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Get Away from Me

 
Album Review: Get Away from Me

  • Artist: Nellie McKay
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: February 10, 2004
  • Type: Contains explicit content, Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

A striking mix of radical and traditional, raw emotion and literate expression, hip-hop and vocal pop, Nellie McKay's Get Away from Me is the kind of feverishly inventive, sprawling album that only comes from young artists. Though it could've easily fit onto a single CD, it's a double-disc set designed to reclaim the feeling of flipping over a record; the back cover proclaims that McKay "is a proud member of PETA." While McKay's age (21 at the time of the album's release) and sound make comparisons to Fiona Apple, Nelly Furtado, and Norah Jones easy -- she even named her album Get Away from Me as a preemptive strike against it being lumped in with Jones' Come Away with Me -- McKay is a more esoteric and hyperactively creative artist. She seems determined to prove how smart and wide-ranging she is on the album, and for the most part, she carries it off. Juxtaposing songs like the swoony torch song to New York, "Manhattan Avenue," and "Sari," a rap song about everything that gets on McKay's nerves (including McKay herself), certainly demonstrates the extremes of her music. However, these rapid-fire stylistic shifts and the sheer amount of information that McKay puts in her songs sometimes makes the album more dizzying than dazzling. But Get Away from Me succeeds, sometimes in spite of itself, as a musical document of all of the contradictions of a 19-year-old young woman with more than half a brain in her head. Some of McKay's songs deal with fairly typical themes like coming to terms with womanhood, sexuality, and relationships, but McKay attempts to cover as much lyrical ground as she does musical territory, with mixed results. On "Work Song," it sounds like McKay has heard how soul-sucking a nine-to-five can be, but it doesn't have the ring of truth that some of her other songs do. "Ding Dong," on the other hand, deals with depression in a surprisingly sprightly way, and the similarly witty "Clonie" turns human cloning into a story about self-obsession. The traditional feel of McKay's songwriting style and voice and her subversive lyrics often give Get Away from Me the feel of being the soundtrack to some long-lost feminist musical. "It's a Pose" and "Won't U Please B Nice" (sample lyric: "If we part I'll eat your heart") apply McKay's sharp wit to men and love; "I Wanna Get Married" casts a languidly scornful eye on traditional notions of marriage. These songs, along with the equally charming album opener, "David," and closer, "Really," have a lighter touch that avoids the clever-cleverness that drags down some of McKay's work, but is still miles away from the mild-mannered coffee-table jazz she loathes. Get Away from Me is an exciting debut that could become a cult favorite among pissed-off girl-women of McKay's age; if she can focus her creative energy without sacrificing any of the bite of her debut, she'll become an even more impressive talent. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Tracks



CD 1

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
David (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (2:47)
Manhattan Avenue (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (3:38)
Sari (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (3:27)
Ding Dong (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (3:11)
Baby Watch Your Back (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (3:28)
The Dog Song Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (3:04)
Waiter (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (4:15)
I Wanna Get Married (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (4:01)
Change the World (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (3:58)


CD 2

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
It's a Pose (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (3:30)
Toto Dies (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (4:02)
Won't U Please B Nice (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (2:09)
Inner Peace (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (2:53)
Suitcase Song (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (2:33)
Work Song (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (4:08)
Clonie (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (1:56)
Respectable (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (4:07)
Really (Lyrics) Nellie McKay Nellie McKay (3:56)

Credits

Cenovia Cummins (Violin), Nellie McKay (Associate Producer), Phillip Stewart (Rhythm Consultant), Nellie McKay (Piano), Cenovia Cummins (Fiddle), Andy Snitzer (Sax (Tenor)), Belinda Whitney (Concert Master), Stuart Breed (Assistant Engineer), Timothy Dark (Consultant), Nellie McKay (Chimes), Norman Panto (Accordion), Corin Stiggall (Bass (Electric)), Billy Kaye (Drums), Elinda Whitney (Contractor), Carol Pool (Violin), Emily Mitchell (Harp), Rob Shaw (Violin), Nellie McKay (Percussion), Richard Locker (Cello), Jim Hynes (Soloist), Nellie McKay (Glockenspiel), Nellie McKay (Xylophone), Geoff Emerick (Producer), Cenovia Cummins (Soloist), Andy Stein (Violin), Andy Snitzer (Clarinet), Nellie McKay (Arranger), Nellie McKay (Synthesizer), Charles Pillow (Sax (Alto)), Jade Synstelien (Guitar), Charles Pillow (Flute), Nellie McKay (Vibraphone), Joyce Hammann (Violin), Nellie McKay (Recorder), Amy T. Zielinski (Photography), Jim Hynes (Trumpet), Mitchell Cohen (A&R), Susanne Cerha (Layout Design), Birch Johnson (Trombone), Jade Synstelien (Jun-Jun), Ari Roland (Bass (Upright)), Nellie McKay (Vocals), Jay Berliner (Spanish Guitar), Steve Genewick (Assistant Engineer), Patricia Davis (Violin), Nellie McKay (Organ), Jim Hynes (Flugelhorn), Geoff Emerick (Engineer), Bill Airey Smith (Assistant Engineer), Greg Calbi (Mastering), Paul Holderbaum (Orchestration)
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Wikipedia: Get Away from Me
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Get Away From Me
Studio album by Nellie McKay
Released February 10, 2004
Genre Singer-Songwriter, Pop, Rock
Length 61:31
Label Columbia
Producer Geoff Emerick
Professional reviews
Nellie McKay chronology
Get Away From Me
(2004)
Pretty Little Head
(2006)

Get Away From Me is the two-disc debut album from singer-songwriter Nellie McKay. It was released on February 10, 2004 by Columbia Records. McKay insisted on the two-disc set even though all content could fit on a single-disc.

A later DualDisc version was released on March 29, 2005. This edition features a DVD side with a live concert, 5.1 audio, and two previously unreleased tracks, "John-John" and "Teresa." The CD side features both discs of the previous release as one continuous album.

Track listing (CD Version)

Disc 1

  1. "David"
  2. "Manhattan Avenue"
  3. "Sari"
  4. "Ding Dong"
  5. "Baby Watch Your Back"
  6. "Dog Song"
  7. "Waiter"
  8. "I Wanna Get Married"
  9. "Change the World"

Disc 2

  1. "It's a Pose"
  2. "Toto Dies"
  3. "Won't U Please B Nice"
  4. "Inner Peace"
  5. "Suitcase Song"
  6. "Work Song"
  7. "Clonie"
  8. "Respectable"
  9. "Really"

Charts

Chart (2004) Peak
position
Billboard Top Heatseekers 7
Billboard 200 181

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Get Away from Me" Read more