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You Are Free

Cat Power

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Album Review

You Are Free arrives nearly five years from her last album of original material, and everything, yet nothing, has changed about Chan Marshall's music. The album's title is as much a statement as it is a challenge, a command to free one's self from the hurt and pain of the past, or to at least find a way of making peace with it. Marshall seems to do both on You Are Free, a collection of songs about finding freedom and peace wherever she can. Initially, the album seems more diffuse than Moon Pix, as it spans tense rockers, blues, folk, and singer/songwritery piano ballads, but it gradually reveals itself as Marshall's most mature and thematically focused work yet. You Are Free opens with a stunning trio of songs that encompass most of the moods and sounds she explores later in the album. On "I Don't Blame You," the first of You Are Free's many spare, piano-driven moments, Marshall paints a portrait of a tormented musician, her voice so full of sympathy that she may well be singing a reconciliation to a previous incarnation of herself. The brisk, buzzing intensity of "Free," however, offers liberation in the form of rock & roll's immediate, poetic nonsense: "Don't be in love with the autograph/Just be in love when you love that song all night long." You Are Free's first two songs address musicians and making music directly; Marshall is a famously willful, volatile artist, and the increasing gaps between her albums (not to mention her unpredictable live performances) suggest that being a musician isn't the easiest thing for her to do, even if it's a necessary one. She addresses the struggle to do the right, but difficult, thing on "Good Woman," a near-spiritual breakup song where, backed by a children's choir and fiddles, Marshall explains that she needs to be a good woman with — or more likely, without — her bad man. Aside from being a lovely song, it's also a departure; earlier in her career the song might have just focused on the conflict instead of Marshall's gently strong resolution to it. This gentle but resolute strength runs through most of You Are Free's best moments, such as "He War" and especially "Names," a terrifyingly matter-of-fact recollection of child abuse and lost friends that says more in its resigned sorrow than a histrionic tirade would. As the album progresses, it moves toward the spare, affecting ballads that give her later work a strange timelessness; listening to You Are Free gives the impression of stripping away layers to get to the essence of Marshall's music. In some ways, the quiet last half of this album is more demanding than the angsty noise of Dear Sir or Myra Lee, but hearing her find continually creative interpretations of minor keys, plaintive pianos, and folky guitars is well worth the attention it takes, whether it's the dead-of-night eroticism of her cover of Michael Hurley's "Werewolf," the pretty yet eerie longing of "Fool," or the prairie romance of "Half of You." Every Cat Power album takes at least a few listens to fully reveal itself; You Are Free may take awhile longer than expected to unfold, but once it does, its excellence is undeniable.

Customer Reviews

Astonishingly good

This is one of my favourite albums ever and established Chan Marshall as, for me, the best female singer\songwriter ever. Her voice, which manages to be simultaneously cool and emotional, seems to connect straight to the heart, and the whispered delivery of songs like Werewolf, Fool and Babydoll are as intimate as music gets. Lyrically, the songs are poetic and beautifully oblique, and repay repeated listening. If you're a thrash metal fan, this probably isn't for you. If, however, you like heartbreakingly intelligent songs that map out the complexities of human emotion, then prepare to fall in love. Interestingly, Eddie Vedder and Dave Grohl feature on a couple of songs, but so wonderful is Chan Marshall, you'd barely notice.

LOVE :)

My favourite song is 'fool'. i watch the programme 'Skins' and it was played on there, ever since i heard it, i fell in love with it :). so i have now come on itunes to look up some more songs by them :)

Amazing Album!!!!

I first discovered Cat Power from hearing her beautiful cover of Sea of Love which lead me on a search for more music from the very talented Chan Marshall. After buying You Are Free it set off a Cat Power addiction. Its music that can touch the soul and song writing that makes the heart weep. Her sombre and bold style is captivating and you can't help but want to hear more. Best track on this album has got to be He War. From the guitar cutting through the delicate piano at the beginning to Dave Grohl on drums this song will unleash something new every time you listen to it!

Biography

Born: 21 January 1972 in Atlanta, GA

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Cat Power is the alias of Chan Marshall, a Southern-bred singer/songwriter whose father, Charlie, was an itinerant pianist. After dropping out of high school, Marshall found herself in New York; performing under the name Cat Power, she was booked as the opening act for Liz Phair, where she met Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley and Two Dollar Guitar's Tim Foljahn, who agreed to become her backing band. Following the release of 1995's Dear Sir and 1996's Myra Lee — both recorded on the same day...
Full bio

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