Category: CD QuickTakes (Page 142 of 149)

Gayle Day: Beautiful Dangerous

For everyone who counts down the days between Mandy Moore releases, here’s Gayle Day’s Beautiful Dangerous, a bright-eyed, fluffy-tailed collection of sparkly clean pop songs from the co-founder of the Los Angeles Women’s Music Festival. Appropriately, this album is a miniature women’s music festival all its own – Day’s lyrics focus on life and love from an unapologetically feminine point of view. That may seem like overstating the obvious, but no, really – this is all doe eyes and fluttering lashes, the sort of album that will leave you feeling like you’ve been shopping at Pier 1, knocked back a few glasses of chardonnay, and taken a bubble bath in some Bath & Bodyworks gel by the time it’s over. If you’re still awake when it’s over, that is — Beautiful Dangerous is a whopping 14 tracks long, and what’s worse, Day strings six ballads back-to-back in the middle, all of which sound almost exactly like one another. She’s undeniably charming (albeit very corny) when she ups the tempo and sings about things like not wanting to forget to live life to the fullest, but she doesn’t do it often enough here. For better or worse, it isn’t hard to hear why her songs have been featured in episodes of The Hills. (Littleyap 2008)

Gayle Day MySpace page

Sarah McLachlan: Rarities, B-Sides, and Other Stuff Volume 2

She’s never been the most prolific artist, but since entering the ‘domestic bliss’ portion of her life, Sarah McLachlan has established a recording schedule that would make Enya jealous, releasing only one album of original material in the last decade. Give Arista credit for doing what it can to stuff the gap, though — Rarities, B-Sides, and Other Stuff Volume 2 comes on the heels of a deluxe reissue of her Mirrorball live album, which itself followed her second live album, Afterglow Live. Given this paucity of new material, it would be wonderful to be able to say that the 14 songs collected here present some sort of significant value for McLachlan fans, but they really don’t. Her voice sounds beautiful no matter what she’s using it for, but the bulk of Volume 2 consists of goopy soundtrack cuts (like “Ordinary Miracle”) and live cuts. And who let Bryan Adams in here? Or thought it would be a good idea for anyone else to hear McLachlan playing hook girl on DMC’s god-awful “cover” of “Cat’s in the Cradle”? There are a few cool things in here, but do yourself a favor and cherry-pick them from your favorite digital storefront and leave the rest. (Arista 2008)

Sarah McLachlan MySpace page

Anna Ternheim: Halfway to Fivepoints

Swedish singer/songwriter Anna Ternheim’s apparent musical ambitions are best summed up with her cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “Little Lies,” featured here: All 10,000 layers of plastic ‘80s bombast are stripped away, leaving Christine McVie’s lover’s lament huddled, naked and shivering in the corner, and changing it in the process from an FM-friendly pop song into something darker and deeper. There’s something vaguely disquieting about Ternheim’s wind-chilled delivery here, and it threatens to coalesce in the first half of Halfway to Fivepoints, but the bulk of the album’s back half meanders from one pale mid-tempo ballad to another; between sixth track “No Subtle Men” and penultimate song “Black Widow,” you’re liable to catch yourself thinking about your grocery list, your doctor’s appointment, your projects at work…pretty much anything but the music. There are nice touches throughout, and Ternheim’s a likable enough performer, but she doesn’t have the material to carry her perpetually detached, smooth-to-a-fault vocals. For background music, you could certainly do worse, but who needs more of that? (Decca 2008)

Anna Ternheim MySpace page

Charlotte Sometimes: Waves and the Both of Us

Bar none the sauciest pop record released this year, the songs on Waves and the Both of Us, the debut by 20-year-old Charlotte Sometimes (name taken from the book and not the Cure song, thank you) are deceptively complex. The airy, hook-laden melodies flow innocently enough, but the lyrics are thick with sex, jealousy and contempt, like Natalie Imbruglia singing songs from Jagged Little Pill. The title track, for example, sounds like a prom theme, until Charlotte instructs her subject, “I take off your shirt /You pull up my skirt,” then informs him that he “better slide into me.” Now take into account the slick, within-an-edge-of-its-life production by S*A*M and Sluggo (with some much-needed assistance from Jack Joseph Puig, a.k.a. The Man with the Golden Ears), and you have a record whose mind is very much at odds with its body. Unless, of course, they’re targeting oversexed teenagers, in which case they hit the bulls-eye. As contemporary pop records go, this is definitely smarter and catchier than the usual drivel, but pray your daughter doesn’t hear it until she turns 25. (Geffen)

Charlotte Sometimes MySpace page

Curtain Call: New Songs From Past American Idol Finalists: Volume 2

The first edition of this compilation of former “American Idol” contestants was pretty bad, and while Volume 2 is itself pretty bland, the songs as a whole are a little better this time around. This round of singers is also moderately talented, but you can’t listen to this album without feeling like you’re hearing glorified karaoke. Maybe it’s the production, maybe it’s the arrangements, or maybe it’s the talent compared to everything else being released in the pop world, but there is just something missing. Alaina Alexander from Season 6 delivers three tracks that probably won’t have you humming along, and her voice isn’t all that memorable either. Rudy Cardenas, also from last season, has three distinct styles on here — R&B/pop/Jason Mraz, rock, and sappy ballad — and the third one is so bad that it evens out the fact that the first two songs are pretty decent. Then there is Sarah Mather from Season 4, who has a decent enough voice, but the songs are only average. Finally, Gedeon McKinney chose to write all of his own material, which was not a good idea. McKinney’s material is very amateurish, and brought the rating of this whole set down a full half-star. So we’re halfway with these four Volumes, and by this time next year, it’s likely that you’ll all have forgotten about these four singers from Volume 2 the same way you did when their seasons on “Idol” ended. (LABEL: Artists Addiction/Rocket Science)

Website: www.artistsaddiction.com

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