Thursday, April 29, 2010

RECOMMENDED ALBUM: Natalie Merchant - Leave Your Sleep




Natalie Merchant - Leave Your Sleep
Nonesuch
Available now in stores and online

In the mp3/iTunes age, it's rare for an artist to focus effort into creating a cohesive vision in the form of a full-length album. Natalie Merchant's 'Leave Your Sleep' (her first album in 7 years) is clearly a heartfelt, painstakingly researched endeavor, in which the talented singer songwriter sets music to 19th and 20th century poetry on the theme of children and childhood.

The music, as fans of the former 10,000 Maniacs frontwoman will expect, is delicate, nuanced and varied both in mood and instrumentation; carefully complimenting the words of her spiritual collaborators. Natalie's voice is as powerful and engaging as ever. Though it is some 32 songs in length (in it's full, deluxe form), 'Leave Your Sleep' rarely fails to delight, inspire or affect as it runs the emotional gamut from the whimsical menace of 'The Sleepy Giant' to Gerard Hopkins' heartrending 'Spring and Fall: To A Young Child'.

Insightful and thought-provoking biographies, penned by Merchant, of the poets are included in the extensive 70+ page booklet (also included in the iTunes deluxe version), and while the album is appreciable for it's own sonic merits, they make for fascinating and worthwhile reading.

A project of depth, innocence, wisdom and beauty, 'Leave Your Sleep' is the crowning achievement of Natalie Merchant's career so far, and an absolutely unmissable journey.

- Michael

Visit www.nataliemerchant.com for videos, tour dates and further info.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

SINATRA/JOBIM: The Complete Reprise Recordings on the way


SINATRA/JOBIM: THE COMPLETE REPRISE RECORDINGS COMING MAY 4 ON CONCORD RECORDS

Twenty-song set contains the complete 1967
Francis Albert Sinatra & Antonio Carlos Jobim album
plus all 10 songs from its intended 1969 follow-up, Sinatra/Jobim

LOS ANGELES, Calif. — In 1967, Frank Sinatra teamed up with Brazilian singer, pianist, guitarist, composer and songwriter Antonio Carlos Jobim to record an album that married the Chairman’s signature vocals with rhythms from the master of bossa nova. The resulting album, Francis Albert Sinatra/Antonio Carlos Jobim, reached #19, remaining on Billboard’s rock-dominated album chart for 28 weeks.

Forty-four years later, on May 4, 2010, Concord Music Group, on license from Frank Sinatra Enterprises (FSE), will release a deluxe reissue of the Sinatra/Jobim classic including all ten songs from the original album plus seven songs from a subsequent collaboration between the two, and three songs from that session that were not released until decades later, when they were included in a box set. Sinatra/Jobim: The Complete Reprise Recordings features digital remastering and expanded liner notes by Stan Cornyn, longtime head of creative services at Warner/Reprise and author of the book about the Warner Music Group, Exploding.

Sinatra and Jobim gathered at Hollywood’s Western Recorders for three nights, January 30 through February 1, 1967. Jobim brought the beat in the form of bossa nova percussionists and arrangers. Sinatra supplied the producer (Sonny Burke), the string arranger/conductor (Claus Ogerman) and the rest of the orchestra. The resulting session produced ten songs including the classic “The Girl From Impanema” plus “Dindi,” “How Insensitive [Insensatez],” “Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars” and six others. (After bidding até a vista to Jobim, Sinatra, on the high of making one of his finest albums ever, stayed at the studio to record a duet with daughter Nancy that would reach #1 on the charts, “Something Stupid.”)

Two years later, Sinatra and Jobim returned to Western Recorders to record ten more bossa novas for a shorter-titled follow-up: Sinatra-Jobim. Replacing Ogerman was a 26-year-old long-haired arranger named Eumir Deodato (later to be known for his 1973 jazz version of Richard Strauss’ “Also Sprach Zarathustra [2001]”). The songs were all written or co-written by Jobim, many with unusual melodic twists. Producer Burke enlisted conductor Morris Stoloff to ensure a pop feel to the session.

After three nights, the album was wrapped, and was readied for release in the fall of 1969. The eight-track version of the album had shipped when the call was placed to Warner/Reprise’s Burbank, Calif. offices. It was Sinatra, demanding that the label “kill the album,” so Warner recalled most of the recordings. A 2005 Goldmine story reported that the rare eight-track would command $5000.

Sinatra later agreed to permit Reprise to release seven of the Sinatra-Jobim vocal tracks on the album Sinatra & Company. It reached #73 and remained on the album chart for 15 weeks in 1971.

More than 40 years later, the airport in Rio has been named Antonio Carlos Jobim International. And an American postage stamp honored Frank Sinatra. And the Francis Albert Sinatra & Antonio Carlos Jobim and Sinatra-Jobim albums have been combined to form Concord’s Sinatra/Jobim: The Complete Reprise Recordings set.

www.sinatra.com

Friday, April 2, 2010

HEAR IT NOW: Melissa Auf Der Maur - Out Of Our Minds












Loss, redemption and journeys taken appear to be the themes of Melissa Auf Der Maur's long-awaited sophomore release, 'Out Of Our Minds'. The album will soon be accompanied by a movie and comic book (unavailable for review at this time), so it remains to be seen how one will inform the other.
What is for sure is that the Hole & Smashing Pumpkins veteran's love for jagged, syncopated riffs remains intact, as do her bewitching siren's call vocals. A denser, darker affair than 2004's criminally underrated 'Auf Der Maur', 'Out Of Our Minds' is a heady experience indeed. Check out Glenn Danzig's guest appearance on the moving 'Father's Grave'.

Hear the whole album below.
Head to xmadmx.com to buy, and to see Melissa's upcoming tour dates.