Kimbra album review
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Still, Primal Heart takes listeners on a smoother journey than The Golden Echo's wild ride, and if some of these tracks are a little more straightforward, they're also great showcases for Kimbra's soul-baring. Somebody That I Used To Know was a huge surprise hit by Gotye that sounded so different from any other hit song, that it shocked even me on how it got popular with the mainstream audience. Kimbra's Primal Heart is a fascinating album of many disparate parts.In some ways it’s more a producer’s album than a singer’s, featuring texture and complex production as the artist explores the varied expressions of her undeniable and prodigious talent. Don’t try to fit this album under any one umbrella. Review Summary: Pleasing both the retro-lovers and diehard indie pop nerds, Kimbra brings pure gold to the pop world that will stick with people for years.
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Now, the New Zealander is proving her musical prowess on her latest release, The Golden Echo. As clever as she is at reinventing the mainstream, Kimbra is still most exciting on the album's more left-field tracks the soulful, bubbly "Recovery" and the subtle hints of swooning '60s pop on "Past Love" are the kinds of unexpected moves she pulls off brilliantly. Album Review: Kimbra, 'The Golden Echo' (Warner Bros.) Kimbra broke into fame after her appearance on Gotye’s Somebody That I Used to Know a gig that landed her two Grammy awards. this monster of a record starts with Teen Heat, a cute and subtle trip hop composition that.
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Vows, her debut album, is a pop near-masterpiece, and she becomes truly ahead of her time with The Golden Echo. That she co-wrote and co-produced every track here helps put her stamp on late-2010s pop and R&B trends: "Like They Do on the TV" mixes a tropical melody with murky trip-hop-inspired rhythms, while trap beats add an edge to the brassy, brooding "Human." "Top of the World," a collaboration with Skrillex, doesn't really resemble anything either he or Kimbra has done before, but its slow-burning stomp sounds like a rising pop queen coming for her throne. Vows, her let me start my review by saying that Kimbra is one of the most misunderstood, underrated pop musicians of our time. Instead, on Primal Heart she combines all of the styles she explored on that album into a more cohesive - and immediate - approach. For her follow-up to The Golden Echo, Kimbra could have expanded on any one of its eclectic sounds.