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Dream Box

Pat Metheny

Jazz - Released June 16, 2023 | Modern Recordings

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Dream Box is Pat Metheny's third date for BMG's Modern Recordings, a set of nine solo tunes for electric guitar, drawn from a folder on his laptop's hard drive. Metheny often records new ideas, covers, or standards by playing them once. During 160 days of touring in 2022, he had ample time to survey the folder's contents. He was surprised when the music he had little memory of recording revealed these "moments in time" as an organic whole. Further, all but one original had compositional roots in the method utilized on "Unity Village" on 1976's Bright Size Life -- an initial harmonic scheme buoyed by a second offering melodic and improvisational sequences. This program contains six original compositions, two standards, and a cover. Longtime fans will find little save for guitar tone in common with earlier solo records such as 1979's New Chautauqua or 2011's What's It All About. It does bear aesthetic and emotional relation to 2004's One Quiet Night, a set of ballads recorded at home solo on an acoustic baritone guitar.One of Metheny's aesthetic signatures is an often euphoric character in his composing and playing. While that's absent here, emotion, vulnerability, and poignancy aren't. The sparse chords and melodic line that introduce opener "The Waves Are Not the Ocean" are gently presented to the listener without adornment save for the dictates of its lyric harmony. The spaces between whispered chord voicings carry the listener's heart alongside. "From the Mountains" seemingly underscores that flavor with a slightly darker yet more majestic Latin-tinged melody. "Trust Your Angels" is lilting, tender, and expository in its impressionistic use of the blues, à la mentors Jim Hall and Charlie Haden. The first four originals are followed by two elegantly wrought covers. The first is a harmonically and rhythmically re-envisioned reading of Russell Vernon Longstreth's (aka Russ Long) obscure yacht rock classic "Never Was Love." Metheny's version strips away the sheen of pop artifice, revealing the sophisticated nature of its intricate blue melody. Sammy Cahn's "I Fall in Love Too Easily" is rendered with a similar approach to the one pianist Bill Evans articulated on 1962's Moon Beams. Metheny's gentle use of reverb adds an additional multi-phonic voice as he hovers between single string melody, chord changes, and the mysterious innovative shapes he employs as bridges between. The other standard is Luiz Bonfa's "Morning of the Carnival" ("Manha de Carnival"). Unlike the many jazz versions out there, Metheny's realization closely adheres to Bonfa's save for a subtle meld of samba and cumbia rhythms. When Metheny states the melody, he offers contrasting melodic voices on top, culminating in a warm, pointed solo. Set closer "Clouds Can't Change the Sky" is another listener-enveloping ballad composed in sections. Its lyric statement is followed first by abstraction in tone, texture, and tempo before establishing a second melody from that investigation, resolving them both. The electric guitar ballads on Dream Box offer unvarnished introspection, uncanny musical vision, and gorgeous technique.© Thom Jurek /TiVo
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Wide Open Light

Ben Harper

Alternative & Indie - Released June 2, 2023 | Chrysalis Records

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With the brilliant Bloodline Maintenance in 2022, Ben Harper made a superb soulful turn, eyeing his elders Otis Redding, Curtis Mayfield, and Marvin Gaye, yet never plagiarising them. This time, the Californian with a thirty-year career has chosen to anchor himself deeply in the United States, to summon the history of southern blues and folk. Acoustics take precedence, as on most of Ben Harper's recent discography, making the slide guitars and the wood of the instruments resound to the point where you think you can hear the fire crackling in the fireplace. It’s mellow until, suddenly, a dominating and tense piano rears on Trying Not to Fall in Love With You, a beautiful UFO à la Tom Waits, followed by a return to the essential, with six controlled and expressive strings. This album is delectable, easy listening. We personally prefer listening with closed eyes; the ideal context to fully appreciate the sixties folk of 8 Minutes, the sensitivity of Wide Open Light, or the authentic blues of Giving Ghosts. Ben Harper has never been short of inspiration. Or beauty for that matter. © Brice Miclet/Qobuz
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Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy

