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Emily Asen : Avalanche EP
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Alternative folk, that, depending on how you look at it, touches into areas of neofolk, anti-folk and modern folk.
Genre: Folk: Folk Pop
Release Date: 2007
Avalanche EP Record Label: Violet Maiden Records, LLC
  • Buy CD - $8.00
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Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Avalanche 5:20 Album Only
Love Bruise 4:18 Album Only
Traffic Signals 4:34 Album Only
Sounds Like It Feels 3:30 Album Only
Icicle 4:34 Album Only
Underdog 2:37 Album Only
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Album Notes

With her bittersweet voice, edgy guitar riffs and innovative arrangements, Emily Asen is bringing a new pulse to the veins of folk music. Dealing with the struggles of love and art, her songs are universal and intimate, nostalgic and unexpected.

From the beginning, Emily was fusing genres and blending sounds. Brought up in Fairfield, Connecticut, listening to Buddy Holly and Chuck Berry, Emily remembers taking a jazz progression taught to her by a cousin and immediately transposing it to her cello. When she picked up her first guitar at age 15, Emily drew influence from Led Zeppelin and Ani DiFranco.


Energetic and ready at 18, Emily entirely self-recorded and produced her first EP, Love Junkie, inspired by the eclectic soundscapes of Zero 7 and Dido.

With twelve years of classical cello training in her back pocket, Emily has already graced thestages of Carnegie Hall, Tanglewood and Lincoln Center. Eyes closed and moving with her instrument, Emily caught the attention of the other players with her unusual intensity. Not afraid to bear her heart, sometimes stripping it wide open in tracks like Love Bruise and Sounds Like it Feels, Emily brings the same unabashed passion to her songwriting and performances today.

By the age of 19, Emily had built her portfolio of songs and started performing regularly in New York Citys Sidewalk Café, The Bitter End, Bowery Poetry Club, C-Note, and the NYC International Music Festival. In November of 2005, Emily released the Traffic Signals EP, a recording of six songs that brought her folksy songwriting into the realm of pop rock production and electronica (available on CD Baby, iTunes, and eMusic).

Not afraid to experiment and push the limits of your expectations, or her own, Emily continues to encounter new instruments and new styles, master them and make them uniquely hers. The new record, Avalanche EP, features Emily's signature acoustic guitar surrounded by an orchestra of sound including her own cello, mandolin, piano and electric guitar parts. The album also features a guest appearance by Ben Taylor (son of James Taylor and Carly Simon), who contributes soulful vocal harmonies to the song Avalanche. Ranging from the organic, ethereal quality of Beth Orton and Jon Brion to the raw lyricism of Paul Simon and Joni Mitchell, the Avalanche EP is a promising example of the developing neofolk movement, which bridges the gap between acoustic folk rock and contemporary sounds.

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REVIEWS

Impossible to Resist
author: Indie-Music.com
Emily Asen’s voice is so earthy and dreamy, it makes my heart ache. As for the music, she’s had twelve years of classical cello training, which she blends into her indie folk sound, creating magic. As if that weren’t enough, she has Ben Taylor (James and Carly’s kid) contributing his warm voice on harmony on the title track. Add lyrics that put you right in the moment, and you have a perfect EP. Asen’s lyrics have an intensity about them that doesn’t let go. In the title track, she describes the buildup of emotions over a transatlantic relationship: "Put on your clothes, still smell familiar, 'cause I haven’t lost you yet. You’re just six hours ahead and when you return, we’ll be six months behind..." Asen mixes folky acoustic guitar strumming with mandolin and piano as well as the cello, which creates a melancholy mood in “Love Bruise” and glorious classical interludes in “Traffic Signals.” She surprised me with a funkier vibe and sensual energy in “Sounds Like it Feels.” The guitar rocks on that one while the strings create an ambient, mystical background. Very well layered. The standout is “Icicle,” a shuffling tempo with crooning that would make Joni Mitchell swoon and Simon and Garfunkel reunite. Her voice sounds like it’s racing along on a breeze, sweeping me up with it. Like the rest of this album, it’s impossible to resist.
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Can't fathom a better way to break my heart...
author: Jay
What makes Emily Asen different from the other female guitar folk-rockers in NYC is that she is 100% about the sound and the music and 0% about the image. With one listen of this EP, it becomes clear that she takes time in her writing wherein there lies an honesty and sincerity unmatched by her contemporaries. There is definitely an Ani Difranco and Zero 7 influence, however, Asen takes it one step further by including a strong string section while laying low on the drums to make room for a very present percussion section. Lyrically, Asen alternates between minimalism ("sounds like it feels") to the very metaphorical and intricate ("Icicle"). And best of all, much like fellow female singer-songwriters Susie Suh (Epic) and India.Arie (Universal); Ms. Asen is awake, educated, and possesses a maturity far beyond her age. This is definitely worth downloading.
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