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Showing posts with label Album. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Album. Show all posts

Composer changes album cover of attacked towers (AP)

NEW YORK – Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Steve Reich (ryk) is picking another image for his album dedicated to 9/11 after the original photo — of the twin towers under attack — was met with protest.

Reich's "WTC 9/11" is out Sept. 20, nine days after the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks. The Kronos Quartet performs the music, and the piece includes prerecorded voices from air traffic controllers, firefighters and others.

The initial image shows one tower in flames after the first plane hit and another jet about to hit the second tower. Since the music included documentary material from the attacks, Reich says he wanted the album art to do the same. But after some criticism, he agreed to choose another image, though he hasn't selected one yet.

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Online:

http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mu/storytext/us_music9_11_cover/42622521/SIG=10rbeeu8m/*http://www.stevereich.com


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Review: Jeff Bridges is country solid on new album (AP)

By SANDY COHEN, AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen, Ap Entertainment Writer – Mon Aug 15, 2:45 pm ET

Jeff Bridges, "Jeff Bridges" (Blue Note)

If Bad Blake, the boozy country singer Jeff Bridges played in 2009's "Crazy Heart," could make albums, he may have made something like "Jeff Bridges." The actor's self-titled album is decidedly country, at once sad and hopeful, laced with heartfelt harmonies and slide guitars.

Perhaps inspired by the movie and certainly made possible by his Oscar win, Bridges sought out his longtime friend (and "Crazy Heart" songwriter and producer) T Bone Burnett to produce the 10-song collection, which features tracks penned by other contributors to the film. Bridges wrote two of the songs himself and co-wrote another with Burnett.

The actor's two self-penned tracks, "Falling Short" and Tumbling Vine," are among the album's most haunting and contemplative, as the 61-year-old sings about what it means to be alive. He continues that theme on "Slow Boat," the song he wrote with Burnett, and throughout the CD. "If it's as bad or good as it can get, well, you ain't seen nothing yet," he sings on one track. "I wasn't born to be standing still long," he sings on another. "You know one day my tombstone will say born to be gone."

The Dude is a deep guy, but Bridges is at his best when he's singing about love. He's earnest on "Either Way," and downright heart-wrenching on "Everything But Love," singing, "The moon cries on the mountains/When it looks down from above/and it sees everything but love."

Bridges, Burnett and Bad Blake should be proud of the actor's eponymous CD. Its 10 songs are solid, if sometimes sad, establishing Bridges as a bonafide musician, not just a guy who plays one on screen.

CHECK OUT THIS TRACK: On the opening track, "What a Little Bit of Love Can Do," Bridges sounds like the cheery-eyed uncle everyone wishes they had. Written by his close friend who died in 2009, Bridges played the song informally for years before leading off his album with it. Upbeat and sweet, the song offers a taste of Bridges' country style and big-hearted vocals.


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Review: Jeff Bridges plays it cool and safe on album (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – Jeff Bridges has said he worried for a while about being typecast as the smart but zonked-out character he played in "The Big Lebowski." So maybe it's not surprising that some early reviews of the actor's T Bone Burnett-produced new album have suggested that it carries certain Dude-like qualities.

Certainly it's low-key enough that you could say it doesn't strive to do much more than abide.

But the "Big Lebowski" character Bridges really most resembles on record is the Stranger, the narrator played by Sam Neil who, you may recall, showed up just long enough to talk about "the way the whole durned human comedy keeps perpetuatin' itself," among other homespun-philosophical nuggets.

Along those same lines, "Jeff Bridges," the album -- possibly much like Jeff Bridges, the person -- is all about the cowboy Zen.

By keeping both his voice and his ambitions low, Bridges avoids a lot of the traps that have befallen other actors-turned-singers. He doesn't take the artistic chances Tim Robbins did on his recently released album debut, and so avoids any of the vocal and thematic embarrassments that the well-intentioned Robbins croaked his way into.

He's neither as pretentious a singer/songwriter as Billy Bob Thornton was in his early country-rock career, nor as silly a genre revivalist as Thornton eventually turned himself into. Cooler than Costner? That goes without saying.

But, utterly listenable as the album is, you may come away from it admiring T Bone Burnett's talent for framing modesty more than the innate likability and unassuming musical charms Bridges brings to the table.

