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Entering Heaven Alive [B&N Exclusive] [Includes Slip Mat]
Barnes and Noble
Entering Heaven Alive [B&N Exclusive] [Includes Slip Mat]
Current price: $13.99
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Barnes and Noble
Entering Heaven Alive [B&N Exclusive] [Includes Slip Mat]
Current price: $13.99
Size: CD
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Calling
Entering Heaven Alive
the acoustic counterpart to
Fear of the Dawn
, the album it follows by a mere three months, isn't quite accurate even if this designation illustrates the divide between the two records. Where
is coiled, nervy, and tense, an explosion of paranoia and dread,
is quieter and contemplative -- the music that arrives after the dawn, as it were.
Jack White
does pluck and strum an acoustic guitar throughout
, sometimes conjuring ghosts of the softest
White Stripes
moments, but the arrangements on the album are detailed, spirited, and, in their own way, as adventurous as their counterparts on
. Witness "All Along the Way," the second song on the record: it begins as a hushed folk tune and then takes a left turn toward prog-reggae on its bridge. The album is filled with little moments like that: the stiff funk of "I've Got You Surrounded (With My Love)" slowly, surely gets jazzier as it crawls on, while the mellow melancholy pop of "If I Die Tomorrow" cascades to a Baroque crescendo. These are surrounded by sly stylistic excursions, such as the plaintive, skeletal ballad "Love Is Selfish," the old-timey shuffle "Queen of the Bees," and "Taking Me Back (Gently)," which flips the frenzied
opener into a ragtime shuffle. The musical range is remarkable yet not flashy: the detours and rambles all feel as if they stem from a natural stream of consciousness.
feels of a piece with
White
's previous work, yet the ideas are synthesized and executed in fresh, inventive ways, suggesting that the ungainly
Boarding House Reach
was indeed a transitionary album to allow him to do music that's as relaxed and vibrant as this. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Entering Heaven Alive
the acoustic counterpart to
Fear of the Dawn
, the album it follows by a mere three months, isn't quite accurate even if this designation illustrates the divide between the two records. Where
is coiled, nervy, and tense, an explosion of paranoia and dread,
is quieter and contemplative -- the music that arrives after the dawn, as it were.
Jack White
does pluck and strum an acoustic guitar throughout
, sometimes conjuring ghosts of the softest
White Stripes
moments, but the arrangements on the album are detailed, spirited, and, in their own way, as adventurous as their counterparts on
. Witness "All Along the Way," the second song on the record: it begins as a hushed folk tune and then takes a left turn toward prog-reggae on its bridge. The album is filled with little moments like that: the stiff funk of "I've Got You Surrounded (With My Love)" slowly, surely gets jazzier as it crawls on, while the mellow melancholy pop of "If I Die Tomorrow" cascades to a Baroque crescendo. These are surrounded by sly stylistic excursions, such as the plaintive, skeletal ballad "Love Is Selfish," the old-timey shuffle "Queen of the Bees," and "Taking Me Back (Gently)," which flips the frenzied
opener into a ragtime shuffle. The musical range is remarkable yet not flashy: the detours and rambles all feel as if they stem from a natural stream of consciousness.
feels of a piece with
White
's previous work, yet the ideas are synthesized and executed in fresh, inventive ways, suggesting that the ungainly
Boarding House Reach
was indeed a transitionary album to allow him to do music that's as relaxed and vibrant as this. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine