The Phoenix Network:
The Phoenix
Boston
|
Portland
|
Providence
STUFF Boston
WFNX
Live Radio
|
On Demand
Tu Boston
About
|
Advertise
Moonsigns
|
Band Guide
|
Blogs
|
In Pictures
Music
Big Hurt
|
CD Reviews
|
Classical
|
Jazz
|
Live Reviews
|
Music Features
See all in CD Reviews
Battles | Gloss Drop
CD Reviews
The Wire: And All the Pieces that Matter
Nonesuch
By
CLEA SIMON
|
March 12, 2008
VARIOUS ARTISTS, THE WIRE: AND ALL THE PIECES MATTER
" alt="photo of 'VARIOUS ARTISTS, THE WIRE: AND ALL THE PIECES MATTER'">
4.0
Stars
The Wire
is over, but the five-season drama lives on in the unforgettable characters and in this simmering HBO collection. From the five versions of Tom Waits’s “Way Down in the Hole” (one from each season — they played under the opening titles) to Diablo’s “Jail Flick,” the Baltimore accent apparent in the slick, sly rap, this is the music of the urban underside: the cops, the gangstas, and all those caught in the middle. Soulful stars including Solomon Burke and the Blind Boys of Alabama take their place alongside plentiful hip-hop, with unexpected twists (Paul Weller’s grim “Walk on Gilded Splinters”) unifying this disc by mood, if not style. Fans may find it difficult to separate these songs from their placement in the show: the Pogues’ “The Body of an American” is indelibly linked to Ray Cole’s wake. But the shuffling of tunes (Waits’s own take on his tune, from Season 2, comes before the final dialogue clip) mixes it up a bit. And if Stelios Kazatzides’s “Efuge, Efuge” confuses the uninitiated, it still carries the longing and desperation of the more mainstream tunes — aural snapshots from mean streets.
Related
:
Various artists
,
Various artists: Obsession
,
Various Artists: Accepted: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
,
More
Various artists
What happened to the label that made college kids feel good about hip-hop in an era when gangstas ruled the streets?
Various artists: Obsession
Some of the finest psychedelic rock in the late ’60s and early ’70s was created far from the movement’s epicenters in the UK and US.
Various Artists: Accepted: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
The Pixies kick things off with, appropriately, “U-Mass,” and an A-list of alterna-indie artists (Modest Mouse, Le Tigre, Weezer, Ryan Adams, the Chemical Brothers with Beth Orton) all provide top-notch if familiar cuts.
Various Artists: GU 10
A three-disc primer on the state of house, trance, and techno, GU 10 comes courtesy of one of dance music’s most advanced and prescient labels.
Monsieur Gainsbourg Revisited
Mark up another score for the seductive spirit of Serge Gainsbourg.
Various Artists: Galore Riddim
Every year, there’s one dancehall riddim to beat.
Various Artists: Strange Folk
Given the hypnotic arrangements and talk of fairies, the 19 tracks compiled on Strange Folk might more accurately be termed “enchanted folk” or, more skeptically, “dippy folk.”
Various artists: Rough Guide to the Music of Tanzania
Tanzania has produced no superstars, but this volume argues that it’s nevertheless an Afropop powerhouse.
Various Artists: Wayfaring Strangers: Ladies from the Canyon
Who’d have guessed we’d live to see a revival of the ’70s female singer-songwriter?
Various Artists, GREAT LOST ELEKTRA SINGLES, VOLUME 1 | Collector’s Choice
Long before inflicting Staind on the world, Elektra was a genuinely eclectic label, home to dozens of oddball bands who shared a post-folkie, acid-Beat sensibility.
Various artists, RUN THE ROAD VOLUME 2 | Vice
If Cam’ron is good enough to look for talent overseas and Jay-Z can nab Lady Sovereign, then Great Britain might just overcome America’s mainstream myopia. Vice believes it.
Less
Topics
:
CD Reviews
,
Tom Waits
,
The Pogues
,
Paul Weller
,
More
,
Tom Waits
,
The Pogues
,
Paul Weller
,
Solomon Burke
,
Various Artists
,
Less
|
More
ARTICLES BY CLEA SIMON
HILARY MANTEL'S POWER PLAY
| May 11, 2012
Endings, perhaps more than beginnings, set the tone in historical fiction.
MANKELL SAYS GOODBYE TO HIS HERO AND HIS READERS
| April 19, 2011
Henning Mankell has no respect for his readers. That's the only conclusion possible after finishing his latest, The Troubled Man , but it has been a long time coming.
WESLEY STACE'S SUBLIME PUZZLE BOOK
| March 01, 2011
Early morning, June 23, 1923, a gunshot wakes the neighbors. The resulting discovery -- two persons poisoned, one shot in an apparent murder suicide -- shakes not only quiet Kensington but also the musical world.
MICHAEL PATRICK MACDONALD WRITES THE DROPKICKS' BACKSTORY
| February 23, 2011
Who is Cornelius Larkin, and how did his obituary come to be on the cover of the new Dropkick Murphys disc, Going Out in Style ?
TALKING CURES
| February 02, 2011
Letting go is never easy. No matter what our reasons, every move we make away from someone we once loved involves regret. In a normal life, this can be bittersweet, tinged with melancholy and the sweetness of memory. In the aftermath of brutal civil war, the sadness is likely to be more palpable: absence as a wound.
See all articles by:
CLEA SIMON
LATEST SLIDESHOWS
PHOTOS: NATO demonstrations in Chicago
Photos: The Fringe at the Boston Conservatory Theater
All Slideshows
Featured Articles in CD Reviews
:
Zambri | House of Baasa
Beach House | Bloom
Santigold | Master Of My Make-Believe
Jack White | Blunderbuss
Alabama Shakes | Boys & Girls
|
Sign In
|
Register
thePhoenix.com:
Home
Listings
Editor's Picks
News
Music
Film + TV
Food + Drink
Life
Arts
Rec Room
Video
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
Boston Phoenix
Portland Phoenix
Providence Phoenix
STUFF Boston
WFNX Radio
People2People
MassWeb Printing
G8Wave
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
Advertise With Us
Work For Us
Sitemap
RSS
Mobile
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group