I really loved 'Forever Blue', some of her other work was released under my radar, so glad to hear from her again. The opening track, "Poison," which is one of the lead singles, makes it clear that she is not just another haunted folk crooner, as it locks into a solid groove. There is a more depressive vibe to the second, which carries a more minimal arrangement and a slight drone to allow her room to lay the vocals over. The swell of the song has more in common with post-rock. There is more of a grooving motion to "Little By Little." Which, even with the synth darkening things in the background it is the most accessible song thus far. This comes from how the vocals interplay with the drums. The guitars slowly build to expand the dynamics.
"Hold it Together" finds her vocals holding onto a fragile piano chord progression. This was one of the first three singles released for the album. It's a power ballad of sorts, as you are led to believe it's going to stay in the direction it was headed for the first half of the song until the guitar comes in. It pulls everything together and makes it make sense. There is a more pastoral post-rock feel to 'Outlines," which she once again slowly builds but with a slight country twang filling the empty spaces. The fact that she takes the songs into the places she does is half the appeal. There is a melancholy wandering to this album that is not overtly dark enough to be called goth.
She often gets called "death gospel," and I am not hearing it on this album. Of course, it can be premature to second-guess where she is going to take any of these songs. "I've Seen Enough" has more of a folk feel, with a slight touch of jazz underpinning the vocal phrashing. You have to allow yourself to get midway into her songs before you can be certain of what she is going for. This forces me to withhold judgment when calling something a ballad, as she could bust out with driving guitars at any moment, but that does not happen on "I've Seen Enough." The drums stay pretty minimal. "The Veil" heads in a similar direction. In fact, it starts off even more minimal. It turns out that one actually a ballad. She does not need driving drums, but it is a lot cooler when she has them, as proven on "Just a Shadow". It almost feels like it could be an A Perfect Circle song. She also proves she can belt it out likea rock singer when called for.
All the elements of "Breathe" keep it flowing, even before the drums come in. It rides the line between dark folk and indie rock. It is one of the album's darker songs. It is another where the guitar opens it up at the midway point. Even on the second-to-last song, this formual does not get old. 'The Gentle Harm" leans more on her vocals. She laments as much as she sings here, though, using enough breath in her voice to work. Guitars begin to emerge as the song crept to the midway point again, as a sorrowful piano line drifts in. Almsot right at the three-minute mark, it does as expected. I will give this album a 9.5, as it is a well produced and polished return for her that is emotionally powerful and beautifully sung.

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