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Lou Reed - Raven
CD DetailsArtist: Lou Reed Edition: Music CD Audio: English (Original Language) CD Release Date: 2003-01-28 Music Label: Reprise / Wea Soundtracks: - Overture
- Edgar Allan Poe
- Call On Me
- The Valley of Unrest
- A Thousand Departed Friends
- Change
- The Bed
- Perfect Day
- The Raven
- Balloon
- Broadway Song
- Blind Rage
- Burning Embers
- Vanishing Act
- Guilty
- I Wanna Know (The Pit and the Pendulum)
- Science of the Mind
- Hop Frog
- Tripitena's Speech
- Who Am I? (Tripitena's Song)
- Guardian Angel
Music reviews of RavenMusic Review: Reed's best album but you have to give it (a lot of) time... Rating: 5 Stars
Initially I hated this album and was sorely disappointed. After listening to it for three weeks, it has won me over completely. This is Lou Reed in all of his glory and with all of his frequently aggravating excesses. You have to take The Raven as a package: 12 great songs, 6 mediocre songs and 3 fine poetry readings with verses added by Reed.The album starts off poorly: the instrumental "Overture" may work in concert but is just filler here. The show tune, "Edgar Allen Poe," is a somewhat clever but mostly grating summary of Poe's work set to the tune of "Future Farmers of America." It is fun to hear Reed, with his NY accent, naturally rhyme "Poe" with "Door." Things then get better. "Call on Me" starts off pretentiously, discussing the "other selves' mournings", but becomes a thing of beauty, transitioning into a stanza of verse read by Laurie Anderson and concluding with her singing the refrain. The instrumental, "A Thousand Departed Friends," sounds not like "Metal Machine Music" as some have suggested, but more like the instrumental conclusion of "What Goes On" on "1969 Live," where musical repetition grows ever so slightly in intensity and tempo and you wish it would never end. An apt tribute to the victims of 9/11. Reed's stripped down remake of "The Bed" from "Berlin" is perfect: it captures the original's pathos while eschewing its bathos. Speaking of remakes, Reed has a singer name Antony perform "Perfect Day"; Antony's warbly high tenor is almost surreal in its beauty: I've never heard anyone quite like him. When Antony sings background vocals on tracks like "Science of the Mind" and "Guardian Angel," the combination of Reed's voice and his is almost a religious experience. Other highlights include "Burning Embers," where Reed adopts a Tom Waite-like singing voice and sounds convincingly like the undead. "Vanishing Act" is the "Oh Jim" of The Raven: simple and powerful lyrics with minimal accompaniment. "I Wanna Know" is bizarre and fun: a gospel call and response tune(!) where Reed sings his heart out about Poe's concept of "preverseness" and the lead singer of the Blind Boys of Alabama offers a powerful echo. "Hop Frog" with David Bowie is just plain fun: pure power pop with lyrics for a children's song. "Who Am I" is simply magesterial--a beautiful track--and "Guardian Angel" reaches the sublime when Antony and Reed sing together. Finally, "Change" is an impassioned and somewhat humorous song about fear and aging. The poetry readings are all fine and entertaining. Now for the ugly. "Balloon" is a nothing a capella song echoing but not improving upon "I'm a Little Teapot." Reed wastes Ornette Coleman on the insipid "Guilty." "Blind Rage" is poorly conceived: if one experiences "blind rage," then one usually isn't capable of saying "I'm in a blind rage!" It's as if Reed suddenly introduced lyrics like "I'm experiencing existential despair!" into "Heroin." He knows better than this. "Broadway Song" is a throwaway, ironic show tune; its only value is the novelty of hearing Steve Buscemi sing a Reed song. Reed has rarely sung with more heart and soul, ranging from soft and soulful ("Science of the Mind") to impassioned and yearning. Reed is experimenting and extending his usual musical and lyrical range. There are some failures, but these are more than outweighed by the glorious successes. As to whether Reed is "true to Poe," I don't particularly care: I'd rather have a Lou Reed album than a soundtrack.
More Raven free music reviews: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Description of RavenLou Reed, the essential poet of modern music, brings to life in words and music, drama and rock 'n' roll, the visceral work of Edgar Allan Poe in The Raven. Featuring guest appearances by David Bowie, Laurie Anderson, saxman Ornette Coleman and The Blind Boys Of Alabama as well as actors such as Willem Dafoe and Steve Buscemi. This 2 CD version is limited and features the complete spoken word and song production. Artist Julian Schnabel created the packaging of the limited edition, which features a four-panel digipak and b/w poster of Lou on one side and notes, songs and performers on the other. (approx. 13 inches square). Sire. 2003. It's not surprising that Lou Reed finds a kindred spirit in Edgar Allan Poe. The godfather of punk's early ambition was to bring the darker elements of great literature--decay, death, and decadence--to rock & roll. The Raven was born following a spoken-word performance of Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart" during which Reed "came to understand it in a way I never had before." Accordingly, The Raven may strike Reed's longtime fans in a way the artist never has before. Although dark, the music is stylistically all over the place--from Velvet Underground-like rock instrumentals to actor Steve Buscemi's creepy lounge-lizard take on the anti-showbiz "Broadway Song," to moments that recall such diverse past Reed ventures as Metal Machine Music and the Bells. He even reprises two classics--"Perfect Day" and "The Bed" from Transformer and Berlin, respectively -- in almost unrecognizable forms. Ornette Coleman and David Bowie drop in, and actors read text in which Reed mixes Poe's poems and stories with his own words. The opium references are surely Poe's; the explicit images probably all Reed's. It's hard to tell, though; the blend's that good. --Bill Holdship
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