SOUNDCHECK: The Ferry Man

Solid efforts from both Corsten, David Byrne










MUSIC BOX




36 Crazyfists


A Snow Capped Romance

Smart, powerful metallic emo (or is that emotional metal?). Deserves not to be overlooked in the crowd of heavy bands with hearts on their sleeves.



Onelinedrawing


The Volunteers

One-man emo powerhouse Jonah Matranga continues to explore far beyond the heavy and angsty. An interesting, layered record.



Jem


Finally Woken

She's not backed by the Holograms, and she's not truly outrageous, truly, truly, truly outrageous. She's a Dido-style folktronica singer with some catchy tunes well-suited for teen dramas.



Joe Satriani


Is There Love In Space?

Guitar virtuoso steps up to the mike for two songs, but his riffs are so insanely catchy that vocals are not necessary. You'll be singing along to Satch's old-school hard rock even when there are no words.



Weezer


Weezer – Deluxe Edition

It's hard to believe it's been 10 years since Weezer's debut was first released. This reissue has extensive liner notes and a mix of interesting and redundant bonus tracks.



U.P.O.


The Heavy

Uninspired Pabulum Overall? Using Post-grunge Offensively? Unnecessarily Painful Opportunity? Um, Puddle Of...Mudd?



Clutch


Blast Tyrant

More feel-good stoner-rock from the kings of feel-good stoner rock. (Is there any other kind?)



Soulfly


Prophecy

Max Cavalera once again brings in all sorts of world-beat influences to mix with his metal, and shows further diversity by covering Helmet, but it all kind of turns into mush after a while.




Josh Bell





Ferry Corsten


Right of Way (3 stars)


A club DJ can make one of three albums: he can make a mix disc; he can collaborate with a number of guest vocalists and musicians; or he can write, play and sing his own compositions. The third option, the road much, much less traveled, has seen its share of funky, melodic successes (Sasha's Airdrawndagger comes to mind) and thudding, overproduced failures (as much as I like his singles, Paul van Dyk can't sustain an entire album).


Trance superstar Ferry Corsten takes the third road, and while he's unlikely to catch up with Sasha, he makes good time with Right of Way. Having remixed everyone from U2 to William Orbit, Corsten knows a few things about making his beats stickier with good melodies. The best tracks here, the dreamy "Kyoto" and "In My Dreams," the atavistic "Punk" and "Rock Your Body Rock," sound like they were grown in a lab. Which they were. Anyone who's really listened to one of Corsten's remixes will instantly recognize the way he subtly builds a melody, then blows it out full-bore at the track's halfway point.


That said, there's no getting around the fact that he's perfected the formula. The way the one-fingered melody of "Rock Your Body Rock" moves to the foreground is absolutely brilliant. It's like a surprise party: You're so gratified, you really don't mind that he's pulled one over on you.




Geoff Carter



David Byrne


Grown Backwards (3 stars)


If for no other reason, you should get a hold of David Byrne's Grown Backwards for "Au Fond du Temple Saint," his duet with Rufus Wainwright. The song has an unusual pedigree, it was penned by Georges Bizet for his opera The Pearl Fishers, but Byrne handles the vocal as earnestly as he does any Talking Heads song, raising his voice into that perfect, somewhat goofy yodel of his while Wainwright does his arty deadpan.


"Au Fond" is soulful, refined, earnest and nearly perfect. Bizet would have loved it, perhaps enough to have joined Byrne's eclectic group of collaborators, a group which has grown these past few years to include members of Belle & Sebastian, Morcheeba and Devo. Few musicians have quite the thirst for learning that Byrne does, and he throws every last bit of that education back into his records. That means the records sound better and better, but don't necessarily move your body the way "Once in a Lifetime" did.


What I'm saying is that while Grown Backwards is an enjoyable record, full of bright, poppy songs, "Pirates" and "Empire" foremost among them, it's almost too refined. Byrne could stand to dismiss the string section for one album and chunk out some of his own naïve melodies, the kind of thrumming geek chic that drew all those collaborators to him in the first place.


However, if it's not to be, that's fine, too. His next record will be as well-crafted and thought-out as this one, and I'll give it three stars, also.




Geoff Carter

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