Music at Elsewhere
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Paul Simon: Surprise (Warners)
25 May 2006 | 1 min read
From the Sounds of Silence through American Tune and beyond, 64-year-old Paul Simon has articulated the fears and hopes of his generation. Unlike Young on his leaden Living with War, for this new album - in a gagging, sentimental cover - Simon takes musical risks and extends himself. Brian Eno provides the sonic landscapes - loops, electronics, weird bass - and it is mixed by Tchad... > Read more
Whirimako Black: Soul Sessions (Mai)
7 May 2006 | <1 min read
Black's two previous te reo album - Tangihanu (2004) and Te Kura Huna (2005) - were compellingly beautiful and weaved between soul balladry and slightly esoteric jazz, but never lost sight of the spirituality which drove them. Black's voice is a thing of great sensitivity, and those albums should have made her a household name. Surprisingly they received few mainstream reviews... > Read more
Hammond Gamble: Recollection (Liberation)
16 Apr 2006 | <1 min read
Gamble is one of this country's most distinctive voices, but too often in the past decade it has mostly only been heard on ads. A couple of decades back, however, when he fronted Street Talk, Gamble was a household name and his songs rocked pubs and even radios across the nation. The band flirted with greater fame - most notably when notorious LA producer Kim Fowley improbably tried... > Read more
Dan Sperber Complex: āIā (Dscomplex)
22 Feb 2006 | 1 min read
Auckland guitarist Sperber was in the New Loungehead and the Relaxomatic Project, both of which remained faithful to the contract of jazz (improvisation, if you need reminding), but also married that to a chill-out lounge factor which made them as popular in clubs as on the home stereo. This disc-only quartet was recorded in Berlin during Sperber's sojourn there, and at the... > Read more
Belle and Sebastian: The Life Pursuit (Shock)
24 Jan 2006 | <1 min read
This long-running Scottish outfit has had brief flirtations with wider acclaim -- a Mercury Prize nomination in 2004, a year ago voted the Best Scottish Band Ever by their countrymen -- but has never enjoyed more than a devoted cult following. That’s a pity because their albums offer a bewildering, but beautifully realised, array of styles from Burt Bacharach sophistication to dark... > Read more
Belle and Sebastian: Sukie in the Graveyard
Richmond Fontaine: The Fitzgerald (Southbound)
22 Aug 2005 | <1 min read
Richmond Fontaine come with big advance notices: the indie Americana band from Portland broke big with their rowdy Post to Wire album two years ago, which drew favourable comparisons with the Replacements, but for their follow-up, The Fitzgerald, they have turned the volume way down. Written by guitarist Willy Vlautin while living at the Fitzgerald Casino in Reno, it is a collection... > Read more
Richmond Fontaine: Exit 194B
Dolly Parton: Live and Well (Sugar Hill)
18 Jul 2005 | 1 min read
The dinner was going well until someone said they didn't like country music, and someone said they didn't mind it. Then we tried to define our terms. Was Shania Twain country? Nope, she's a property investor said Dave. Emmylou Harris was still country, Joe Ely and Tom Russell were sort of although we liked them because they were also Tex-Mex rockers. Then things got difficult.... > Read more
Elton John: Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, Deluxe Edition (Universal CD/DVD)
2 Nov 2004 | 1 min read
Elton is like a kindly old uncle these days, giving big ups to Ryan Adams, throwing post-Oscar parties, behaving himself, turning up on Disney soundtracks, or rewriting one of his prettiest tunes for the funeral of a slightly wacky royal. And he got married (again, to a man this time though). It's hard to remember that he was, before he went pear-shaped and crazy during the... > Read more
Elton John: Bennie and the Jets
Jim White: No Such Place (Luaka Bop)
2 Nov 2004 | 1 min read
Tom Waits' influence crops up in unexpected places. After his superbly titled Wrong-Eyed Jesus, the man who goes by the unmemorable nom de disque Jim White comes back for a second album of dark narratives, juke-joint folk-blues a la Tom, and disconcerting atmospheric productions on stories which begin, "Long about an hour before sunrise she drags his body down to the edge of swollen... > Read more
Jim White: Ghost-town of my Brain
Van Morrison: What's Wrong With This Picture? (Blue Note)
1 Nov 2004 | 3 min read
Wordsworth, more fool him, peaked early. The first edition of his groundbreaking Lyrical Ballads collection with fellow poet Coleridge was published in 1798 when he was 28. In the following decades (notably his revised editions) it was mostly downhill. Sure, he wrote some later stuff worth studying in late-degree Eng. Lit classes, but the real oil came early. His The Excursion in 1814 was... > Read more