Curiously, Bridges wrote or co-wrote only three of the 10 tracks -- curious because, when he made his indie-label bow in 2000 with a little-remembered album called "Be Here Soon," he wrote a full six of the tunes on that recording. Maybe he's gotten humbler in the intervening 11 years, feeling that his own compositions can't compete with those of Texas music stalwarts like John Goodwin and the late Stephen Bruton, both of whom worked on the film "Crazy Heart" and make multiple writing contributions here.

The opening number, Bruton's "What a Little Bit of Love Can Do," works up a shiny, catchy, Buddy Holly-like feel and it's the last time the album rises to anything so much as a mid-tempo. Most everything else sounds designed for driving into the remnants of a West Texas sunset and musing on life as a slow drive into the unknown. Or "Slow Boat," the simile in one of his original songs. He's a journeyman on "Jeff Bridges" in every sense of the word. "Lookin' down that highway as far as I can see/Where I left so much of me " "Well, it's a good old car/But the clutch is a little loose/And the brakes are screaming/A song called 'What's the Use'/But it's good for one more trip to you " "Are we headed upstream?/The fog's too thick to really see " You get the metaphoric-transit picture.

Familiarity is almost everything here. If you feel like you've been on this highway with Bridges since first-picture-shows like "The Last Picture Show," you may forgive the repetition of some of the imagery and settle into the passenger seat for this very comfortable midlife chat.

Burnett makes that easy enough, by putting to use the trademark sounds he's turned into Americana institutions over the last 30-plus years -- the tremelo and baritone electric guitars, the standup bass, brushes on snares, and Marc Ribot going a little crazy for a few seconds here and there -- and throwing in Rosanne Cash and Sam Phillips as harmony sweeteners.

Bridges stays so well within his limited vocal range that you occasionally wish he'd work up a slight sweat and at least test it, but there's something to be said for an actor knowing his limitations.

The two best tracks do come from the writing hand of John Goodwin, a friend of Bridges' since the fourth grade: "Maybe I Missed the Point," a pointedly self-searching eulogy for good deeds undone, and the closing "The Quest," which transcends its journeying symbolism with a wise message about learning to know when you've replenished your spirit enough to do some hard work.

The most quotable moment comes when Bridges, in an original verse, sings, "Here is my seat/I do not pay rent/I'm delighted/I'm Buddhistly bent." Critics may cock their eyebrows at that one, but both The Stranger would surely approve, and probably The Dude, too.


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Coldplay's new "Mylo Xyloto" album gets October release (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – British rock band Coldplay announced on Friday they will release their fifth studio album on October 25 in the United States and a day earlier elsewhere

The group unveiled the new album's graffiti pop art reversible cover and its title "Mylo Xyloto," on its website, but did not explain what the album title meant.

The album's new single, "September," will be released on September 12, following the June release of "Every Teardrop is a Waterfall".

Lead vocalist Chris Martin told Billboard the album, co-produced by Brian Eno, does not fit into "any musical kind of box".

"I think we have a lot to prove to ourselves. There's no point in not going for it," he said in an interview published on Friday.

The band's fifth album, which will be released in digital, CD and vinyl formats, follows their 2008 album "Viva La Vida", which sold 2.8 million units in the United States.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)


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3 Doors Down gets introspective on new album (AP)

By CAITLIN R. KING, Associated Press Caitlin R. King, Associated Press – Fri Aug 12, 11:16 am ET

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Multi-platinum rock band 3 Doors Down is moving forward by looking back.

"The title of this album really kind of hits it on the head, `Time of My Life.' It talks about a lot of things that went on in the past," lead singer Brad Arnold said in a recent interview. "But it talks about a lot of more lighthearted things as well, and (there's) a lot of fun songs on this record, too."

The band had a long history to pull from for this effort. Most of them have known each other for more than 20 years, having grown up together in Mississippi and officially forming in 1995. Their debut album, 2000's "The Better Life", featured the song "Kryptonite" and sold six million copies.

In many ways the group (comprised of Arnold, lead guitarist Matt Roberts, bassist Todd Harrell, guitarist Chris Henderson and drummer Greg Upchurch) wanted to get back to that initial feeling from their early years.

