
k.d. lang and the Siss Boom Bang
k.d. lang and the Siss Boom Bang, Sing it Loud
On Sing it Loud, k.d. lang’s first album in 20 years with
a core band, she does just that – blasting through the big-sounding shell of
opener "I Confess" with that creamy croon of hers. It’s like lang sprung from a
slumber – that of the solid-but-sleepy Watershed, released three years ago –
and woke up as Roy Orbison, whom the song mirrors. Reaching back to her country
roots, first earning her fame in the early ’90s, the next nine tracks are as
close as we’ll probably ever get to Absolute Torch and Twang, the last
straight-up country album of the Canadian’s career. And that’s still not very
close. Sure, there’s banjo on "Habit of Mind" and slide guitar on her dreamy interpretation
of the Talking Heads’ "Heaven" (the only cut not with a k.d. credit), but Sing
it Loud marries many of the musical meanders of lang’s career. She’s in top
form when she’s recalling an old flame on "The Water’s Edge," a sophisticated
love song with a melodic sweetness that lang pulls off effortlessly. It’s that
ease that makes Sing it Loud such a pleasantly cushy listen. The Siss Boom
Bang, an alt-country collective that shakes up the arrangements without
sacrificing the fluid feel of the album, helps make that long-coveted voice not
just new again, but more thrilling than it’s been in years.
Grade: B+
Christina Perri, lovestrong.
From tip-making waitress to hit-making songstress, Christina
Perri’s first single, "jar of hearts," turned her into an overnight name. No
wonder: The barebones piano ballad is a been-there-done-that doozy – someone
loves you, dumps you, wants you back – and is a fine showcase for the
24-year-old’s precocious voice that’s part Regina Spektor and part Sara
Bareilles. That sound is particularly present on "mine," a track mixed by
Michael Brauer – one of Spektor’s song smiths – that could easily be an outtake
from Spektor’s Far. The fetching "bang bang bang," a jaunty song that takes
girl power to a new pistol-packin’ level, is a biting Bareilles-like kiss-off.
That’s as upbeat as it gets, but the mid-tempo "Arms," the second single, is a
guitar-grower that thumps and charms with telling lyrics like, "I hope that you
see right through my walls." She doesn't break through many, but suckers for
sappy pop love songs – from the cute "miles" to the pretty, soul-searching
"bluebird" – should find Perri pretty easy on the ears. Even if she’s only
truly pushing outside the pop confines she – or her label – are comfortable with
on the loose power ballad "the lonely" and "tragedy," both moody
orchestrations, there’s no question that love is strong. (Out May 10)
Grade: B
Also Out
Glee: The Music Presents The Warblers
McKinley High’s competition, The Warblers, on the TV juggernaut
Glee isn’t actually competition at all. This season, the Darren
Criss-as-Blaine machine, with Chris Colfer’s Kurt and a bunch of other boys, is
sucking up all the performance points. And now they have their own CD, which is
more listenable than any of the actual Glee season two compilations. The real
bust is the Criss-Colfer duet on "Candles," which never sparks. But otherwise,
the a cappella arrangements are clever takes on big pop hits, like "Bills,
Bills, Bills" and "Teenage Dream." They even take a Keane song somewhere only
they know.
Alison Krauss & Union Station, Paper Airplane
One of the best voices of any genre belongs to Alison
Krauss, who reunites with Union Station for a follow-up to their 2004 critical
darling Lonely Runs Both Ways. "Every silver lining always seems to have a
cloud that comes my way," she sings with a meek sadness on the moving title
track. But it’s not just darkness that’s still hanging around; many of the
Americana ditties – from Dan Tyminski’s earthy "Dust Bowl Children" to Krauss’
gorgeous-but-dragging "Dimming of the Day" – sound intent on recapturing old
magic. But you know how it is, sequels rarely do. Paper Airplane is proof.