Brandi Carlile, Live at Benaroya Hall with the Seattle
Symphony
No wonder Brandi Carlile’s always releasing live music – her
big, bellowy voice is best heard outside the studio, in all its rawness. This
time it’s with the Seattle Symphony, which complements the crescendos of songs
from the folk-rock musician’s magnificent catalog. Most of them are pulled from
her latest album, Give Up the Ghost, with a staggering seven-minute "Pride
and Joy" that kicks into a string-fueled, sound-flooded rocker, and the lovely
"Before it Breaks," which follows its original piano-launched blueprint until
there’s an even more epic midway blast – with horns and woodwinds – that surges
into an explosive powerhouse. Her biggest hit, "The Story," follows similarly
with its end wallop, but especially setting it apart from the studio song is
Carlile’s unrefined onstage interpretation – like her up-and-down-and-sideways
voice is running through a grater. She nails it. "Turpentine" is turned into a
three-part-harmony sing-along with Tim and Phil Hanseroth, her bandmates,
before they take the spotlight themselves on "The Sound of Silence," and
completely steal it. Carlile wraps majestically with two stirring covers,
"Hallelujah" and a show-stopping "Forever Young," dropping the 30-piece
orchestra for just a piano. The real instrument, after all, is that voice.
Grade: A-
Augustana, Augustana
Let’s just pretend this is Augustana’s debut. After all,
like most firsts, it’s named after the band. And considering the mediocrity of
their two previous LPs, the boys might not mind starting over. Now
unrecognizable as the dreamy piano-pop group – except that they still sing
about love woes and new beginnings – this is practically a new formation. Even
frontman Dan Layus sounds like he hit a second puberty, with a rasp that’s more
Bruce Springsteen than pre-pubescent boy channeling a poor man’s Coldplay.
Augustana is better for it. "Shot in the Dark" is a bouncy boost of optimism
whose positivity is infectious; it’s a single The Killers would kill for, and
one of the best songs you’ll hear this year. The rest of the seamless 10-track
album, even if the songs don’t reach the same feel-goodness, is nearly just as
solid. "Wrong Side of Love" is a radio-ready rocker; and "On the Other Side" is
the band’s new "Boston" (their biggest hit), another power ballad that swells
like a balloon. They go completely Americana on "Borrowed Time," a sweet little
soft spot. So of course they named Augustana after themselves – who wouldn’t
want to be remembered for this one?
Grade: A-
Also Out
Stevie Nicks, In Your Dreams
One day Stevie Nicks might finally catch up to the times,
but till then we have In Your Dreams, a divine throwback to her Fleetwood Mac
days that captures the essence of the mystical music-maker. Early-’90s
nostalgics will find pleasure on "Secret Love," which casts a dreamy blend of
storytelling and light-rock reverie. There’s a simple sweetness to road song
"For What It’s Worth," and a great hook on the title track, an old-school rocker.
Even the weaker material, like a corny love song called "Cheaper than Free"
with producer Dave Stewart of the Eurythmics, doesn’t totally bomb at the helm
of Nicks’ enchanting voice. Dreams was worth a decade of waiting.
Yelle, Safari Disco Club
You don’t need to know French to get sucked into the joyful
dance world of Yelle, producers of dance-pop that charm again on this follow up
to 2007’s Pop Up. Their sophomore CD is enveloping with its rich, buoyant
melodies and effervescent style of electro-framed disco dancers. Many of the
songs are chic, bubbly, lo-fi bait (even if they’re sad) – think chimes,
handclaps and slick synths – sung in Julie Budet’s chirpy sing-speak. The
cohesiveness blurs individuality among tracks, but the best ones – the eerie
"La Musique" and the seemingly happy-go-lucky "C’est Pas Une Vie"– break all
language barriers.