GoodSound! "Music" Archives Published February 1, 2007 |
The Be Good Tanyas: Hello Love
Nettwerk 30416 21
Format: CD
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Say hello to my
new love, the third studio release from the Vancouver-based female trio The Be Good
Tanyas. Hello Loves quirky patchwork of songs is woven together with a
minimalist approach that allows the songwriting quality to speak for itself and plainly
reveals the groups talents. The Tanyas harmonies are like a siren song,
swarming the ear with sultry whispers of achingly voiced urgency. The tempos are generally
laid-back; they take time to contemplate the melancholy, though its never too long
before a lilting fiddle or rousing banjo number gets them back on their feet again. Their
acoustically styled Americana sound works perfectly for this group, whove earned
their creative license with intriguing and delightfully unexpected covers. "For the
Turnstiles" sounds better than Neil Youngs original, and my jaw dropped when I
heard the CDs hidden track: a cover of Princes "When Doves Cry,"
replete with claw-hammer banjo and standup bass. A definite rawness apparent throughout
the album sometimes suggests the faintest tinkling of chimes in the distance; at other
times, it sounds as if youve caught your sister singing in the shower when she
thought no one was home. Hello Love is a gift of unflinching intimacy
.Shannon
Holliday |
Nickel Creek: Reasons Why (The Very Best)
Sugar Hill SUG-CD-4022
Format: CD, DVD
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Nickel Creeks very enjoyable Reasons Why (The Very Best)
comprises a 14-track CD and a seven-track DVD. The traditional ballad "The Fox"
is even more of a tour de force live than in the studio version, with some peak picking by
the trios front man, mandolin prodigy Chris Thile. The touching
"Lighthouses Tale," the clever "Cant Complain," and the
gentle "When You Come Back Down" are high points. "Sweet Afton," a
Robert Burns poem set to gorgeous music by Thile on the bands first album, Nickel
Creek, easily could have made the cut. A few tracks are less good but still strong,
along with the videos, which are mostly arbitrary pop-music footage that smacks of
film-student homework and suggests marketing to a youth audience. Very young themselves,
Thile, guitarist Sean Watkins, and violinist Sara Watkins have plenty of time to
concentrate their shining vocals, playing, and skilled songwriting on more serious, less
self-oriented material. I look forward to it!...David Cantor |
David Crosby: If I Could Only Remember My Name .
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Atlantic/Rhino R2 73204
Format: CD, DVD-Audio
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David Crosbys personal life and bouts with alcohol and
drugs have garnered so much media attention that its easy to forget what a good
songwriter he can be. This Rhino reissue of his best solo album ought to set the record
straight. Crosbys melodies often float over a thick carpet of instruments, and
sometimes, as in "Traction in the Rain," over just two guitars and an autoharp.
The tight harmonies that Crosby had worked out with Graham Nash for Crosby, Stills &
Nash reach their zenith here in "Song Without Words." The songs have all been
remastered and are offered in several formats: Theres a regular two-channel CD, plus
a DVD-Audio disc that contains multichannel MLP, DTS, and Dolby Digital multichannel
mixes, as well as DD stereo. Though they all sound good, they also sound very different.
The CD and DVD two-channel mixes are bright and in your face much of the time. The MLP
multichannel mix is mellow by comparison -- the highs are still there, but more subtle. On
many songs there seems to be a musical fog punctuated by tight bass, with lead vocals
clearly emerging from the front, and backing vocals, guitar, and keyboard coming from
almost anywhere in the 360-degree soundfield. Those who grew up in the late 1960s and
early 70s will need no urging to hear these discs; those too young to have been
around when these tracks were released in 1971 can find out what all the excitement was
about
.Rad Bennett |
JJ Cale & Eric Clapton: The Road to
Escondido
Reprise 44418-2
Format: CD
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After 40 years of mutual respect and influence, two of the
greatest living guitarists, JJ Cale and Eric Clapton, finally sat down in a studio to
record a collaborative full-length album. Just as youd hope, its a gem. The
two mens phrasing and vocal range are often indistinguishable. Cale wrote many of
the songs Clapton became famous for, including "After Midnight" and
"Cocaine," so its not surprising that Cale wrote 11 of The Road to
Escondidos 14 tracks. The compatibility of these two legends is so complementary
that they hardly needed a powerhouse of special guests backing them, but who can complain
that they invited Taj Mahal, John Mayer, Derek Trucks, Steve Jordan, and the late Billy
Preston (in some of his last recorded sessions) to sit in. Cale and Clapton coproduced,
and the spirits of collaboration and mutual exchange are evident in the final product -- a
mellow convergence of blues, swing, and pop. I hope its not the last well hear
from this pair
.Shannon Holliday |
The Flaming Lips: At War with the Mystics
Warner Bros. 49966-2
Format: CD
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The Flaming Lips are so gloriously strange that theyre
nearly indefinable. Their music has evolved from the garage-band simplicity of their 1980s
recordings to something that might be called progressive rock -- were it not for the
bands lack of bombastic self-importance. Their records, including their newest, At
War with the Mystics, are so filled with aural loopiness that it would be easy
to think the Lips are just goofing around. A careful listen to At War soon dispels
that assumption -- its rich in sonic details that show a very skillful and committed
band at work. Vocalist and lyricist Wayne Coyne continues to ask big questions about life
and death, but At War also includes more topical material, such as "Free
Radicals (A Hallucination of the Christmas Skeleton Pleading with a Suicide Bomber)."
At War with the Mystics isnt as consistently brilliant as the discs that
preceded it, The Soft Bulletin (1999) and Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (2002),
but its still complex and very rewarding
.Joseph Taylor |
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