Reviews

Jill Andrews: The Mirror

Jill Andrews
The Mirror
(Thirty Tigers)
[Rating: 4 stars]

When Jill Andrews released her self-titled EP in 2009 soon after the break-up of her folk duo The Everybodyfields, it played a little bit like a six-song โ€œDear Johnโ€ letter. And while the songs chronicle the slow and careful dismantling of a romantic relationship, it wasnโ€™t easy — especially for devoted fans of Jill Andrews and Sam Quinnโ€™s promising project — to not read into the music looking for answers for the break-up.

Those who listened closely, however, found a collection of songs from Andrews stronger than her work with Quinn: The emotional depths were deeper; the narrative arc more detailed and full of insight and catharsis. The Mirror, Jill Andrewsโ€™s first full-length record, draws on the strengths of her previous work, but does so in what feels like a deliberate move from the indie fringes (and the edge of despair) — and into the a more emotionally stable, pop-friendly milieu. This bodes well for Andrewsโ€™s career as her great range as an artist is, for the first time, apparent, but will disappoint fans who have grown accustomed to Jillโ€™s voice as the soundtrack to their chronic malaise.

On The Mirror, Andrews stretches out and pulls back the curtain a bit to let sunshine and breeze in the room on songs like the up-tempo opening track โ€œSound of the Bellsโ€ and the superstitious title-track โ€œThe Mirror.โ€ Both display a conscious break from her alt-country roots and show off new influences and expertise. But the sunny sound is sometimes a smoke-screen for still deeply-affecting lyrics; “Wake up, Nico,” for example, is a morning song to Jill’s son full of both the joys of parenthood and the fears, worries, and regrets that go along with raising a child. Jill has become an expert here and on other songs throughout The Mirror of artfully capturing emotional paradox.

This isnโ€™t to say that The Mirror doesnโ€™t have a little of that trademark Jill Andrews heartache. โ€œCut and Runโ€, a lovely ode to better memories and bitter realities, is Andrews at her subtle best. The song starts with a simple piano and acoustic guitar before arcing into a stormy midsection and back while Andrews sarcastically capitulates: โ€œYou can tell all your friends that I just cut and run when it got too tough.โ€ Youโ€™ll also find a bit of that same resolute sadness on the track โ€œSinking Shipโ€ but like most of the album, the song doesnโ€™t wallow in despair but accepts it as a condition of humanity and pushes on through. Indeed, The Mirror is a portrait of emotional endurance, and as such is a promise that Jill Andrews is at the beginning of a wonderful and long-abiding career.