- Artists:
- St. Vincent »
- Label:
- 4AD »
If the portrait on the cover of Annie Clark's first album as St. Vincent, 2007's Marry Me, made lovelorn denizens of the indieverse, female and male alike, forget about Joanna Newsom for a bit and moon over the striking Oklahoman instead, the music behind the face was even more beguiling. Lyrically astute and sonically unconventional, after listening to Marry Me its cover shot came to seem like subversion of a sort: this was a work of substance, not just another album by a mediocrity with a guitar and cheekbones.
Having said that, Actor's artwork repeats the trick, so maybe Clark just likes putting her face on things. Or maybe she's commenting on the illogic of equating a fortunate bone structure with a capability for song structure. Or maybe her shift from staring the viewer in the eye to looking askance reflects a more guarded approach to her songwriting. Or maybe...Who knows. The point is, in Clark's case you're encouraged to ponder the reasons for things because her work exudes such keen intelligence that everything, be it a lyric, an arrangement or an album cover, becomes potentially significant.
Certainly the air of paranoia that swirls through the opening trio of songs here has meaning, both in the context of the individual songs and for the theme of the album as a whole. "Paint the black hole blacker" is the despairing yet jaunty refrain of opener 'The Strangers', 'Save Me From What I Want' has Clark repeatedly pleading just that, while the queasily off-beat fairground waltz of 'The Neighbors' culminates in the discomfiting apprehension that "Tomorrow's some kind of stranger/Who I’m not supposed to see".
This distressed air continues throughout, and grows only more pronounced on the songs lying beyond the palette-cleansing single 'Actor Out of Work'. Even here, on the album's most straightforward number, identity and confidence are in crisis. Putatively a love song, lines like "You're a liar/And that's the truth/You're an extra/ Lost in the scene" leave this feeling like a snapshot of a relationship that's headed for the rocks. The music reflects this, too, with distorted bursts of treated guitar giving the otherwise breezy melody a demented cast.
The protagonists of these songs seem to be battling with maintaining some sort of outward show of calm while inside they're rapidly falling to pieces. The music reinforces this reading, with lush woodwind motifs, the dappled light of the economical guitar parts and the soft balm of Clark's voice often being overwhelmed by harsher elements. The concluding section of 'Black Rainbow' – one of several songs to make mention of neighbours, underlining the recurring sense of an observed outer self hiding a troubled interior – offers the most extreme example of this technique, its ascending strings and relentless beat imparting a sense of inescapable, unbearable panic.
For all the darkness of Actor's concerns, however, it remains an exceptionally pleasurable album to listen to. But that isn't to say that its songs, which cluster around the themes of dishonesty, unhappiness, hurt and doomed dreams of rekindling past loves, are ultimately unsuccessful in conveying what they're about. It's more the case that, like any truly engaging artwork, they satisfy even as they perturb. The clearest parallel with what Clark is up to here seems to be the conceptual self-portraits of Cindy Sherman, which see the photographer adopt role upon role that, while never really her, are explorations that nevertheless have their basis in authentic emotion.
"What'll I share, what'll I keep/From all these strangers who sleep where I sleep?" Clark asks herself on 'The Strangers'. Whatever the answer, and whatever games she's playing, 'Actor' is a gift that it would be foolish to overlook.
- This Week's Singles: 2/11/09
- Various - New Moon: Music from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
- Spotifriday #20 Side I: This Week on DiS as a playlist
- Watch: St Vincent's Video Tour Diaries
- Death Cab to release single from Vampire movie OST
- Watch: St Vincent vs. Andrew Bird
- Spotifriday #11 - This Week on DiS as a Playlist + Mercury albums
- Blank stares and black holes: DiS meets St Vincent
More St. Vincent
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Hove Festival 2008: DiS's final word(s)
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This Week's Singles: 2/11/09
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The National, St Vincent at O2 Shepherds Bush Empire, London, Wed 07 Nov
Great album
When the chorus of 'Marrow' kicked me in the face for the first time, I was a happy lad indeed.
mediocre
Really sad that there are barely any women in indie rock which are actually good. Why?!!?!?
Nar bruv
She´s great (evidence: http://www.blogotheque.net/St-Vincent,3519). Look forward to the record, especially after this review.
"barely any women in indie rock which are actually good"
Wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, grammatically and factually.
'Actor' proves this. Awesome album.
I think that is the worst album cover I have seen in quite a while.
She looks like she would have the capacity to annoy me.
I think it's superb
For some reason Marry Me didn't quite click, but ACTOR = TOP STUFF, wish I'd caught her live the other day
do not get fooled by the hype this woman gets
This woman makes very mediocre music, all songs have very basic song structure. When you make this kind of (simple) music you have to be able to create mindblowing melodies and your voice has to be really interesting. This woman cannot make good enough melodies and has a very pedestrian voice.
Considering that you said
"there are barely any good women in indie rock", I'll take your views with a pinch of salt
It's taken me 2 days to muster up the energy to respond
to the yawning vapidity of this: "This woman cannot make good enough melodies and has a very pedestrian voice". And still all I can manage is: what unmitigated arse.
i've just got to track 2
.. having spent all weekend listening to 'strangers' on repeat...
LOL
!
I love this album...
... I know exactly what you mean about putting The Strangers on repeat. Amazing stuff.
Intersting to note the strange, almost industrial guitar passages that are scattered about. Could have sworn I was listening to NIN at some points.
it'd be interesting to see some reasons
rather than just a number.
Amazingly Talented
I don't think anybody can quite touch her when it comes to making beautiful music and yet portraying such intense unease and distortion; that feeling that something's just not right. 'Laughing with a Mouth of Blood', 'Marrow', and 'The Strangers' exemplify this the most, I think, but every song (except for maybe 'The Sequel', which I think succeeds in portraying unease and distortion but otherwise fails to be up to the standards set for it by the rest of the tracks) on this album is really good.


In Photos: Monotonix @ Hector's House, Brighton
In Photos: The Specials @ Hammersmith Apollo, London
In Photos: Camden Crawl Launch Event @ The Blues Kitchen, London
In Photos: La Roux @ Shepherds Bush Empire, London
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