• Home
    • Little Tomodachi (ともだち)
    • About Me!
    • My Tumblr
  • Linktr.ee
  • Livros
    • Ainda a ler…
    • Christmas Books List!!! #2018
    • Liam Reads
    • WOOK
    • Leya
    • BERTRAND
    • wookacontece
    • Editorial Presença
    • Clube dos Livros
    • A mulher que ama livros
    • Livro e Café
    • Viajar pela Leitura
    • Baú da Tanocas
    • Criar Luz no Universo
    • El Viaje por un Libro
    • Um Blog Entre Bibliotecas
    • the book mermaid
    • Ministério dos Livros
  • Musica
  • Lifestyle
    • Dicas
    • Pets
    • MOSHI MOSHI NIPPON
    • SHOP
      • YumeTwins
      • TOKYOTREAT
      • Simplu
      • Hibiki-an
      • Goyaya – Loja Japonesa
      • JAPANHAUL
  • Vale a pena visitar…
    • O PORTO COOL
    • Almadeviajante
  • ainda a ler…
  • Christmas Books List!!! #2020

♥ Bubble Days…

~ (うたかたの日々)

♥ Bubble Days…

Tag Archives: Christine and the Queens – Christine and the Queens (Album)

Christine and the Queens – Christine and the Queens (Album)

26 Monday Oct 2015

Posted by ayuhcircus in Musica

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Christine and the Queens - Christine and the Queens (Album), music, Musica


The Christine and the Queens project is guided by one woman, the French synth-pop auteur Héloïse Letissier. At home she is a known quantity: She capped off a string of EPs and touring gigs with Lykke Li and Woodkid with her debut Chaleur Humaine in June of 2014. But the U.S. release this fall of Humaine, repackaged as a self-titled debut, marks her introduction to the American market: Some of the French lyrics were redone in English, accompanied by a couple of Anglophone bonus tracks. As with the French edition, the record starts with an unequivocal declaration of her arrival. “I’m a man now,” she sings in a bold voice on “iT”, “And there’s nothing you can do to make me change my mind.”

A few verses later, she offers up a line whose regal, gory quality seems worthy of Lorde orKanye: “I’ll rule over all my dead impersonations.” Out of context, it sounds like a very 2015 pop move: burying past incarnations of yourself that the public never even witnessed and calling yourself king from the off, fueled by nothing but divine belief in your own selfhood. Letissier has the chops and charisma to pull off this role, too: “iT” has gorgeous minimal production—just a sputtering beat, tarnished synth glimmers, and canny employ of sprite-like backing vocals. Her expressive voice leads the lone melody, at first vulnerable and then rasping with defiance.

But it’s a feint: Letissier spends the next 11 songs pulling back from this grandstanding (which was inspired by her discarding her feminine identity as a teenager) to explore the nuances of her queer identity and what that means in private and public spheres. On the way, she comes out with some pin-sharp lyrics to rival collaborator Perfume Genius’ “no family is safe when I sashay,” full of daring and vulnerable truths. “Science Fiction” unravels on spacey burbles that underpin the alienation she and her partner feel when out in public: “They look at me when I stare at you… In this sea of eyes, every move’s a coup.” Letissier reclaims the discrimination she experiences for not passing as a prescribed gender ideal on “Half Ladies”, which moves between percussive gasps indebted to Michael Jackson and pared-back, angular funk: “Every insult I hear back/ Darkens into a beauty mark.”

That particular image seems to reference the source of her own liberation. A few years ago, beset by depression, Letissier ran away from college in Paris and crossed the Channel to London, where she was taken under the wing of three Soho drag artists. They heard her humming and encouraged her to make music, so she locked herself away for weeks, garrote-style, as she taught herself to write. Letissier named her act Christine and the Queens in tribute to her saviors, an act that also highlights her knack for self-mythologizing. At the end of Christine and the Queens, there is a second arrival, “Here”, a work of unbroken tension hooked around disintegrating, crackling beats and an organ’s glow. She sings, in French, “I evolve in living trace.”

