Showing posts with label random album review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label random album review. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2008

Random Album Review: Recovering the Satellites

I'm fairly certain Counting Crows is the best band that's arrived on the scene in my adult life. As I listened to this album, fresh with my reviewer-ears, I realized that I'd no idea all these songs were from the same album. iPods tend to de-educate album detail as it goes about rendering songs as singularities to sort and configure at will. I'm not sure that is A Good Thing. This fact is yet another sound reason for the Random Album Review.

I had one concert experience with Counting Crows at the Texas Motor Speedway in 1997. Their performance was extraordinary and had the effect of locking me in for life. As usual, I've laid out the tracks best to worst with the first half dozen or so very difficult to decide between.

5-stars



Goodnight Elisabeth (4:33) - Romantic and sappy and all that.

Another Horsedreamer's Blues (5:20) - I remember this song as particularly soothing to my daughter as baby. To this day, she's still not allowed to sing along to the "Stupid Mothers" line, but allowed to shout the "Drunken Fathers" line with impunity. Go figure.

Catapult (3:35) - Pulsing and pushing, great on the headphones on the big hills.

A Long December (4:58) - As great as this is, there's a couple live versions in my collection that are even better. Counting Crows is one of those great bands that encourages trafficking of their live bootlegs.

Miller's Angels (6:34) - Hey Romeo indeed.

Children in Bloom (5:24) - Someone finally takes of the handcuffs of the lead guitar.

4-stars

Monkey (3:02) - If Horsedreamer is my daughter's domain, this belongs to my son. All monkey everywhere on that boy.

Angels of the Silences (3:39) - Angels picks up the pace, an excellent respite among all the brooding ballads.

Mercury
(2:48) - Harmonica?

3-stars

Daylight Fading (3:50) - OK, I guess.

I'm Not Sleeping (4:58) - Good but radio overplay diminished this one for me.

Recovering the Satellites (5:25) - Why do title tracks let down so often?

2-stars

Have You Seen Me Lately? (4:11) - Yawn.

Walkaways (1:12) - I'm not sure why this ditty was ever included.

If you're interested in a listen, my iLike library should have replicated snippets by the time you read this grab the torrent off my facebook. Upcoming for RAR is The Cure's Disintegration.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

What is the Random Album Review?

Before I post my next review, I want to chat a bit about what the Random Album Review series means to me. I love my iPod. Over the years, combining my sizable digitized CD collection and downloads left me with about 10,000 songs. It was great that I was enjoying all my music in single compact magic box, but it was maddening how much crap was in there too.

So, I sat down and listened to it all. In a grand act of self-expression and personal liberty, I deleted all the crap. That left me with about 4000 songs, still quite a bevy of tunage. But that wasn't all. I found that I generally collected music via compilation releases which left me with an empty feeling in a weird way. Compilation albums are kind of seedy and coolness killers. They are an absolute expression of being a late adopter.

I went through my entire collection again. This time I endeavored to document in iTunes: the source album, original year of release and album art. My wife calls this couple of months the dreaded "headphone era". Demonstrating ADD superpowers, I think I even cleaned up iTunes at the dinner table, during dinner with my family. That effort was completed a couple of weeks ago.

So what's left after reaching the summit? Well for one thing I noticed that the quality of some of my favorite songs isn't quite as good as I'd like. When I first bought an iPod and ripped music (circa 2004), I was too ignorant about quality and obsessed with storage. Also, I think the algorithms that iTunes uses to rip music have improved. Several iPods later, storage isn't an issue with 60GB to work with and a more selective collection. Rather than implement an ADD approach, I'm re-ripping my music one album at a time and blogging about it, doing this at whatever pace happens no longer how long it takes.

One word about the "random" nature. It is only as random as iTunes is capable, which is quite suspect but good enough for this purpose. I have a smart playlist that looks for songs that 1) aren't singles, 2) have a five-star rating, 3) haven't been reviewed previously - and then limit that list to one song. That's how I determine which album is next. When I run out of albums that have at least one five-star song, I'll knock it down to four-stars - but that will be a while.

I'm also, trying out new social means to share my collection with family, friends and stalkers. I haven't found any yet that work just the way I want. I'll keep trying out a variety of them and linking or embedding them in Random Album Review posts. Don't expect any consistency on this aspect of the reviews, as I'll be all over the map as it pleases me.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Random Album Review: Purple Rain

UPDATE: removed embedded SeeqPod, which was too script heavy for my tastes. A blog should be lightweight... use my iLike library for a listen instead.




Purple Rain is the bomb. Despite this, I have to admit this album is contrary to my musical tastes in quite a few ways. Primarily, there are so many moments where I can feel the normally awful ooze of jamming rearing its ugly head, but surprisingly it never repels me.

When Purple Rain happened I think anyone in my demographic (suburban white teenager) was embracing probably the funkiest music of their lives. We could almost tap our toes in rhythm; it was intoxicating. We weren't sure if Prince was exactly black or exactly gay and for whatever reason it didn't matter. We could put the Purple Rain album right next to Led Zeppelin and Boston, and it was all right.

The film is a blurry distant memory. I couldn't imagine watching it again except for s&g. The most memorable thing for me was having an introduction to Morris Day's awesome sound.

Here is the track breakdown, best to worst.

The Beautiful Ones (5:14) - When it comes to generating lovin' action, this one has one of the highest play:score ratios of all time.

Darling Nikki (4:14) - Ten years before I knew this was my sister-in-law's theme song, I was fascinated with how provocative this song was. Great for offending any afraid-of-their-genitals Christians within earshot.

Let's Go Crazy (4:39) - I still haven't found Dr. Everything Will Be Alright.

When Doves Cry (5:54) - My complete inability to understand if Prince is the Dove or I'm the Dove or what possible noise non-existent aviary tear ducts might make doesn't diminish my enjoyment.

Purple Rain (8:42) - The quintessential Prince song. Though the film was essentially unwatchable, thankfully this album fails to induce any recall of it.

Take Me with U (3:54) - I enjoy the harmony with Apollonia Kotero.

I Would Die For U (2:50) - Trite but still alright.

Baby I'm a Star (4:25) - A high energy dud. (Sorry no SeeqPod below, but you aren't missing much.)

Computer Blue (4:00) - I don't get it, nor do I listen to it.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Random Album Review: The Stranger

I've put a fair amount of work into organizing my iTunes collection of music and I'd like to randomly chat it up a bit. My Random Album Reviews won't be timely or even hip. I'm actually quite lame and quintessentially not cool.

The first installment is Billy Joel's The Stranger.



Although Wikipedia could easily add a head shot of Joel on the fugly page, his music has always been a staple for me since junior high. Easily, the best and only great song off the album is She's Always a Woman. It's pure corn hits me square in the eyes; if I'm not careful, I'll even get a sniffle.

Decent tracks include Just the Way You Are and Only the Good Die Young. Unremarkable but fun and fluffy, great for blaring to scare off any encroaching hip-hop element in the vicinity. Honorable mentions include Movin' Out (Anthony's Song) and Scenes From an Italian Restaurant, both of which live tenuously on a thread in my iTunes.

If this album interests you, visit my Facebook iLike Library for a listen.