Roselove
‘Peachy Keen’
Self-released
If art were supposed
to be perfect and polished, the young and inspired would hit snooze instead of
making it, and beautiful albums like Roselove’s
“Peachy Keen” would never exist. Rose Love, a rising voice in Rochester music,
will release the collection on October 13, and it’s an unbending work of
nonconformist art.
The qualities of old
folk songs from the early days of recording — the low-fi quality, the
unaffected form, the almost guileless innocence — are often things that are
missing from modern music. But like early recordings, “Peachy Keen” is raw and
unassuming. In the opening tune, “Geography,” Love contemplates limitless mobility,
while mixed meters and spliced guitar evoke feelings of jumping around from
place to place. In “Txt Me Bby” and “You Don’t Want
Me,” buzzing distortion and dissonance create an atmosphere of disarray, as the
artist genuinely addresses the insecurities that come with being human.
Most of the songs
are sparsely arranged for voice and guitar, with the occasional Casio keyboard
played by Love and the album’s sound engineer, Steve Coleman. There is a
lightness to title track “Peachy Keen” and “Peachy Keen (Reprise),” in contrast
to some of the dark subject matter in surrounding songs. In between giggling,
Love makes out the words “peachy peachy keen” as the
Casio keyboard, which sounds more like a Mellotron,
jaunts to a 90’s drum machine beat. Despite overtones of cynicism, there is a
sense of hopefulness that could be viewed as the overarching essence of the album.
Love makes herself
vulnerable in both the unembellished, unedited way she chose to record “Peachy
Keen” and in the honesty of her words. The clear theme throughout the ten-song
album is recovery from trauma, and how that trauma manifests itself later in
life. Songs like “Dear Mom,” “Feel Dead” and “Epitaph” are powerful and pointed
in their message, incisively pronouncing what some might consider too taboo to
say. Roselove reminds us that mental illness needs to
be talked about, and that recovery can be a slow and complicated process. The
songs take on different aspects of dealing with trauma, the relationships
affected by it, and the highs and lows that life throws at you.
Roselove will play an album release show with
Borger, Kitchen, and Olivia Clarke on Saturday, October 13, 6:30 p.m. at
Vineyard Community Space, 836 South Clinton Avenue. $5 suggested donation.
This article appears in Oct 10-16, 2018.






