Let It Die
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Let It Die | ||
Studio album by Feist | ||
Released | May 18, 2004 | |
Recorded | 2003 - 2004 | |
Genre | Indie Rock, Baroque Pop | |
Length | 45:10 | |
Label | Universal / Polydor/Arts & Crafts | |
Producer(s) | Renaud Letang | |
Professional reviews | ||
---|---|---|
|
||
Feist chronology | ||
Monarch (Lay Your Jewelled Head Down) (1999) |
Let It Die (2004) |
Open Season (2006) |
Alternate cover | ||
Second release cover |
Let it Die is the second album by Canadian singer-songwriter Feist. It was recorded in Paris during 2002 and 2003 and released in 2004.
A combination of jazz, bossa nova and indie rock, Let it Die was hailed as one of the best Canadian pop albums of 2004, and garnered three Juno Award nominations in 2005 — winning Best Alternative Album and Best New Artist. Let it Die was nominated once again in the 2006 Juno Awards; this time for Inside and Out as Single of the Year.
Let it Die has attracted a significant international audience. The album was originally divided into original compositions on the first half and cover versions on the second, though a reissue later in 2004 added a further original composition as the penultimate track.
The single "Mushaboom" is a pun on sh-boom as a refrain, and the Canadian coastal community east of Halifax, Nova Scotia, the province where Feist was born. The song was used in a Lacoste commercial.
[edit] Track listing
- "Gatekeeper" (Feist/Gonzales)
- "Mushaboom" (Feist)
- "Let It Die" (Feist)
- "One Evening" (Feist/Gonzales)
- "Leisure Suite" (Feist/Gonzales)
- "Lonely Lonely" (Music by Tony Sherr, lyrics by Feist)
- "When I Was a Young Girl" (Traditional - inspired by Texas Gladden)
- "Secret Heart" (Ron Sexsmith)
- "Inside and Out" (B. Gibb/M. Gibb/R. Gibb)
- "Tout Doucement" (Clausier/Mercadier)
- "Now At Last" (Bob Haymes)
- "Amourissima" (Gonzales/Feist/Pierre Grillet) *
- "L'amour ne dure pas toujours" (Francoise Hardy) *
* indicates bonus track on 2004 reissue.