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Transmitter Failure (Bonus Track Version)

Jenny Owen Youngs

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Album Review

Jenny Owen Youngs stuck to the singer/songwriter handbook on her 2005 debut, making occasional diversions from the tranquil, acoustic-based material with barbed songs like "F**k Was I." Four years later, Transmitter Failure finds the artist widening her reach with electric instrumentation, collaboratively written tracks, and a genre-spanning wealth of material. "Led to the Sea" is the most immediately striking tune here, a fusion of bass-heavy verses and buoyant, stomping refrains, but Youngs' biggest asset is her willingness to explore vastly different territory, both musically and lyrically. "Here Is a Heart" peppers its elegant chord progression with some unexpected culinary imagery — "Here is a heart... battered and braised, grilled and sautéed, just how you like it" — while "Clean Break" likens a quick breakup to surgery, with neo-jazz melodies and spaghetti western guitars adding color to such stark lines as "Just sterilize the scalpel and let's get this over with." Youngs' ability to confidently jump from genre to genre owes a sizable debt to producer Dan Romer, who laces her music with strings, ukuleles, horns, and harmonies (most of them sung by Bess Rogers, sideman extraordinaire and a solid songwriter in her own right) as he sees fit. Even so, Youngs is the true star here, and the studio polish that coats Transmitter Failure only makes the album more palatable. ~ Andrew Leahey, Rovi

Customer Reviews

Another summer album
     

Back when Batten the Hatches came out, I listened to it for 3 straight months and rarely anything else. It was there for me in the good times and bad times and I was almost hoping that this cd would be bad so it wouldn't "ruin" the amazingness of BTH for me. But needles to say Transmitter Failure is absolutely amazing as well. I find myself pushing "back" alot to listen to the same songs over and over and forcing myself to get to the next one only to repeat the same actions. Too many artists make the mistake of having all their songs sounding the same, but Jenny has mastered the ablitly to have a unique personality for all of her songs. What I love about Jenny (and other artists for that matter) is when I can tell they LOVE music when I listen to their songs. Jenny is definitely one of those experiemntal, brave, adventurous artists who shows her passion through her music. The wait for the cd was well worth it.

Awesome!
     

This is much more upbeat that previous JOY songs. However, it is still AMAZING!! See her perform live if you get a chance. Hopefully, this cd will open her up to a larger audience and give her the recognition she deserves.

Too Much Drowns a Good Thing
     

I prefer her previous more acoustic and less produced-sounding work. Although I love Clean Break off this album.

Biography

Born: November 22, 1981 in Montclair, NJ

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s

Coming up strong behind R. Stevie Moore as the most talented singer/songwriter to be based in the nondescript bedroom community of Montclair, NJ, Jenny Owen Youngs fuses Liz Phair's perceptive and brashly funny lyrics with the orchestrated folk-pop of Regina Spektor and Erin McKeown, adding just a hint of Nellie McKay's jazzy cabaret leanings and Cat Power's throaty, confessional angst. Born in New Jersey in 1981, Youngs first picked up the guitar at the age of 14 and attended the music program at...
Full Bio

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