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Laura Marling

Alas I Cannot Swim

  • AMG Review of Alas I Cannot Swim

    Amg
    Stewart MasonMyspace
    All Music Guide

    Due to her youth (16 when she first hit Myspace, 17 when signed to an imprint of EMI, and 18 when her debut album came out), perky-cute looks and extremely British diction, singer/songwriter Laura Marling got a lot of comparisons to Lily Allen in her early buzz, but the quietly compelling Alas I Cannot Swim is not at all a frothy pop confection. A folk-tinged AAA pop record based on Marling's alluringly husky voice and graceful acoustic guitar, Alas I Cannot Swim would be more aptly compared to the likes of Feist, Keren Ann, or Regina Spektor. (In the album's press kit, Marling reveals her primary influence to be Bonnie "Prince" Billy, which also seems appropriate.) Although not to draw too forbidding a comparison, opening track and first single "Ghosts" is most strongly reminiscent of Joni Mitchell circa For the Roses, both in Marling's expressive vocal phrasing and the expert shifts in the arrangement between solo acoustic passages and full-band sections, not to mention an excellently deployed string section. That old-school '70s singer/songwriter vibe predominates throughout the album, in fact. There's one straight-up pop song here, the deceptively chipper-sounding "Cross Your Fingers" ("...hold your toes/We're all gonna die when the building blows" continues the sweetly sung chorus), but aside from that, Alas I Cannot Swim is the kind of album that takes a couple of listens for its charms to completely sink in. Rather than swath every track in prominent, ear-grabbing hooks, Marling and producer Charlie Fink choose to keep the decorations off in the distance on songs like "The Captain and Hourglass," where swells of pedal steel stay buried deep in the mix under Marling's hypnotic guitar line and quietly insistent vocals. There's every chance that Laura Marling will get lost in the shuffle as the unexpected commercial success of Feist's The Reminder leads major labels to unleash hordes of similarly talented female singer/songwriters, but Alas I Cannot Swim is far better than the average coffee house-endorsed girly pop.

New Romantic
about 1 year ago

--- - |- Every time I listen to this amazing debut from Laura Marling, 'Alas I Cannot Swim' I have to constantly remind myself that she is only 18yrs old. Oh, to have this kind of wisdom when I was her age...i would have been dangerous! This is already one of my favorite records of the year...and another example of a perfect rainy day soundtrack. (Plus she gets bonus points for name-checkin...

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Laura Marling...Thanks for the suggestion MOG
about 1 year ago
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I'll admit, I'm rarely on the home page of MOG but decided to stop by last week. And I'd have to say it was good timing on my part. There was either a "Featured Post" or something to that effect that was calling out Laura Marling. It looked promising, so I went for the extra click to learn more. What I found was this...An 18-year-old folk-pop singer/songwriter ...

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wahoooo... new.
about 1 year ago

so I've been meaning to update here for a while, work's been killing me though!i have a bunch of new stuff I'd like to share with you guys, so let me start with the best!I guess you may have heard of Laura Marling by now... but just in case, she's the 18 year old brit who (then 17) played last summer's Wireless Fest. read up here.and listen to the appended track, which is by no means my favorit...

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Laura Marling
about 1 year ago

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