Multitudes
Feist’s quietest album to date is warm and comforting throughout, but really peaks when it gets fuller, weirder, and more unpredictable.
With Multitudes Feist has entered a new era in her artistry, one in which she makes space for reverie where her grand realisations are beautifully stated.
On her sixth album Leslie Feist tells the optimistic story of loss, love and the human experience — read the NME review
With her albums separated by anywhere from three to six years, it took a couple decades for Leslie Feist to establish that, while her songwriting tendencies show an affection for complex bossa progressions as well as breezy campfire folk, she never really repeats herself.
The Canadian's sixth album is an intimate affair – it's honest, reflective and undeniably Feist.
The Canadian singer-songwriter processes birth and bereavement on a raw sixth album of gossamer vocals and screaming outbursts
Despite Feist’s talent as a singer and musician, though, ‘Multitudes’ fades too easily into the background. Read our review.
Multitudes by Feist album review by Sam Franzini for Northern Transmissions. The Canadian indie singer/songwriter's album drops on April 14th
Six years after her grandiose, moody career high-watermark Pleasure, Canadian singer-songwriter Leslie Feist is changing gears a bit. Multitudes, written in the wake of the birth of her adopted daughter and the loss of her father, is potentially her most nakedly personal yet. Feist’s lyrics often tend to be puzzles, never betraying too much while
The heavy metal band are belligerent as ever, Merchant is full of existential desire and Manchester trio GoGo Penguin are the sound of hope
Canadian artist confronts life and death in a heartfelt ode to her father and daughter. Album New music review by Cheri Amour
Feist reshapes a stage show into an album on Multitudes, informed by new life, old loves and agonising loss.