Van Morrison: Goldfish Bowl
Joe Ely: Streets of Sin (Rounder)
6 Oct 2004 | <1 min read
Ely from the flatlands of West Texas offers a triple threat: a memorable leathery twang cured in tequila, the paraffin soul of a rocker in the clothes of a Tex-Mex country singer, and a connection to a songwriting tradition which includes his gifted peers Butch Hancock and Jimmie Dale Gilmore (of the shortlived Flatlanders which included Ely), Townes Van Zandt, organist Augie Myers,... > Read more
Patti Smith: Trampin'
16 Sep 2004 | 2 min read
For over a decade now each new Patti Smith album has been hailed as "a return to form" - and this one is no exception. It has picked up five-star reviews in many magazines from senior rock writers dragged out to consider one of their peers, the woman who shaped their listening, the one often lazily referred to as the poet laureate of punk. However, when you look at the reviews it's... > Read more
Diana Krall: The Girl in the Other Room (Universal)
22 Apr 2004 | <1 min read
Krall has been among the more anodyne of "jazz" artists and while her lightweight stylishness has undoubted appeal for less demanding listeners there has often seemed an emotional vacuum at the centre of her breathy vocals and constrained piano playing. While she may be her own woman you can't help note that marriage to Elvis Costello -- who co-writes most of the lyrics here -- has... > Read more
Warren Zevon, The Wind
1 Dec 2003 | 1 min read
The late Warren Zevon was a self-destructive guy - throwing himself down stairs while in the grip of the demon drink was one of his things - but this Jekyll and Hyde of sunny California in the 80s, who wrote the lovely Hasten Down the Wind, could also pen, "He took little Susie to the Junior Prom, and he raped her and killed her, then he took her home. After 10 long years they let him out... > Read more
Karen Hunter: Inside Outside (Rawfishsalad)
13 Nov 2003 | 1 min read
As a performer, Auckland singer-songwriter Hunter is one of the most assured we've got. She shifts effortlessly from acoustic cafe to the festival circuit in Canada, bars in Australia and thinks nothing of strapping on the Telecaster for nuggety rock gigs. You can take the girl out of the metal but ... After her excellent Private Life of Clowns of '98 -- which covered all the... > Read more
Karen Hunter: Little by Little
Neil Young: Greendale (Reprise)
28 Sep 2003 | <1 min read | 1
Neil Young's Greendale confirms "quirky" and "eccentric" aren't always endearing qualities, especially on a song-cycle about three generations of a family which ... blah-blah. With Crazy Horse he wades through the dreary narrative in the voices of the various characters (all sounding exactly like Neil Young) and piles on his musical cliches. The album is peppered... > Read more
Neil Young: Bringin' Down Dinner
Lou Reed: The Raven (Reprise)
13 Mar 2003 | 1 min read
"These are the stories of Edgar Allen Poe, not exactly the boy next door," yelps a breathless-sounding Reed over dramatic, grinding guitar riffery at the start of this guest-heavy collection of diverse songs and spoken-word sections which explore the works of that peculiar, melancholic American writer with whom Reed feels great affinity. It's an unpromising start but, somewhat... > Read more
Lou Reed: The Fall of the HOuse of Usher (read by Willem Dafoe)
Ash: Intergalactic Sonic 7s (FMR)
29 Oct 2002 | <1 min read
The power pop single was in safe hands with Northern Ireland's Ash, a young and feisty trio - and latterly quartet - who brought brittle, angry energy to the three-and-a-half minute, chart-aimed song. But singer-writer Tim Wheeler had a post-grunge sensibility, pop smarts to burn, and could astutely meld his influences (punk, Nirvana, bubblegum-on-speed, the Vapours' new-wave pop of Turning... > Read more
Human Instinct: Peg Leg (Rajon)
9 Sep 2002 | <1 min read
As interesting for its back-story as the contents, this period piece has been rescued from dusty vaults. Auckland band Human Instinct scored with a couple of much sought-after classic Kiwi rock albums in the late Sixties/early Seventies, notably Stoned Guitar and Pins In It. In '75 the band - guitarist Phil Whitehead, keyboardist Steve McDonald and bassist/singer Zaine Mikkelson, and... > Read more
Dolly Parton: Halos and Horns (Shock)
18 Jul 2002 | <1 min read
Dolly Parton has enjoyed a critical reappraisal these past few years for her excellent bluegrass and back-porch albums The Grass is Blue and Little Sparrow. She turned down that blowtorch voice and went back to her origins in traditional country, but also bought into the style of songs by Billy Joel, Steve Young and Cole Porter. On paper that looks like an appalling mix, but Parton's... > Read more