Album Review: Jen Cloher - Jen Cloher

7 August 2017 | 3:06 pm | Chris Familton

"Her most honest, clear-cut and autobiographical release to date."

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This is album number four for Jen Cloher and in keeping with the title and stark artwork - featuring Cloher naked and with guitar - it is her most honest, clear-cut and autobiographical release to date.

So many songwriters cloud their ideas and experiences in metaphors and diversionary tactics, but Cloher goes straight for the literal and personal, detailing the trials and tribulations of extended periods apart from her partner (and guitarist) Courtney Barnett, suburban malaise, gay marriage, Dirty Three and the shallowness and strain of the music industry. It amounts to an internal and external state of the nation address, delivered with poetic poise and intellectual observation.

Musically, Cloher and her band frame her songs with a loose, indie-rock sound that can be locked and direct with a gentle toughness (Shoegazers), drifting and dreamy (Regional Echo) or noisy and surging like Sleater-Kinney (Strong Woman). That stylistic range creates a flow and dynamism that complements the songs perfectly, ensuring the focus remains on Cloher and her lyrics. That intimacy takes the listener right to that place side-of-stage at a Dirty Three show or a kitchen table with your loved one 17,000 km away.

It's hard to distil one's thoughts and emotions into song with such self-awareness, artistic confidence and lack of pretence, but Cloher has, quite wonderfully, done just that.

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