A comfortable susurrus of breath cedes to the sound of fingers sliding over nylon guitar strings on “Holy Equation,” the opening observe of Anna Tivel’s Animal Poem. “I’m waking up early, I’m bussing the tables/This entire factor is mostly a hopeless equation,” she sings earlier than a mournful saxophone shimmers atop the formica. On the people singer’s seventh studio album, her songs are extra indictment than invitation: Witness the world we’ve made, and let your revulsion transfer you.
Whereas the Portland songwriter’s earlier information have constantly chronicled the downtrodden, Animal Poem brings sharper enamel to the trouble, delivering searing condemnations of indignities which have develop into so frequent as to really feel pedestrian. The title observe, a defeated snare-drum shuffle, describes “characters in fixed ache/Reaching for a strategy to style some magnificence,” from a panhandling mom with a cardboard signal to a magpie on the lookout for a diamond within the dying grass.
Tivel is at her greatest when the visions arrive entire and detailed, as tactile and searing because the hood of a sizzling automotive. “Hough Ave, 1966,” a retelling of Cleveland’s Hough Uprisings is especially heartbreaking on this sense, like a Twenty first-century homicide ballad. “The airplane touched down, Cleveland, Ohio,” she sings like somebody staring right into a whiskey glass. “I raised my collar to the chilly/On the cab experience dwelling, that tune was enjoying/‘Don’t let me be misunderstood.’” She describes somebody “raised on soul and operating hungry,” whose seek for love in “rock’n’roll or god and nation” ends with them residing in a automotive, then bleeding out on a metropolis nook. “There’s a purpose in your demise now,” she guarantees again and again, and perhaps it’s the reiteration that makes this declare appear determined, like she needs, impossibly, that it may soften the violence.
There’s hope right here, albeit measured. “White Goose” pads tentatively by its opening bars earlier than a flip in the direction of the jazzy. When Tivel’s not chronicling mammalian despair, she’s a wizard on par with The Climate Station at turning nature into a personality unto itself. “A inexperienced so shiny and tender, I acquired excessive sufficient to let it blow my thoughts,” she sings. Remembering a childhood goose hunt, “crimson rose blooming throughout the empty wildness he fell out of,” she lies down within the subject “to really feel one thing/Small and misplaced and stuffed with thanks.” The lyrics are so poetic they may evoke surprise in whole silence, however the instrumentation is simply as pristine: Sam Weber’s rubber-bridge guitar bounces jubilantly between Tivel’s voice and the parade of ecological marvels she describes, whereas Galen Clark’s piano apes the burbling brook, the polyrhythms of birdsong or rustling grass.