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Rabbit Fur Coat (CD)
 
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Rabbit Fur Coat (CD)

Jenny Lewis Audio CD
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
Price: £5.49 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Frequently Bought Together

Rabbit Fur Coat (CD) + Acid Tongue + More Adventurous (U.S. Release)
Price For All Three: £17.82

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Product details

  • Audio CD (1 Jan 2007)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Rough Trade Records
  • ASIN: B000CBEWM4
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 10,417 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Run Devil Run 1:08£0.79
Listen  2. Big Guns 2:34£0.79
Listen  3. Rise Up With Fists 3:37£0.79
Listen  4. Happy 4:16£0.79
Listen  5. The Charging Sky 2:58£0.79
Listen  6. Melt Your Heart 2:52£0.79
Listen  7. You Are What You Love 2:54£0.79
Listen  8. Rabbit Fur Coat 4:34£0.79
Listen  9. Handle With Care 2:58£0.79
Listen10. Born Secular 5:09£0.79
Listen11. It Wasn't Me 4:12£0.79
Listen12. Happy (Reprise)0:48£0.79


Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Previously best known as the front-woman of Rilo Kiley, Rabbit Fur Coat sees Jenny Lewis breaking out on her own to stunning effect. Teaming up with gospel singers Chandra and Leigh Watson, with a little help from producer M.Ward, and collaborations with Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst and DCFC’s Ben Gibbard, this is alt. country at its finest--sweet, heartfelt and deceptively simplistic.

Drawing inspiration from the record collection she shared with her mother whilst growing up, the album definitely has an old Americana feel to it, and several tracks wouldn’t be out of place on a Harry Smith anthology. Stand out tracks include the stunning gospel-tinged harmonies of "Rise Up With Fists!", the gorgeous "Melt Your Heart" (reminiscent of Mazzy Star’s "Fade Into You") and the full on toe-tapping country hoedown assault of "The Big Guns".

To be fair, though, all the tracks on here earn their place, and even the somewhat strange inclusion of a cover of the Travelling Wilburys’ "Handle With Care" works somehow. A truly exceptional gem of a record. --Melanie Wilkin

BBC Review

Jenny Lewis was a child actress before fronting BBC 6 Music's favourite band, Rilo Kiley. In Rabbit Fur Coat she goes solo with identical twin Texan gospel singers providing backing vocals.

And it sounds bloody glorious; addictive even. Jenny Lewis' musical soul comes from god-fearing country; hence her music takes on those elements traditionally linked with the Deep South: slide guitars, harmonica, and three part harmonies. But curiously her heart doesn't fear god,so with her lyrics she ingeniously turns the songs on their heads. She moves from beautifully warm close mic'ed intimate waltzes like "Melt Your Heart", to a defiant, rocking, unearthing of hypocrisy, in "Rise Up With Fists".

Her voice wraps up youth, wisdom and strength with vulnerability, to utter dark lyrical wisdom. The title track tells the tale of one girl's knifepoint attempted stealing of another's coat, but revenge was had by sleeping with knifepoint girl's father. Lewis speaks prettily of troublesome truths; the chiming organ and the vocal harmonies on confessional "You Are What You Love" has melted my heart all over the floor. --Lucy Davies

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
This is a lovely album and a very rare kind of new country, it's not po-faced or full of false sentiment but it has lots of flare and quirkiness. For me the best country music was made by people like Dolly Parton, Glen Campbell, Willie Nelson and Hank Williams snr. people who understood 3 important country ingredients melody, story and a bit of showbusiness. Jenny seems to understand all of these and mixes it with a classic girl group attitude, think Shangri-las, think Ronettes, think the girls in the B52s. Big Guns, the first full song proper, shows she's got both pop and country in her soul. She delivers songs with heart but also with a twinkle in her eye and never gets too precious. Her cover of the Travelling Wilburies isn't as great as the original but it sure is a lot of fun. After that she sticks in a classic twisted story song, the title track, Rabbit Fur Coat.

This is a country record that will make some purists sniffy but will entertain anyone looking for good songs, good singing and some fun.
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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful
Great stuff 23 Feb 2006
Format:Audio CD
Taking time out from her band, Rilo Kiley, Jenny Lewis shuffles out of the indie-darling spotlight and into the softer shade of a Memphis back porch for the release of her debut solo album, Rabbit Fur Coat.

The disc’s dozen tracks were in gestation for two years, with songs written in the Rilo Kiley tour van, rehearsed around sound-checks, and finally recorded in 2005 in the San Fernando Valley and Portland, Oregan. Ostensibly a solo affair, Lewis gives equal billing to Kentucky-born twins Chandra and Leigh Watson, but while their cooing southern belle harmonies add a sprinkling of charm, it’s Lewis’ own confessional poetry that’s the album’s focus.

