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CD Reviews
Hem
Funnel Clouds | Wavland
By
SHARON STEEL
|
December 11, 2006
HEM, FUNNEL CLOUDS
" alt="photo of 'HEM, FUNNEL CLOUDS'">
3.0
Stars
You’d be hard pressed to find anything written about Brooklyn’s Hem without the mention of at least one of three things: a honey-synonymed description of Sally Ellyson’s voice; a recapped version of how the band, who range from a four-member core to an eight-piece ensemble, found Ellyson to complete their “countrypolitan” folk-pop line-up seven years ago through a tiny ad in the
Village Voice
; and the support given by NPR’s
All Things Considered
to Hem’s first album,
Rabbit Songs
, a labor of love that bankrupted several band members and has given Hem the chance to tiptoe out of quiet obscurity at a measured pace. They can be counted on to provide excellent anecdotes. More than that, though, they can be trusted to deliver modern Americana lullabies that are equal parts pedal-steel twang, hot summer poetry, and scene-setting harmonies comforting as a low whisper in a dark room.
Funnel Cloud
doesn’t have quite the sparse, plucked beauty of
Rabbit Songs
or the golden tones of
Eveningland
, but Dan Messé, Hem’s primary songwriter, is expert at orchestrating songs to coax the right levels of sealed-off tenderness out of Ellyson’s pipes. So even if this disc sounds ready for broadcast over a wide-open prairie, it’s still capable of nestling in spaces just big enough for one.
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Garment district
A preggers Sally Ellyson sings warm drizzles for NPR outcasts and soccer dads.
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The turntablist who taught jam bands to scratch speaks on his new album, the roots of jazz rap, and his New Orleans tribute with Charlie Hunter.
Goin’ Home: A Tribute to Fats Domino
This packed two-disc set gathers all the usual suspects and more for a Tipitina’s Foundation project to rebuild Domino’s Ninth Ward neighborhood in New Orleans.
Papa Grows Funk
The third studio album by this popular New Orleans funk/jam band is in a sense their first studio album.
James Blood Ulmer
This time Ulmer was in a brooding mood.
The Radiators
Like the other great album to come out of post-Katrina New Orleans, Allen Toussaint & Elvis Costello’s The River in Reverse , the Radiators’ latest consists mainly of songs written before the deluge.
Keith Urban
Australia-born Keith Urban is modern country music’s only real rock star.
Casting ballots
Some believe democracy can save the world. Others wonder whether it can even work in America.
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If you thought November was unusually warm, you weren’t alone.
Still life
Nobody knew very much about Mike Disfarmer. Even his name was a fabrication.
Two sides to Guy
I’m a delegate at the state Democratic convention and I didn’t vote for Guy Glodis for auditor.
Less
Topics
:
CD Reviews
,
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,
Accidents and Disasters
,
Natural Disasters
,
More
,
National Public Radio Inc.
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,
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,
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,
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ARTICLES BY SHARON STEEL
LENA DUNHAM AND HBO GET IT RIGHT
| April 13, 2012
When a new television show chronicling the lives of young women arrives, it tends to come packaged with the promise that it will expertly define them, both as a generation and a gender.
EUGENIDES'S UPDATED AUSTEN
| October 12, 2011
For his long-awaited third novel, Jeffrey Eugenides goes back to look at love in the '80s — and apparently decides that it's a lot like love in the early 19th century.
REVIEW: RINGER
| September 08, 2011
Sixty seconds into the CW's new psychological thriller Ringer, star Sarah Michelle Gellar is seen running from a masked attacker in the darkness.
LOVE'S LEXICOGRAPHER
| February 10, 2011
As the editorial director at Scholastic, David Levithan is surrounded by emotional stories about adolescents. Being overexposed to such hyperbolic feelings about feelings could easily turn a writer off pursuing such ventures himself — despite the secrets he may have picked up along the way.
REVIEW: MTV'S ''SKINS''
| January 26, 2011
MTV has rated its new Skins TV-MA LDS - which in plain English means teenagers smoking weed, popping pills, fucking each other, and having emotional breakdowns in a scripted show that MTV would like us to think is designed to be viewed by adults.
See all articles by:
SHARON STEEL
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