The Needle Drop

jenny hval

Jenny Hval & Susanna - "I Have Walked This Body"

New TracksjeremyComment

Jenny Hval and Susanna are both well-respected Norwegian singer-songwriters with striking voices who favor unique, complex, and often quite minimal compositions. Last year, Hval released a pretty good experimental pop LP called Innocence is Kinky, and Susanna released her fourth solo full length (she has an additional three under the name Susanna & the Magical Orchestra), The Forester. Together on this new collaborative project, they form a very clear bond between their favorite styles.

"I Have Walked This Body" opens on a dark, somber drone, with Hval delivering a keening but mostly placid vocal. Soon though, things get weird. An eerie vocal affect and some well-placed static later, it almost leaks into Shaking the Habitual territory. Both singers' voices get nicely showcased here, as the song slowly morphs and slides through a few different phases, before growing quite cacophonous and intoxicating, and then finally collapsing back into the void from whence it came. The two women clearly know what they're doing here. Their collaborative album is a whopping 15 tracks long, so I am very interested to see what they do across such a huge canvas.

Meshes of Voice comes out Aug 19 via SusannaSonata.

Jenny Hval - "The Seer"

New TracksadminComment

Singer-songwriter Jenny Hval has a sharp, interesting voice that is equally matched by the odd beauty of the music she surrounds herself with. This adventurous personality Hval's got was also on display through the track I previously posted on this blog, "I Called," which is much noisier. In contrast, "The Seer" is a chilly ballad where the vocals really lead the way through droning layers of organ and sparse percussion toward the finish. Enjoy!

Jenny Hval - "I Called"

New TracksadminComment

A new track from Norwegian singer-songwriter Jenny Hval. Her next album, Innocence Is Kinky, will be dropping April 19th via Rune Grammofon.

"I Called" is an exercise in noisy guitars, passionate singing, and strange vocalizations. Jenny definitely displays a knack for taking familiar rock and pop sounds, but turning them into something uncompromisingly weird. Enjoy!