Archive for March, 2008

GOODBYE BLUES - THE HUSH SOUND

On the Hush Sound’s third album, Greta Salpeter shows off a voice fit for Broadway and some piano skills worthy of a recital. But her band keeps things light and fast, letting Salpeter’s piano keep pace with peppy, power-pop guitar riffs. Check the brief, tap-dance-like breakdown of “Honey” or the almost ragtime bounce of […]

March 24th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

RANDY JACKSON’S MUSIC CLUB VOL. ONE - RANDY JACKSON

So far the story of this genre-skipping disc has been Paula Abdul’s comeback with lead-off club track “Dance Like There’s No Tomorrow,” and rightfully so — it’s a sexy and potent return to form. If not as headline-worthy, the Joss Stone-sung “Just Walk On By” is easily one of her best songs, a nasty, […]

March 12th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

RABO DE NUBE - CHARLES LLOYD QUARTET

Poet Charles Simic’s verse for the liner notes of “Rabo de Nube,” Charles Lloyd’s latest CD, released the week of his 70th birthday, reads, “I hear someone whispering/’Without this music/ Life would be a mistake.”‘ In essence, this sums up Lloyd’s reflective jazz, presented here live from Switzerland in tandem with pianist Jason Moran, […]

March 12th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

DREAMING OF REVENGE - KAKI KING

Kaki King plays her acoustic guitar like a drum set, literally tapping on it to create percussive sounds. But she also lays down foundational, virtuosic finger-picked or fret-slapped rhythmic patterns upon which she stacks everything from electric guitar and keyboard to bass, actual drums and, sometimes, vocals. One would expect a massive wall […]

March 12th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

GET ONBOARD - ERIC BIBB

After 2007’s “Diamond Days,” a personal high-water mark for veteran Eric Bibb, “Get Onboard” offers further proof that he is working at an extremely high level of artistry. Several tunes, including “If Our Heart Ain’t in It,” “Stayed on Freedom” and “God’s Kingdom,” conflate folk, blues and gospel in a way that’s uniquely […]

March 12th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

THESE ARE THE GOOD TIMES, PEOPLE - THE PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

The Presidents of the United States of America remain best known for their 1995 self-titled album. Luckily, the band hasn’t changed much. Instead of peaches and kitties, bandleader Chris Ballew now sings about ladybugs and French girls. But the sparse, compact formula that led the group to success in the mid-’90s remains intact. Punchy […]

March 12th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

11TH HOUR - DEL THE FUNKY HOMOSAPIEN

Del the Funky Homosapien has spent much of the past eight years either off the radar or somewhat incongruously all over it, as was the case when he took over the song “Clint Eastwood” on the first Gorillaz record. But his 2008 is looking lively. In addition to rumored new albums from Hieroglyphics and […]

March 12th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

SOUNDS SO GOOD - ASHTON SHEPHERD

There are debut albums, and then there are debut albums that serve notice that the landscape has changed. Twenty-one-year-old Alabama native Ashton Shepherd and producer Buddy Cannon have delivered the latter. Unabashedly country in production and theme, the set is refreshing, authentic and delightfully un-PC. Liquor? Lots of it. Heartache? Check. Dirt roads? […]

March 4th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

GO AWAY WHITE - BAUHAUS

Recorded in 18 days, some tracks in one take, Bauhaus’ fifth studio album proves that even a quarter-century’s hiatus can’t kill a great band, especially if it was undead to begin with. There’s no trickery here — apart from the sinister seduction of Peter Murphy’s ever-deepening Transylvanian croon — and the bare, live style […]

March 4th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

SOUL SPEAK - MICHAEL McDONALD

It’s not quite “Motown 3,” but Michael McDonald is certainly taking his time transitioning back to making new music. “Soul Speak” features 11, well, soulful covers from his personal favorites, along with a trio of new songs that hold their own amidst their formidable surroundings. Highlights include a winning, sultry take on Leonard […]

March 4th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

SATURNALIA - GUTTER TWINS

The Gutter Twins’ Sub Pop debut, “Saturnalia,” is teeming with the kind of raw and gritty music one might expect to hear kicked around in, well, the gutter. And considering that the project is a collaboration between indie vets Mark Lanegan and Greg Dulli, that’s certainly not a bad thing. There’s something ominous and […]

March 4th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

SNAKESKIN VIOLIN - MARKUS JAMES

A handful of American artists have explored the connection between West African music and American blues, but Markus James has lived this connection for the past seven years (and four albums). “Snakeskin Violin” continues his profound world blues passage. Working, as usual, with several Malian players, including Hassi Sare (njarka violin), Mamadou Sidibe (calabash, […]

March 4th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

TRANSNORMAL SKIPEROO - JIM WHITE

Jim White narrated the 2004 film “Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus,” an insightful peek at the often dark place where music and religion meet in the rural South. But the title here is meant to describe his recent bouts with contentment. With accompaniment as varied as vocals from Ollabelle and Brazilian percussion from Mauro […]

March 4th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

MARCUS - MARCUS MILLER

Most largely instrumental jazz albums lose their appeal after the 50-minute mark. Notwithstanding its four R&B-style vocal tracks (including a winning rendition of Deniece Williams’ “Free” by Corinne Bailey Rae), Marcus Miller’s zesty CD has adrenaline to spare at the close of its 70-plus-minute funk-jazz marathon, when he speeds across the finish line […]

March 4th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews