The Memory Machine

The Memory Machine is the debut studio album by Australian singer-songwriter Julia Stone. It was released in September 2010 in Australia and peaked at number 73 on the ARIA Charts.

The Memory Machine
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 2010 (2010-09)
RecordedNew York (late 2008)[1]
GenreFolk, indie rock, pop rock[2]
Length42:08[2]
LabelPicture Show/EMI Music (Australia),
Flock/PIAS (UK),
Nettwerk (USA)
ProducerJulia Stone, Kieran Kelly
Julia Stone chronology
The Memory Machine
(2010)
By the Horns
(2012)

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
The AU Review[3]

Duncan McLeod from The AU review called it "a subtle album that weaves its magic on the listener. Stone's unique vocals wash over you and warm your insides. The rich cleverness of strings, the imagery of a timid girl almost whispering into the microphone, the power in the paired back sound that highlights Stone's clever writing.". McLeod called out "Catastrophe!", "The Memory Machine", "My Baby" and "Where Does the Love Go" as the album highlights.[3]

Craig Mathieson from Sydney Morning Herald said "The Memory Machine is a kind of liberating event, although most tracks touch on inhibition and restriction" adding "this disquieting, unexpected set is her best work yet."[4]

Ally Carnwath from The Guardian said on her debut solo effort Stone can "indulge her more fanciful impulses" adding "But whatever mood her compositions achieve is soon nobbled by the grating effect of her ickle-girl vocals and twee lyrics."[5]

Tom Lordan from GoldFlake Paint said the album is "a gentle, often dark and insightful journey into a young woman's life. In the album's short time frame she deals eloquently with large themes: love, sex, loneliness and the inability to feel. Her lyrics are like a child's painting after his/her parents have gone through a divorce: they're simple, tightly focused, raw and vulnerable."[6]

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."This Love"3:32
2."My Baby"4:21
3."Winter on the Weekend"4:41
4."The Memory Machine"2:49
5."Catastrophe"3:43
6."Maybe"4:30
7."Lights Inside This Dream"4:17
8."What's Wrong with Me?"4:38
9."Horse With the Wings"4:40
10."Where Does the Love Go?"5:03

Charts

Chart (2010) Peak
position
Australian (ARIA Charts)[1] 73
French Albums (SNEP)[7] 137

Release history

Country Date Format Label Catalogue
Australia September 2010 CD Picture Show Records/EMI Music 9173702
United Kingdom 2010 CD, Digital download Flock/PIAS FLOCKCD12
USA & Canada 2011 CD Nettwerk 06700309102-2
gollark: And they don't mean a moving thing or some general potential, but some loosely defined religious thing.
gollark: It may have *originally* meant that. It does not mean that *now*, in languages we actually speak.
gollark: Your nonstandard and connotation-laden definitions are *not* helpful.
gollark: But actually it just happens to do that up until n = 41 because your examples show no general trend.
gollark: To be mathy about this, consider n² + n + 41. If you substitute n = 0 to n = ~~40~~ 39, you'll see "wow, this produces prime numbers. I thought those were really hard and weird, what an amazing discovery".

References

  1. "ARIA Report – 20th September 2010" (PDF) (1073). Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). 20 September 2010. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  2. "The Memory Machine at All Music". AllMusic. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  3. McLeod, Duncan (5 October 2010). "JULIA STONE – THE MEMORY MACHINE (2010 LP)". The AU review. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  4. "ENTERTAINMENT MUSIC The Memory Machine". The Sydney Morning Herald. 1 October 2010. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  5. "Julia Stone: The Memory Machine – review". The Guardian. 28 November 2010. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  6. "Review The Memory Machine". GoldFlake Paint. 2010. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  7. "Lescharts.com – Julia Stone – The Memory Machine". Hung Medien. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
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