Qu'écoutez vous au moment où...

Tout ce qui concerne la musique...

Modérateur : dino VELVET

Avatar du membre
peter wonkley
ROCCO
Messages : 20542
Enregistré le : 21.12.2002 - 21:13
Localisation : ajaccio

Message par peter wonkley »

Image
In 1994 Cash stunned the music world with this commanding collection of 13 solo acoustic performances that roll from gospel to cowboy to sarcastic folk. Minimalism had long been Cash's meal ticket, but this time around, producer Rick Rubin stripped it all away, recording the bulk of the record in Cash's cabin or his own living room (two cuts were captured live at the Viper Room in front of an emphatic audience). Cash offers five typically direct and vivid originals, but he also seizes control of songs by Kris Kristofferson, Nick Lowe, Leonard Cohen, Tom Waits, and Loudon Wainwright. Forty years after "Hey Porter," Cash delivers a pure, naked, and incredibly moving record that, dare we say, rivals the impact of his greatest achievements.

Image
The first four songs on Unchained come from the songbooks of Beck, Don Gibson, Soundgarden, and Jimmie Rodgers. What might look like absurdly unsupportable eclecticism in other artists, of course, is pretty much standard stuff for Cash. Unchained is hardly standard, though; it's more like the best album he's made since his 1984 departure from Columbia Records. Not only is this a stack of songs perfectly and idiosyncratically suited to the man, they're given door-rattling backing treatment by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, who prove as fitting for Cash's music as his own Tennessee Two was back in the day.

Image
For younger generations of musicians, having their song cut by Johnny Cash must be a little like scaling the Washington Monument. On his third album for producer Rick Rubin's American label, Cash makes Tom Petty's "I Won't Back Down" sound like a companion classic to "I Walk the Line." He transforms U2's "One" into a sturdy testament of plainspoken faith, while he plumbs the netherworld of Nick Cave's "The Mercy Seat" and Will Oldham's "I See a Darkness." Amid more familiar fare (including Neil Diamond's title track), the album's sing-along standout is the deadpan, down-and-out, talking blues of "Nobody." Cash's recent originals have the age-old purity of Appalachian music, while the traditional closing of "Wayfaring Stranger" offers bittersweet benediction. Merle Haggard, Sheryl Crow, and June Carter Cash provide vocal cameos.

Image
On first thought, the idea of the Man in Black recording such covers as "Bridge over Troubled Water," "Danny Boy," and "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" might seem odd, even for an artist who's been able to put his personal stamp on just about everything. But American IV: The Man Comes Around, which also draws on Cash's original songs as well as those by Nine Inch Nails ("Hurt"), Sting ("I Hung My Head"), and Depeche Mode ("Personal Jesus"), may be one of the most autobiographical albums of the 70-year-old singer-songwriter's career. Nearly every tune seems chosen to afford the ailing giant of popular music a chance to reflect on his life, and look ahead to what's around the corner. From the opening track--Cash's own "The Man Comes Around," filled with frightening images of Armageddon--the album, produced by Rick Rubin, advances a quiet power and pathos, built around spare arrangements and unflinching honesty in performance and subject. In 15 songs, Cash moves through dark, haunted meditations on death and destruction, poignant farewells, testaments to everlasting love, and hopeful salutes to redemption. He sounds as if he means every word, his baritone-bass, frequently frayed and ravaged, taking on a weary beauty. By the time he gets to the Beatles' "In My Life," you'll very nearly cry. Go ahead. He sounds as if he's about to, too. Unforgettable.
Image
Avatar du membre
peter wonkley
ROCCO
Messages : 20542
Enregistré le : 21.12.2002 - 21:13
Localisation : ajaccio

Message par peter wonkley »

Image
Image
Avatar du membre
creepers
Epouvantail
Messages : 11978
Enregistré le : 10.01.2004 - 14:17
Localisation : metz

Message par creepers »

creepers a écrit :Image
Avatar du membre
Superflo
Palme d'Or
Palme d'Or
Messages : 3892
Enregistré le : 03.11.2003 - 18:08
Localisation : Bastia

Message par Superflo »

Image
Et quand ils vinrent pour moi, il n'y avait plus personne pour crier...

Superflo, toujours là quand il faut!!!

Image
Avatar du membre
peter wonkley
ROCCO
Messages : 20542
Enregistré le : 21.12.2002 - 21:13
Localisation : ajaccio

Message par peter wonkley »

Image
Image
Avatar du membre
creepers
Epouvantail
Messages : 11978
Enregistré le : 10.01.2004 - 14:17
Localisation : metz

Message par creepers »

Image
Avatar du membre
creepers
Epouvantail
Messages : 11978
Enregistré le : 10.01.2004 - 14:17
Localisation : metz

Message par creepers »

Image
Avatar du membre
creepers
Epouvantail
Messages : 11978
Enregistré le : 10.01.2004 - 14:17
Localisation : metz

Message par creepers »

je viens de retomber la dessus...

