Aurora (NOR)
All My Demons Greeting Me as a Friend


3.5
great

Review

by davidwave4 USER (55 Reviews)
April 11th, 2016 | 20 replies


Release Date: 2016 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Shimmering and ephemeral, AURORA’s debut shows promise but lacks in personality.

I distinctly remember the first time I saw AURORA. It was at the SweetLife Festival out in Maryland. She emerged on the stage, her pale skin flushed out by the immense heat, and began one of the most enigmatically engrossing live sets I’ve seen in a while. Set against a tapestry of glitchy drum programming and sparkling synths, she twitched and shook in time with the music. Her fingers moved like a harpist’s as she danced barefoot around the stage. About 45 minutes into the hour long set, an image popped into my mind of another barefooted ingénue with an affinity for harps, and the thought irreparably colored my image of AURORA. I saw Florence Welch.
As I listened to “All My Demons Greeting Me As A Friend,” I couldn’t erase this image of Florence Welch from my head. And AURORA seemed hell-bent on reinforcing them at every turn here. Whether it’s the stomp-clap skyscraper of a song “Conqueror” or her siren vocals or her overreliance on mythical clichés and fierce devotion to the Tori Amos-Kate Bush playbook, AURORA’s debut is ultimately a master class in the execution of these stylistic elements.

One only needs to look at the tracklist to see what’s up here. You’ve got songs like “Running With The Wolves,” “Winter Bird,” and “Black Water Lilies” on the regular version and, if you’re fancy enough to buy the deluxe edition, you get “Nature Boy” and “Wisdom Cries.” These tracks again roll through the Florence Welch Black Book of Lyrical Clichés with alarming efficiency, covering “human sacrifice as metaphor for love” (“Lucky”), drowning and water (“Under the Water”), and suicide (“Winter Bird”). The tracks themselves are written pretty well, and do right by their chosen themes and clichés. The production is less “Lungs” and more “Ceremonials,” with a splash of Ellie Goulding’s “Halcyon” (itself a half-assed attempt at F+TM maximalism) thrown in for spice.

AURORA herself is a pretty good vocalist, although she lacks the presence and personality of her contemporaries. Her particular brand of vocalization is equally indebted to Florence, Ellie, and Kate, but never shows the range or idiosyncrasies of any of them. The best example of this lack is on “I Went Too Far,” a song about longing and obsession that falls just below its potential. Its chorus needs more punch and the verses need more emotion and freedom. Too often across the project, AURORA’s vocals seem more restrained than they need to be. In a live setting, her loosened wails and tics give personality and depth to her performances. Sadly, they’re absent throughout this album, and the songs suffer for it.

All in all, this album is a fairly good debut from an artist that’s bound to blow up in some capacity soon. She definitely poses the ability to produce really good and engrossing songs (“Murder Song” and “Under the Water” will probably wiggle their ways onto a few critics’ top 10 or 50 lists of best songs). But despite boasting considerable talent, you just can’t shake the feeling that she’s building her house on someone else’s well-trodden land. I wrote in my review of Supercar’s “Futurama” that critical comparisons can often be lazy, but also serve the purpose of illuminating a particular cultural phenomenon. I’ll be the first to say that too many young female artists have been compared to Kate Bush or Tori Amos (pretty much any idiosyncratic female gets that rep). But AURORA is the first artist I’ve heard in a long while who doesn’t just flirt with these comparisons, but goes out of her way to invite them. She takes themes implicit to Bush’s music and makes them painfully explicit in a way that’s undeniable to almost anyone who’s listening. “Under the Water” takes “Under Ice”’s anxiety and turns it into an open and obvious couplet asking who’s below and what’s separating us and them. She takes “Between a Man and a Woman”’s vivid and compassionate description of marital discord and transposes it onto an overblown metaphor about compassionate murder (just guess the song). AURORA’s debut is capable and should appease fans of folky pop music that fits well into a Forever 21 playlist as well as those who fancy flighty mistresses obsessed with their own mortality, but she’s still got some growing to do if she wants to be more than just another name on the Influenced part of Kate Bush’s Wikipedia page.



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user ratings (103)
3.5
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
LotusFlower
April 11th 2016


12000 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

I wish this album focused a little more on the baroque (chamber) elements a little more honestly, it seemed like some weird back and forth of pop music for the masses and alternative chamber pop for us true music patricians. Im looking forward to her work in the future though, with a little work I think she can become the next "thing" in pop music.

Willie
Moderator
April 11th 2016


20212 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5 | Sound Off

I really liked this album. It was a nice surprise. There are some formatting issues, but otherwise, good review.

Skoop
April 11th 2016


2201 Comments


Agreed this was solid. Conquerors is one of the better songs I've heard on the radio.

guamman64
April 11th 2016


14 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Nice review. I'm glad this album has one now, although I think I like this a bit more. The tracklist is definitely split between downbeat, melancholic tunes and more pop-oriented ones, but I really enjoyed both. Maybe some production changes would have made the overall tone more coherent, but Aurora's unique voice and personality (which I agree is more on display during live performances) really make this album worth checking out.

RadicalEd
April 11th 2016


9546 Comments


Listen to The Hue - Aurora instead of this.

BHAR
April 11th 2016


231 Comments


Ditto to what Willie said.

Flugmorph
June 7th 2016


34040 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

meeeh

Egarran
July 29th 2016


33874 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

I admit I only listened to this because title mentions demons and I like demons.



But there are some really nice songs on this for my closet indie dream pop listener. The hits leave me a little cold, but the downtempos are sweet.

Cygnatti
December 16th 2016


36021 Comments

Album Rating: 2.0

bo-ring~

Lord(e)Po)))ts
March 7th 2017


70239 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

this







almost had potential

verdant
Emeritus
December 13th 2017


2492 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

i love this woman so much

Egarran
December 13th 2017


33874 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Can you rec anything like it?

DinosaurJones
December 13th 2017


10402 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

She did a Tiny Desk Concert on NPR that's definitely worth checking.

Egarran
December 13th 2017


33874 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Yeah, it's good. I'm thinking other artists, since I know little of this genre.

DinosaurJones
December 13th 2017


10402 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Oh yeah, Uhh... me neither. I'm kinda in the same boat, I really just discovered this on a whim.

Egarran
June 18th 2018


33874 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

When a human

strokes

your

skin

That is when

you

let

them

in

Pho3nix
November 4th 2020


1589 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Some songs feel like filler here and there, might have been a tighter cohesion if it had fewer tracks.



"although she lacks the presence and personality of her contemporaries."



I must disagree ^^

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
February 8th 2022


32020 Comments


man the new one is a REAL grower.

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
February 8th 2022


60295 Comments


review the new one it was like the 2nd best pop thing released last month

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
February 8th 2022


32020 Comments


I am temporarily retired from reviewing my dear but I would appreciate someone reviewing it.



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