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Audio CD review:
Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all Patty Larkin reviews here, or go back to the Patty Larkin tabs.
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| Patty Larkin - Red = Luck |
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Band: Patty Larkin Title: Red = Luck Rating: Release Date: 2003-02-11 Media: Audio CD Tracks: 1: All That Innocence 2: 24/7/365 3: The Cranes 4: Children 5: Italian Shoes 6: Birmingham 7: Too Bad 8: Home 9: Different World 10: Normal 11: Red=Luck 12: Inside Your painting 13: St. Augustine 14: Louder |
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Brilliant artist This is a wonderful album full of beautiful, melodic songs, a very tasteful backing band on some songs, Patty's great guitar work, her haunting voice (with occasional overdubbed harmonies), her smart lyrics . . in short, the album is great. I saw Patty live in NYC a couple of weeks ago. She was terrific, was a riot between songs, the audience was enraptured. She is an incredible artist, deserves better recognition, and this CD will not disappoint.
Deeply felt lyrics from Patty, offset, contrasted, or enhanced by the background. "The Cranes" is a masterpiece, shimmers and hangs in the air like the chevron of flying birds she describes, the melody gets in your brain and sticks. "24/7/365" compulsive full-time love. "Birmingham" comments on the downside of Capitalism. Where are the "children" of yesterday? Get away from it all, Escape with your lover and "Fly away down the Boulevard". In "Italian Shoes" she is undecided about letting her lover know how she really feels. Impressionist/Expressionist paintings in sound. Everyone who hears it at my house says "that's really great, who is it??" The more you listen, the more you like it.
Her latest offering is frustrating because there is evidence that she could be great if presented in the right context. "Home" is the best song on the album-its power lies in the solitude of nothing but Larkin's understated guitar strumming and her voice. Songs like "The Crane," however, get overproduced and wind up sounding sterile. Even Larkin's genuine performance can't save them. I would like to hear all the songs from "Red = Luck" in a live setting where their honesty is not lost. The difference between the potential of this album and its actual presentation can be likened to Elliott Smith's jump from "Either/Or" to "Figure 8. " Though many of the songs on "Figure 8" are just dandy, I always wind up taking it out of the player and replacing it with somber "Either/Or. " But if Larkin really wants to sound clean and on the cutting-edge, she could always listen to Smith's transition album, "XO. " It's a fine example of how to allow lush production to enhance songs instead of hurt them.
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