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This Friday: A New Record and a Big Show from Jennifer O’Connor

Jennifer O'Connor (Photo by Amy Bezunartea)

The cover of Jennifer O’Connor’s album “Surface Noise” (March 4, 2016, Kiam Records) features an abstract painting, “There 48,” by Brooklyn artist Joan LeMay.


by Steven P. Marsh
Jennifer O’Connor, the singer-songwriter and proprietor of The Kiam Records Shop in Nyack, New York, has a spectacular new album, Surface Noise, coming out next Friday, March 4. That’s the same day she makes her debut at the Tarrytown Music Hall; she’ll be entering the home stretch of her tour with bad-ass indie singer-songwriter Neko Case.
Surface Noise is packed with 12 songs that explore love, loss, and the challenges of life with a casual brilliance. It’s the best work this talented artist has produced so far.
The title in part seems in keeping with O’Connor’s modest, self-effacing personality, while also suggesting  an homage to the Kiam Records Shop in Nyack, where she and spouse Amy Bezunartea sell vinyl albums — with their love-it-or-hate-it quality of pops and crackles, or surface noise — along with books and turquoise jewelry.
But don’t let the title fool you — this noise is heavenly. The tunes are instantly accessible and memorable, with sharp, confident lyrics that O’Connor puts across well with her expressive voice. Some are gems of the stripped-down, basic, singer-songwriter genre, while others are almost baroque, with stunning arrangements featuring beats that O’Connor created at home on a drum machine before adding in a live drummer, layered harmonies (all O’Connor, tastefully multitracked), and other effects.
'Surface Noise'
The album’s first single, “Start Right Here,” is an absolute earworm. It’s a simple tune, propelled by a sinuous bass line provided by her friend James McNew of Yo La Tengo, who lends a YLT vibe to the proceedings while supporting and nurturing —  rather than redirecting — O’Connor’s personal style. Drummer Jon Langmead provides a rock-solid beat throughout, while O’Connor provides the guitar.
“It’s a Lie,” which also features McNew on  bass, would feel right at home in a mixtape of Yo La Tengo tunes, coming across like a loving homage to YLT’s idiosyncratic sound. It evokes YLT’s Georgia Hubley both in the dreamy way O’Connor’s voice is recorded and mixed and in Langmead’s solid, understated drumming.
Of the two other tracks that feature McNew’s bass, only one, “Tell Me What You Need,”  has the relaxed confidence of a YLT slow-burner. “Mountains,” the fourth McNew track, goes its own way, with a darker, more intensely defiant tone — verging on a snarl.
Tom Beaujour, another longtime collaborator and operator of Nuthouse Recording, where the album was made, provides guitar on half the tracks.
O’Connor will hit Tarrytown with Case at 8 p.m. Friday, March 4. (Go here to get your tickets online. And here to order Surface Noise) It’s a great way to give O’Connor a nice Lower Hudson Valley welcome-home, and to experience a great show. (If you can’t make it to Tarrytown, you have a chance to check out O’Connor’s full set during her official record-release show at Manhattan’s Mercury Lounge on Monday, March 7, with wife Amy Bezunartea opening. (Go here for tickets.)
Steven P. Marsh is a longtime professional journalist based in the New York-Metro area. This article was originally published on his blog, Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone?.


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