SOUNDCHECK: Vanderslice Worth It

Norah Jones follow-up is strong; Darin Talbot needs edges sharpened










MUSIC BOX



MUSIC BOX



Casey Stratton


Standing at the Edge

High, ethereal voice and quiet, piano-drive adult contemporary. Sort of like a male Sarah McLachlan. But do we need a male Sarah McLachlan?



Hanoi Rocks


Twelve Shots on the Rocks

'80s glam-rockers reunite for first album in 17 years. The only band from Finland that sounds like it came from the Sunset Strip. Big influences on Motley Crue and Guns N' Roses, who, no offense, improved on the formula. Still, some catchy tunes and the right amount of attitude.



Red Tape


Radioactivist

Politco-punk-metal-whatever. They're mad at something, and they're not going to take it anymore.



40 Below Summer


The Mourning After

It's good to see that nu-metal has reached the "third-tier acts lose major-label deals and release later albums on indie labels" phase of its existence. Prepare for these guys on a nostalgia tour with Static-X in 10 years.



Armsbendback


The Waiting Room

Serviceable emo-core, but is that really worth anything these days? Prepare for these guys on a nostalgia tour with Coheed and Cambria in 15 years.



Skrape


Up the Dose

How many boring nu-metal records can I listen to in a week? A lot, apparently. A whole lot.



1208


Turn of the Screw

As venerable punk-indie label Epitaph gets more adventurous with other genres (hip-hop, folk, etc.), its punk acts get more and more generic. Like the Offspring's third cousin twice removed, only less compelling.




Josh Bell



David Guetta


Just a Little More Love

As if the continued existence of Donna Summer wasn't evidence enough, along comes David Guetta to prove to us all that disco is alive and well in Europe. The French DJ is apparently a huge hit in Paris, but it's hard to see why after listening to the tracks here. This is what happens when a people gets too used to throwing its arms into the air at the slightest provocation.



Robert Lamm


Subtlety & Passion

Ask your great-grandparents about the Chicago Transit Authority and they're likely to get all misty eyed. They're also likely to then get a confused expression and ask for their medication. Lamm, a member of Chicago, has put out his fourth album and it gave me the second of those two reactions. Overly subtle and utterly lacking in passion, the disc is perfect for when you want a nap.



Our Lady of the Highway


About Leaving

The debut CD from this Bay Area group is chock-full of high, reedy vocals, strummin' guitars and lyrics like, "If you want to go dancing, then you should go dancing, because I want to lie down." I couldn't have said it better myself.




Martin Stein





John Vanderslice (3 stars)


Cellar Door

If john vanderslice really has a cellar door, you'll likely find some crazy shit when you open it. On his latest album, Vanderslice sings about war zones, dysfunctional families, and a nutjob who buys a rifle with a Bushnell scope to blast a bird into feathery bits. And, as always, he tells his messed-up stories with lovely pop melodies.


Things are always slightly askew in Vanderslice's world. He likes to work in the Kinks, and there seems to be nothing that makes him happier than writing a perfect hook and then contorting it ever so slightly, adding cellos and church bells but also scuzzing things up just to keep them interesting.


What holds it all together are Vanderslice's voice and story lines. He sounds totally affecting, but he also knows how to conceal his emotions, to set you up for as many twists as you'll get in a David Mamet caper.


Sometimes you have to listen closely to figure out whether Vanderslice is happy or sad, sincere or just screwing with you. It's worth the effort.




Andy Wang



Norah Jones (4 stars)


Feels Like Home

Considering the 18 million copies Jones' debut, Come Away With Me, sold worldwide, not to mention the eight Grammys she and her team won for the album, it's going to be almost impossible for this effort to be seen as anything other than a slight disappointment. That's a shame, because this is a good, solid sophomore album.


While it lacks a stand-out single, a la "Don't Know Why," to propel it into the album-sales stratosphere (though "Creepin' In," a duet with Dolly Parton is pretty catchy), all of the songs are good in their own right, and the album as a whole is not only a good follow up to Come Away With Me, it's also a nice, relaxing listen.


Jones hasn't changed things a lot here, although there is less jazz influence and more bluegrass and blues-tinged songs, but her sound is growing and changing, making this a good album for fans of her debut and new listeners.




Maria Phelan



Darin Talbot (1.5 stars)


Big Air

The first song on this CD, "Tweeker Shred Master," is a thoroughly uninspired, middle-of-the-road ska tune, but it gave me a little hope for the rest of the disc. Perhaps Talbot's "extreme sport folk-rock" wouldn't be as bad as I expected. I should have stopped listening then.


The next four songs sound like a general sampling from any early '90s alt-rock radio station, minus anything truly interesting or innovative. Then, with track six, "Snow Day" (yes, an entire song about staying home on a snow day), the album takes on a heavy Jimmy Buffet quality, which seems fitting since all of these songs are about skiing, snowboarding, sitting on a boat and drinking.


This might be acceptable if the lyrics and music were better, but they are both extremely mediocre. If you're into this sort of bland, uninteresting and uninspired music, you might as well save yourself some money and just put on a Jimmy Buffet CD.


Perhaps if I had downed an entire bottle of rum or tequila before listening to this disc, it would have been less painful. On the bright side, there's no way local radio will pick up anything from this CD or artist, so only people who choose to subject themselves to it will have to suffer.




Maria Phelan

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