Elton John

Pop - Released January 1, 1975 | EMI

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Sitting atop the charts in 1975, Elton John and Bernie Taupin recalled their rise to power in Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy, their first explicitly conceptual effort since Tumbleweed Connection. It's no coincidence that it's their best album since then, showcasing each at the peak of his power, as John crafts supple, elastic, versatile pop and Taupin's inscrutable wordplay is evocative, even moving. What's best about the record is that it works best of a piece -- although it entered the charts at number one, this only had one huge hit in "Someone Saved My Life Tonight," which sounds even better here, since it tidily fits into the musical and lyrical themes. And although the musical skill on display here is dazzling, as it bounces between country and hard rock within the same song, this is certainly a grower. The album needs time to reveal its treasures, but once it does, it rivals Tumbleweed in terms of sheer consistency and eclipses it in scope, capturing John and Taupin at a pinnacle. They collapsed in hubris and excess not long afterward -- Rock of the Westies, which followed just months later is as scattered as this is focused -- but this remains a testament to the strengths of their creative partnership.© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo
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The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars

David Bowie

Rock - Released June 6, 1972 | Parlophone UK

Hi-Res Distinctions The Qobuz Ideal Discography
Borrowing heavily from Marc Bolan's glam rock and the future shock of A Clockwork Orange, David Bowie reached back to the heavy rock of The Man Who Sold the World for The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. Constructed as a loose concept album about an androgynous alien rock star named Ziggy Stardust, the story falls apart quickly, yet Bowie's fractured, paranoid lyrics are evocative of a decadent, decaying future, and the music echoes an apocalyptic, nuclear dread. Fleshing out the off-kilter metallic mix with fatter guitars, genuine pop songs, string sections, keyboards, and a cinematic flourish, Ziggy Stardust is a glitzy array of riffs, hooks, melodrama, and style and the logical culmination of glam. Mick Ronson plays with a maverick flair that invigorates rockers like "Suffragette City," "Moonage Daydream," and "Hang Onto Yourself," while "Lady Stardust," "Five Years," and "Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" have a grand sense of staged drama previously unheard of in rock & roll. And that self-conscious sense of theater is part of the reason why Ziggy Stardust sounds so foreign. Bowie succeeds not in spite of his pretensions but because of them, and Ziggy Stardust -- familiar in structure, but alien in performance -- is the first time his vision and execution met in such a grand, sweeping fashion.© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo
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The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars

David Bowie

Rock - Released June 6, 1972 | Parlophone UK

Hi-Res Distinctions The Qobuz Ideal Discography
Borrowing heavily from Marc Bolan's glam rock and the future shock of A Clockwork Orange, David Bowie reached back to the heavy rock of The Man Who Sold the World for The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. Constructed as a loose concept album about an androgynous alien rock star named Ziggy Stardust, the story falls apart quickly, yet Bowie's fractured, paranoid lyrics are evocative of a decadent, decaying future, and the music echoes an apocalyptic, nuclear dread. Fleshing out the off-kilter metallic mix with fatter guitars, genuine pop songs, string sections, keyboards, and a cinematic flourish, Ziggy Stardust is a glitzy array of riffs, hooks, melodrama, and style and the logical culmination of glam. Mick Ronson plays with a maverick flair that invigorates rockers like "Suffragette City," "Moonage Daydream," and "Hang Onto Yourself," while "Lady Stardust," "Five Years," and "Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" have a grand sense of staged drama previously unheard of in rock & roll. And that self-conscious sense of theater is part of the reason why Ziggy Stardust sounds so foreign. Bowie succeeds not in spite of his pretensions but because of them, and Ziggy Stardust -- familiar in structure, but alien in performance -- is the first time his vision and execution met in such a grand, sweeping fashion.© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo
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Standards, Vol. 2

Keith Jarrett

Jazz - Released April 29, 1985 | ECM

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One of three trio albums that pianist Keith Jarrett recorded with bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Jack DeJohnette during the same month, this second volume of Standards gets the edge over the first due to its slightly more challenging material. Jarrett, who has often taken himself a bit too seriously, is surprisingly playful at times in this format. In addition to Jarrett's "So Tender," there are such superior songs explored on this date as Alec Wilder's "Moon and Sand," "If I Should Lose You" and "I Fall in Love Too Easily." Bassist Gary Peacock and drummer Jack DeJohnette listen closely to Jarrett and no matter what direction the pianist turns, they are already there waiting for him.© Scott Yanow /TiVo
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Carpenters With The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra

