Mirel Wagner

簡介: The great Townes Van Zandt once said there are two kinds of music: &The blues and zip-a-dee-doo-dah.&
 
According to this, Mi 更多>

The great Townes Van Zandt once said there are two kinds of music: &The blues and zip-a-dee-doo-dah.&
 
According to this, Mirel Wagner's self-titled debut falls solidly into the blues category. &Songwriting can hardly be more minimalistic, no-frills, more strict as Mirel Wagner's sparse music,& according to German magazine Spex; we agree.
 
Mirel Wagner grew up in Finland.
 
Jean Ramsay, a Finnish journalist, came across Mirel at an open mic session in Helsinki. He was particularly convinced of her talent, raved about her in an early article and recommended her to others. So, without producing a demo or contacting any record labels, Mirel found herself sitting in a real recording studio. Over two days she recorded 12 songs straight. Nine of them can be found on her debut, which was first released in Finland through the indie label Kioski Recs and mainland Europe through Bone Voyage Recordings, and is now seeing a wider release across North America through Friendly Fire Recordings. Whether in Finland, France or Germany, journalists who have listened closely are full of praise for this unique young talent who has appeared, seemingly out of the blue, with her otherworldly gloomy folk.
 
This debut is quiet and intimate. It's a minimalist record, in the best sense: stoicly picked, almost trance-inducing acoustic guitar, a voice you wouldn't expect to hear from a 23 year old, and songs that mostly avoid classical folk song structure (they're &lonely prayers in expressionistic language&, writes another German critic). Everything is stripped to the bone and maintains a beautiful, strangely fragile tension, even more so during Mirel's live performances. &The singer is majestic in her sobriety,& a French critic has written of Mirel. &She will literally knock you down with her candor and tenderness, captivating with her melodic charisma, wonderful and quiet... It's music from another time, fabulous and elusive.&
 
As the ghostly mood floats through her album, Mirel's lyrics deal with equally dark themes: necromancy, love, death and the devil. These are not happy songs. But Mirel avoids any overly theatric gestures and instead imbues her songs with a subtle lyrical grace, even when the songs are about dead lovers and equally dark topics. In this sense, Mirel draws from a deep tradition of moody, introspective songwriters that includes such luminaries as Leonard Cohen and Nick Drake.
 
All of which begs the question: how can a young woman sound so sad? In an interview with the German Rolling Stone, Mirel said: &I think it's a bit lazy to say that I make sad music. Of course you might say the lyrics are bizarre or dark. But for me, the songs are first and foremost filled with desire. And there's this hope in them that love overcomes everything. What I find sad is the soulless music that is on the radio most of the time, music that is simply product. If there is no life in it... is this not much sadder than a melancholic song?&