Welcome back to the CD Odyssey. Today I come to you live from…my holidays! Yes, I am taking a very short break, but I bring you this humble offering before I sail off to Parts Unknown (I know where I’ll be but this is a music website, not a travelogue).
Disc 1881 is… Cazimi
Artist: Caitlin Rose
Year of Release: 2022
What’s up with the Cover? An out of focus Caitlin Rose appears to witness a stream of fuzzy musical notes passing into…or out of her head.
How I Came To Know It: I am sad to say I don’t remember, which usually means I read a review somewhere. A quick Google search shows there were reviews on at least two of my oft-visited music sites (Paste Magazine and Americana Highways) so there is a good chance one or both of these inspired the journey.
How It Stacks Up: Caitlin Rose has released four albums, but this is the only one I have, so it can’t stack up.
Ratings: 3 stars
“Cazimi” did not win me over immediately, and I would say it still hasn’t won me over completely, but it is proof that if songs have good bones they can survive a fair number of other shortcomings.
Rose is a pop singer, with a country flair to some of the tracks that might trick a modern country radio station to play her tunes. I wouldn’t know, as I don’t listen to the radio. That pop/country crossover takes the form of a lot of mid-tempo tunes with a bit of jump in the rhythm and a production that might be twang, but in the end just comes out as reverb.
The issue on Cazimi is a couple of things, the first being the aforementioned production, which opts for a considerable amount of fuzz.
Long-time readers will know that while my musical tastes are wide (to the point of wanton) I have a bias toward clean production, with plenty of space for the songs to breathe. Cazimi is not this, and there is a lot of stuff going on at the same time. Also, Caitlin Rose’s vocals, which are almost exclusively up in her head voice sound overdubbed and cloudy throughout. The album employs a number of background singers, so it might be tight harmony and not overdub (I am no expert) but either way it creates a diffuse sound where I would have preferred things to be a bit more distinct.
The instruments fare similarly. The drums sound light and diffuse, and the guitars have a bit of a wall of sound that is unexpected given the light and airy flavour of the music overall. When they rock out you don’t get oomph out of them, because the mix is too busy.
Fortunately, Rose is also a very gifted songwriter, and there are plenty of solid offerings on Cazimi that overcome all of these triggering (for me) production decisions.
Most of the good stuff is front-end loaded to Side One, which is a trend I have never liked but that has been seen on records…forever. I continue to live in hope that I will get over it, but seems late in the day for that.
But I digress…
The first track is the delightfully wistful “Carried Away” which features Grade A songwriting. The melody has delightful jumps up the scale that punctuate how the narrator would like a slow climb into a relationship but instead finds herself in a sudden jump forward. The melody carries you away suddenly just like the lyrics say it will. Meanwhile, there is a guitar tag with a measured step down at the end of the verse that seems to add a bit of sad resignation to the moment. Music and lyrics in synch to deliver an emotional punch = good songwriting.
This is followed up with “Modern Dancing” which is a dance-friendly number. Not so much “cut a move at the club” as “twirl in your living room” but danceable all the same. It also has handclaps and a weird bit of funky synth that is an example of the busy production, only here I liked it.
The record starts to flag in the middle, with songs like “Lil’ Vespa” and “Black Obsidian” that want to feel either whimsical or poetic but come off forced.
Fortunately, before the end, we get a Side Two gem in “Blameless”. Many of the songs on the record have a very common mid to up tempo sound (there’s probably a classical term for this, but I can’t think of it) but “Blameless”’ comes in with a slow and mournful drag at just the right time. The song’s slow meandering undertow make you feel the feels, and the lyrics are inspired, showing that bad relationships need to be named for what they are. The chorus alters slightly throughout but my favourite iteration is:
“Do it outta habit, do it out of love or whatever you're holding
to
'Cause you always come runnin' each time you discover that I'm as cold as you
And there's no point in making it painless
It's nobody's fault and, baby, we're blameless, blameless”
“Blameless” would benefit from letting the pedal steel lift out of the mix a bit, but as noted above, that’s not how this record is constructed. Fortunately, the emotional impact of the record overcomes one grumpy reviewer wanting to elbow his way onto the mixing board. In the end, I sat in the corner of the studio, arms crossed, and forced to admit that all things considered, yeah, I liked it.
Best tracks: Carried Away, Modern Dancing, Getting it Right, Blameless



