"Hypnotic in places, even narcotic, "Oh, My Girl" continues to reverberate long after it ends. Like the Velvet Underground's third record or Bob Dylan's "Desire", what resonates after "Oh, My Girl" fades isn't any
specific moment, but the feel of the world created in it and by it." (Magnet)
"(Jon Pareles' 2004: The Ones That Got Away) "Troublesome things, they fall down on me" Jesse Sykes sings with a certain calm acceptance on her second album, "Oh,My Girl" (Barsuk). As her songs face desolation and mortality, a cold wind seems to blow through her voice, while her band, the Sweet Hereafter, plays in poised slow motion. There's country in the music, with brushes on the drums and pedal steel guitar wafting in from above: there's also a sighing viola and a touch of surf-guitar reverb. It's spellbound music, rapt in fatalism and sorrow." (New York Times)
"It’s not often that one comes across a voice as haunting as Jesse Sykes’. With a deep, smoky resonance, that in some ways recalls Marianne Faithful, Sykes manages to convey even more wasted resignation, making this record an instant melancholia classic. Of course, her voice isn’t all there is; a crack band featuring the atmospheric guitar of Phil Wandscher and duelling viola and pedal steel, creates a perfect sultry backdrop for Sykes to work her magic. And song titles like “Troubled Soul” and “The Dreaming Dead,” need little more explanation to describe their dark content. But even amid such darkness, everything about Oh, My Girl is strangely comforting. There is a warmth to all the performances that will inevitably strike a nerve within anyone enamoured with the current new folk revival, not to mention anyone who simply appreciates pure emotional songwriting sung by someone who sounds as if she has truly lived it. Oh, My Girl is a gem waiting to be discovered." (Exclaim)
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