...according to our Ant on Fri 21 Sep, 2007.
Sandro Perri's 'Tiny mirrors' is essentially a singer songwriter album that's melodic and has a slightly jazzy undertone. It's melodic and soulful and is not unlike Tim Buckley in places. This guy simultaneously plays guitar and kick drum. I cant imagine doing that. Like patting your head and rubbing your tummy at the same time. My co-ordination is appalling. I take my hat off to the man.The usual deluxe Constellation packaging with metallic embossing.This is the first full-length recording by Sandro Perri under his own
name, following an E.P. on Constellation last year (on which Perri
re-interpreted songs from his critically-acclaimed Polmo Polpo
instrumental/electronic project). Working with some of Toronto's finest
avant and improv players, Sandro has fully re-invented himself as a
singer, lyricist and guitar player, and Tiny Mirrors is the culmination
of this transformation - a highly personal collection of songs, shaped
by an utterly original approach to composition, performance, and
melodic and vocal phrasing.
Tiny Mirrors incorporates elements
and sensibilities - albeit in subtle hues - as diverse as Vanguard-era
Skip James (and his weary falsetto), post-tropicalia Caetano Veloso
(the compositional twists), and the 60s-era axis of hybrid songwriters
like Tim Buckley, Tim Hardin, Harry Nilsson and Fred Neil (whose
"Everybody's Talkin'" is covered here, re-cast as a rumination on the
'epidemic' of second-hand experience). Perri's simultaneous guitar and
kick drum playing is complemented by the cracked wah guitar of
labelmate Eric Chenaux on several tracks, with brass, reeds, woodwinds,
keys and percussion filling out the arrangements, courtesy of regular
bandmates Ryan Driver, Marcus Quin and John Jowett. A handful of other
Toronto players contribute on drums, trombone and cello.
Crucial
to the album's sound is the fact that Perri gave up much control to the
group dynamics, allowing some of the arrangements to develop out of the
players' natural tendencies towards improvisation. "Love Is Real", for
example, set to a fluid and amorphous backdrop of heavily phased
'neo-soul', was altered substantially by Chenaux's rhythmic
re-configurations, while "Double Suicide" (of which the original
version has not yet seen proper release) is presented here in an
alternate form. Anchored entirely by drummer Blake Howard's in-studio
restlessness, the original gets transformed from a brooding slow-burner
into a strangely fractured bossa nova; a tricky polyrhythmic delight.
Ending the record is a re-working of the lead-off track "Family Tree",
here renamed "Mirror Tree" and consisting of only the core band, sans
Perri altogether - a testament to the group's interpretive power.
Overall,
Perri strikes the perfect balance of sophisticated writing (melodically
and as a lyricist) and, with the help of his band, deceptively
effortless, relaxed, unconstrained performance. These songs abound in
subtle texture and flourish, and the burbling swirl of instrumental
work is a through-line to his earlier recordings as Polmo Polpo, where
a similarly simmering brew of interweaving melodies yielded such an
original and seductive take on 'electronic' music. Perri brings the
same originality, warmth, energy and intelligence to his eponymous
singer-songwriter work; Tiny Mirrors pulses and froths and lounges and
glides with inimitable ingenuity, genuineness, substance and style.
The
album was beautifully recorded by Jeff McMurrich (Hidden Cameras,
Constantines, Bruce Cockburn) at Hallamusic in Toronto. Two songs, and
various overdubs, were recorded at Sandro's home studio, The Honey Pot.
The
CD format of this recording comes in a felt-finish cardstock package
with bronze foil-stamp printing. 180gLP comes in same paper, with a
silkscreen print.
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