Maria Taylor

Something About Knowing

2013-11-05

1/2 of Azure Ray and Saddle Creek alum Maria Taylor is back with her fifth solo LP Something About Knowing. Starting her career with longtime friend and collaborator Orenda Fink in a band described by their label as "lushly haunted, dreamy folk pop," Taylor has been a regular on Conor Oberst (Bright Eyes)'s radar. She has also collaborated with the likes of Michael Stipe, Moby, and David Barbe. At the end of the day, this album sounds pretty familiar to anyone acquainted with Azure Ray or Taylor's previous solo work.

Guitar lines echo through an atmosphere wrought with reverb, bleepy-bloopy synth arpeggios dot the highway, and the drums provide a paint-by-numbers framework ready to go for any given 4:4 time signature, I-IV-V chord progression pop jam. Sure, there are folk and country influences here and there (the slide guitar on "Saturday in June," namely), but songs like "Tunnel Vision" denote that this is at its core a pop rock album. On the title track, a refrain of "I've got everything" repeats atop a buoyant and undeniably joyous melody. To say the lyrics on Something About Knowing are optimistic would be a massive understatement. In fact, I Had A Baby and Now My Life is Completely Shiny and Beautiful may have been a more apt title. Taylor's fifth solo attempt is absolutely pleasant, which in itself is the greatest flaw. 

Recommended Tracks: #3 "Tunnel Vision", #6 "Something About Knowing"

Sigmund Steiger

Quick Links:

More reviews tagged #Rock

  • reviewed 01/2008

    Brett Mitchell
    Small House

  • reviewed 10/2013

    TOMMY MALONE
    NATURAL BORN DAYS

  • reviewed 10/2015

    The Como Brothers Band
    Imagination

  • reviewed 03/2010

    NICK CURRAN AND THE LOWLIFES
    REFORM SCHOOL GIRL

  • reviewed 05/2011

    ERLAND AND THE CARNIVAL
    Nightingale

  • reviewed 03/2007

    The Innocence Mission
    We Walked In Song

Compiled by the WYCE Journalism Club

The opinions expressed in these reviews are those of the individual volunteers that submitted the article and do not necessarily reflect the views of WYCE or GRCMC; nor its staff, donors, or affiliates.