Right from the gorgeous, haunting accapella of opening track, Run Devil Run, you know you’re in for a treat. It’s well known that Lewis has a most wonderful voice, but she excels herself here with a song of almost immeasurable beauty. Elsewhere, Lewis runs along the bumpy road of inter-band relationships on You Are What You Love and Melt Your Heart, and adopts a near perfect Lucinda Williams’ drawl on Rise Up With Fists!!, before unleashing the full-on gospel of Born Secular.

At the centre of the album lies the title track, which has Lewis completely alone with her acoustic guitar, telling the true story of her absent mother and her rabbit fur coat. The tone of Lewis’ voice makes the mood hard to pin down; it’s not one of happiness, but nor is it one of sadness, rather a weary acceptance of her mother’s peculiar obsession with her coat. Rabbit Fur Coat is immediately followed by a sparkling cover of the Traveling Wilburys’ Handle With Care. While Lewis handles George Harrison’s lines, she invites M Ward, Conor Oberst and Death Cab For Cutie’s Ben Gibbard to share the vocals on the ever-convincing tale of the perils of stardom.

Lewis has tapped into a fifty-year-old Americana and found that moment at the birth of rock ‘n’ roll where folk, country, gospel and vocal pop all fused together. Acoustic guitars tumble their melodies over brushed snares with an occasional slide guitar brought to the fore, and Lewis achieves all this without the album ever sounding dated. Such is the alchemy of greatness.

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35 of 37 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Anyone of these tracks, with the possible exception of Handle Me With Care (good cover version though it is), could have featured on the last Rilo Kiley album More Adventurous. They are all that good individually. However they work even better collectively and this is definitely a case of the value of the whole being greater than the sum of the parts.

Many of the songs have been showcased by Jenny live before and a copy of her performance of some of them at The Echo (wherever that is!) has been available on the internet for quite a while. But they really come to life with the help of a bit of decent production and great harmonies provided by the Watson Twins. Not that she needs a lot of studio enhancement; her voice has always been that good. Like Natalie Merchant with knobs on.

Stand out tracks for me are 'The Big Guns' (stomping Country music that makes you want to slap your knees as the music swells), 'You Are What You Love' (simple but brilliant lyric 'you are what you love, not what loves you back'), 'Melt Your Heart' (all breathy sensual vocals) and the wonderful 'Born Secular' (could have been on 'Take Offs and Landings' with its simple drum machine backing) in which Jenny returns to a pet theme of religion and questions her lot in life.

Just one question, what's happened to the brilliant 'Somebody Else's Clothes'? Always thought this was a solo song. I know it's been properly recorded and it's too good to leave off this album or throw away as a B-side. Maybe a hidden track at the end? Please...

Jenny Lewis may actually be a bona fide musical genius but I have a horrible feeling the world is never going to cotton on. Cotton on everybody!

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Wow.....the best album Ive heard in ages!!!
I love this album soooo much! Jenny Lewis's voice is truly amazing, she could sing anything, including addresses from the phone book, and it would sound fantastic. Read more
Published on 1 July 2007 by K. Allen
Nice but dull
Bought this hoping for something interesting and quirky - unfortunately, I found all rather dull. Pretty country songs with a few interesting lyrics, but nothing worth getting... Read more
Published on 3 April 2007 by Shepps
Memorable antidote to bubblegum pop
This is a really beautiful album that defies description to an extent. I bought it because I'm a big Rilo Kiley fan and thought I'd see how Jenny Lewis' solo material compares. Read more
Published on 15 Feb 2007 by James J. Marsh
More please...
I bought this on a whim after spotting it one day. I was expecting something nice but not for something this great. Beautiful songs that showcase Jenny Lewis's songwriting talents. Read more
Published on 24 Jan 2007 by Isotala
LISTEN
Please listen to the album and not the pretentious idiots above who quite ignorantly and obviosly understand very little about music. Read more
Published on 26 Dec 2006 by A. Coccia
Top class
An absolutely brilliant album. Very strong lyrics - "Born Secular" is particularly intelligent and clever, and beautiful vocals. Read more
Published on 23 Oct 2006 by Mr. Stephen Edwards
Rabbit Fur Coat
Jenny Lewis reminds me a little of Neko Case albeit less advanced and more 'modernized' than folklore-esque. I rather liked all three of Rilo Kiley albums and this one too. Read more
Published on 9 Sep 2006 by L. Omelasz
Jenny lewis saved my music life... and the rest of my life
After dilly dallying around with popular indie music for the last couple of years, I was recently introduced to the joys of jenny lewis and the band that she fronts, Rilo Kiley. Read more
Published on 28 July 2006 by Ms. Sarah K. Squires
Pallid roots
I bought this on the recommendation of several people and after reading their laudatory reviews, some citing it as the best album of the year so far. Read more
Published on 5 Jun 2006 by Adam K.
Definitely worth 5 stars
There are albums and then THERE ARE ALBUMS. Its a rare treat indeed to find an album that u can play all the way thru and then play it again. Read more
Published on 15 May 2006 by mike_from_nyorks
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