Track Review: Imogen Heap – Lifeline

Lifeline Cover

Track by track:Lifeline | Propeller Seeds | Minds Without Fear/Neglected Space | Xizi She Knows | Me The Machine| Telemiscommunications | You Know Where To Find Me

“Lifeline” is the first song recorded and released for Imogen Heap’s fourth solo record and was recorded over a span of two weeks with her fans. Through her #heapsong1 mini-site she would ask fans to submit audio samples, videos, photographs, and miscellaneous inspiration, which Immi would have to sort through one by one via live Ustream chat sessions to choose to pieces that would make it inside the song.

There is a similarity between the new Imogen Heap track “Lifeline” and her third record Ellipse in that through all the sound manipulation, lush reverbs and spinning delays there is a very humanistic feel to it all. Nothing is compressed to the point at which you feel death by Mr. Brick Wall Square-Wave, everything has it’s limits without a hard limiter, and they’re songs you can turn up without worrying about blowing your ears or speakers to bits. They’re songs that recall a time where loudness wasn’t an issue and the point of engineering a song was simply a time where you’d edit it until it sounded pristine to you. The majority of tracks by Imogen are put together like this and it makes for an extremely admirable and respectful listen.

With that said, this similarity isn’t 100% perfect. There was once an article online which took “Tidal” from Ellipse and gave it a mastering facelift. Sadly, all traces of this article have been erased, but the result was a much more punchier and lively sounding final mix. The lack of compression and other outboard gear to give the song an extra spurt of groove and feeling causes “Lifeline” to almost sound like a mix before it was sent off to mastering for that extra push, which unfortunately causes the sound to sound a bit flat. It’s basically an engineering masterpiece without the magic final touch.

But it’s still one Godly sounding track.

The song was released on iTunes, but is also available in much better quality and packed with heaps of extras (ha!) from Imogen’s official website. 320kbps MP3, Apple & FLAC lossless formats are available and every option comes bundled with the instrumental, sound seeds sent in by fans version, video, MP3 of Imogen explaining the sounds and placements of fan sound seeds, and a revolutionary 3DiCD (which acts as a digital CD case and booklet) put together by Andy Carne.


Download Lifeline [iTunes]
Download Lifeline [Imogen’s Website]

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Album Review: Britney Spears – Femme Fatale

I like to treat Britney Spears’ albums as collaborative science projects from various songwriters, producers, audio engineers, and other creative individuals in the music industry. She doesn’t write any of her lyrics, she doesn’t do a lot of her own backup vocals, hell, she doesn’t even dance anymore, but because of her and everyone around her – every single Britney record comes off as an extremely solid attempt at energetic, carefully mapped out Pop music.

FIRST, LET’S GET THIS VERY OBVIOUS ISSUE OFF THE TABLE. IS IT LOUD IN HERE OR IS IT JUST ME? NO, YOU HEAR IT TOO? OKAY. GOOD. FEMME FATALE IS AN EXTREMELY COMPRESSED RECORD WHICH IS SOMETHING THAT HAS BASICALLY BECOME A TRADEMARK INSIDE MAJOR RECORD LABEL TOP 40 MUSIC – ESPECIALLY THEIR KEY ARTISTS. LET ME TURN DOWN THE VOLUME SO I CAN STOP SCREAMING AT YOU.

Interestingly enough, when taking a listen between Femme Fatale up against albums like Christina Aguilera’s Bionic (which only scored DR 6 on the Unofficial Dynamic Range Database, while Britney’s last record Circus rated a healthy DR8), Britney’s record holds a nice amount of punch, groove, and feeling over a few of her pop contemporaries. You wouldn’t think that Team Spears would care much about taking time to ensure our ears aren’t bleeding from the inside out, but they do and it’s much appreciated. In fact, the only time loudness is a negative thing on this record are the less layered tracks “Gasoline” and “Criminal”.

Why you would have all the instruments pushing as hard as they can with a vocal soaring above all of it on a song as well put together as “Criminal” is beyond me, but in terms of songwriting and instrumentation, this is one of the winners of the album. It’s straight traditional 21st century folk-pop in the vein of early Cher & Music era Madonna.

The true winner?  The Rodney Jerkins produced “He About to Lose Me”. The song takes a rather sparse approach to production (basic percussion loop, nice repetitive guitar sounds, and a slow evolving Synth) and beautiful vocals provided by the song’s co-writer Ina Wroldsen (as well as Michaela Shiloh). And are you ready for the killer? Jerkins tweeted that there is absolutely no Autotune on Britney Spears’ vocals on this track! A treat for our ears in an audio world that is absolutely drenched in perfection because of the Antares plugin.

Vocal effects aren’t always the bane of our ears existence as shown in the Robyn-esque “How I Roll”, which displays a playful pitch-bend and time stretched vox . The Will.I.Am penned “Big Fat Bass” also falls in this category. Even though the track suffers from a headache inducing bass (which is somehow the point of the song?) Britney’s vocals are cleverly wet with Autotune and have boosts in the higher frequencies of her voice that give a nice contrast to the high-energy buildup in the song’s low end.

Overall? Don’t hold this review against me. We aren’t listening to Bach. Femme Fatale is a pop record and accomplishes all the things a modern pop record symbolizes.

Album rating: 3/5

Purchase Femme Fatale Deluxe Edition [Amazon]
Purchase Femme Fatale Standard Edition [Amazon]

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Album Review: Radiohead – The King of Limbs

The King of LimbsTo say Radiohead doesn’t cater to almost everyone’s personal listening preferences would be a lie. 2011’s The King of Limbs follows suit with it’s preceded In Rainbows in that they both share innovation in their distribution. While Rainbows allowed you to name your own price, with several options for physical copies, Limbs provided a spreadsheet of set prices and formats to choose from, including WAV or MP3, or a “newspaper album” that featured two vinyl’s, photographs, and a CD.

However, even given the option of going with consumer or audiophile methods, there are several complaints that the album’s mixing and mastering is not handled with much love. More often than not, the bass (and at times percussion and Thom Yorke’s vocal) is over-compressed and high in the mix, causing problems on the more experimental tracks like “Feral,” which suffers from a lack of build throughout the song’s barely three minute run. “Bloom” & “Give Up the Ghost” also degrade from this decision, having the songs sound loud from start to finish, creating issues in the albums fluidity into the next track.

Although the Unofficial Dynamic Range Data base gives the album a rating of DR5,  loudness is not always a negative thing or that big of an issue. Compression and EQ thrive through most of the percussion, aiding the rhythms with quick and effective punch (see “Separator”). The mixing also provides a nice foundation for tracks which give different instruments time and space as the lead single “Lotus Flower” proves. Lotus defines an in-your-face bass as the main groove, and allows electronics/Thom’s processed voice to duck in and out of the forefront of the mix when necessary.

Leaving alone the technicalities of the disc, The King of Limbs on it’s own is quite beautiful. The gloomy tale, emotional piano, and beautiful string arrangement by The London Telefilmonic Orchestra, makes up “Codex”‘s blue state and is easily one of many shining moments throughout the record’s 37 minutes.

37 minutes? Yes, but it doesn’t feel like it. These are 8 wonderful tracks that sit nicely in Radiohead’s eclectic catalog and the “Lotus Flower” video will forever be a staple in 21st century music videos.

Album rating: 3.5/5


Purchase The King of Limbs [Radiohead’s Website]
Purchase The King of Limbs
[Amazon]

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