GoodSound! "Music" Archives Published March 1, 2008 |
Juno (Soundtrack)
Rhino R2 410236
Format: CD
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The soundtrack album for Juno
is as fun, lighthearted, and smart as the film itself. The artists featured are mostly of
the underground, alternative, quirky type, and include Kimya Dawson, the Moldy Peaches,
Mott the Hoople, and Antsy Pants; rounding out the mix are not-so-underground but equally
quirky bands such as Cat Power, Belle & Sebastian, and the Velvet Underground. Neither
the film nor the soundtrack aims for pretension, and thats the secret of the success
of both. Nominated for four Academy Awards, Juno is fresh and endearing, and though
more drama than comedy, its funnier than most films that deliberately strive for
laughs. The film and score are so complementary and intrinsic to one another that they
appear to have been arranged simultaneously rather than in postproduction -- both will win
your heart and are well worth your while
.Shannon Holliday |
Eagles: Long Road Out of Eden
Eagles Recording Company 98268-4500-2
Format: CD
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Theres a pretty good
argument to be made for the Eagles having been the most influential band of the
1970s, but you cant really hear them much in current rock. Turn on any country-music
station, however, and their sound is everywhere. Long Road Out of Eden, the
bands first studio recording in 28 years, lists four coproducers (plus the band as
primary producers), loads of recording engineers, and a passel of supporting musicians.
Despite so many hands at work, the album has a consistent, clean, and relatively
uncompressed sound, and its the most likable Eagles disc since One of These
Nights (1975). The trademarks are all there: soaring, complex harmonies, Joe
Walshs stinging slide guitar (not enough of that), and firm grasps of both
rocknroll and country. "How Long" echoes the best of the bands
run of AM hits in the 70s, while "No More Walks in the Wood" and the title
track typify the political convictions that run through this sets two discs. At 90
minutes, Long Road Out of Eden could perhaps have been trimmed a bit to make a good
single disc, but the good outweighs the bad -- and at $11.99 list, the Eagles give their
fans good value
.Joseph Taylor |
Leroy Anderson: Orchestral Music, Vol.1
BBC Concert Orchestra; Jeffrey Biegel, piano;
Leonard Slatkin, conductor.
Naxos 8559313
Format: CD
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Leroy Andersons ingenious scoring was always as critical a
factor as the actual content of his striking miniatures. So, of course, was the matter of
performance: his pieces could not be sight-read, but required high-level musicianship and
meticulous preparation. Arthur Fiedler started him off, as arranger for the Boston Pops,
and Fiedler, Frederick Fennell, Maurice Abravanel, and Anderson himself left us splendid
recordings of Andersoniana. Leonard Slatkin, who joined this distinguished roster more
than 15 years ago in one of his last recordings with the Saint Louis Symphony, now has
embarked on a five-disc series of all of Andersons music for orchestra. Vol.1
comprises 14 of these vignettes, some as well known as Belle of the Ball, Blue
Tango, China Doll, etc., and some virtually unknown: Balladette,
Arietta, Governor Bradford March, etc. Also included is the composers
only formal concert work, a concise but potent Piano Concerto about which Anderson had
doubts, but neednt have. Eugene List must have had fun with it in its 1953 premiere;
Jeffrey Biegel and Slatkin certainly do here, presenting us, in agreeably spacious sound,
with a scintillating piece substantial enough for subscription concerts
.Richard
Freed |
Dave Insley: West Texas Wine
D.I.R. 120
Format: CD
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The folks who have
unofficially replaced the House Un-American Activities Committee of the 1940s and
50s dont typically prowl country music for targets. But subtle subversiveness
lurks beneath Dave Insleys straight country sound. Is that Willie Nelson? Voice not
twangy enough. Is that one more sentimental remembering-Mom song? Listen closely:
Its as much about a neurotic Dad. Another lost-love lament? That one turns out to
depict the heavy drinking that might have driven the girl away in the first place. Listen
to Insleys new CD, West Texas Wine, for his fine, clear singing and
catchy tunes, and for the fine backup of the Careless Smokers -- Insleys road
band in one place for a moment -- all nicely recorded and mixed. But pay attention:
The insights might run funnier and deeper than you at first suspect
.David Cantor |
Moreland & Arbuckle: 1861
Northern Blues Music NBM0044
Format: CD
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Bluesmen Moreland & Arbuckle hail proudly from Kansas, and
their 1861 -- a tribute to that states induction into the Union -- is their
first album on the Canadian label Northern Blues Music. The 12 tracks are raucous and
real, edgy with raw distortion, and driven by drummer Brad Horners backbeat, which
smokes like a freight train. Dustin Arbuckle, on vocals and harmonica, infuses each song
with rich resonance and warmth, while his partner, Aaron Moreland, keeps it grungy with
electric, resonator, parlor, and cigar-box guitars. The opener, a cover of Hound Dog
Taylors "Gonna Send You Back to Georgia," sets the pace for the
rollicking, rocking rest of the disc. "The Legend" follows a heart-hardened
Vietnam War veteran through 40 years of emotional and spiritual pain, and features a guest
appearance by Jeffrey Eaton on a one-string bass homemade from a gas tank. The blues lives
in each track, lamenting good men, bad women, a lack of luck, and a mess of trouble
.Shannon
Holliday |
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