Jeremy Fisher - Let It Shine Redux (2025)

Artist: Jeremy Fisher
Title: Let It Shine Redux
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Jeremy Fisher Music
Genre: Folk Pop, Indie Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:38:16
Total Size: 88 / 233 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Let It Shine Redux
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Jeremy Fisher Music
Genre: Folk Pop, Indie Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:38:16
Total Size: 88 / 233 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Lemon Meringue Pie
02. Suckerpunch
03. High School
04. Shooting Star
05. On Par
06. Fall For Anything
07. Singing On The Sidewalk
08. Drunk On Your Tears
09. Living On The Moon
10. Let It Shine
11. Just Friends
Canadian folk popster Jeremy Fisher has been getting back to his earlier material lately. Let It Shine Redux is his latest installment of re-recording his earlier material, this time an acoustic reworking of his first major label LP. A lot of artists have been drawn to the redux path in the last two decades, mostly to squeeze a bit more on the royalty side away from record companies. The first instance I recall was Squeeze’s Spot the Difference LP from 2010. The band’s reasoning was pretty straight up. With boomer nostalgia fueling the use of 1980s music in movies and TV the band wanted their re-recorded versions to be licensed for use instead of the ones owned by their former record company. And who can blame them. In Fisher’s case though, as he never really broke that big commercially, the reasoning might be different. This time out is a bit different from his 2022 reworking of Goodbye Blue Monday, retitled Hello Blue Monday. That record completely retooled the musical approach, different instruments, sometimes different tempos. But Let It Shine Redux is more of an acoustic treatment, reducing the earlier record’s pop complexity to just acoustic guitars (rhythm and lead) and vocals (background and lead). And these are not even the first acoustic takes as a number of tunes from the record have already appeared in stripped down form on Fisher’s Acoustic Songbook I and II. Still, the versions here are different from all others and definitely worth the return visit.
The album features the same tracks as the original in the same running order. Opener “Lemon Meringue Pie” sets the all-acoustic tone and I’ll confess I worried as it got going that things might be too stripped down here. But when the chorus kicked in that Fisher magic simply could not be contained. Other songs like “Suckerpunch” and “High School” gain a fresh punch with these new arrangements while should-have-been hits like “Singing on the Sidewalk” sound no less AM radio fabulous. A number of songs from the original album were already pretty folky (e.g. “Fall For Anything,” “Drunk on Your Tears”) so Redux gives Fisher a chance to strike a different folk pose. And he does, drawing out new melodic possibilities from his material. That’s the thing about Fisher, he makes it all sound so simple, obscuring his songwriting prowess. Always more Paul Simon than Bob Dylan, Fisher’s material is usually hummable, often sing-along-able, sometimes just reverently moving. What I loved about Let It Shine was Fisher’s knack for getting just the right balance of quirky instrumentation and reliable hooks. Let It Shine Redux alters that balance for sure but the results are fresh and lively and no less compelling.