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Friday, August 17, 2018

Austra - Feel It Break (Deluxe Edition) [CD 2 - Full Album] - YouTube
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Feel It Break is the debut studio album by Canadian electronic music band Austra. It was released on May 13, 2011, by Domino. The album received generally positive reviews from music critics, who complimented lead singer Katie Stelmanis's voice and compared the band to artists such as Kate Bush, Cocteau Twins, Fever Ray, Zola Jesus, and Depeche Mode. Additionally, it was shortlisted for the 2011 Polaris Music Prize, and received a Juno Award nomination for Electronic Album of the Year. Feel It Break spawned three singles: "Beat and the Pulse", "Lose It", and "Spellwork".

A deluxe edition was released digitally on November 29, 2011, followed by a double CD edition on December 13, 2011, limited to 1,000 copies. Additional tracks include the "Beat and the Pulse" B-sides "Young and Gay" (written by Stelmanis as a tribute to the late Toronto artist and activist Will Munro) and "Energy"; the "Spellwork" B-side "Identity"; the unreleased B-sides "Believe Me", "Trip", and "Pianix"; cover versions of Joni Mitchell's "Woodstock" (a B-side to "Lose It") and Roy Orbison's "Crying"; and a remix of "Beat and the Pulse" by Shawn "Clown" Crahan of Slipknot.


Video Feel It Break



Singles

"Beat and the Pulse" was the first single and was released well in advance of the album on November 16, 2010. A promotional video was released three months later by Domino on YouTube. Directed by Claire Edmondson, the video shows singer Katie Stelmanis in a room surrounded by scantily clad women dancing in a suggestive manner.

The second single was "Lose It" and was released on May 9, 2011, a week before the album. A video for the single was released on YouTube on May 4. The video shows the band posing around on a living room set dressed in different costumes. At one point, Stelmanis looks out a window and sees a missile frozen in mid-air. The video was directed by M Blash.

The third and final single was "Spellwork" and was released on September 5, 2011. A promotional video was released on YouTube four months later. The video shows the band portraying mysterious figures wandering through a forest while a group of women engage in rituals reminiscent of the opening scenes of Arthur Miller's The Crucible. The video was directed by Yelena Yemchuk.


Maps Feel It Break



Critical reception

Feel It Break received positive reviews from most music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 75, based on 24 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews". Heather Phares of AllMusic wrote that Stelmanis "shar[es] the aloof beauty of Glasser, Esben and the Witch, Fever Ray, and Zola Jesus. Unlike some of the band's peers, however, there's a humanity to Stelmanis' vocals that, even when distorted, keeps Feel It Break's songs from feeling too remote." She continued, "On this consistently hypnotic debut, Austra carve out a place of their own among their contemporaries." The Guardian's Michael Hann agreed, stating that although Austra "have been lumped in with the synth-gothisms" of Zola Jesus and Fever Ray, "there's a cleanliness and sharpness about them that belies those associations. Katie Stelmanis sings with a cut-glass voice, and the precision of the electronic music behind her--always carefully restrained, never overwhelming--might be chilly, but it's rarely foreboding." Similarly, Benjamin Boles of Now magazine commented that the band's "dark electronic production and soaring vocals are often compared to acts like Fever Ray and Zola Jesus, but Austra is far from a carbon copy of their goth-dance sensibilities. Stelmanis brings a more musical sensibility to the formula, even if it's still miles away from mainstream pop", praising the album as an "extremely strong debut".

In a review for The A.V. Club, Chris Martins noted that Austra "hits the holy trinity of synthesizer music on Feel It Break" and that the album is heavily influenced by "the high drama and dated synths of Cocteau Twins", "the clangy darkwave pioneered by Gary Numan", and "the jaunty, syllable-stretching weirdness of Kate Bush", concluding that "Austra is best when all three influences expertly converge--like on the groove-steeped creeper 'Beat And The Pulse'--or when none of them bother showing at all, as on the epic closer 'The Beast'." Charlie Frame of Clash expressed that "[t]he songwriting and production are strong throughout and often Stelmanis acquires a surprisingly rich amount of warmth from her dramatically sweeping sound that's rarely heard in this scene. With the cool-o-meter currently set at all things synthy and coldwave-y, Austra look set for big things." Pitchfork reviewer Tom Breihan commented that Austra "play a warm, hazy sort of electro-goth. It's synthetic and repetitive, and there's plenty of Giorgio Moroder in its DNA, but it's not dance music. Instead, it's music for a planetarium, or maybe for a mid-1980s PBS science documentary. Austra's synth riffs don't pound or undulate; they flutter and envelop. And Stelmanis doesn't sing over the top of their tracks; she emits sound from somewhere in the thick of it."

Andy Beta of Spin opined that the band's "seedy synth pop more often recalls Kate Bush's dramatic art songs and the Knife's ghostly techno-pop (and more specifically, the soured vowels of frontwoman Karin Andersson). But from surging, operatic opener 'Darken Her Horse' to closing piano ballad 'Lose It,' Stelmanis' voice and vision are mostly her own." Slant Magazine's Paul Schrodt gave the album four out of five stars, noting that the album "combines the atmospherics of darker new wave with a thumping, Giorgio Moroder-type beat. It's big in scope, but clean in sound. Every detail of the production feels carefully thought out. In the background, it's all piano, chimes, drums, and sleek synths. At the front, it's Stelmanis's voice, a glorious Kate Bush-like caterwaul that can also drop much lower". Laura Snapes of NME commended the album's first half, but felt that the second half does not "quite [hit] such ecstatic peaks", adding that "although Katie's piano skills are impressive, final song 'The Beast' is too stripped back and literal, erring a teensy bit on Evanescence balladry." She concluded, "The odd misfire aside, Feel It Break is self-assured and utterly consuming. At this rate, [Stelmanis will] be leading the pack soon." Arnold Pan of PopMatters called the album "promising" and characterized Stelmanis' "eccentric" voice as "[u]nique and resembling nothing except itself", but remarked that "Feel It Break as a whole is a little uneven because Austra still seems to be looking to strike the right balance between its different parts. That's not to say, though, that Austra won't grow to possess a richer, fuller aesthetic, something that the group shows it's capable of on the debut's most complete tracks, 'Spellwork' and 'The Villain'."

Accolades

Feel It Break was shortlisted for the 2011 Polaris Music Prize, but lost out to Arcade Fire's The Suburbs. It was also nominated for Electronic Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2012.


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Track listing

All tracks written by Austra, except where noted.


Quiz: Know How to Deal With Breakups and a Broken Heart?
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Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Feel It Break.

Austra

  • Katie Stelmanis - vocals, keyboards
  • Maya Postepski - drums
  • Dorian Wolf - bass
  • Austra - producers

Additional personnel


How to Feel Good and Be Happy After Break Up - YouTube
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Charts


How to Feel Good and Be Happy After Break Up - YouTube
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Release history


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References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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