Archive for the 'Album Reviews' Category

APRIL - SUN KIL MOON

With a Modest Mouse covers collection out of his system, Mark Kozelek is back to sketching his signature tales of love poisoned by expectation on his second album as Sun Kil Moon. Evenly divided between the distorted guitar epics of the last two Red House Painters albums (”The Light”) and spartan voice-and-acoustic confessionals (”Lucky […]

March 30th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

LAST NIGHT - MOBY

Madonna, Seal: Big pop stars who started as dance artists have circled back to the floor on their latest albums. But “Last Night,” Moby’s homage to/reconstruction of New York dance music over the course of his 42-year lifetime, is the only one that causes the desired effect: making you feel about the artist the […]

March 30th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

KEEP IT SIMPLE - VAN MORRISON

Forty years on, a new Van Morrison album is still welcome. “Keep It Simple” is his first collection of all-new material since 2005, and as the title hints, there’s not a lot of embellishment, just a kind of basic, rhythmic and melodic flow. “That’s Entrainment” is one of the better tunes, the title referring […]

March 30th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

ATTACK AND RELEASE - THE BLACK KEYS

Throughout four proper albums, the Black Keys hewed to a no-nonsense formula: guitar, drums, vocals, period. It was so satisfyingly simple and raw, it’s likely that the duo could successfully have deployed it again. But, to paraphrase the old saying, you can’t know what you’ve been missing until you’ve had it, and on “Attack […]

March 30th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

LA NOVELA - AKWID

This sibling duo of brothers Sergio and Francisco Gmez broke ground nearly a decade ago by blending traditional banda beats with rap and hip-hop. Here, the brothers expand their sound by incorporating a broad variety of regional Mexican rhythms — from norteno to cumbias adorned with rippling accordions — as the basis for tales of […]

March 30th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

YAEL NAIM - YAEL NAIM

Apple scores again with its latest choice for sweet-voiced female ad singer. The airy vocals behind those MacBook Air promos are a French-Israeli import whose spare coffee shop of a U.S. debut feels pleasingly Euro, while maintaining enough spunk to pull off a Britney Spears cover and appeal to the Norah Jones/Sia set. “Yael […]

March 24th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

WHY WE SING - DIONNE WARWICK

While the several nods to a perfectly realized, contemporary gospel sound (”With All Heart,” “I’m Going Up,” Kirk Franklin’s “Why We Sing”) come across just fine on Dionne Warwick’s latest, it’s the down-home, classic Sunday-morning songs that delight. She shows an unparalleled master’s touch on a fervent array of unapologetically seminal gospel (”Old Landmark,” […]

March 24th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

A MAD AND FAITHFUL TELLING - DEVOTCHKA

Denver-based Devotchka delivers another batch of aching, spacious and histrionic tunes on “A Mad and Faithful Telling.” Still included are sweeping strings and frontman Nick Urata’s dusty, quivering narration, taking the ever-crescendoing melodies through alternating universes of international influence, from mariachi to the Balkans. A good example of this is “Transliterator,” a hypnotically […]

March 24th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

SELF-MADE - ROCKO

Last year, Atlanta’s Rodney “Rocko” Hill told Billboard that money was his main incentive when he made the transition from artist development executive/producer to rapper. Today, riches are a recurrent theme on his debut album, which features head-bopping, neck-jerking production from Drumma Boi (Young Jeezy, Yung Joc) throughout. On the guitar-based “This Morning,” Rocko […]

March 24th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

UMALALI: THE GARIFUNA WOMEN’S PROJECT - VARIOUS ARTISTS

Five years in the works, the Garifuna Women’s Project is the brainchild of producer/musician Ivan Duran, a native of Belize. The Garifuna people are the descendants of African slaves who intermarried with Carib and Arawak Indians. They live primarily along the Caribbean coast of Belize, Honduras, Nicaragua and Guatemala. Duran traveled the region, […]

March 24th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

HONEYDEW - SHAWN MULLINS

The careworn ambience of Shawn Mullins’ 11th studio album comes honestly. Since 2006’s “9th Ward Pickin’ Parlor,” the Georgia-born troubadour lost his mother and had his favorite guitar and songwriting computer stolen in a home burglary. And his dog died. But while “honeydew” has its share of laments, they’re not necessarily Mullins’. As on his […]

March 24th, 2008 - Posted in Album Reviews

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