"This being our fifth record, it is really similar to our first record in a lot of ways in that we really approached it with kind of new eyes. ... with a good heart and hungry hearts and ready to do something new," Arnold said of the album, released last month.

"We did things that we normally wouldn't do in the past, and it shows," said Harrell. "You know how every band in their career has that one record, like Rush has `Moving Pictures,' and Def Leppard has `Hysteria'? I think this is our record. I think this is it, because it's by far, to me, the best record we've ever done."

The album's leadoff song, "When You're Young," became the band's 10th top 10 single on the mainstream rock chart.

"I think this song strikes a chord with fans, because everybody can relate to how hard it is to be young, whether you're presently young or whether you're just looking back on how hard it really was," said Arnold. "This song in a way is a mockery of how easy people think it is sometimes and how easy people talk about how it is to be young."

At age 32, Arnold said he thinks of his band mates as brothers. Harrell, 39, agreed and said he feels that 3 Doors Down is finally coming into its own.

"I think the band right now as a whole is probably better than it's been ever. I think we're all a lot tighter," Harrell said. "If you do something as long as we've done it, you can't help but get better at it, you know?"

"As far as where we're at in our lives, I think the band's all great. Everybody's in a good spot right now, and we're just having fun. We're ready to go out and have a lot of fun with the fans," he added.

3 Doors Down are currently on a U.S. tour through October. They just released a new single, "Every Time You Go," and the music video features footage from their European tour earlier this summer.

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Online:

http://www.3doorsdown.com/


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Review: TV's "The Voice" album is a listenable experience (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – It may be that we don't need another line of pop hits remade by barely identifiable reality-show contestants or actors, when we already have more "American Idol" and "Glee" albums than America's shrinking music-retail shelves can hold.

Actually, it's certain that we don't. But if the gods have decreed we have to have another cover-tune franchise, thank God it's "The Voice," whose credible coaches know first-hand that individuality of interpretation counts.

The breakout series' first full-length soundtrack, "The Voice: Season 1 The Highlights," turns out to be an altogether listenable experience on its own "reality"-free terms. Part of the reason is that, on the surface, several of the 11 singers seem wrong for the material they're singing -- which is why things sometimes go so intriguingly right.

Do we really want to hear anyone other than Dolly Parton sing "Jolene?" (Besides the White Stripes?) Hardly, but the case is easier to make with someone whose voice is the opposite of crystalline Dolly's -- that being, in this case, Vicci Martinez's slightly cracked, more R&B-rooted tones.

Usually the singers on "Idol" are trying to out-brass the originals, so it's a delight to hear Xenia offering a sweeter, more relaxed take on "Price Tag" than Jessie J, the originating British diva, did. (In this case, it may help not to have watched the show; Xenia's live performing skills, or the alleged lack thereof, were supposedly what got her voted off early, but on record, her contribution may be the album's most instantly appealing.)

Nirvana's "Come as You Are" wasn't made for as wistful and free-range a warbler as Rebecca Loebe, but even if you believe all too well that she "don't have a gun," she's packing an alternative approach that suits Kurt Cobain's former surliness just fine.

Of course, when it comes to Kanye West's "Heartless," any interpreter who isn't blatantly singing through Autotune's electronic filtering would be radically breaking from form. It's a bit of a stunt to turn his electro-lament into a more traditional ballad, but runner-up Dia Frampton finds the heart in West's seething.

While series winner Javier Colon doesn't take many chances with the tune that introduced him, "Time After Time," you'd be hard-pressed to argue that even Cyndi Lauper's iconic version has anything in loveliness on his tender vocal or, especially, its bare-bones arrangement.

The album isn't all about departure: Frenchie Davis' "When Love Takes Over" couldn't skew much closer to the minor David Guetta original. But Davis arguably brings more vocal character to the dance track than Guetta's guest, Kelly Rowland, did, which is merit enough for its inclusion.

If you didn't watch the series and weren't invested in the cast, listening to the "Voice Highlights" album won't change your musical life, but it should at least change your viewing habits next season.


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Review: Luke Bryan keeps party going on new album (AP)

By MICHAEL McCALL, For The Associated Press Michael Mccall, For The Associated Press – Mon Aug 8, 2:03 pm ET

Luke Bryan, "Tailgates & Tanlines" (Capitol Records Nashville)

Nearly every photo of Luke Bryan shows him flashing a bright smile, and at his best, his music captures the easy-going personality that makes the Georgia native as appealing as the sing-along party songs he favors.

