
Agnès Milewski was born in Poland in 1983 and immigrated to Austria when she was four years old, where she soon after began lessons for both classical guitar and piano. She gathered band experience through the years, but by the age of 24 was eager to branch out on her own, and released her debut album “Pretty Boys and Ugly Girls” a mature work strongly influenced by the likes of Joni Mitchell and Tori Amos, which garnered European-wide attention and brought her the Amadeus “Best Newcomer” award in 2008.
In 2009 she continued with the release of her second album “Learn to Swim”, an ambitious sophomore effort which included more complex arrangements and put her dexterous musical skills and interests on full display; She brought everything from RnB to Reggae, through to Drum n’ Bass and Metal-infused guitar sounds, practically everything which would improbably and, certainly unexpectedly, become reduced to a musical common denominator. The well-formed and structured songs are to be thanked for the success of the musical potpourri found on the album, and in its entirety the album functions as an unshackling from the external lasciviousness of easy marketability. Conventions and connotations about the fictive genre of “female pop” lead to nowhere and thanks to the relevance of her songwriting prowess, are firmly placed there to stay. Throughout the album, her lyrical and crystal clear voice float above the art form she has set out to create, and her voice is both fun-loving and intense and detached, which fully engages the listener, just as one might expect from the craft of her self-proclaimed influences mentioned above.

Milewski has also taken the reigns for her own promotion and marketing into her own hands, using social media platforms and direct contact with her fans and the public, both at home and abroad. This directness and personal approach lead to her success for fundraising and crowdfunding projects, which she used to co-finance “Al-most Spring”. Milewski is sitting firm in the saddle, a young woman with charisma, talent and a bright future, who writes meaningful yet mass-appealing music. That such talent isn’t firmly and consciously taken, in a comprehensive and sustainable way, into the arms of the local music scene, borderlines on a cultural-political act of carelessness.
David Weidinger
translated from German
Agnes Milewski: Christoph M. Bieber
http://www.agnesmilewski.com