THE VINYL WORD: ALISON KRAUSS & UNION STATION ‘PAPER AIRPLANE’

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If Alison Krauss felt any pressure when she went in to record Paper Airplanes, her follow-up to 2004’s triple Grammy-winning Lonely Runs Both Ways and Raising Sand, her collaboration with Robert Plant — which went on to garner an additional six Grammys – it is impossible to hear it anywhere on the album. Whatever blood, sweat and tears were shed during the creation of this beautifully realized cycle of songs are invisible as each performance comes off as exhilarating, natural and blissfully unforced. In every instance, Paper Airplanes rises to the impossibly high bar set by its predecessors to form what may well be the finest album Krauss has ever released.

The sound Alison Krauss and her longtime bandmates in Union Station create continues to express an intuition and flow that is rarely heard in country music. Dan Timinski’s pristine guitar playing and worn-in vocals are as essential and impressive as ever, while bluegrass legend Jerry Douglas’ dobro playing is stellar throughout. But, not surprisingly, Krauss’ vocals are the centerpiece, and her mezzo soprano has never sounded as pure as it does on this new set of songs. Her range continues to stagger, and nowhere is this more evident than it is on her cover of Richard and Linda Thompson’s “Dimming of the Day.” While she wisely chooses not to descend into the heart of darkness that washed over the original version, Krauss effortlessly holds each note as she pulls off the long phrases and diabolical range required without ever faltering, effortlessly walking the line between sugary sweetness and tragic desperation to bring the song home.Paste

OTHER NEW VINYL RELEASES:

Deerhoof/Woom Woom on Hoof
Be Good Tanyas Blue Horse
Big D & The Kids Table For the Damned the Dumb & the Delirious
Deerhoof Milk Man
Father’s Children Who’s Gonna Save The World
Keith Richards Vintage Vinos
Bon Iver Calgary

BRIAN ENO ‘DRUMS BETWEEN THE BELLS’ AND OTHER NEW CD RECOMMENDATIONS!

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For all of his prolificacy, his repertoire, his universal influence and all the hushed tones surrounding his name, Brian Eno has never really made music for singing. He’s certainly played around with the idea; his landmark work through the ‘70s featured intermittent vocal support, and his partnership with David Byrne has produced some honest-to-god pop songs—but most of these moments seemed entwined to the very essence of the music, the songwriting becoming a primary instrument. This isn’t the case with Drums Between the Bells; while texturally it runs the gambit of Eno’s various guises over the years, the voices present are coming through clearer, and more deliberately than ever before. This emphasis comes quite characteristically from the mind of Rick Holland, a poet, who understandably comes from a place of invisible rhythm and implied music. Eno has always been a background worker, but here he’s crafting the origins and scenario of another’s cadence, positioning his music like shadows to the words. It’s the sort of thing that could collapse in the hands of another talent, but the long-proven expertise of Eno transforms what probably should be an afterthought of an album into something rather terrific.Paste

OTHER NEW CD RECOMMENDATIONS:

Big D & The Kids Table For the Damned the Dumb & the Delirious
Deer Tracks Archer Trilogy Pt. 2
Draconian Rose For The Apocalypse
Robert Ellis Photographs
Head Cat Walk the Walk Talk the Talk
Memory Tapes Player Piano
My Epic Broken Voice
Julia Stone Memory Machine
Teddybears Devil’s Music
Unearth Darkness in the Light

NEW RELEASE OF THE WEEK: OLD 97’S ‘VOLUME 2 – GRAND THEATRE’

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On their 2010 album, The Grand Theatre Vol. 1, the Old 97’s per- formed new material live at a Dallas theater, then took the songs that went over best and recorded them in an Austin studio. Consisting of songs left over from Vol. 1, this second installment, The Grand Theatre Vol. 2, places Rhett Miller’s articulate, off-the-cuff songs right between the composure of the control room and the looseness of the barroom. Miller savors lines like “He said, ‘Can I buy a drink?’/What he meant was, ‘Can I buy you?’ ” over his bandmates’ proudly ordinary punky-tonk. But Miller is no roots reactionary: “Manhattan (I’m Done)” is the rare country dig at New York where it actually sounds like the singer gave the big city a fighting chance.Rollingstone

NEW DVD/BLU-RAY: BLACK MOON

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In Louis Malle’s apocalyptic fantasy Black Moon, Lily (Cathryn Harrison, granddaughter of Rex) drives down a lonesome road, and soon finds herself in a alternate world full of non sequiturs and bizarre characters. At times, this looks like a David Lynch film, what with an old woman conversing with a rat, a pack of naked children chasing a pig, a talking unicorn, a strange set of possibly incestuous siblings (one of whom is “underground” film star Joe Dallesandro), and several other warped set pieces. Malle reportedly culled inspiration for the narrative of this film from his own dreams.

OTHER NEW DVD/BLU-RAY RELEASES:

Bad Company Live At Wembley
Sucker Punch
Season of the Witch
Doobie Brothers Live at the Greek Theater
Bloodworth
Eddie Vedder Water on the Road

THE VINYL WORD: HANDSOME FURS ‘SOUND KAPITAL’ AND OTHERS!

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Even though Canadian bands Wolf Parade and the Handsome Furs share Dan Boeckner’s instantly recognizable vocals, the latter have gone to great lengths to make a name for themselves. With Plague Park (2007) and Face Control (2008), Boeckner and his wife, keyboardist Alexei Perry, grew into more than just a side project to Wolf Parade. Throughout their history as a band, however, you could always hear the harder, grungy synthesizers yearning to break free from the New Wave-y, almost Strokesian guitar lines. Their latest release, Sound Kapital, fuses the couple’s impressive but disparate talents by eliminating the guitar altogether. Boeckner wanted to “challenge” himself by playing keyboards, and it’s safe to say he rises to the test. Sound Kapital initially sounds like a departure from the band’s earlier efforts, but after repeated listens it’s actually a logical progression. The album hews closely to ‘80s electronic and industrial music of Eastern Europe, which is the primary influence for the new record. This gives them a solid musical platform on which to explore their socialist advocacy and nostalgic denial. – Consequence Of Sound

OTHER NEW VINYL RELEASE:

Avi Buffalo How Come
13 & God Own Your Ghost
Bread Best of Bread
Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. It’s a Corporate World
Iron Maiden From Fear to Erernity
Left Banke Walk Away Renee
National Cherry Tree Ep
Set Your Goals Burning at Both Ends
Jonsi Go Out Ep
Venetian Snares Cubist Reggae