The production of Christine and the Queens follows that mystical sense of becoming. Most of the songs are built from tapestries of microbeats that have an organic, sinewy feel, unfolding with the intricate flow of a centipede’s spine. She often forms strong rhythms from a surprisingly delicate percussive backbone—”No Harm Is Done” has a feather-light, trap-indebted beat that sounds as though it was sampled from recordings of magnesium fizzling across water. Tiny shifts in impact or intensity can have a massive effect: The simple beat that hardens halfway through “Tilted” adds a new level of confidence to Letissier’s tale of a wonky but thriving relationship. It’s a constellation of experience, the sense of a body being animated, twitching and jerking into existence. Letissier literally espouses the power of movement on “Safe and Holy”, but the heavy beat and synth-scapes drown out the effect that flows naturally elsewhere.

Letissier’s melodic sensibility is as strong as her subtle percussion. “Paradis Perdus” is the work of a real pop scholar, an interpolation of Christophe’s 1973 song “Les Paradis Perdus”and the chorus of Kanye West’s “Heartless” that unites their common sense of loss over soft piano and a knocking beat. “Jonathan”, Letissier’s duet with Perfume Genius, confronts a lover whose internalized shame means that their relationship is only acknowledged by night. It’s a song of immense grace, the funereal pace guided by exquisite synths and expanding strings. “Can you walk with me in the daylight?” Letissier asks, her head held high.

Christine and the Queens is a beautiful, important negotiation of these liminal states at a time when the media is quick to bandy about the term “post-gender” as if the hard work is done. Her music is bold and fully formed, but Letissier unpeels the façade of outer confidence to shine a light on the way that queer identity requires constant negotiation, to deal with the world’s often unforgiving gaze and the one that can come from within—on “Safe and Holy”, she admits that her own eyes “mock and judge” her. It’s empowering, bold, and vulnerable, and made for dancing. Chaleur Humaine translates as “human warmth”, and the album makes good on that intimacy. You get the sense of Letissier guarding her own precious, burgeoning fire, and inviting listeners to share in its glow.

Source: http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/21147-christine-and-the-queens/

Release Date: October 16, 2015

Tracklist:

1.iT

2.Saint Claude

3.Titled

4.No Harm Is Done (feat. Tunji Ige)

5.Science Fiction

6.Paradis Perdus

7.Half Ladies

8.Jonathan (feat. Perfume Genius)

9.Narcissus is Back

10.Safe and Holy

11.Night52

12.Here

OVERALL RATING
starstarstarstarblankstar
4 stars

 

Christmas Books List! #2020

Quotes:

” … o verdadeiro sentido da vida está dentro de cada um de nós, que somos sempre mais fortes do que aquilo que imaginávamos e que só com ajuda de todos podemos ser inteiros, livres e felizes.” - Paola Peretti

Categories

March 2023
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« May    

Recent Posts

  • BoA – The Greatest (Album)
  • ZAQ – QUEEN (Digital Single)
  • Uru – それを愛と呼ぶなら (Single)
  • Tate McRae – i used to think i could fly (Album)
  • Nissy (Takahiro Nishijima) – Hocus Pocus 3 (Album)

Little Tomodachi (ともだち)

The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams. -Eleanor Roosevelt
📚Nova Leitura 2023 / 2️⃣6️⃣ : "Os Meus Dias na Livraria Morisaki" de Satoshi Yagisawa

Little Tomodachi (ともだち)

Little Tomodachi (ともだち)

Goodreads

Goodreads

oportocool – insider’s cool guide to Porto

 

ayuhcircus

ayuhcircus

I love music in general and I have a very bipolar taste. I listen to all music genres and I wouldn't be able to pick a favorite. I really love asian music.

Personal Links

  • bubbledaysblog

View Full Profile →

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,310 other subscribers
Follow ♥ Bubble Days… on WordPress.com

Recent Comments

Luís Fernando Dos Sa… on Laura Bretan – World I S…
Daron Palone on IU – LILAC (Album)
Matt on Masami Okui – 11-elevens…
Bashiek A. on Mai Fuchigami – MARIONET…
Airos on Seiko Omori – Kintsugi…

Blogs I Follow

 

 

 

Blog Stats

  • 101,216 Bubbles

Comunidade/Afiliados

WOOK - www.wook.pt

Read the Printed Word!

Start a Blog at WordPress.com.

My Eurofreaks

Our Kind Of Freak

Misa-chan's J-pop blog ♪

A translation of Japanese music, blogs, and magazines!

cristinalpf

Nicholas' Toy Chest

alanmking

A great WordPress.com site

"The End"

  • Follow Following
    • ♥ Bubble Days...
    • Join 73 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • ♥ Bubble Days...
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...