Archive for December, 2007

THE BIG DOE REHAB - GHOSTFACE KILLAH

Even while the Wu-Tang Clan was most active, Ghostface Killah was quietly establishing himself as one of the wickedest, least predictable MCs of this era. This is his third album in 18 months. But if there’s a bottom to Ghost’s lyrical well, he’s nowhere near it on “The Big Doe Rehab,” which is jammed […]

December 11th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

KILL THE HOUSE LIGHTS - THURSDAY

This collection of Thursday material well-serves its likely purposes of keeping the band top of mind in the fourth quarter while giving screamo fans a new favorite thing for Christmas. Three new songs and nine previously unreleased ones, plus a documentary/concert DVD, make “Kill the House Lights” worth exploring. Instead of throwing in anything […]

December 11th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

FACE OFF - BOW WOW & OMARION

Full-length pairups between R&B and rap/ hip-hop artists are nothing new. (See R. Kelly and Jay-Z’s “Unfinished Business.”) On this outing, teen heartthrobs and tour mates Bow Wow and Omarion team for an album that builds on their 2005 hit merger “Let Me Hold You.” The result doesn’t disappoint. One of the strongest tracks […]

December 11th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

SWEENEY TODD — ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK - VARIOUS ARTISTS

At first slice, the musical tale of a murderous barber doesn’t seem like appropriate Hollywood fodder. But if you think of it as Tim Burton’s answer to the stage-to-film adaptation craze that gave us John Travolta in drag, it makes some kind of sense. Helena Bonham Carter as the meat-pie-making Mrs. Lovett sings more […]

December 11th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

LOVEHATE - THE DREAM

R&B rookie the Dream has already proved adept at penning ultra-catchy tunes. Exhibit A: Rihanna’s “Umbrella.” Exhibit B: J. Holiday’s “Bed.” The same elements that made those songs such irresistible hits are what make this singer/songwriter’s debut so impressive: lingering melodies, plenty of “ehs” and even a few “ellas.” Realizing that repetition is the […]

December 11th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

8 DIAGRAMS - WU-TANG CLAN

The biggest revelation on Wu-Tang’s first record in six years isn’t the Beatles “reinterpolation” “The Heart Gently Weeps” or even that the album actually came out. It’s that the project is as strong as it is — for all the years of obligatory infighting, there’s a cohesion and strength to these “8 Diagrams.” RZA […]

December 11th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

LIVE AT PIEDMONT PARK - DAVE MATTHEWS BAND

As strong a representation as you’ll find anywhere in Dave Matthews Band’s burgeoning catalog of concert releases, “Live at Piedmont Park” is notable for the ferocity of the band’s playing on tracks like the seriously funky “Louisiana Bayou,” a Latin-tinged “You Might Die Trying” and “Cornbread,” one of three new songs here. There’s also […]

December 8th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

RUFUS DOES JUDY AT CARNEGIE - RUFUS WAINWRIGHT

This song-by-song re-creation of Judy Garland’s iconic 1961 Carnegie Hall performance, staged there by Rufus Wainwright in 2006, seems better-suited to a cabaret act. Wainwright tries valiantly, but his persona is too affected to do what Garland did with this material: all standards, but rearranged for maximum drama and sung by the troubled star […]

December 8th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

THE SOLUTION - BEANIE SIGEL

This Philadelphia-based MC, one of several Jay-Z proteges who have yet to attain that level of fame, describes in more detail than most rappers the criminal demimonde that gangsta rap alternately glorifies and laments. And Beanie Sigel knows what he’s talking about: In addition to three previous studio discs, his resume reflects several run-ins […]

December 8th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

GO - MARIO

Mario is certainly a fine singer, and his 2004 ballad “Let Me Love You” remains a modern R&B classic. Problem is, he’s failed to consistently hold our attention. While third album “Go” shows a necessary maturation, the disc is short on standouts. At 21, Mario still struggles to find his adult sound, hitting dead […]

December 8th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

Y34RZ3r0r3mix3d - NINE INCH NAILS

Trent Reznor has become something of a nouveau-marketing poster boy lately, and from the liner notes of this remix disc, you might think it was just another interactive, nontraditional, brand-positioning tactic. “Included on this DVD is everything you need to get started remixing every track from ‘Year Zero,”‘ it reads, going on to break […]

December 8th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

THE CARNIVAL II: MEMOIRS OF AN IMMIGRANT - WYCLEF JEAN

Wyclef Jean has spent the 10 years since the original “Carnival” in projects of scattered ambition and success, some that hit (”Hips Don’t Lie”) and some that didn’t (anyone remember his reworking of “The Gambler” with Kenny Rogers?). But hip-hop loves its Roman numerals, and it was probably only a matter of time before […]

December 8th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

AUDIO DAY DREAM - BLAKE LEWIS

One can’t help but proceed with caution when an album is named after Attention Deficit Disorder, especially when the artist caught his break by beatboxing on a reality TV show where he used to sing the praises of 311. But skeptics can relax: “American Idol” season six runner-up Blake Lewis’ debut is indeed a […]

December 8th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews

WORRIED NOODLES - VARIOUS ARTISTS

Visual artist/writer David Shrigley is a strange talent. Two years ago, he released an LP-size book, “Worried Noodles,” filled with idiosyncratic song lyrics but no actual songs, along with his silly and demented drawings. Now, 29 of indie rock’s most notable acts have tried their hand at musically interpreting his works on this double-disc […]

December 8th, 2007 - Posted in Album Reviews