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[indie-folk, indie-rock] (2019) Sharon Van Etten - Remind Me Tomo...
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Category:Music Total size: 251.60 MB Added: 1 week ago (2026-01-21 00:08:01)
Share ratio:29 seeders, 3 leechers Info Hash:175454221E00F8AB61684F6B8CFDD492C3B226CC Last updated: 5 hours ago (2026-02-03 13:35:01)
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Description:
  Sharon Van Etten â Remind Me Tomorrow (2019)
Review:
We all approach artistic evolution in different ways. Die-hard fans might feel angry or betrayed at a musicianâs new direction. They might commit themselves to one particular album, destined to play it on repeat forever even as their favorite band grows and grows. Saturday Night Liveâs recent critique on the matter, using the always divisive Weezer as a marker, proves as such: Sometimes weâre just not open to change. But the fact of the matter is people change, and as art is so often an extension of the inner-self, their music evolves, too. Singer/songwriter Sharon Van Etten has experienced a lot of change since the release of her last album, 2014âs Are We There, and theyâre the kind of life-altering shiftsânewfound romantic partnership, motherhood, career advancementsâthat are all but destined to reveal themselves in oneâs art. And here, on her fifth studio effort Remind Me Tomorrow, those evolutions are apparent in a powerful sonic swerve, and in Van Ettenâs desire to explore both nostalgia and rebirth, and maybe even how they intertwine. Remind Me Tomorrow is the first great rock album of the year, and it would behoove any and all of Van Ettenâs fans, even those who staunchly prefer her folk-leaning material, and rock ânâ roll aficionados of all stripes to open their ears (and their hearts) to this beautifully executed pivot. Remind Me Tomorrow is a New Yorkerâs album. And not just because the magnificent music video for single âSeventeenâ is Van Ettenâs self-described âlove letterâ to the city, though that clip, which shows her revisiting NYC venues like Union Pool and Pianos, is compelling enough to convince you of the Brooklyn-based artistâs fierce love for the place sheâs called home for almost 15 years. The whole album is a love letter to the cityâs sounds and colors. Van Etten wasnât herself present for NYCâs early 2000s rock renaissance (though Iâm sure her early-career stint at Brooklyn label Ba Da Bing was plenty educational), but there are nods to that eraâs finest visionaries around every corner: The intense, driving Strokes-reminiscent rock ânâ roll on âComeback Kid;â the synthy tick-tock of âNo Oneâs Easy To Love,â comparable to that of LCD Soundsystem. Van Etten has captured the scrappy mood of the Lower East Side and brooding drag of Brooklyn, all while musing on her life, her new love (with former drummer and current manager Zeke Hutchins) and amorphous career. In the past, Van Etten has specialized in lyrics thatâll make you weepâtales of disintegrated love, fodder for the heartbroken and, occasionally, remedies for the emotionally abused. These songs still possess the power to induce tearsâchills, at the very leastâbut thereâs not as much despair. On Remind Me Tomorrow, Van Ettenâs a wizened kind of happy. The album opener, âI Told You Everything,â is about bearing it all to a partner, with no fears or doubts. âI told you everything,â she sings. âNo changing my mind.â Later, on âMalibu,â as she ponders the longevity of her relationship, her imagery and narrative are as brilliant as ever. âI walked in the door / The Black Crowes playinâ as he cleaned the floor / I thought I couldnât love him anymore.â As ever, Sharon Van Etten can pack 25 layers in a single verse, multiple meanings in one specific personal anecdote. And for all its bold sonic upheavalsâthe addition of drum machines and electric shred and cavernous synthâRemind Me Tomorrow maintains Van Ettenâs gothic sensibilities. She moves me most when she sings in her dusky howl, like on the haunting (an overused word in criticism, but truly) âMemorial Day.â Sheâs some kind of ghoulish messenger, intent on singing the good word, but in a foreboding manner. âJupiter 4â (named for the synthesizer she used to write the album) is downright spooky; an alien-like synthline creeps along even as Van Etten sings lovesong lingo: âBaby, baby, baby / Iâve been searching for you.â Though she sings mainly of being at peace on this album, Van Etten is not quick to shed her dark side. âSeventeenâ is without a doubt the albumâs centerpiece. With those same yowling synths, she takes a turn for the Springsteen, allowing herself to float down memory lane. She certainly has the Bossâ flair for the sentimental, but she also takes youthâs appeal with a grain of salt (âI used to feel free, or was it just a dream?â), and the track is livewireâitâs so electrically charged, it could soundtrack an action movie. Sharon Van Etten was already one of the great lyricists of the â10s, but with this breathtaking new project, sheâs proved an artistic pliancy her contemporaries may not possess. She hit her stride with Are We There, but here sheâs not even on the ground. â pastemagazine.com
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Track List:
01 I Told You Everything
02 No One's Easy to Love
03 Memorial Day
04 Comeback Kid
05 Jupiter 4
06 Seventeen
07 Malibu
08 You Shadow
09 Hands
10 Stay
Media Report:
Genre: indie-folk, indie-rock
Origin: Belleville, Nova Jersey, USA
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits
Compression mode: Lossless
Writing library: libFLAC 1.3.0 (UTC 2013-05-26)
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