An Argument with Myself Jens Lekman

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  • Release Date: 09/20/2011
  • Sales Rank: 53,347
  • Label: Secretly Canadian
  • UPC: 656605021126
Other Formats 
Vinyl LP$14.24

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits

Overview -

Argument with Myself

Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player

An Argument with Myself

1LISTENAn Argument with Myself 3:49
2LISTENWaiting For Kirsten 3:47
3LISTENA Promise 4:34
4LISTENNew Directions 2:42
5LISTENSo This Guy At My Office 2:58

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Coming almost four years after the release of the excellent Night Falls Over Kortedala album, Jens Lekman's 2011 EP An Argument with Myself is made up of five songs that according to Lekman didn't fit the mood of the songs he'd been working on for a full album. Those songs must reflect the more somber and soulful aspects of Lekman's work because the songs on the EP represent the upbeat, almost chirpy side of his musical personality. The title track has an undulating Afro-pop rhythm and an ultra-twee lyrical construct that has him arguing with himself as he walks down a Melbourne city street at night. Elsewhere, he waits to spot Kirsten Dunst at a café (she's in Gothenburg filming a movie) and thinks about his city and how it's changing, sings street map directions, and laments crap jobs. All sung in his patented sincere and charmingly awkward voice and backed by intelligently sophisticated pop. This time perhaps a bit too sophisticated, as it's the first time Lekman's records have sounded played by professionals instead of pieced together with samples or stumbled through by friends, and inspired instead of painstakingly crafted. It gives the songs a sheen of studio gloss they don't need at all and distracts from Lekman's innate humanity and the intimacy he so easily transmits most of the time. Also, it's a very bad idea to have a song with a fake reggae beat a couple songs after making fun of people stumbling out of a reggae bar. Maybe it's a joke, since it's attached to a song about knuckleheads at the office, but it's not one that works particularly well. Which is too bad, because the song has the best melody of any here and Lekman's vocal harmonies are divine. Overall, the EP feels like a placeholder and not a vital part of his catalog; Lekman sounds like he's merely cruising along. He probably should have waited until after he released his long-awaited third album to release this EP of songs that sound like castoffs. Entertaining castoffs, but not his best work by far. Tim Sendra, All Music Guide

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