The Idler Wheel… is an innately private record, as Apple’s tend to be, but she has a way of drawing listeners in as she pushes them away, luring them, siren-like, into the maelstrom of her own reflection.
After sixteen years, Apple has finally reached her megaton moment. The Idler Wheel is her ferocious eruption.
You have to give yourself over to The Idler Wheel in a way you probably haven’t done since you were a kid, before jobs and other adult responsibilities claimed the long hours you spent curled up by your stereo speakers. It isn’t easy listening. But it’s worth it.
Apple has quite cleverly developed musically in just the right way, creating something utterly distinct and different to her earlier work whilst still retaining all the characteristics that won fans over to begin with.
The Idler Wheel's spareness does lend it an insular loneliness, one that's divorced from the outside world while also being intimately in-tune with its basic realities.
The Idler Wheel succeeds in creating a singular world more daring than any of Apple’s previous records and one of the most daring pop records in recent history.
The Idler Wheel is Apple’s biggest statement yet, its textured, booming soundcapes finally living up to the conflict housed in her twisted poetry. It’s a tension that leaves the album swinging from the uncomfortable to the divine.
The sparse, even unprompted production only makes it richer, resulting in a fascinating unanimity of piano and voice that turns more involving with every clink, clatter, and clap.
The Idler Wheel is an emotional thesis that cannot be ignored. It is perhaps the most unforgettable work of her career.
On her first album in seven years, singer-songwriter Fiona refines her usual style into something simpler, but emotionally potent.
The Idler Wheel ... is Apple’s best work yet, spontaneous and so utterly unique, uninhibited and self-possessed in its sonics and language, risky and jarring, full of sharp turns yet encountering beauty everywhere, it feels like the first document to fully explore the depths of her talent.
She’s refining her outlook here, and The Idler Wheel… stands as her most concentrated and mature record yet.
The Idler Wheel… is Apple’s most stripped down, musically simplistic album, but it’s no less heartfelt or harrowing for that.
Few vocalists can erase the distance between performer and listener as shrewdly as Apple can, and that toggle gives The Idler Wheel its strange power.
Since there’s so little to grab onto, The Idler Wheel might be better understood as an emotional statement rather than a musical one.
The tension created by the lyrics and music is wonderful and uneasy, ensuring that ‘The Idler…’ is endlessly fascinating and unlike anything else you’re likely to hear this year.
The Idler Wheel’s ramshackle, barely-holding-it-together aesthetic can’t be anything but carefully constructed, but in an artistic sense, that’s a virtue, not a vice.
The Idler Wheel… is her most adult work yet, a record that’s underpinned by the fundamental grown-up characteristic of embracing one’s own ridiculous, stubborn dysfunction because, Hell, what other option is there?
The Idler Wheel captures what’s made Apple one of the defining artists of her generation: a persona that’s reflected changing views of private versus public spheres.
Thankfully, Apple’s return to music is not only undeniably powerful, but Idler is arguably her best work yet. It’s strange, raw and grabs your attention the way few modern albums can.
Not that Apple, on this work or any other, has ever been one to shy away from the messier parts of human emotion. Her wordplay may be complex, but the metaphors she employs are stunningly effective.
Sometimes the songs drag ... But Apple's kooky energy pushes through the slow spots.
Whipping Cords seems to require far too many listens to really reach that ‘viola!’ moment—sure to result in exhausted listeners who try desperately to love the record as much as they think they should
I listened 5 times in a row to prepare for the new album, and that definitely helped since this is way out of my lane of interest
Albums like this are VERY rewarding for being patient, and open minded. This album is a gentle, but powerful listen. It’s hard to really explain because I’m not used to loving this kind of shit so much
Fiona Apple is someone who's music i am not familiar with at all. i had very little to expect when coming into The Idler Wheel, other than general hope that i'd enjoy it. and wouldnt you know it, i do! i enjoy this album a lot! now this isnt normally the kind of music i listen to or review often, as usually singer-songwriter kinda folkier pop stuff just isnt my cup of tea. my ADHD attention span just cant fuckin pay attention long enough to appreciate a lot of slower, more ... read more
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It's as a complete neophyte that I talk to you about Fiona Apple's fourth opus, "The Idler Wheel". I won't bother to give you the story of the artist, learned late, it would be like rehashing Wikipedia... Let's be satisfied with this: with this record, Fiona is back after a 7-year absence, and her character is as strong as her life is messy.
With a production that she chose to make non-existent, Lady Apple has nowhere to hide, no big ... read more
EDIT (18/05/2022): revisando a última review do dia antes de eu assistir um filme.
a produção aqui é bem mais simples em comparação aos outros álbuns mas ela compensa demais com a voz, a letra e o piano. assim como os outros álbuns, ela consegue produzir um álbum de altíssima qualidade mesmo só tendo lançado 2 álbuns nos últimos 9 anos.
o apelo emocional aqui é um tanto maior até ... read more
The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw *gasp* and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do is such a deeply personal and private record that it at times makes you feel almost dirty for listening to it again and again to try and more thoroughly understand its meaning. The delivery of its message to listeners demands open-mindedness and patience. it is unconventional and unique in that regard. Notice a pattern? That’s right, The best albums ever made force ... read more
"Tidal" was an excellent debut, and "When the Pawn Hits the Conflicts He Thinks Like a King What He Knows Throws the Blows When He Goes to the Fight and He'll Win the Whole Thing 'Fore He Enters the Ring There's No Body to Batter When Your Mind Is Your Might So When You Go Solo, You Hold Your Own Hand and Remember That Depth Is the Greatest of Heights and If You Know Where You Stand, Then You Know Where to Land and If You Fall It Won't Matter, Cuz You'll Know That You're ... read more
1 | Every Single Night 3:29 | 98 |
2 | Daredevil 3:28 | 95 |
3 | Valentine 3:32 | 99 |
4 | Jonathan 5:03 | 95 |
5 | Left Alone 4:50 | 96 |
6 | Werewolf 3:12 | 97 |
7 | Periphery 4:58 | 96 |
8 | Regret 5:16 | 96 |
9 | Anything We Want 4:40 | 96 |
10 | Hot Knife 4:02 | 98 |
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