Sweet music to your ears. LP’s, EP’s and everything in between this is the place you will find out about the latest music and maybe even some oldies but goodies.
La Sera’s self-titled album provides twelve transcendental tracks that allow listeners to enter a dream-like trance. La Sera is Katy “Kickball Katy” Goodman’s first solo effort, and her transition from three-piece group (Vivian Girls) to independent artist gives Goodman an opportunity to shine. Goodman’s distinctly calming vocals, upbeat melodies, and positive instrumentation make this self-titled album a success. Singing of life, love, and the Devil, La Sera caters to an array of audiences, while staying true to the illusory sounds and ethereal vocals that set this album apart from other pop-inspired albums.
La Sera’s first single, “Never Come Around,” gives the audience a taste of what the album has in store: soft percussion, upbeat guitar, and a hint of tambourine beautifully compliment Goodman’s angelic voice. The lyrics to the track are highly relatable, as Goodman sings of a broken relationship—while refraining from entering the realm of clichéd love song lyrics. While “Never Come Around” sets the tone for La Sera, the album will keep its listeners on their toes. The somber harmonies of “Beating Heart” and the heavier tones of “Been Here Before” provide fluid diversions from some of the album’s more singsong tracks. All 12 tracks on La Sera work in cohesion with one another, creating an airy pleasantness that is sure to lift the spirits of any listener. While La Sera is a positive experience, the track-lengths are one of the album’s few negative aspects: averaging at about two minutes in length each, the tracks seem to end just as the listener is becoming entirely engrossed.
Goodman sings of life, death, and everything in between, while she simultaneously produces a satisfyingly sanguine album. “Kickball” Katy Goodman certainly leaves her mark in the realm of solo-artists. With a sense of fragility, Goodman’s phantasmagorical voice serves as the album’s central feature, complimented by clean sounds, soft bass lines, gentle percussion, and at times a sense of the psychedelic. La Sera has produced a feel-good work that will leave the listener wishing that the album was longer than 26 minutes.
-Sarah Lashley
Thu Feb 24