Image

je me rappelé même plus que je l'avais. :lol:
Avatar du membre
peter wonkley
ROCCO
Messages : 20542
Enregistré le : 21.12.2002 - 21:13
Localisation : ajaccio

Message par peter wonkley »

Image

Bruce Springsteen used the Jersey Shore as the backdrop for his tragic-heroic tales of everyday people in nowhere places. Ween, as you might expect, have a slightly different take on the proud coastline between New York and Atlantic City, the place where they recorded much of their new album, The Mollusk. Gene and Dean are more interested in dead jellyfish, rusted beer cans, flotsam and jetsam, dirty syringes and other assorted detritus that washes up. As for the kind people who live near the water? Ween's only interested in the ones who lurk at amusement park freak shows--and even then, only the really twisted ones. The Mollusk was made between rounds of surf-fishing for bluefish and bass--both before and after the water pipes burst in their winter beach house/studio, leaving recording equipment adrift in an indoor flood. Naturally, the album sounds thoroughly soaked. This is Ween's 'wet' album, in much the same way last year's 12 Golden Country Greats was their Nashville album. Songs like "The Golden Eel" and "Ocean Man" mine the water motif quite literally, while the hilarious title track and "Polka Dot Tail" take it one step further, the first by aping the dopey Brit folk mysticism of Donovan's "Atlantis" and the second by lumbering whimsically like "Yellow Submarine." Other tracks, such as the opening ditty "I'm Dancing in the Show Tonight," are more impressionistically soaked: the piano notes sprinkle lightly, the tuba plods like a foot through mud, and the vocals warp as if they were accidentally thrown into the washing machine. Though they're good enough songwriters to play it straight and almost get away with it ("It's Gonna Be" sounds pulled from the Peter Cetera songbook), the Ween boys are at their best on songs like "Mutilated Lips," when they're foraging through the grotesque, the surreal, the outright nasty--anything that titillates their sick sense of humor. They're still guys who get off on weird sounds (such as "Pink Eye"'s vacuum cleaner melody and dog bark percussion) and wiener jokes ("Waving My Dick in the Wind"). And what's most fun for us is hearing how much fun it still seems to be for them.
Image
Avatar du membre
creepers
Epouvantail
Messages : 11978
Enregistré le : 10.01.2004 - 14:17
Localisation : metz

Message par creepers »

Image

"autant de solution que de culture... autant de générations que de futuuuure !!!!"

j'aime vraiment ce dernier de mass moi
Avatar du membre
peter wonkley
ROCCO
Messages : 20542
Enregistré le : 21.12.2002 - 21:13
Localisation : ajaccio

Message par peter wonkley »

Image

In the liner notes to Jamiroquai's debut album, lead singer and mastermind Jason Kay delivers a sincere, if oversimplified, screed about distributing the wealth and saving the rainforests. The lyrics follow suit: except for a single love tune ("Blow Your Mind"), Kay bemoans war, greed, racism, and conformity, or extols the power of music as a drug ("Hooked Up") or as a catalyst for social revolution. This is not Jamiroquai's most eloquent album, nor their strongest musically, what with most songs structured as long-form, open-ENDed jams weighing in at six minutes or more. Though interesting as a chronicle of Kay's musical vision taking shape, overall it's a document that will appeal most to Deadheads and jam-band fans.
Image
Avatar du membre
Lord Toussaint
Second Rôle
Second Rôle
Messages : 33
Enregistré le : 25.04.2004 - 10:52
Localisation : Prof dans le 9-3, Baby !

Message par Lord Toussaint »

Image

Après 1er écoute, un peu décu, je préférai leur collaboration sur The Mouse and the Mask, Danger Doom. A retenter tout de même !
Avatar du membre
peter wonkley
ROCCO
Messages : 20542
Enregistré le : 21.12.2002 - 21:13
Localisation : ajaccio

Message par peter wonkley »

Image
Image
Avatar du membre
creepers
Epouvantail
Messages : 11978
Enregistré le : 10.01.2004 - 14:17
Localisation : metz

Message par creepers »

Image
Avatar du membre
peter wonkley
ROCCO
Messages : 20542
Enregistré le : 21.12.2002 - 21:13
Localisation : ajaccio

Message par peter wonkley »

pour me reveiller en douceur :

Image
Image
Répondre