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I Saw First Light [Pink Vinyl]
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I Saw First Light [Pink Vinyl] in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $15.99
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Size: CD
While indie singer/songwriter
Anna McClellan
launched her music career from her hometown of Omaha, she relocated to New York while working on her second full-length, 2018's
Yes and No
, which was partially tracked in both cities. Two years later,
I saw first light
finds her back in Omaha, reflecting on the intervening period. Her second album for
Father/Daughter Records
, it also features slightly more assured performances from an artist to who favors -- even champions -- homespun immediacy and straight talk over the filtered and refined. Speaking of straight talk, "Desperate" sees
McClellan
confessing to a neediness that's out of balance ("I know I probably came on a little strong"). Its sashaying, midtempo strumming is accompanied by a quietly wailing lead guitar line, lively bass, and steady drums. She turns to instruments like rustic violin, accordion, bongo or similar, and brass in addition to guitar on "No Wind." It opens with a rattlesnake-like shaker that's sustained throughout the lament to self-consciousness and overthinking. On a similar theme, "Trying Too Hard" ("And I think it's wearing me down") is a spare indie rock ditty that gets sick of itself halfway through and breaks into an instrumental jam. Although self-loathing is a running state of mind here -- the dramatic string-ensemble entry, "Gone," is about losing a part of oneself -- there are affectionate moments to be found, like the brighter "Feel You" and alternative country-rock duet "Veronica," an album highlight. While arrangements are varied,
is consistently candid, ramshackle, and hooky, and
's voice -- in both literal and metaphorical senses -- remains distinctly her own. ~ Marcy Donelson
Anna McClellan
launched her music career from her hometown of Omaha, she relocated to New York while working on her second full-length, 2018's
Yes and No
, which was partially tracked in both cities. Two years later,
I saw first light
finds her back in Omaha, reflecting on the intervening period. Her second album for
Father/Daughter Records
, it also features slightly more assured performances from an artist to who favors -- even champions -- homespun immediacy and straight talk over the filtered and refined. Speaking of straight talk, "Desperate" sees
McClellan
confessing to a neediness that's out of balance ("I know I probably came on a little strong"). Its sashaying, midtempo strumming is accompanied by a quietly wailing lead guitar line, lively bass, and steady drums. She turns to instruments like rustic violin, accordion, bongo or similar, and brass in addition to guitar on "No Wind." It opens with a rattlesnake-like shaker that's sustained throughout the lament to self-consciousness and overthinking. On a similar theme, "Trying Too Hard" ("And I think it's wearing me down") is a spare indie rock ditty that gets sick of itself halfway through and breaks into an instrumental jam. Although self-loathing is a running state of mind here -- the dramatic string-ensemble entry, "Gone," is about losing a part of oneself -- there are affectionate moments to be found, like the brighter "Feel You" and alternative country-rock duet "Veronica," an album highlight. While arrangements are varied,
is consistently candid, ramshackle, and hooky, and
's voice -- in both literal and metaphorical senses -- remains distinctly her own. ~ Marcy Donelson