DAVE'S
DIARY - 23/8/11 - KIRSTY AKERS CD REVIEW
2011
CD REVIEW
KIRSTY AKERS
NAKED (OTHER TONGUES)
KIRSTY BARES ALL - CLAWS BONUS
"Screw
everyone in the industry/ throw up my food to make me real skinny/ jump
on the alcoholic bandwagon/ be told I'm a wanker but I'll do it all again."
- That's How You Get Famous - Kirsty Akers-Melody Pool.
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Hunter
Valley vamp Kirsty Lee Akers dropped more than her guard when she
cut her third album at the age of 23.
First there was her second Christian name - there's no Lee on the
front of the CD slick.
There's no costume either in Jesse Anderson's photo of Akers naked
in a tranquil forest setting.
Gone also is any pretence of civility towards rock, rap, disco, techno
and pop peers prancing lemming like in that mushrooming heretic herd
of oft-milked heifers.
Akers punctures pomposity of reality TV twerps and face book bovines
in her version of AI - artistic insemination by managers and marketeers.
The singer and Melody Pool, collaborator on seven songs, have drawn
their line in the gland.
Yes, they have lampooned Hollyweird harridans force-fed to the media
by their puppeteers. |
High profile
suspects nailed to that crass cross of consumerism include Britney Spears,
Jessica Simpson, Osbornes, Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan and others whose
names never invaded my memory bank.
And let's
not forget Kylies and Kyle with diverse degrees of talent but lethal doses
of trash rashes that make them fertile phone hackers' fodder.
Ironically, as the Akers parody burst from the sales chute another femme
fatale and exploited angel of the airwaves, Amy Winehouse, went to God
as her meal ticket punchers shed crocodile tears for the cameras.
Your reviewer can't claim historical innocence here.
In a previous life he was employed to write about dubious droogs - Boy
George, Wham, Bay City Rollers, Adam Ant, Johnny Rotten and vocally challenged
locals Midnight Oil, Rose Tattoo, Nick Cave, INXS and others drowned in
the mists of time and taste.
Luckily, the wolves have now decamped my door and I write for pleasure
- not pain.
And this is about the spiritual rebirth of Akers who traced her ancestry
to the indigenous Wanaruah clan who have called the Kurri Kurri environs
home for centuries.
TAYLOR
SWIFT - TOPICAL TREAT
"I'll
make my own dirty video, walk around naked like a skanky ho/ there's no
doubt I'll have the most views/ when I post me kissing Taylor Swift on
Youtube." - That's How You Get Famous - Kirsty Akers-Melody Pool.
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Akers
discovered her roots while climbing the family tree after the recent
death of her grandmother.
Whether the Wanaruah clan can protect Akers from targets of her artistic
satire is in the lap of local taste tsars.
First, in this commercial radio backwater, artists need mainstream
airplay.
That's not an easy task when airwaves are clogged with disposable
dross and comics whose next funny joke will be their first.
Akers, who won Tamworth Starmaker and a Golden guitar as a teenager,
took a 12-month hiatus after being rejected by a Nashville label.
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It's not
clear if the label was the same that signed Novocastrian neighbour Catherine
Britt as a teenager but dumped her after six years.
But, like Britt, the singer-songwriter boomeranged with new producers.
Britt enjoyed studio tutelage of her embryonic producer Bill Chambers
and Shane Nicholson for her fourth album.
Akers has chanced her muse and vocals on Olympian middle distance runner
Paul Greene, also a revered singer-songwriter, and Matt Fell.
She recorded her album at Green's Red Shelf studio on the NSW south coast
and Fell's Love HZ studio in Razor city where his clients include Sara
Storer, McAlister Kemp, Graeme Connors, Tracey Lee Killeen who also dropped
her Lee, Lianna Rose, Sam, Hawksley and Victoria Baillie.
Despite Green's distinctive harmonica, banjo, mandolin and banjo and bassist
Fell's guitar, banjo and keyboards Kirsty sounds like none of the above.
SUMMARY
JUSTICE
"My
face were the colours of a rainbow/ purple blue and yellow/ he took the
better part of me/ when I fired that shot that set me free." - Where
The Lonely's Found - Kirsty Akers-Melody Pool.
Melody
Pool
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Akers
kicks off her disc with affirmation action in Where The Lonely's
Found - her character avenges domestic abuse with summary justice
from the barrel of a gun.
She mixes and matches the plight of two marriage victims in a pair
of doomed unions and rhymes San Antone with "own" despite
an errant I being added to the spelling of the south Texas city where
Davy Crockett also suffered collateral damage.
Akers punctuates that angst-fuelled entrée and a jezebel ignited
cheating Pool tune Blackbird with a cover of the historic John Prine-Iris
De Ment duet In Spite Of Ourselves.
The latter was released as a single, replete with video and cameo
by Bob Evans, in the hope of leaping the radio moat with crossover
familiarity. |
Ironically,
the highlight of Prine's sole Australian tour in the eighties was a gig
on a unseasonally cold day in February at Hanging Rock racecourse - now
back in vogue.
Meanwhile back to Akers whose affirmative action returns in the sin and
gin cheating daily double The Axe Song and jailbreak mystery Sweet
Ol' Jackson.
Yes, the prisoner was sentenced for breaking hearts and is still on the
run from the law and lovers.
She scores a mood swing with positive love song Has Anybody Told You
- penned by Ashley Monroe, better known as writing partner of Britt and
more recently member of The Pistol Annies with Miranda Lambert and Angaleena
Presley.
Now, if the names of Monroe and Presley are familiar check out Akers previous
discs.
Presley, a prolific writer in the publishing stable of expats Barry &
Jewel Coburn, wrote title tracks of Akers albums Little Things
and Better Days.
She also penned Akers single Knocked Up - not the Loudon Wainwright
movie song - and customised The Territory.
DIRTY
FARMER'S DAUGHTER
"Lay
me down on the river bank/ wash me clean in the water/ drown away these
loveless sins/ of this dirty farmer's daughter." - Dirty Farmer's
Daughter - Kirsty Akers-Melody Pool.
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But
here it's Akers who takes the reins in It Gets To Me - the
tale of a vanquished victim who forgives her cheating charmer -
reprised from her debut disc.
And no country album is complete without an adulterous male spreading
his fertile seed into the loins of a sister of the soil and decamping.
Like so many reality rooted rural requiems from days or yore the
victim in Dirty Farmer's Daughter is forced to give up her
child for adoption.
That
song is a distant descendant of another Prine tune Unwed Fathers,
once cut by the late Tammy Wynette.
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And, of course,
a sibling of Sweet Bobby Ray who also flees the arms and charms
of a decimated damsel.
Akers adopts the persona of a guilt ridden guitar picking man who flees
the bed of his sleeping spouse in Satan's Game - third of a trilogy
and reportedly inspired by Tommy Johnson in the Coen Brothers movie O
Brother, Where Art Thou?
Akers dynamic disc is a refreshing attempt to break her embryonic muse
from the mainstream mould.
But, here in the unlucky radio country, that's a tough task.
Sisters in song - Kasey Chambers, Catherine Britt and Suzie Dickinson
- chanced their soulful music in the shrink-wrap market.
I suspect Akers might need to prolong her Americana invasion this year
and emulate mentors diverse as Matraca Berg, Marshall Chapman and new
age outlaw Jamey Johnson.
Sadly, exposure for her Hallam Hotel gig on August 22 with Jace Everett
fell between the media cracks.
But that may change at the Gympie Muster where a captive audience goes
with the territory.
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