She’s
certainly done so for this listener over the course of all three of her albums.
If this one, co-produced by Buddy Miller, is the breakthrough it’s getting
called (I'm such a fan of all three, it's hard to make that distinction), it may just be this sharp focus. Though the arrangements
are gorgeous, they tend to be minimal--a gentle interplay between guitars with the
occasional glimmer of steel and keys. The virtue of the production is the
way it stays out of Gillis’s way and primarily serves to complement and highlight
what she does with just the right words and a voice that takes
those words where no one else could go.
The
blessing and perhaps curse of being Ariana Gillis is that she’s dazzling. Her
vocals spring from clinched deep altos to wide-open ethereal heights. On the menacing “Slow Motion
Killer,” when she sings “feel the chill shiver up right into your skeleton,” she
is (perhaps somewhat unwittingly) describing her effect on listeners. She indeed
seems to know this when she repeats the cry-of-a-refrain, “I’m in
your brain.” Jim Hoke’s saxophone launches into an erratic, explosive
response--those listener bones contorting past control.
What makes
her more than a fascinating talent is her unrelenting desire to get at the
truth in the moment. The record bounces through a dialectic. She begins with
the gritty “Dirt Gets Dirty,” digging holes to escape her own prison, and she
immediately follows that by reaching back for a trapped friend on “The Maze.”
She confronts isolation on “The Feeling of Empty” and finds there a
zen-like acceptance before contrasting it with the terminally wounded character
in “Jeremy Woodstock.” The record centers around womanhood, both contemplating
a (her?) mother’s age and wisdom on “Rock It Like Fantastic” and her own
wholeness at the point of severing a relationship, “Less of a Woman.” (Glimpses of each cut and downloads available here--https://www.arianagillis.com/)
The
trilogy that comes next is defiant and, though hard fought, triumphant. “White
Blush” is a seemingly delicate creation—at points just the drummer's sticks and stabs of
guitar, eventually bolstered by banjo—about refusing the equation of vulnerability
and weakness. “Slow Motion Killer” and “You Don’t Even Know My Name” take the concept of misleading appearances even further. In “Name,” she describes the impossible
princess at the heart of this fairy tale as someone who “goes mad at night” and
is “low in the afternoon,” but she points out this is exactly how she lures you
in—“maybe you see the same things in you.” None of these dangers and flaws make
these characters lesser women; they make them more fully human.
The
record ends with hauntings. “Lost with You” describes a ghost of a relationship she never wants
to leave, and its gentle arpeggios and “silver tears” offer a grace to mourning that may never end. At the same time, the orphaned
singer in “Dream Street,” contrasts the loss of her mother with her ongoing struggles. "I'm going to play it so hard," she sings of her "busted up guitar," and in doing so, she holds tight to that ribbon and pulls out of "The Maze's" darkness and into its light.
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