The Carpenters

Pop - Released December 7, 2018 | A&M

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The greatest classics from The Carpenters have resurfaced in a sublime blend of vocal harmonies and symphonic arrangements. For this project in 2018, Richard Carpenter himself went along to Abbey Road Studios. Their last album in 1981, Made in America, was a half-posthumous album (Richard’s sister Karen having died in 1983 at only 32 years of age) and invoked a certain feeling of nostalgia, showing that this legendary pop group shifting more towards easy-listening could still be deep. However, it is still very rooted in the American culture of the seventies, particularly through the classics Close To You, Rainy Days and Mondays and We’ve Only Just Begun.With this album, the legacy of The Carpenters lives on in an unconventional way. The producers have kept the voices of the original recordings and some instrumental parts, surrounding them with the brand-new sounds of the violins from the London Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Thanks to their classy arrangements, these strings tastefully accentuate the romanticism of this timeless pop. © Clotilde Maréchal/Qobuz
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When I Look In Your Eyes

Diana Krall

Vocal Jazz - Released January 1, 1998 | Impulse!

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With this CD, the young Canadian singer/pianist/arranger joins forces with producer Tommy LiPuma, who places his orchestral stamp on eight of the 13 tracks. It is the latest attempt to push Krall to an even wider pop/smooth jazz audience than she already enjoys. After all, Nat Cole, Wes Montgomery, and George Benson, among others, went this route. Wonder if she'd agree the cuts sans strings were more fun and challenging? Krall does get to it with central help from bassists John Clayton and Ben Wolfe, drummers Jeff Hamilton and Lewis Nash, and guitarist Russell Malone, all stellar players. Krall's voice is sweet and sexy. She's also flexible within her range and at times a bit kitschy, mostly the hopeless romantic. On this CD of love songs, it's clear she's cool but very much in love with this music. Bob Dorough's "Devil May Care" and the insistent "Best Thing for You" really click. Favorites are a decent Shearing-esque "Let's Fall in Love" with vibist Larry Bunker; a suave slow bossa on the opening number, "Let's Face the Music"; the lusher-than-lush title track; and especially an incredible horn-fired fanfare intro/outro on the hip "Pick Yourself Up." Some might call this fluff or mush, but it depends solely on your personal taste. This will certainly appeal to Krall's fans, lovers, and lovers at heart.© Michael G. Nastos /TiVo
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Cigarettes After Sex

Cigarettes After Sex

Alternative & Indie - Released June 9, 2017 | Partisan Records

Booklet
Greg Gonzalez's androgynous voice. Ethereal guitars that blur at the edges. Weightless rhythms. Sensual melodies. In all, Cigarettes After Sex wear their name well... Somewhere between dream pop and shoegaze, the Texan group is an invitation to nonchalance, an apologia for giving up. If you took the vocals off this album, you'd wind up with easily the most erotic counterfeit soundtrack available today. Like a slow bubbling, like a delicious, languorous draught of a fine musical vintage. The spirit of Angelo Badalamenti, David Lynch's official composer, isn't far away... Cigarette? © Marc Zisman/Qobuz
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Psychopath

