Album Reviews

Jay Som: Everybody Works

 

Jay Som
Everybody Works
(Polyvinyl/Double Denim)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

Melina Duterteโ€™s alias is as unusual as the way she first attracted attention. Her bio explains that her moniker was derived from an on-line baby name generator (roughly translated to Victory Moon) and this debut arrived after she had reluctantly posted homemade โ€œfinished and unfinishedโ€ recordings to the Bandcamp site in late 2015. Those random, rough yet enticing indie rockers became a compilation titled Turn Into which led to this more conceptually focused debut full-length.

Similar to Somโ€™s earlier music, these ten tunes were composed and recorded in her bedroom studio. She played/overdubbed all the instruments, creating a solo album few will be able to tell wasnโ€™t the work of a full band. Thatโ€™s not only notable as an indication of how sophisticated recording equipment has become but also shows Som as a rare talent who not only plays all her music, but has a finely-tuned concept of how to arrange and layer those tracks into a finished whole.

The songs range from the asymmetrical, creepy (โ€œBedhead),โ€ with its minor key, experimental, stripped-down sonics, to the far more traditional mid-tempo rock of the title cut. The Latin percussion that energizes the bubbly rhythm and sweet tones of โ€œOne More Time, Pleaseโ€ shows that Som can write a more pop-oriented tune if she wants to veer in that direction. But even there, the song makes a sharp left turn about halfway through into a bridge that abandons the initial sound and seems like itโ€™s pasted from another composition. Somehow it all works, creating an idiosyncratic approach that proves she can navigate the most unusual twists and turns with a maturity far beyond her 22 years.

Vocally, Somโ€™s breathy style wonโ€™t win any awards, but works well within the context of her generally atmospheric, gauzy production. Thatโ€™s particularly true of the opening โ€œLipstick Stains,โ€ a diaphanous fever dream prelude both beautiful and ominous where the singer-songwriter uses her voice as another instrument in a mood-setting piece which ends in less than two minutes.

The closing, sprawling, nearly seven-and-a-halfย minutes of โ€œFor Lightโ€ (nearly twice the length of anything else here) unfolds at a leisurely pace, gradually building instruments atop its opening (and ending) sparse, reverbed electric guitar strums, resulting in a hypnotically intense experience creating a track best described as epic, especially in Somโ€™s nascent catalog.

Itโ€™s an impressive start to what seems to be a promising career for Jay Som, an artist ready for the next step to build atop this remarkable and often striking self-constructed first release. ย  ย  ย  ย  ย