SOUND: Profoundly Sacred

Bonnaroo mixed; Strummer a bit sketchy










MUSIC BOX



Robert Earle Keen


Farm Fresh Onions

This is the kind of country music—rocking but not overproduced, lyrically intelligent—that you don't bother listening to country radio for anymore. It's that good.


Smashmouth


Get the Picture?

The innocuousness of the title is a good indication of the contents. Music so breezy it dissipates before your very ears.


Joe Henry


Tiny Voices

Moody and listenable, from the menacing jazz tinkle of "This Afternoon" to the sad lilt of the title song. Pass the scotch.


Shakatura


Galactivation

Spacy, trancy ... did I say spacy? Outer spacy. I can't say I'd dance to it, but it's great to type to.




Scott Dickensheets





String Cheese Incident


Untying The Not

The first three tracks of this CD gave me hope that it would be a good one, until it morphed into a combination of slickly overproduced rock and new-agey spa tunes. SCI fans should either pass on this one or get it at Big B's, where there are already about 10 copies in the used CD bin.


Poison the Well


You Come Before You

Much like Linkin Park and the Deftones (who they'll be opening for October 30), this band is loud and angry—except when they're thoughtful and quiet, though they're not quite polished, yet.


Willie Nelson


Teatro

This one came out a while ago, but there's nothing better than this disc, a good margarita, and if you have access, a boat to relax on.


Phish


Farmhouse

After the String Cheese Incident I had to cleanse and refresh my ears with this album; not as good as live Phish, but pretty damn good.




Maria Phelan




STING
(4 stars)


SACRED LOVE


Sting continues his growth and maturity as an artist with his newest release, Sacred Love. Inspired in part by the terrorist attacks of 9/11, the lyrics, instruments and orchestrations also can be seen as part of a continium from Brand New Day.


 Much of Gordon Sumner's work as a songwriter evokes classic themes of love as a near-violent experience in "Inside," as a hope for the future in "Send Your Love," as romance in his pairing with a gospel-hued Mary J. Blige on "Whenever I Say Your Name," and finally as benediction in the title track. In between are the songs we've grown to expect from Sting, infused with sounds from India, Turkey and Spain.


Sting, who had a friend die in the World Trade Center collapse, directly addresses that other classic theme, war, in another pair of tracks. "Forget About The Future" is a paean of sorts to Santayana's famous line extolling the virtues of knowing one's history.


It's followed by "This War," the sort of song likely to raise eyebrows at Clear Channel's Dixie Chicks division, though Sting has gone on record stating it has nothing to do with George W. Bush.


 Excluding any BMW commercials popping up, none of the tracks are likely to be in high FM rotation, which is a shame because it will rob a lot of people of the chance to discover one of the more talented artists of a generation. Fortunately, a re-mix of "Send Your Love" is guaranteed to at least be a hit at clubs and raves.




Martin Stein






VARIOUS ARTISTS
(3 stars)


LIVE FROM BONNAROO 2003


Compilations and live albums are always hit-or-miss, so a live compilation is already a dicey prospect, even before you stick it in the CD player. This double-CD document of the 2003 Bonnaroo Festival in Seattle falls squarely in the middle, offering few stand-out tracks but serving as a decent introduction to the jam-centric sound supported by Bonnaroo.


Despite lengthy jams from bands like The Dead, The Allman Brothers and Medeski Martin & Wood, the album feels less like a live recording than a mix tape that a Bonnaroo fan would play in the car on the way to the festival.


That said, there are some fine performances, especially from funky instrumentalists Galactic, indie alt-country group My Morning Jacket, and Emmylou Harris. Anyone who's curious what the whole jam scene and its periphery are about could do worse than checking out this record.




Josh Bell






JOE STRUMMER AND THE MESCALEROS
(3 stars)


STREETCORE


Neither as catchy as their first album, Rock Art and the X-Ray Style, nor as essential as their second, Global a Go-Go, the Mescaleros' third disc isn't the five-star send-off you'd have wanted for the late Joe Stummer. That probably couldn't be helped: Streetcore was completed by bandmates from tracks recorded before Strummer died.


No surprise, then, that the full-bodied rock/world-beat gumbo of the previous discs sounds thinner here, sketchier. A languid cover of Bob Marley's "Redemption Song" isn't the cathartic musical moment it probably sounded like it would be.


Likewise, "Long Shadow," written for Johnny Cash and recorded by Rick Rubin in the unadorned style he used for Cash, is more promise than payoff, despite some fine lyrical turns.


Still, there are some lovely moments here: the rousing and insistently singable "Get Down Moses"; the guitar lines that curl like barbed wire around the chorus of "Arms Aloft;" and the final song, "Silver and Gold," which sounds like a number the mates sing down at the pub to toast the idea of living a full life. Sounds good in Strummer's voice.




Scott Dickensheets




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