
Barbra Streisand, What Matters Most
Barbra
Streisand, What Matters Most
Five decades into her career and
Barbra Streisand still doesn’t need much else to sell a song than her voice.
And so it goes, launching her first album since 2009, an all-new, 10-tune LP
with her favorite Alan and Marilyn Bergman-written songs (also available in a
deluxe edition with already-released tracks), with just that sublimely
enchanting, untouched-by-time instrument of hers. The Academy Award-winning
song, called "The Windmills of Your Mind," is breathtakingly beautiful with its
gradual orchestra swell that never feels like too much, wisely letting
Streisand’s voice carry the melody. She also fully commands on the following
track, "Something New in My Life," which reaches that diva climax that gets so
many of her gay fans going. The same goes for "The Same Hello, The Same
Goodbye," which catapults into a string-surging wallop that has her opening her
voice enough to swallow the world – it’s gorgeous. Streisand mostly sticks to
ballads, but they’re broken up by the buoyancy of "That Face," originally
written in 1957 and made popular by Fred Astaire, and Frank Sinatra’s "Nice ’n’
Easy," which eases into the traditional take with just some slinky
instrumentation. Anyone who’s loved Babs before is bound to love this
perfect-for-a-rainy-day project; it’s simple, elegant and so Streisand, who –
despite the timeless songs and full orchestra – is clearly what matters most on
this album.
Grade:
B+
Joss
Stone, LP1
Joss Stone tore up the Grammy
stage with Melissa Etheridge years ago during "Piece of My Heart," and that
must have been enough for the lesbian rocker to rub off on the British
24-year-old. No, Stone isn’t lezzie, too – but she’s a gritty spitfire on her
latest album, newly independent, without the commercial sheen and, as addressed
on set-starter "Newborn," ready to do her own thing (she’s the girl
who "doesn’t give a shit" on this one). This new rocker-chick direction finds
Stone going all out with the guitars, a shift from the R&B run she had ever
since the release of The Soul Sessions in 2003. Eight years later, she’s
talking like she’s out for blood; on "Karma," which sounds like an Etheridge
song through and through, she has a "loaded gun" for her man who’s "the bitch."
They sound like true threats coming from Stone, who sings with as much
conviction as a Southern Baptist preacher. That’s especially true of "Last One
to Know," which practically bursts at the seams during the final third of the
song, building into a drum-banging, belt-crazy lash out. But for all the
hard-ass edge on Stone’s LP1, the music itself feels a little too linear and
without enough variety to sustain its 10 tunes. But you have to start
somewhere, and it’s not a bad place for a new beginning.
Grade: B-
Also
Out
Glee: The 3D Concert Movie
(Motion Picture Soundtrack)
What can’t Glee do? It can
champion in ratings, churn out hits and piss off homophobes. And it can sell
out live shows, which is what the show did this year, resulting in a movie –
and this soundtrack. Essentially, it’s not any different than listening to the
polished covers on the umpteen compilations. But now there’s something extra
for you: the sounds of screaming, Finn-crazy girls. It’s the price you pay,
Gleeks, if you want to hear live takes on show faves like "Don’t Stop Believin’"
and "Somebody to Love." And it’s also worth it when Rachel belts out "Don’t
Rain on My Parade" and duets with Kurt on "Happy Days Are Here Again/Get
Happy." Fine, Glee, you win... again.
Graffiti6,
Annie You Save Me
The four songs on this EP is all
it takes for this British duo to leave an impression. The title track, and
first single, busts out of pop confines with a cool psychedelic British soul
vibe, sung in Jamie Scott’s sexy, emotionally resonant voice. The dude looks as
good as he sounds, even when he’s tempering Blackstreet’s "No Diggity" – the
kind of cover that reality-show TV judges go crazy over. Besides a wonky,
space-y remix of "Annie You Save Me," there’s the acoustic "Free," a
wonderfully soulful ditty done on guitar. At just a few songs, there are enough
appetizers here to make you hungry for the full meal.