KRISTI RAE: Things We Had To Let Go

kristi rae

Things We Had To Let Go

© 2006 kristi rae (837101211208)

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Kristi Rae is a singer-songwriter from Austin who makes deceptively unassuming, very quiet, mostly acoustic-guitar driven music.

tracks

1 Right Back To You
2 No Sun Today
3 The Ballad of Cherokee Bill
4 O, White Bird
5 All the Paths
6 Shiner
7 Morning Song
8 Any Life at All
9 Your Song
10 Things We Had To Let Go

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notes

French poet and author Victor Hugo said that music expresses those things that can’t remain silent. And although Angleton, Texas seems as far from France as Pluto is from the sun, music found a way to break the silence of a young woman who not only has something to say, but something worth hearing. Kristi Rae, who now lives in Austin, had an epiphany at a folk festival: the power of joys and sorrows of life are wholly enshrined in music. So, in her early 20’s, Kristi began playing guitar and laying out for all to see the intimate details of life as she perceived it. Kristi found resolve in the strength of fellow heroines from Virginia Woolf to Ani Difranco ; people who not only stand for what they believe, but in this world of credulity, people who stand out for their beliefs—she became one of those people.

It would be a few years of playing venues and charities in Houston that Kristi decided her life’s ambition was not to be a this or a that, but instead, a musician. She has traveled throughout the U.S., reaching out to others through her tender voice and memorable melodies, and finding inspiration in the uncanny human condition.

In 2005, Kristi Rae completed the first entry in what is sure to become an ever-expanding catalogue of originality. Various Means of Transportation, which transports the listener through a lifeline, evinces memories of childhood, examines the present, and considers the future. This debut recording is a great introduction to not only her music, but to Kristi. Wasting no time, Kristi has recently recorded her sophomore album just one year later, Things We Had To Let Go.

Things We Had To Let Go is introspecting of detachment and release. The album explores the isolation evoked by life’s darker turns, such as “we seem to thrive on early instincts of not opening up to say what hurts, or what loves”. The intimacy of subjects like these imposes upon reality a numbness that Kristi so eloquently describes; “here on this mountain, we don’t fight at all, we never even talk about it, we watch it go away”. Track 3 quickly whisks the listener up and lifts into a chorus of Fender Rhodes, xylophone, jangling guitars and even a sweeping broom on “The Ballad of Cherokee Bill”. In its entirety, the album is a collection of peaks and valleys that easily resembles the landscape of any life that is open and true. Things We Had To Let Go encompasses nature, fiction, reality, and loss to carry the listener to a meadow where all things are released.

With such strong statements, it will be interesting to see where Kristi Rae takes her music from here. Likely, our ears will be equally rewarded in 2007.

reviews

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  • this whole record has got a sort of sweet sensibility to it. Even though the son
    author: collected sounds

    There is something familiar about Kristi Rae's voice, but I can't seem to place it. At times I am reminded of Dar Williams. But that might be because these songs, like Dar's, are story songs for the most part. The vocals and lyrics play more of a roll than the guitar playing. That's not to say the guitar playing isn't good, it is. It just knows when to stay in the background is all. Kristi Rae sometimes uses that effect where her voice is either amplified oddly or there are layers of vocals singing in unison. It's an interesting technique and gives a bit of an eerier quality to the songs in which it's used. ('No Sun Today' is a good example). 'The Ballad of Cherokee Bill' has a sweet sound that feels very cheery. 'All the Paths' is a standout perhaps because of its minor keys and slighting haunting sound. This might be my favorite, at least today. It's simple, yet complicated. Very nice. I noticed that Tim and Terri Dittmar (of Annabella) play on this record and Tim helped produce, engineer and mix it. Sweet! In fact this whole record has got a sort of sweet sensibility to it. Even though the songs aren't always happy.

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