Meghan Cary - Building This House
2012, Meghan Cary
2012, Meghan Cary
Meghan Cary was Indie before Indie was cool. The former theater actress fell into
songwriting through personal tragedy in the late 1990’s. What began as catharsis and tribute to her
then-recently deceased fiancé turned into a win of Billboard Magazine’s
Critics’ Choice for Best Newcomer in
1998. Cary was quickly drawn into the
folk scene, touring extensively and recording/releasing three critically
acclaimed albums. Cary met her husband,
Peter Farrell (The BlackTails) at a Meghan Cary show at CBGB’s Gallery, at a
time when touring was becoming old hat.
She settled down and built a home and a family, but music was never
really gone from her life. Cary returns
on January 31, 2012 with her first album in eight years, Building This House. A story
of recovery, rebuilding and ultimately, happiness, Building This House is a personal tale full of the resilience of
the human spirit. And while Meghan Cary
has been rightly compared to the likes of Shawn Colvin, the Indigo Girls,
Natalie Merchant and Stevie Nicks over the years, on Building This House she offers a voice that’s influenced by those
above, but distinctly her own.
Cary gets started with the title track, a refreshingly
smooth and mature piece of pop songwriting that’s an ode to family to be. Cary’s voice is mildly soulful, and the
almost harpsichord style sound from the synth gives this something of a
baroque-pop ballad feel. “Lost You In
The Light” is a brilliant marriage of poetry and music. Cary’s mildly soulful pop arrangement wraps
itself around lyrics about the human tendency to lose sight of what’s important
from time to time. This organic blend of
thought and muse reflects an artist who spends a lot of time inside her own
thoughts, yet still manages to convey the output in an artful manner. “Responsibility” is a morality tale told from
a personal perspective, reflecting on those we see around us in hardship every
day. The message is solid and poignant
in difficult economic times, but the subject has been covered many times over
with more power. Nevertheless, the
wonderfully jazzy piano work underscores an arrangement that will get this song
some attention.
“I Might Miss You” shows off Cary’s ear for melody in no uncertain
terms. A song about discovering what you
really want after you’ve already cast it aside, the song’s theme unrolls in
your brain like it was always written there and therefore refuses to leave. This sort of honest, sweet love song is
always appealing, but Cary delivers it with a sincerity and simple power that
is compelling. Cary digs into a
delicious blues/rock arrangement with lots of soul for “Through Walking”. This catchy number builds slowly, and will
likely become a live favorite. It would be
nice to hear Cary open this one up a bit more vocally, but the song sits well
as delivered.
“Invitation” is a powerful love song that might be about
opening your heart to love, or perhaps something a bit more carnal. Either way, Cary plays it straight and
manages to create one of the most intriguing listens of the newborn 2012. The compact pop/rock arrangement delivers the
song with an economy of style that allows the raw desire of the song to be the
star. “Darker Song” is all about the
unstable emotional ground that leads to a breakup. This woeful, haunting tune
finds Cary coming to terms with what her heart has known for some time. The universal appeal of this song will come
from the fact that almost anyone who hears it will have been there once in their
life, and Cary captures the moment in a near-perfect blend of poetry and
musical scenery.
“Moon Song” explores the complicated emotions that arise
from learning a former love has moved on. In this case he is getting married. This is all about the emotional turmoil that
turns up at such a time, particularly when unsettled feelings still in play,
and about the phone call or letters that happen at such times that rarely turn
out of the better. Cary plays this as if
she’s lived it, and her representation in song is compellingly human, mixing
desire, need, desperation and pain with that one little drop of hope that
drives humanity to seek the impossible.
This is a brilliant, if raw, piece of songwriting that will haunt
you. Cary closes with “Live!”, a Sunday
go to meeting song with a single message: seize the moment. The energy here is tremendous, and punctuates
the collection of songs about chances lost and gained with a simple directive:
never give up on yourself.
Meghan Cary has lived both dreams and nightmares, and
reflects upon them all in artful and symbolic songs on Building This House. This
album is a study in remembering that not only are good experiences build us,
but that the ones we’d rather forget are often even strong shapers of the people
we are to become. Cary shares her story
in honest and uncontrived language throughout the album, and blends these
stories with arrangements that often perfectly shadow the mood of each moment. The only possible complaint about the album
is that it took Meghan Cary eight years to put it all together. Listeners will find themselves fervently
hoping that it won’t be eight years until the next one.
Rating: 5 Stars (Out of 5)
Learn more about Meghan Cary at www.meghancary.com, where you can pre-order Building This House, as well as as purchase copies of her albums New Shoes, Onion Dream and Live At Your House. You can also get a free song download from the new album for signing up for Cary's mailing list.
1 comment:
Thanks so much Wildy, for listening with heart wide open.
Love........Meghan
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