Morgan Wade

Country - Released August 25, 2023 | Ladylike Records - RCA Nashville

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Morgan Wade has not only conquered the sophomore slump; the music and her raspy Virginia twang sound better than ever. "80s Movie" is redolent of the kind of nostalgia Eric Church does so well, referencing cassette tapes and small-town water towers, When Harry Met Sally and Dirty Dancing, and remembering boyfriends with "Tom Cruise hair." And, as with Church, it's as inspired by '80s guitar rock as classic '80s country. But there are plenty of '90s touchstones, too, including the folksy jangle of "Roman Candle" and smoky "Outrun." "Alanis," with its jittering guitar, pays tribute to Alanis Morisette and "You Oughta Know," which came out the year Wade was born. (She performed that song with Morissette and other country singers at the 2023 CMT Awards.) "Alanis, lived out your pain through sweet profanity … Alanis, how did you ever keep your sanity?" Wade sings, in awe of the way Morisette would "scream on the stage and let out the rage 'til the lights go dark." Appropriately, the song ends with Alanis-style harmonica. There's a Sheryl Crow open-mic vibe "Phantom Feelings," a Julia Michaels co-write, with Wade hitting a growl as she gets nostalgic about being "young and … dumb" and "getting drunk at a bar downtown quoting Sylvia Plath." There's also a longing for being 16 and carefree, before knowing "the world was so damn mean," on "Losers Like Me," which rips with juke-joint piano and siren-wail guitar. "We said we wouldn't get jobs and we'd burn our bras/ We wouldn't turn out nothing like our moms/ I didn't/ But I wish I did," Wade reckons. Inevitably, the songs on this record will be picked over for clues to Wade's nebulous relationship with Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star Kyle Richards, a favorite topic of internet gossip. Power ballad "Guns and Roses" should fuel the flames: "Chasing after you feels a little dangerous/ I could give it all, but it never is enough/ Just when I think we're friends/ All of your words turn to lead/ Planting flowers in my head/ Aiming for love, hitting me instead." And "27 Club," a bittersweet-sounding acoustic number, is sure to spur guessing games, as Wade sings about "laying in the bed at the Chateau/ With someone I saw on TV but barely even know" and being "out in LA with a Beverly Hills hottie/ The kind that wants to go and sniff the pills off my body." It builds and the guitars rock out, but Wade, who proudly wears her sobriety, is sometimes left "feeling so sad/ I could reach for the gun/ I could reach for the bottle/ But it's great/ I'm getting paid ... I didn't make the 27 club/ I'm 28." Glad she's here. © Shelly Ridenour/Qobuz
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Shadows and Light

Joni Mitchell

Pop - Released May 7, 2013 | Rhino - Elektra

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Shadows and Light is Joni Mitchell's second live album, and it serves as a good retrospective of her jazzy period from 1975-1979. As expected, she assembles a group of all-star musicians including Pat Metheny (guitar), Jaco Pastorius (bass), Lyle Mays (keyboards), and Michael Brecker (saxophone) who give these compositions more energy than on the studio recordings. The musicians are given room to jam, and they sound terrific on uptempo songs such as "Coyote" and "In France They Kiss on Main Street." If there is a general theme of these songs, it's about growing older and maturing after the failed idealism of the late '60s (the album opens with audio clips from the movie Rebel Without a Cause). Although this album is pleasing, the live arrangements are not different enough from the studio versions to warrant higher marks. In fact, Mitchell has always been an album artist who recorded studio albums that had a sound and feel all their own. While Shadows and Light provides a nice summary of her experimental period for casual fans, interested listeners should start with Hejira or The Hissing of Summer Lawns.© Vik Iyengar /TiVo
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The Dirt Soundtrack

Mötley Crüe

Rock - Released March 22, 2019 | BMG Rights Management (US) LLC

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Biopic The Dirt tells the story of Mötley Crüe's wild ride through their time as one of the most popular and most debaucherous bands of the metal years. During a blistering run that lasted the entirety of the '80s, the L.A. band sold millions of records, toured the world, and challenged death constantly with reckless behavior, substance abuse, and the kind of mayhem that sometimes seems like it only existed in the time when hair metal reigned. Some of these misadventures were collected in the 2001 book The Dirt, and the 2019 film adaptation of the book further dramatizes some of the group's already unbelievable antics, as well as getting into the music that made it all happen. The soundtrack to the film is made up entirely of music by Mötley Crüe, but in addition to 14 selections from their early catalog, they recorded four entirely new tracks in 2018 especially for inclusion in the film. Rapper Machine Gun Kelly (who plays the role of drummer Tommy Lee in the film) features on the song "The Dirt (Est. 1981)," dropping a rapped coda about tattoos, girls, cars, and the rock & roll lifestyle into the song's pop-metal framework. Huge, hooky choruses were part of the Crüe's formula for success in the '80s, and they don't shy away from that formula here, either. In addition to two other new songs, "Crash and Burn" and "Ride with the Devil," the band offer an unlikely cover in the form of Madonna's 1984 smash hit "Like a Virgin." Die-hard metalheads might scoff at the idea of a band synonymous with '80s metal decadence taking a stab at one of the decade's most commercial artists, but 35 years later the context of the song (and of all the musicians in the equation, for that matter) has shifted to the point where the cover can be taken at face value. It's a revved-up version of an undeniably catchy song, delivered with an extra dose of menace and possibly a self-aware smirk at how ridiculous it is. The Dirt soundtrack pairs the nostalgia of well-loved favorites ("Home Sweet Home," "Kickstart My Heart," "Shout at the Devil") with the reinvigorated excitement of the raw newer songs for a collection that feels more like a companion to the film than a greatest-hits repackaging.© Fred Thomas /TiVo
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Religiously. The Album.

