SOUNDTRACK: JULIEN BAKER-Tiny Desk Concert #690 (January 10, 2018).

Julien Baker joins a handful of artists who have now made a second appearance at a Tiny Desk Concert. (If they start inviting artists back regularly, they’ll never get ANY work done at the NPR offices).
I was quite enamored with Baker when I watched her first Tiny Desk Concert. And I was totally smitten with her when I saw her open for The Decemberists.
Julien plays three songs here. I’m intrigued that in the blurb Bob says “I reached out to ask if she would be willing to do something different this time around.”
It makes it sound as if she’s going to do some kind of dance/electronica show. But I guess the difference is that last time, she just played electric guitar and this time she mixes up instrumentation and adds a violinist.
The first two songs, “Hurt Less” and “Even,” were accompanied by Camille Faulkner, with Julien on piano for the opening tune and acoustic guitar on the second.
If Julien Baker sounds delicate with just her electric guitar, she’s twice as delicate on piano. But her voice sounds exquisite–powerful, honest and a little raspy, adding a slight edge.
I love seeing her sticker-covered acoustic guitar as she sings on “Even”:
Putting my fist through the plaster in the bathroom of a Motel 6 / I must have pictured it all a thousand times / I swear to God I think I’m gonna die / I know you were right / I can’t be fixed, so help me
She tends to play her guitar a little louder than the piano, so this one is a bit more dynamic. The violin adds some aching sounds over the top.
I love that she plays each song in a very different style:
For the final song, Julien put together an arrangement of “Appointments” that begins on electric guitar, which then was looped as a backdrop to her on piano and voice.
It’s always fun watching someone loop guitar melodies. And I like that she continues to loop long after it seems like the looping is done. This allows for some of her gorgeous ringing chords. They continue to ring out as she plays the piano. It’s even cooler that she can stop parts of the guitar looping while she is completing the song.
All along her voice, which seems so delicate when she starts proves to be really powerful, especially during “Appointments” when she builds to a powerful high. When I saw her live, she held a really long note that was quite impressive. Don’t be fooled by the quietness of her music, Julien Baker rocks.
[READ: October 27,2017] Threads of Blue
This is the sequel to Beautiful Blue World, a book I really enjoyed.
In the first book, Mathilde’s country of Sofarende was being attacked by Tyssia. She was sent to a special location to work on the war effort–they needed precocious children and she was picked for her empathy. As the book ended, Mathilde followed her empathy and, while their encampment was under siege, released a teenaged prisoner of war because she felt that he was a good person who was just caught up in the war.
This act caused her to leave her group (and her best friend Megs) and to miss the conveyance to safety.
As this book opens, Mathilde wakes up on a boat that is bringing her to the country of Eilean. She has secret documents and an order to be secretive.
The book picks up right where the previous one left off (I could have used a slight refresher, honestly). (more…)


