Recent album reviews
Urgency proved the currency when
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Before it came to a widely promoted end last year, Kix Brooks and
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Mark Ronson knows a thing or two about handling boozy musicians (he produced
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For a guy who once sang bitterly of
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Eddie Vedder has said this solo outing began with no intention of the music going public, for understandable reasons: A solo ukulele record from the leader of one of the great alt-rock bands of the last quarter century doesnt exactly brim with marketing potential. The narrow musical scope carries with it both freedom and isolation, and the nakedness of the sonic palette -- this is truly folk chamber music -- also leaves him emotionally exposed, lending power to songs of separation, alienation, romantic yearning and vulnerability. Who knows? Perhaps this experiment will inspire him to take on that last bastion of uncharted rock-star territory: Accordion Anthems.
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Dave King formed this Celtic-inspired punk band here in L.A., but for the last several years the frontman and his wife, violinist Bridget Regan, have lived in her hometown of Detroit, its ravages informing the working-stiff lyrics. If King maintains a tight focus for much of Flogging Molly’s fifth studio album, his bandmates (on guitar and drums, as well as tin whistle and Uilleann pipes) employ broader strokes, pushing the music toward arena-rousing Bruce Springsteen territory. They come closest to that ideal in “Revolution,” a fuzzed-out hard-luck tale that King narrates from the perspective of a “working man without any work.”
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