Bailey Zimmerman

Country - Released May 12, 2023 | Warner Music Nashville - Elektra

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Reverberations (Travelling In Time)

Primal Scream

Alternative & Indie - Released September 15, 2023 | Young Tiki - XTRM Ltd.

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In the mid-'80s, Primal Scream helped invent indie pop with their double shot of singles for the nascent Creation label. "Velocity Girl" and "All Fall Down" launched a thousand bands inspired by the glorious 12-string jangle, meltingly sweet melodies, winsome vocals, lo-fi splendor of the recording, and the deeply melancholy lyrical content. They sounded like the Beatles mixed with the Byrds all dolled up for a new generation. When they went in to record their first album, they found themselves suddenly at the whims of producers and record labels, and 1987's Sonic Flower Groove was hindered by a slick sound that was a little too studied. The songs themselves were brilliant, though -- little nuggets of noisy, psychedelic wonder that would have taken flight if they hadn't been polished to perfection. Need proof? Check out the 2023 album Reverberations (Traveling in Time) for the unvarnished truth. Recorded at a series of BBC radio sessions before they began work on their first album, these stripped-down, noisy, and glimmering songs come fully to life in their raw state. The interplay between the chiming 12-string and gritty rhythm guitar is like watching sparks fly, the rhythm section is tighter than Tom Jones' trousers, and Bobby Gillespie imbues the lyrics with all the boyish charm and wobbly soul that got paved over on the album. Almost all the songs from Sonic Flower show up along with a few tracks like the super bouncy "Feverclaw" and the tender ballad "Bewitched and Bewildered" that didn't make the cut as well as a ripping take on "Velocity Girl." These recordings capture a very special moment in time as the band define a new genre with a batch of songs so perfect that they were hard to match much less top. Even Primal Scream didn't try. Hearing these versions finally collected in good fidelity is like a dream come true, and the addition of all the tracks from the first two Creation singles is the cherry on top.© Tim Sendra /TiVo
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The Party (feat. Dré Pallemaerts & Clemens Van Der Feen)

Paul Lay

Contemporary Jazz - Released February 17, 2017 | Laborie Jazz

Hi-Res Booklet Distinctions 4F de Télérama
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Gates of Twilight

Wings of Steel

Metal - Released May 19, 2023 | Wings of Steel

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Nightclub

Patricia Barber

Jazz - Released September 26, 2000 | Premonition Records

Chicago native and classically trained pianist Patricia Barber's sixth album is a collection of downtempo standards, perfect for a rainy day. Taking on classics like "Autumn Leaves," "I Fall in Love Too Easily," "Bye Bye Blackbird," or even "Alfie" is always a risk, but her confident vocals and interpretations eradicate any doubt that she is a master. Her production is spare, allowing her to sing with such melancholy it's almost eerie. Not many performers can relay such harrowing feeling without over-emoting, but Barber makes it seem effortless. Nightclub is an appropriate title; listening to these love songs is like being in a smoky room, courted by a lounge singer. This is a classy, solid effort.© Bryan Buss /TiVo
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Archangel

Two Steps From Hell

Classical - Released September 20, 2011 | Two Steps from Hell

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Manassas

Stephen Stills

Pop - Released April 12, 1972 | Rhino Atlantic

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Live With Orchestra And Special Guests

Chris Botti

Jazz - Released October 17, 2006 | Columbia