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Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton - Knives Don't Have Your Back (2006)

Posted By: Designol
Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton - Knives Don't Have Your Back (2006)

Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton - Knives Don't Have Your Back (2006)
MP3 CBR 320kbps ~ 114 Mb (incl 5%) | Time: 00:45:45
Genre: Indie Rock, Alternative, New Wave, Female Vocalists | Label: Last Gang Records | # Q2 00932

Knives Don't Have Your Back is the first album to be officially released by Canadian singer/songwriter Emily Haines (and the Soft Skeleton). The album was released in September 2006 on Last Gang Records. It debuted at 28 in Canada and has sold 20,000 copies there. She has stated that Metric is still her first priority. The album is a collection of piano-driven songs backed with soft strings and horns and is said to feature guest spots by Sparklehorse's Scott Minor, members of Stars, Broken Social Scene and Metric.
Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton - Knives Don't Have Your Back (2006)

Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton - Knives Don't Have Your Back (2006)

Emily Haines is so thoroughly the public face of the dance-happy neo-wavers Metric – quite literally, in that her fetching blonde looks are the basis of both of the band's album covers so far – that the idea of a solo album seems redundant at first. As it turns out, however, Knives Don't Have Your Back is utterly unique, far removed not only from Metric's often-hyper pulse but also from atmospheric post-rock gems like Broken Social Scene's gorgeous "Anthems for a 17-Year-Old Girl," still likely the song Haines is best known for overall. Members of both bands do appear here, but the focus of Knives Don't Have Your Back is strictly on Haines' vocals and piano. Recorded together live in the studio, with other instruments and vocals layered on afterwards, Haines' impressive keyboard skills (only hinted at in her other work) and alluring, throaty voice mesh perfectly; the combination gives Knives Don't Have Your Back the intimacy of a '70s singer/songwriter album, or perhaps that of a small-combo jazz album. That last comparison isn't at all that far-fetched: Haines is the daughter of the late Montreal jazz poet Paul Haines, and the spare black-on-gold all-text artwork is undoubtedly an homage to the similarly austere covers of her father's best-known albums, the Carla Bley collaborations Escalator Over the Hill and Tropic Appetites. An even closer comparison is Robert Wyatt, who provides a glowing testimonial on the back cover. Like Wyatt's solo work, Haines marries a sharp social conscience ("The Maid Needs a Maid," neatly riffing off an old Neil Young song, calmly eviscerates the frat-boy mentality in a single quiet verse) with a tendency toward elegiac, unhurried melodies. However, the keen pop scene that's Metric's strong suit can still be found on subtly hooky tunes like "Our Hell" and the simply lovely "Reading in Bed." Although far more low-key than Metric's nervy rock or Broken Social Scene's epic sweep, Knives Don't Have Your Back is a mature and engaging work revealing an exciting new side of Emily Haines, who is quietly turning into one of pop's most compelling presences.
Review by Stewart Mason, Allmusic.com
Emily Haines is the frontwoman for Toronto's indie dance-rock band Metric. Although her first record arrived several years after Metric had formed, Haines had always been writing her own material. With the encouragement of a friend, Haines decided to record the songs so they wouldn't be forgotten. After four years of putting together an album in four cities (Los Angeles, Montreal, Toronto, New York) with various contributors she dubbed the Soft Skeleton, Last Gang Records released Knives Don't Have Your Back in September 2006. The record, which leans toward a more introspective, quieter approach than Metric, features Scott Minor of Sparklehorse, Justin Peroff of Broken Social Scene, Evan Cranley of Stars, and James Shaw of Metric, and received a lot of positive critical response. In July of the following year What Is Free to a Good Home?, an EP that included five previously unreleased songs from the Knives Don't Have Your Back sessions as well as a remix of "Mostly Waving," came out.

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Tracklist:


1. "Our Hell" – 4:09
2. "Doctor Blind" – 3:57
3. "Crowd Surf Off a Cliff" – 5:56
4. "Detective Daughter" – 5:10
5. "The Lottery" – 3:45
6. "The Maid Needs a Maid" – 3:21
7. "Mostly Waving" – 3:12
8. "Reading in Bed" – 2:49
9. "Nothing and Nowhere" – 3:24
10. "The Last Page" – 4:49
11. "Winning" – 5:08


Personnel:

Bass, Guitar, Guitar [Pedal Steel] - Stewart Pack
Drums, Drum Programming, Guitar [Pedal Steel], Organ [Hammond], Keyboards [Rhodes] - Scott Minor
French Horn - Chris Seligman
Producer - Emily Haines, John O'Mahony
Strings - Tokai String Quartet, The
Trombone - Evan Cranley
Trumpet, Organ [Hammond] - Jimmy Shaw
Vocals - Emily Haines