Sunday, August 6, 2017

Julia McDonald - Gravity (2016)




Written by Lance Wright, posted by blog admin

The six song EP Gravity is a monumental debut for nineteen year old Florida native Julia McDonald and gets opens up a new avenue of her musical journey loaded with promise. Many times we hail newcomers for the remarkable maturity displayed in their art, but it seems almost feeble to suggest with McDonald. She clearly has much to offer the pop world, but there isn’t a single cut on Gravity that smacks of pandering to takes short cuts to garner the listener’s attention. The songs on Gravity explore experiences and interpersonal relationships with rare insight, a flash of the poetic, and undeniable vulnerability. Her ability to bring these lyrics to life with incredibly dramatic phrasing is another facet of her presentation that helps put everything over the top. There isn’t a hint of filler on Gravity and the confidence she displays on each of its songs is nothing less than inspiring.

The title song begins things quite auspiciously. “Gravity” has a relaxed tempo and relies on acoustic guitar more than any other single instrument. There are light keyboard touches scattered through the song and the drumming gives this opening performance quite a solid foundation. Exactly like the EP’s other songs, the title number has great focus and shows McDonald’s penchant for avoiding any self indulgence. Acoustic guitar threads its way through the second song “Games” and the keyboard presence, while tasteful, is much stronger here, but it’s a far busier affair than the opener. McDonald handles the challenging vocal melody with great skill and conveys each line with the attentiveness it deserves. Keyboards and a compelling percussion track give “Pretty Committee” a very different feel than we’ve encountered so far on Gravity, but this illustration of McDonald’s diversity is quite credible and rates among the best songs on the release. “No Good for Me” has some of the best lyrics featured on the EP and is a relatively rueful look at a doomed connection. The first person point of view makes it a rather intimate experience and its unflinching appraisal of the narrator’s behavior sets it far apart from the usual pop song.

There’s a surprising amount of attitude coming from the EP’s penultimate song “Something to Talk About”, but it shares some similarities with the previous tune in the way it embraces a singer/songwriter aesthetic while still operating along clearly commercial lines. Much of its ultimately satisfying impact comes from McDonald’s vocal. Her phrasing really makes the most out of the lyric and imparts just enough velocity to key lines that it gives the performance a lot of its occasionally biting flavor. The musical intensity is further ramped up with the EP’s concluding number “Simpler Things”. McDonald has the sort of command over orchestrating dramatic tracks that many listeners might associate with rock bands and the heavy-hitting focus of a song like this, despite its moody air, makes for an excellent ending to Julia McDonald’s debut release. There’s a second EP soon to follow and, based on this effort alone, one can only assume that her ascent will continue unabated.

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