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Here's
music to your ears
Tune in to some choices that might make suitable
Christmas presents
Confession
Ill Nino
Roadrunner
Reviewer
::
Gaelian Ditchburn
Apparent
in Ill Nino's music is a strong Latin influence. The last song on
Confession is a repeat of the CD's second song - How Can I Live
- but sung in Spanish.
The
inclusion of nicely played Spanish-sounding acoustic guitar scales
can be heard in many of the songs. There are also a few distinctive
distorted guitar riffs, solid beats and a vocal that alternates
between growl and melody.
Ill
Nino show there's more to Latin music than Ricky Martin after all.
Welcome
Interstate Managers
Fountains Of Wayne
Virgin
Reviewer
::
Cpl Damian Shovell
Easily
the band's crowning achievement, the song-writing duo of Adam Schlesinger
and Chris Collingwood have produced their most accomplished and
stylistically varied album yet.
Their
sound has evolved but still fits somewhere into the Indie, pop-rock
genre that has you humming along in no time.
As
for the lyrics, they're still a collection of short stories that
for the most part portray a more retrospective or humble view of
the world than on earlier albums.
Jarchives:
10 Years of Bodyjar
Bodyjar
Capitol Records
Reviewer
::
Michael Weaver
Ten
years ago, I'd have been a big fan of Bodyjar. Their guitar-based
Aussie rock sound is right
up there with all the bands I was into at the time but, alas, CD
purchases don't occur as often as they used to.
So
if the extent of your Bodyjar appreciation is what you've heard
on radio, this 14-track compilation of their first 10 years is well
worth the listen.
All
their hit songs are there and Bodyjar's covers of Midnight Oil's
Borderline and Paul Simon's Hazy Shade of Winter are as good as
the originals. There's also two new singles and a bonus DVD with
the usual backstage footage, live action and fanography.
Buy
the CD for no other reason than to feel 10 years younger.
Identity
Crisis
Shelby Lynne
Capitol Records
Reviewer
::
Ellen Rees
What
do you get if you combine Norah Jones, Cheryl Crowe, Harry Conick
Jr, gospel choir music and a good dollop of country rock?
The
answer is Shelby Lynne's first album, Identity Crisis.
An
easy listen with no surprises, Identity Crisis makes for good background
music at your next dinner party, provided your guests don't mind
slide guitars.
It
will probably never be a best seller, but if you like a bit of country
that's not too country, combined with a smooth easy-listening vocalist,
this may be the next album for you.
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