New Music Reviews – Sara Parkman, Anna Tivel, and Rema

Just mopping up a few 2022 records that I didn’t get to before the end of the year. Nigeria’s Rema plays smooth Afrobeats with some Arabian and Indian influences. Sweden’s Sara Parkman plays art-folk on an album titled after three kinds of love. Portland’s Anna Tivel’s fourth album is poised and insightful. All three sing beautifully.

Sara Parkman

Eros Agape Philia

2022, 8.5/10
If you’ve ever studied the Bible, you’re probably familiar with the three Greek words for different kinds of love. Eros is erotic love, agape is divine love, and philia is brotherly love. Swedish folk musician Sara Parkman was inspired by “studies of theology and bible texts on love, combined with inspiration from thinkers such as the mystic Gunnel Vallquist and the philosopher Byung-Chul Han.” There’s a lot going on musically – she’s ostensibly a folk artist, but there are dollops of Wagnerian bombast, and it employs modern synths and dance beats tastefully at times.

Parkman’s ability to mix and match genres evidence on the standout track ‘Till Salka’, which takes flight from meditative to a trippy dancefloor beat. If the below translation is accurate, she’s a strong lyricist as well.

You were alchemy and nylon stockings
We spooned and you were warm
And a promise of eternity
You were all those things, that I wasn’t
Like an Amelie from the deepest dreams of Västernorrland
Whom I still love

https://lyricstranslate.com/en/till-salka-salka.html

Swedish-Finnish singer-songwriter Markus Krunegård sounds great duetting with Parkman on ‘Mörkgröna älven’.

Parkman already has a distinctive and unique style figured out on her sophomore album – an impressive feat.


Anna Tivel

Outsiders

2022, 8/10
Anna Tivel makes small-scale music, with low-key tunes about ordinary people. She told Robert Horvat that “I’m drawn over and over to the small stories of people (myself included) just trying to get by, to do a little better, to feel some sort of beauty in an ugly world.” But her lyrics are disarmingly incisive at times.

You sit at the kitchen table, a six-pack and a capo
An artist and an asshole, you write all of your wrongs
And your heroes grow unruly, they overdose or just leave
Their lives are f***ed up movies and you’ve studied every one

Heroes, Anna Tivel

The entire record barely raises above a gentle conversation, but there is enough textural variation to keep things interesting. Piano and strings colour ‘Two Dark Horses’, while there’s a light drum machine on ‘Royal Blue’ and a slinky electric piano (I think?) on ‘Invisible Man’.

Tivel’s keenly observed vignettes are impressive.


Rema

Rave & Roses

2022, 7.5/10
Nigerian artist Rema describes his music as “Afrorave”, a subgenre of Afrobeats that includes influences from Arabian and Indian music. Starting off singing in Church, Rema’s popularity has grown quickly – he’s been featured on a Barack Obama playlist and has reached a billion plays on Spotify. Rema has a lovely voice, able to deliver rhythmic raps or dreamy singing. With the lovely singing, pretty production, and airy tunes, Rave & Roses goes down easily. It doesn’t completely fulfil Rema’s potential – it’s too homogeneous for an hour’s running time, and his lyrics are often too facile.

But it’s great in small doses. The hit single ‘Calm Down’ was inspired by Rema getting blocked from his love interest by her protective friends, The integration of Indian instrumentation into ‘Love’ is effective, while the woozy synths that drive ‘Oroma Baby’ are a great touch. Conversely, the Chris Brown duet on ‘Time N Affection’ is a low point – “Girl, I dey feel your pressure/I will never leave you, you’re my treasure” is a shoddy lyric.

Rema is an impressive vocalist, even if Rave & Roses is less than the sum of its parts.

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3 Comments

  1. Anna Tivel is the one I like best. I like her style and those lyrics “And your heroes grow unruly, they overdose or just leave…Their lives are f***ed up movies and you’ve studied every one” are wonderful and I can relate to her. I also like the sparse music because it can breathe.

    • Yeah, that Tivel album is nicely arranged and produced. There are different instruments used like strings and keyboards, but it’s never overbearing.

  2. I’ve interviewed Anna Tivel three times now. She is so giving of her time and always has a set of honest answers. I really enjoy her music and I guess it’s reflected in what I write about her. Not sure if you read my latest interview about her album Outsiders? Very insightful. Thanks for the plug.

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Aphoristic Album Reviews is almost entirely written by one person. It features album reviews and blog posts across a growing spectrum of popular music.

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Graham Fyfe has been writing this website since his late teens. Now in his forties, he's been obsessively listening to albums for years. He works as a web editor and plays the piano.

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