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To Survive

To Survive

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Artist: Joan As Police Woman
Label: Reveal Records
Category: Music

List Price: £12.99
Buy New: £6.98
You Save: £6.01 (46%)



New (17) Used (1) from £6.98

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 431

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

EAN: 5413356512120
ASIN: B0017OCML8

Release Date: June 9, 2008
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: unwanted gift - unopened

Tracks:

  • Honor Wishes
  • Holiday
  • To Be Loved
  • To Be Lonely
  • Magpies
  • Start Of My Heart
  • Hard White Wall
  • Furious
  • To Survive
  • To America

Similar Items:

  • Fleet Foxes
  • I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too
  • For Emma Forever Ago
  • Sunday At Devil Dirt
  • Real Life (2CD Special Edition)

Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The Survival Instinct   July 19, 2008
A. Strong (UK)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

There's something enormously powerful here: this woman's voice, the spare arrangements, the apparently simple yet complex songs. I'm not sure what it is, but I'm smitten. She's capable of an emotional depth I've heard nowhere else, from any artist, from any other music. She did it with 'Real Life' and she does it again here on 'To Survive'. And I was ready to be disappointed when I bought this album. It overwhelms me.


5 out of 5 stars Thank you Joan Wasser. You so belong.   July 6, 2008
Jdavidson (Workington, Cumbria, England.)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Words cannot express how much of a rare thing of beauty this album is, but I simply have to write SOMETHING. As a musician alone, this artist is impressive, playing with class many of the instruments on here. As a songwriter she is staggering: such command of effortlessly engaging lyrics, melody and mood. And the arrangement is skilful and seamless; each component compliments the others. The balance is spot-on throughout. Add to this a voice so exquisite, so rich, expressive, moving and delightful, and you a work of a quality many times greater than the sum of its already outstanding parts.
The range, depth and subtlety in these songs makes them all the more powerful; they demand attention, but there is no clamouring for it here. You listen because you've no choice - you're rapt. This sharing of a gift is priceless.
I got this album three weeks ago and I've fell deeply in love with it, the songs drifting in and out like welcome friends. Successive plays reveal more and more layers, further enhancing the appreciation and pleasure. All other music has faded somewhat.
This is an accomplished, highly talented artist at her peak. It is clear she is maturing, learning something about the futility of control and resistance, and the wisdom of surrendering to fear and pain. Though, like us all, she's on the journey. Her vulnerability is exposed, as is her aching, longing sadness (I've cried my eyes out several times to the title track alone; such is the sheer power of the self-doubt and despair conveyed here - this, despite what she's learnt). The spectrum of feelings realized is spellbinding. At the other end: a contagious glee, the joy of love, of life, and of finding someone special to share it all with. You cannot help but warm to this.
To Survive is the most magical, wondrous thing I've heard in a long time - a new friend :)
This review may appear gushing (then disregard the superlatives), but please, listen to this music.



4 out of 5 stars Survived Real Life?   July 4, 2008
Amplified Man (Manchester)
1 out of 3 found this review helpful

Supposedly, and I suppose logically, follow ups to a fantastic debut album are notoriously difficult things. Many bands have cracked the problem and many bands have failed miserably.
If I may cut to the chase, Joan Wasser hasn't cracked the old second album problem unfortunately. Real Life was a brilliant album; inspired, eclectic, ridiculously enjoyable and catchy. Since the time of it's release it's crept up to being one of my very favourite albums & my main listening staple is heavy music.

To Survive doesn't have that same vibrancy that Real Life possessed. The kick off song; Honour My Wishes plinks and plonks on drearily and without much recognition & the second track also seems a bit flat. Sure it's got perfect musicianship, Joan's magnificent voice but the songwriting just isn't at that sparkling level that Real Life maintained throughout.
The duo of To Be Loved & To Be Lonely are great tunes and sit nicely on Joans' top shelf. Start of My Heart is a classy swaying, moody ballad and has struck out as one of my favourites on the album. Hard White Wall is the only really effective uptempo track on here and is definitely the highlight on To Survive. It posesses all Joans' confident swagger & it's one of the catchiest she's written for a while.

The piano is the main instrument here and seems to drag the mood down with it's dreary plinking. Don't get me wrong; the piano can be a beautiful instrument but Joans songs seem to come alive when the guitar is brought out. Even at her gigs, the most effective tracks are those with guitar where she can impose herself on the track rather than those where she's sat a wurlitzer.

All in all I'm quite disappointed with To Survive. It comes across as being flat and a little dull, especially when compared to Real Life. There are some very good songs as you'd expect but that top level of songwriting and consistency just isn't there.
However, it is a pleasant listen, it's just not as exciting a listen as it probably should have been.
I'd hate to see Joan end up being another dull, uninspiring Katie Melua coffee table fare, she has too much talent and personality to be relegated to that level.
Here's to next time round.



5 out of 5 stars A Law Unto Herself   June 11, 2008
The Wolf (uk)
10 out of 10 found this review helpful

Elusive. Slippery. Beguilingly and Bewitchingly Beautiful.

The ten songs which comprise Ms Wasser's new album will not
give themselves up easily to listeners looking for a quick
melting-moment fix.

There has been remarkable development since 2006's 'Real Life'
(an absolute stunner too if you haven't heard it yet !)

This is uncompromising writing and performance from a woman
not afraid to move against the mainstream.

The fluid, almost jazzy structure, of these compositions
reeks somehow of a stifling New York City Night.
Compressed and achingly searching for intangible resolutions.

'Honor Wishes' is a brave and austere opening track.
Voice. Piano. Bass. Drums.
Ms Wasser's voice roaming yearningly through and around
the icy keyboard's chordal progressions.

'Holiday' brings us into warmer, more, exotic territory altogether.
The lilting rhythm and melody lulling us into a false sense
of security as we are drawn into the tangled, splintered cacophony
of it's remarkable closing bars.

'To Be Loved' an optimistic and upbeat, yet wistful, reflection
on the possibility of love.

'To Be Lonely', the bruised and bleeding heart of the album.
Raw. Exposed. The intimacy of this shared moment almost unbareable.

'Magpies' delivers one of the most musically satisfying and complex
brass and vocal arrangements imaginable. Another real highpoint.

'Start Of My Heart'. A slow and gorgeously evocative melody and
more words about love to stretch your heartstrings.

'Hard White Wall' is a ducking and diving accoustic guitar led
number filled with complex waves and layers of electric guitar,
synthesiser, drums and vocal harmonies. Stunning.

'Furious' chugs along nicely with the Wurlitzer holding down
a quasi-latin rhythm. Ms Wasser beligerent in the best possible way.

'To Survive' is another pared-down gem of a song.
A lullaby and lament of breathtaking beauty.
The string arrangement a masterclass of affecting economy.

Closing track 'To America' is an ambiguous and ambivalent ending.
The classy brass and woodwind arrangement and not insignificant
contribution from a junior, masculine Wainwright brings the album
to a rapturous close.

Mr Goggin's production and supporting musicianship is inspired thoughout.

A Magificent Achievement.

Highly Recommended.

(I'm tempted to say "Move over Martha" but of course we must keep
room in our hearts for them both.)




5 out of 5 stars Listen, Listen, Listen and Listen Again   June 11, 2008
J. Parker (Bath, UK)
4 out of 6 found this review helpful

This is an incredible piece of work which has already burned itself into my soul only three days after its release. Not all of the tracks are immediate and it is not generally as accessable as the also excellent 'Real Life'.

That does not in anyway diminish its worth though - it just means that you may need to give it multiple listens before you fully appreciate its brilliance.

Get it now, your need this music in your life.


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