Rachel Kiel - Dream Logic (2020)

Artist: Rachel Kiel
Title: Dream Logic
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Independent
Genre: Indie Pop, Dream Pop
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 34:58
Total Size: 80 / 215 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Dream Logic
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Independent
Genre: Indie Pop, Dream Pop
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 34:58
Total Size: 80 / 215 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Car Crash Dream (3:04)
02. Late Night Drive (4:37)
03. Watch Yourself (2:28)
04. Keep That in Your Pocket (3:22)
05. Favorite Work (4:05)
06. I Don't Need You (3:49)
07. Do What You Want (2:26)
08. Sincere (3:37)
09. Discipline (2:59)
10. Ava Gardner (4:31)
Rachel Kiel’s third album, Dream Logic, begins and ends with a dream. “Foot on the pedal, I’m in control/What’s the worst that could happen?” she croons in the barn-burning opener, “Car Crash Dream,” a tense, percussion-saturated song about nightmares.
That lucid awareness of dawning powerlessness haunts the rest of the 10-track album. “Favorite Work” is a lush symphonic tribute to doing what you love that showcases Kiel’s yearning, silvery alto, while “I Don’t Need You” is all jangly pop. Some songs have the energetic feel of Eye to the Telescope-era KT Tunstall, while the sweeping drama of others is reminiscent of Phoebe Bridgers.
The dream world is a state of consciousness that the Chapel Hill songwriter and multi-instrumentalist says she’s orbited her whole life. The liner notes make a self-conscious reference to the adage “there’s nothing more boring than someone else’s dream,” but Dream Logic belies it. Nothing is boring about Kiel’s dreams. She has a remarkable way of universalizing both the material of the dreams themselves—vampires, car crashes, anxiety—and the way that dreams tend to leak over into real life, giving us longings and fears we can’t quite shake off.
That lucid awareness of dawning powerlessness haunts the rest of the 10-track album. “Favorite Work” is a lush symphonic tribute to doing what you love that showcases Kiel’s yearning, silvery alto, while “I Don’t Need You” is all jangly pop. Some songs have the energetic feel of Eye to the Telescope-era KT Tunstall, while the sweeping drama of others is reminiscent of Phoebe Bridgers.
The dream world is a state of consciousness that the Chapel Hill songwriter and multi-instrumentalist says she’s orbited her whole life. The liner notes make a self-conscious reference to the adage “there’s nothing more boring than someone else’s dream,” but Dream Logic belies it. Nothing is boring about Kiel’s dreams. She has a remarkable way of universalizing both the material of the dreams themselves—vampires, car crashes, anxiety—and the way that dreams tend to leak over into real life, giving us longings and fears we can’t quite shake off.