GoodSound! "Music" Archives Published April 1, 2007 |
Watermelon Slim & The Workers: The Wheel Man
Northernblues Music NBM0038
Format: CD
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Good blues is easy to come by
-- Mississippi John Hurt, Muddy Waters, Sonny Boy Williamson, and a slew of sight-deprived
hard-luck souls have left us a mighty fine legacy. But good blues by living artists is a
different story. Shiny alligator shoes dont make it the blues, but a howling,
bawling voice, some left-handed, upside-down dobro slide guitar, and a name like
Watermelon Slim -- now, that combo is blues-worthy. With the release of his fourth
CD, The Wheel Man, Bill "Watermelon Slim" Homans earns his salt and his
title as "a blues man." Slim has worked as a truck driver, mill sawyer, forklift
operator, and watermelon farmer, and served in Vietnam, and his songs have many an
inspired tale to tell. Lyrically witty, rhythmically rocking, and gloriously original,
Watermelon Slim and the Workers play blues for a new era, and The Wheel Man ushers
it in like hell on wheels, pedal to the metal. This album wont be released until
mid-April but has already been nominated for six music awards. No collection should be
without it
.Shannon Holliday |
Paul Simon: Surprise
Warner Bros. 49982
Format: CD
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Paul Simon has long had a keen interest in sound and texture in
his recordings, so its not surprising that he would eventually collaborate with
Brian Eno, who is credited with the "sonic landscape" of Simons latest
album, Surprise. However, Enos electronic effects dont overwhelm or
distract from Simons profoundly beautiful songs about the mysteries of life and
spirituality, at the center of which, always, are Simons skillful guitar playing and
soothing voice. Hes aided by other great musicians -- including guitarist Bill
Frisell, bassist Abraham Laboriel, and drummer Steve Gadd -- and the sounds of their
instruments are often processed, a fact that can be attributed to the mix of Tchad Blake.
Audio purists often scorn Blake, who does crowd the soundstage more than is usual for a
Paul Simon recording. But in most cases, Blakes choices seem right for the
enveloping sound Simon clearly aimed for in such songs as "How Can You Live in the
Northeast" and "Sure Dont Feel Like Love." On occasion, however, I
wondered if Blake couldnt have restrained himself from trying to make every
snare drum sound like something else. In the end, its Simons sure songwriting
and singing that make Surprise well worth hearing
.Joseph Taylor |
Tom Waits: Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers &
Bastards
Anti- 86677
Format: CD
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I knew of Tom Waits
through his role in Francis Ford Coppolas Bram Stokers Dracula (1993).
Waits performance as Draculas minion, Renfield, stuck with me. Little did I
know that the performance was more a function of Waits persona than of his acting
prowess. That same gravel-voiced, slightly perverse personality delivers some very
poignant and disturbing anecdotes by way of song in this three-disc set of
"orphan" tracks that never made it to any of Waits many albums of the past
three decades. Im not much for atonal music. I prefer more traditional structures of
layered melodies coupled to sweet vocals. Still, Orphans has a hypnotic charm
thats hard to resist. Songs such as "Fish in the Jailhouse," "Long
Way Home," and "Lie to Me" possess an honesty that is in some ways catchier
than the most effervescent melody. Waits is a wonderful storyteller, recounting tall,
twisted tales of lady shoppers ripping him off, as well as an insightful take on King
Kong. Its hard to tell if these songs were recorded at the same time. Many sound
as if they originated from scratchy LPs or half-dead master tapes. My guess is that they
were engineered this way. The sound quality is good in terms of vocal textures and overall
clarity, even if the noise floor sounds abnormally high
.Anthony Di Marco |
Christopher ORiley: Second Grace: The
Music of Nick Drake
World Village 468066
Format: CD
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If youd enjoy
a superb recording of a master classical pianist performing live on a Hamburg Steinway
Concert D, Christopher ORileys arrangements for solo piano of 14 songs by an
enormously talented and influential singer-songwriter-guitarist most people have never
heard of, who died in his mid-20s in 1974 after making only three LPs, might be for
you. A possible caveat, depending on your taste: Despite ORileys obvious
passion for the task, and his thoughtful adaptations and fine playing, in the absence of
these songs lyrics, there is a bit of fluid New Age sameness to the disc.
Drakes mysterious early death in no way explains serious musicians and
listeners high regard for his work. In the decades since his death, few have caught
up with his unique combinations of tradition and invention, precision and ambiguity,
solidity and ethereality. Skillfully preserving every tone and texture of
ORileys playing while nixing applause and other concert-hall sounds, the
engineering of Second Grace launches the listener more into ORileys
than into Drakes musical orbit. Fortunately, all of Drakes recordings are
still in print
.David Cantor |
Turbo Tabla: The Belly and the Beat
CIA 941 690 012 2
Format: CD
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Turbo Tabla culls ancient rhythms from their primordial roots and
blends them with an amped-up dance-club vibe to create a fusion of traditional Arabic
music and contemporary house, hip-hop, and techno. Musician-DJ-producer Karim Nagi
enhances his tabla drums with electronic effects and looping, mixing the traditional with
the modern to deliver beats of urban sophistication and exotic eastern appeal. Audiophiles
will relish the swirling spectrums of sound created by cerebral high ends and infrasonic,
bass-driven lows. The Belly and the Beat bursts open with "Turbo Tabla
4," a frenzied drum anthem, and maintains that fervor throughout. "Saidi
Song" is the best example of how Nagi pays homage to both old and new; traditional
Egyptian instruments such as the nay, mizmar, and rubbaba recall the entrancing melody of
an ancient snake charmer, but the remixed groove and pulsating beat are meant to charm
club kids more than snakes. As its title suggests, this music is the ultimate outlet for
the seductive gyrations of belly-dancing -- so skip Pilates, turn up some Turbo Tabla, and
break a sweat. Just be careful not to break anything else
.Shannon Holliday |
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