Recently voted top new artist by fans during the Academy of Country Music Awards, Bryan kicked his career in gear over the last year with a couple of back-to-back No. 1 hits. Along the way, he has cultivated a reputation as a good-time guy known for upbeat tunes, even releasing a series of EPs with "spring break" in the titles.

"Tailgates & Tanlines," his third full-length album, builds on his status as country music's "Mr. Fun-in-the-Sun," as indicated by the rocking first single, "Country Girl (Shake It For Me"), a top 10 hit.

As likable as he is, Bryan occasionally tackles songs he can't handle, as in "I Don't Want This Night to End," in which he struggles to keep up with the song's fast-rolling phrasing. He also strains to lend believable weight to a serious song, such as "You Don't Know Jack," about a conversation with a homeless alcoholic.

With "Tailgates & Tanlines," Bryan proves once again he can get a party started. But he still needs to prove he can communicate the nuances of what happens when the party is over.

CHECK OUT THIS TRACK: Bryan can even make a love song sound like a lighthearted celebration, as he does on the mid-tempo "Drunk On You," which features his most engaging vocal work on the album.


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Review: Fountains of Wayne more rueful on fifth album (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – Fountains of Wayne, the lawn ornament store in Wayne, N.J., that was seen in the opening credits of "The Sopranos," finally shut its doors two summers ago. Fortunately, there's no closure in sight for the other, even better-known Fountains of Wayne, the rock & roll quartet that's been one of America's greatest bands since its 1996 debut.

But mellowing does seem to be in the cards, after a four-year layoff. Although band leaders Chris Collingwood and Adam Schlesinger continue to write some of the hookiest and most clever material of the modern age, there's less fun and more ruefulness in "Sky Full of Holes," the group's fifth album.

It may be a moot point that the new effort is FOW's least airplay-friendly, since neither radio nor MTV would likely play this kind of stuff anymore even if the group did manage to come up with a "Stacy's Mom II." But fans who prefer an abundance of power in their power-pop may worry about what the lopsided spunk-to-sadness ratio portends for the beloved band.

It'd be a mistake to only celebrate Fountains of Wayne's drollery, anyway. Some of their best songs have set the wit aside for wistfulness, like "All Kinds of Time," the slowest and ironically saddest song ever to be adopted for an NFL commercial. On the new album, sure enough, the finest track is "Action Hero," the sorrowful tale of a middle-aged guy whose business and family stress are getting the best of his health -- even though, in his arrested-youth daydreams, he's still costuming up and saving the world.

There are still up-tempo comic highlights here, mostly concentrated in the album's first half. The single "Richie and Ruben" warns about an alliterative pair of serial business owners who manage to lose all their friends' investments moving from one failed retail or restaurant venture to another. "Eleven hundred bucks for a ripped-up shirt/That came pre-stained with bleach and black dirt/Seemed just a little bit too steep to me-ee-ee," Collingwood sings, in a typically dry, matter-of-fact tone that makes little distinguishment between mundane narrative details and deep emotions.

Wryness gets traded in for ruefulness in most of the album's second half, which forsakes the band's trademark quirky narratives for more impressionistic, reflective material. "You save your money for a hole in the ground, a black car and a long row of roses," the band sings in "Workingman's Hands," which seems almost designed to be the antithesis of the working-class celebrations that country music specializes in.

"Hate to See You Like This" splits the difference between cheer and depression, being a call to a despondent friend to break out of her funk. At least there's some wit to her depression: "Let's get your phone reconnected/Let's get this room disinfected"

Even a second-tier Fountains of Wayne album beats just about anything else 21st century rock has to offer. But "Hate to See You Like This" might also describe the reaction of some FOW fanatics who'll long for the more spirited days of "Welcome Interstate Managers," their 2003 masterpiece.

Maybe Schlesinger was just saving his more upbeat songs for side projects like the band Tinted Windows or his musical theater projects. Surely, after this four-year layoff, it's Fountains of Wayne's characters that are so resigned, not the members themselves, and the more laid-back feel is a natural phase, not part of a slow slide toward the fate of the band's namesake store. Right?


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