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EMA | Past Life Martyred Saints
CD Reviews
Ry Cooder
I, Flathead | Nonesuch/Perro Verde
By
JEFF TAMARKIN
|
June 24, 2008
RY COODER, I, FLATHEAD
" alt="photo of 'RY COODER, I, FLATHEAD'">
4.0
Stars
For the final entry in his “California Trilogy,” following 2005’s
Chavez Ravine
and last year’s
My Name Is Buddy
, Ry Cooder once again navigates a Southern California of strange realities and real strangers. But whereas
Chavez Ravine
lamented a lost Los Angeles of honest diversities and
Buddy
was an allegory for a Steinbeck/Guthrie–inspired hobo morality tale,
I, Flathead
(produced and mostly written by Cooder) bumps into an encroaching post-war modernity that its narrator — salt-flat drag racer and traveling musician Kash Buk — doesn’t quite know how to live in. More playful and ambitious than its predecessors,
I, Flathead
— released along with a 95-page novella that expands on its concepts — winds its musical way through the panoply of Cooder’s favored roots-Americana subgenres. Its protagonist pays homage to the Man in Black and Western-swing steel-guitarists, the “Filipino Dance Hall Girl,” and the guy who complains that “public transportation gets me down.” With a trusty old cohort of Flaco Jiménez, Jim Keltner, and son Joachim Cooder, along with Mariachi Los Camperos (who liven up the opening “Drive like I Never Been Hurt”), ace brass blowers, and singer Juliette Commagere (on the otherworldly “Little Trona Girl”) fleshing it out,
I, Flathead
is the perfect capper to Cooder’s dusty travelogue.
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,
All You Need is Love
,
Review: Let Freedom Sing! Music of the Civil Rights Movement
,
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Battle of the banned
It's one thing to be a musician and get thrown out of Disneyland (Velvet Underground) or banned from a national landmark (Ozzy Osbourne at the Alamo), but you've hit rock paydirt when you become the target of an entire nation.
All You Need is Love
Never less than fascinating and informative, although the narration tends toward the droll (it’s British, remember).
Review: Let Freedom Sing! Music of the Civil Rights Movement
In any given Black History Month, the three-disc Let Freedom Sing: The Music of the Civil Rights Movement would be a powerful anthology.
Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars | Rise & Shine
Although their music stands on its own, the backstory can't help but give it a deeper perspective.
Belinda Carlisle
Belinda Carlisle is about as French as a bag of “freedom fries.”
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Just to prove how serious they are about their commitment to retro soul, Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings recorded I Learned the Hard Way using an eight-track Ampex tape machine, the kind their heroes and heroines in Memphis and Muscle Shoals might have employed back in the day.
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Arriving five years after his last release of new material, and two after the three-disc Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards box of outtakes and oddities, this live set culled from assorted 2008 gigs could be seen as a time marker.
Miles Davis | The Complete Columbia Album Collection
Given the consensus that the CD era is drawing to a close, labels have begun to look increasingly toward the well-heeled — those who not only still buy their music on something they can hold but aren't averse to buying it in supersized, extravagant configurations they can show off and savor.
Robyn Hitchcock
Robyn Hitchcock, in one of many illuminating moments of reflection during this 53-minute documentary, posits that his songs “don’t appeal to meatheads.”
Joan Armatrading | This Charming Life
Joan Armatrading’s previous album just didn’t feel right. This Charming Life is more like it.
Silver Jew | Drag City DVD
Michael Tully’s 52-minute home movie/documentary follows the band as they schlep around Israel touring, shopping, and playing a handful of gigs.
Less
Topics
:
CD Reviews
,
RY COODER
|
More
ARTICLES BY JEFF TAMARKIN
NEW YORK DOLLS | DANCING BACKWARDS IN HIGH HEELS
| March 17, 2011
The new New York Dolls have now been around longer - and released more albums (three) - than the old New York Dolls, and they're commemorating that new longevity by letting go of any compulsion they may have still harbored to honor their designation as "punk-rock progenitors."
BLACK JOE LEWIS & THE HONEYBEARS | SCANDALOUS
| March 09, 2011
The soul revival has been going on long enough now that maybe it's a not a bad idea to stop calling it a revival at all.
BRYAN FERRY | OLYMPIA
| October 19, 2010
From the Kate Moss cover pic to the A-list of guest stars to the reunion with original Roxy Music members Brian Eno, Phil Manzanera, and Andy Mackay, Olympia screams, "EVENT!"
OLD 97'S | THE GRAND THEATRE
| October 12, 2010
When Old 97's are on — which they are most of the time on their eighth studio album — they're very, very on.
DAR WILLIAMS | MANY GREAT COMPANIONS
| October 05, 2010
The companions of the title are Dar Williams's songs, which the singer-songwriter revisits here two different ways.
See all articles by:
JEFF TAMARKIN
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