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EMA | Past Life Martyred Saints
CD Reviews
Randy Newman
Harps + Angels | Nonesuch
By
ZETH LUNDY
|
August 12, 2008
RANDY NEWMAN, HARPS & ANGELS
" alt="photo of 'RANDY NEWMAN, HARPS & ANGELS'">
3.5
Stars
Randy Newman could have titled his first new studio album in nine years
More Songs About Politicians, Dubious Old Men, and Humanity's Ineptitude
, but that would have been too obvious.
Harps & Angels
is a much better title, because, like Newman’s best work, it hides its darkness in phony sunshine — after all, this is the guy who wrote a song from the point of view of a God who gets his kicks watching people suffer. God doesn’t make an appearance here, though the narrator of the title track embellishes his near-death experience to make a good story. The music is vintage/predictable Newman, full of ’Nawlins boogies and understated ballads, and as on 1999’s Bad Love, lyrics are spoken as often as sung, so the songs have the air of a porch-side ramble. This works on “A Few Words in Defense of Our Country,” the not-so-subtle rip of the Bush administration that doubled as a
New York Times
op-ed piece last year. Funnier still are the elbows thrown at celebrity activism (“A Piece of the Pie”) and dumb American kids (“Korean Parents”). Yet as welcome as it is to have Newman’s acerbic wit back, it remains a singular pleasure to listen to a simple, devastating ballad like “Losing You,” which is wrapped up in sympathetic strings and absolutely devoid of irony. I think.
Related
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Various Artists | Where the Action Is: Los Angeles Nuggets 1965 - 1968
,
Ones and twos
,
Listen!
,
More
Various Artists | Where the Action Is: Los Angeles Nuggets 1965 - 1968
More than three years in the making, the most recent installment of Rhino's legendary archival garage-rock series offers an amazingly comprehensive excavation of an absurdly fertile scene.
Ones and twos
At first, I thought, there’s no way to get a grip on a string of pop songs with a different dancer in each. But by the end of the first set, Ladies Night Out , things were beginning to add up.
Listen!
10 pop and jazz discs you need
Netsky notes
Hankus Netsky founded the Klezmer Conservatory Band 30 years ago at New England Conservatory and sparked an American klezmer revival that continues to this day.
Stark contrasts
The 20th anniversary production of Trinity Repertory Company’s All the King’s Men is remarkable, not simply a skillful reprise but a re-envisioning.
2008 Listravaganza!
We are not at all sick of bands with animal names yet and seem to have a soft spot for Erykah Badu that we kept very hush about all year.
Loose Ends
It’s four in the morning and raining. I’m 27 today, feeling old, listening to my records, and remembering that things were different a decade ago.
Teasers and tidbits
The puppeteer’s face and body reflect what the puppet is going through, as if the puppet were giving life to him instead of the other way around.
Jew note
Defining "Jewish" music is pretty much a fool's task — not much easier than defining jazz.
From kidneys to kittens
The Killdevils have been kicking around the area to much acclaim over the past six years.
Giant step
Indie-folk trio the Low Anthem — Jeff Prystowsky, Ben Knox Miller, and Jocie Adams — have signed with Nonesuch Records, which will re-release their highly-acclaimed disc, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin, on June 9.
Less
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,
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ARTICLES BY ZETH LUNDY
SUN KIL MOON | AMONG THE LEAVES
| May 22, 2012
The first thing you'll notice about Mark Kozelek's fifth LP as Sun Kil Moon are song titles that would give Morrissey a boner.
THE FIGGS | THE DAY GRAVITY STOPPED
| May 15, 2012
These days Mike Gent, Pete Donnelly, and Pete Hayes are involved in enough extracurricular activities (Graham Parker, NRBQ, countless side/session-men gigs) that you could hardly blame them if they closed their two decades-plus Figgs chapter.
BILLY BRAGG + WILCO | MERMAID AVENUE: THE COMPLETE SESSIONS
| May 01, 2012
In 1998, and again in 2000, English singer-songwriter Billy Bragg teamed up with Wilco— not yet on their post-Americana trip — to put unreleased Woody Guthrie lyrics to music.
RUFUS WAINWRIGHT | OUT OF THE GAME
| April 24, 2012
Out of the Game is being billed as the most "pop" album of Rufus Wainwright's career, which is to say that it dismisses many of his trademark classical and/or stagey affinities.
THE DANDY WARHOLS | THIS MACHINE
| April 17, 2012
The title of the Dandy Warhols' eighth record may be a Woody Guthrie allusion, but don't fret — the closest the Portland, Oregon, band get to politics here is a cover of Merle Travis's "16 Tons."
See all articles by:
ZETH LUNDY
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