VIDEO: Feist, "My Moon, My Man"
Canadian singer Feist’s third solo album is a soundtrack for watching your lover walk out the door. From misty-eyed paralysis to teenage triumph, The Reminder (Cherry Tree/Interscope) bespeaks the adrenaline-soaked moments of clarity that strike when your flame leaves you for the first or the last time. And Feist — who comes to Berklee Performance Center this Saturday — is in tune with the universality and the intimacy of these moments. She writes great pop songs because she captures real emotions.
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Although she was always the Broken Social Scene–ster most likely to cross over, Feist has taken her time coming into her own as a solo artist. The Calgary-bred singer cut her teeth in punk bands as a teenager; she got her first notoriety touring with electro-pop bad girl Peaches. Then she moved to Toronto, where she joined the indie-rock collective Broken Social Scene and helped make their 2002 You Forgot It in People (Arts & Crafts) a Juno Award winner. That set the stage for her major-label breakthrough, 2004’s Let It Die (Interscope). An alluring, easy-going mix of bossa novas and torch songs, the album gave off flickers of mass appeal — the sultry intro “Gatekeeper” and the galloping pop gem “Mushaboom” — but was compromised by the adult-contemporary flourishes of its over-cautious covers.
The Reminder reprises Let It Die in pace and formula but is more emotive and comfortable. The languorous bossa nova thrum of “So Sorry” is a beautiful slow boil; it begins as a showcase for Feist’s ethereal voice before the gradual hum of background vocals and windswept xylophone bring out a deep melancholy. Elsewhere, chirping birds and a mournful trumpet give a bit of orchestral gravity to “The Park.” In “So Sorry,” she begins, “I’m sorry, two words/I always think after you’re gone/When I realize I was acting all wrong”; then she reels you in with lovely, plaintive musings: “We’re so helpless/We’re slaves to our own forces/We’re afraid of our emotions/And no one knows where the shore is/We’re divided by the ocean.”
Offsetting the torch songs and pop tracks are offbeat experimental numbers. “Sea Lion Woman” is a Nina Simone cover that begins with tribal handclaps and scatty vocals and climaxes in a guitar solo. The best of the four effervescent single candidates is “1 2 3 4,” an infectious ditty that ends with a celebratory Bacharachian horn breakdown. The first proper single, “My Moon My Man,” is built on a breathy chorus and free-associative lyrics reminiscent of a more playful Sade. Adventurous but without rough edges, heartfelt but not ostentatious, The Reminder achieves the balance of Aimee Mann’s best solo work, or perhaps a more eclectic Norah Jones.
FEIST + GRIZZLY BEAR | Berklee Performance Center, 136 Mass Ave, Boston | June 9 | 617.931.2000