Search - Jorane :: 16 Mm

16 Mm
Jorane
16 Mm
Genre: Pop
 
Jorane's self-produced second disc may take its name from a film format that is modest in size, but the music is definitely closer to 70mm in scope. In 16mm, the Montreal-based singer and cellist has created a much more sa...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Jorane
Title: 16 Mm
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Release Date: 10/2/2001
Album Type: Import
Genre: Pop
Style: Vocal Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 0731458922421, 064027451825, 731458922421, 731458922421

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Jorane's self-produced second disc may take its name from a film format that is modest in size, but the music is definitely closer to 70mm in scope. In 16mm, the Montreal-based singer and cellist has created a much more satisfying disc than Vent Fou, her precocious debut. While she may still attract comparisons to Kate Bush, Tori Amos, and Dead Can Dance's Lisa Gerrard, Jorane confidently stakes out more of her own terrain. On "By Feet from" and "Pour Gabrielle," her plaintive singing and cello playing are effectively juxtaposed with the nimble, subtle rhythms that lie deep in the songs. With its lush, multitracked vocals, the gorgeous three-part "Film" has a depth and richness missing in Enya's lullabies. But 16mm is too compelling to serve as musical wallpaper. The centerpiece is the eight-minute "Work No. 3," a brooding song on which Jorane sings wordless incantations. On "Chouette," she gets more playful, mewling like a cat over a jazz riff by bassist Thomas Babin and clattery percussion by Genevieve Jodoin and Alexis Martin. "Hello" is an offbeat piece of percolating babble that recalls the work of American composer Meredith Monk. The closing songs--the ghostly "Nouvelle" and "My Little Luck"--are equally endearing. On the latter, she croons while plucking out a melody that bears an odd resemblance to Otis Redding's "Sitting on the Dock of the Bay." (That melody recurs in the hidden bonus track, a full-band version of "My Little Luck" that includes a lovely vocal duet by Jorane and Jodoin.) The album benefits greatly from a sense of economy and restraint that was mostly absent on the melodramatic Vent Fou--the music on 16mm is intricately detailed but not overly ornate. On this rich and emotionally affecting disc, Jorane proves to be a performer capable of subtlety as well as intensity. --Jason Anderson

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CD Reviews

Magical, strange and important.
homogenik | Québec | 06/08/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Jorane decided to pick out a layer off her first album and work on it thoroughly on this one and it has paid off. '16mm' is a more cohesive, haunting, beautiful and listenable record than 'Vent fou' was, even though that one was already astounding. On here Jorane experiments with moods, rythms and arrangements. You can feel the passion for music and the lust for life through every song, even though many are quite dark. She also decided to give up words for this album, which to me is a good thing because I always felt they were intruding on her universe before. Her voice does not need any word to speak. A magical, strange and important album that I will always cherish. My second favourite album of 2000 and a must for all fans or admirers of Dead Can Dance, Godspeed you Black Emperor! or Tori Amos."
Jorane's music is on its own astral plane.
D. Mok | Los Angeles, CA | 12/02/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"When I bought Jorane's first album Vent Fou, I immediately discovered that it worked marvellously well as temp music for films I was cutting. Her songs are like short experimental films in themselves, conjuring such disparate and complex emotions and colours and they seem to pop out of the spectrum of sound. Jorane makes that analogy with her second record -- 16mm being a treasured motion-picture-film format, especially for independent and experimental filmmakers -- and continues on her madcap musical journey with another record that's never going to get played at parties or on the radio, but will thrill the judicious listener with its unstoppable audacity.While Vent Fou reminded me of Sinead O'Connor's The Lion and the Cobra, this record conjured up Lisa Germano with its opening tracks "Ghost" and "By Foot from...", which are much more fragile and tender than anything on Jorane's first record. The two tracks flow into each other so seamlessly that I always think they're one song if I'm not looking. "Pour Gabrielle" shows that Jorane can write a more traditional-sounding (relatively!) French folk tune if she wanted to; the three-part songs "Film I, II and III" are sweeping in their dramatic cello moans and Jorane's gorgeous vocals; and "Chouette" is Zappa-esque in its bouncy, humorous percussion.Come to think of it, this record sounds a little like Joe Hisaishi -- in French, on LSD. I think my desperate attempts to make comparisons to pre-existing artists is simply a response to Jorane's baffling musical imagination. She is, in a word, unclassifiable. And no doubt I will keep listening -- Jorane is like a mirror into parts of the consciousness you can't access through normal means."