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Pick up the Featured Album of the Week in the XPN Music Store
Read the Review - Check out the XPN Music StoreYour purchase from Amazon.com that starts from a link on XPN.org, supports the music your hear on WXPN. Check out the hand-picked music selection in our WXPN Picks at Amazon.com section. You'll find the same prices as you would going directly to Amazon.com, and you can download to your music player, or order the CD online. Tune in to the XPN Morning Show each Monday to hear, Host, Mike Vasilikos, review XPN's Featured Album of the Week. This week's album is....
Sharon Van Etten - Tramp (Jagjaguwar)It seems that whoever crosses the path of Sharon Van Etten eventually falls under the spell of her songwriting and subtle magnetism. In addition to a growing fan base and critical appeal, fellow musicians have taken notice of the once independent singer-songwriter. Perhaps there’s no better example of such admiration than on Sharon’s new album Tramp. In addition to producer Aaron Dessner, a legion of notable indie-rockers helped make Tramp, one of the more confident and surprisingly engaging early releases of the year. Up to the release of Tramp, Sharon Van Etten gained a decent bit of exposure by being the first artist featured in WXPN’s music and video collaboration series with Weathervane Music called Shaking Through. That recognition led Sharon to a series of dates opening for The National. And it certainly helped that both artists call home to Brooklyn, New York. Dessner would sign on to produce Tramp, which is also Sharon’s first album for the Jagjaguwar label (Bon Iver, Okkervil River). Sharon and Aaron also recruited some other notable musicians to record on the new project, including Aaron’s brother Bryce who also plays in The National. Jenn Wasner of the Baltimore indie-rock duo Wye Oak contributes backing vocals, Matt Barrick of The Walkmen adds drums and Zach Condon of Beirut harmonizes and shares a verse with Van Etten on the song “We Are Fine.” For folks that have heard of Sharon Van Etten and are familiar with her previous independent releases, the attraction has always circled around the intimacy of her recordings. Her confessional and fragile songs are soaked in honesty and despair. And while the songs on Tramp are certainly not bright and shiny, there is a certain confidence that is developing with her as a songwriter. Tramp has a sonic boldness to it; it’s a bit more muscular and bigger in its production that we’ve heard from Sharon before. That reflects in the songwriter as well. On Tramp we’re all witnessing a songwriter that is evolving and gaining momentum note by note. Click here to see the complete list of WXPN Featured Albums. |
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