I Don't Want To Let You Down
General
| Jun 2015
Reviews
Francis D
Reviewed 2015-06-12
Reviewed 2015-06-12
“I Don’t Want to Let You Down” EP Sharon Van Etten
5-song set of rock and folk-rock songs. Largely an extension 2014’s full-length “Are We There,” the songs take a last look at a relationship that came apart as Van Etten sought to build her career as a singer-songwriter. As is typical of her, the tracks are brutally honest — as critical of Van Etten herself as of her lover. Because these tracks didn’t make “Are We There,” one might expect this to be a second-rate collection. But it’s a solid addition to what’s fast-becoming an impressive body of work for the Brooklyn-based artist.
— Francis
Recommended: 3, 4, 1.
1. (4:01) I Don’t Want to Let You Down — Easy rolling melody with lovely, thrumming, reverbed guitar, bass and drums. Van Etten’s plaintive vocals quaver and drift. Electric guitar trail-out. ***
2. (4:40) Just Like Blood — Piano and warbling Wurlitzer organ set the tone for this pensive melody. You can almost feel the weight of the world on Van Etten through her lethargic vocal stylings.
3. (3:18) I Always Fall Apart — Fabulous, precise piano ballad. Wistful, harmonized vocals. Strings layered under. Incisive lyrics. “It’s not my fault/It’s just my flaw/It’s who I am,” she sings. Heartbreaking. ****
4. (5:14) Pay my Debts — Synth-driven rock. Departure from the rest of the set, but great! Ominous, piercing synth tones underscored by thumping bass line. Rich orchestral accompaniment. Powerful vocals. ****
5. (4:59) Tell Me (Live) — Live version of a B-side song written during the making of her third album, “Tramp.” Straight-ahead rock with Van Etten’s languid vocals — backed by strummed guitar.
5-song set of rock and folk-rock songs. Largely an extension 2014’s full-length “Are We There,” the songs take a last look at a relationship that came apart as Van Etten sought to build her career as a singer-songwriter. As is typical of her, the tracks are brutally honest — as critical of Van Etten herself as of her lover. Because these tracks didn’t make “Are We There,” one might expect this to be a second-rate collection. But it’s a solid addition to what’s fast-becoming an impressive body of work for the Brooklyn-based artist.
— Francis
Recommended: 3, 4, 1.
1. (4:01) I Don’t Want to Let You Down — Easy rolling melody with lovely, thrumming, reverbed guitar, bass and drums. Van Etten’s plaintive vocals quaver and drift. Electric guitar trail-out. ***
2. (4:40) Just Like Blood — Piano and warbling Wurlitzer organ set the tone for this pensive melody. You can almost feel the weight of the world on Van Etten through her lethargic vocal stylings.
3. (3:18) I Always Fall Apart — Fabulous, precise piano ballad. Wistful, harmonized vocals. Strings layered under. Incisive lyrics. “It’s not my fault/It’s just my flaw/It’s who I am,” she sings. Heartbreaking. ****
4. (5:14) Pay my Debts — Synth-driven rock. Departure from the rest of the set, but great! Ominous, piercing synth tones underscored by thumping bass line. Rich orchestral accompaniment. Powerful vocals. ****
5. (4:59) Tell Me (Live) — Live version of a B-side song written during the making of her third album, “Tramp.” Straight-ahead rock with Van Etten’s languid vocals — backed by strummed guitar.
Recent airplay
I Don't Want To Let You Down
Meow: The Best Of 2015 — Jan 03, 2016
Pay My Debts
ZoëRadio — Aug 12, 2015
I Don't Want To Let You Down
Meow — Aug 11, 2015
I Always Fall Apart
Meow For Monday — Aug 10, 2015
I Don't Want To Let You Down
Clean Copper Radio — Jul 30, 2015
I Always Fall Apart
ZoëRadio — Jul 29, 2015
Charting
2015-06-12 — 2015-08-14
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Aug 16 | 2 |
| Aug 2 | 3 |
| Jul 26 | 2 |
| Jul 19 | 2 |
| Jul 12 | 2 |
| Jul 5 | 2 |
| Jun 28 | 3 |
| Jun 21 | 3 |
Track listing
| 1. | I Don't Want To Let You Down | ||
| 2. | Just Like Blood | ||
| 3. | I Always Fall Apart | ||
| 4. | Pay My Debts | ||
| 5. | Tell Me (Live) |