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Garage Orchestra [Expanded]
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Garage Orchestra [Expanded]
Current price: $17.99
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Barnes and Noble
Garage Orchestra [Expanded]
Current price: $17.99
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After the sophomore slump of 1989's unfortunately uneven
Naked Movie Star
,
Cindy Lee Berryhill
left New York City, did some traveling, and made a home in California, where she settled into a committed relationship, began writing new songs, and took a new approach to how she performed them.
Berryhill
became friends with
Randy Hoffman
, a percussionist who had a large collection of instruments in his garage, and as they began toying with her songs, they invited a large and diverse variety of musicians to join in. While the title of 1994's
Garage Orchestra
refers to the fact
and her collaborators worked out their arrangements during sessions in
Hoffman
's garage, it also nods to the ambitious but unpretentious sound of the album as conjured by the dozens of folks who took part in the sessions. The massed backing vocals, buzzing string sections, woodwinds, and
's tympani, vibraphone, marimba, and other noisemakers give the songs a sound that's big and rich with nuance, but the music still has a playful quality, just ramshackle enough to be loose but still painting the big picture she requires with the layers of sound at her disposal. On tracks like "UFO Suite," "Father of the Seventh Son," and "Song for Brian," this music sounds like a homebrewed approximation of a classic
Brian Wilson
session of the '60s, with a dash of
the Wrecking Crew
and
the Funk Brothers
for additional flavor. And
was absolutely right to create this kind of scenery for her songs;
strips away much of the social and political commentary of her early Anti-Folk material and instead gives a genuine sense of wonder to her tunes about love, humanity, and the curious world in which we exist, and as a vocalist and composer, she never sounded as eloquent or as fully engaged as she does here. In her way,
had just as much to say on
as on her first two albums, but the greater dynamics and scope of these performances elevate the songs and the result is the finest album of her career. [In 2019,
Omnivore Recordings
reissued
in an expanded edition that adds nine tracks to the original ten-song running order. Most of the extras are alternate versions of numbers that appeared on the original edition, but they do add to the listener's appreciation of how this album -- mostly cut live in a mere five days -- came together. The booklet also includes notes on the songs from
, and essays on the album from friends, admirers, and those involved in making the album. This edition is a genuine improvement on the original 1994 release, if not radically so, and it's more than welcome to have this gem back in print.] ~ Mark Deming
Deming
Naked Movie Star
,
Cindy Lee Berryhill
left New York City, did some traveling, and made a home in California, where she settled into a committed relationship, began writing new songs, and took a new approach to how she performed them.
Berryhill
became friends with
Randy Hoffman
, a percussionist who had a large collection of instruments in his garage, and as they began toying with her songs, they invited a large and diverse variety of musicians to join in. While the title of 1994's
Garage Orchestra
refers to the fact
and her collaborators worked out their arrangements during sessions in
Hoffman
's garage, it also nods to the ambitious but unpretentious sound of the album as conjured by the dozens of folks who took part in the sessions. The massed backing vocals, buzzing string sections, woodwinds, and
's tympani, vibraphone, marimba, and other noisemakers give the songs a sound that's big and rich with nuance, but the music still has a playful quality, just ramshackle enough to be loose but still painting the big picture she requires with the layers of sound at her disposal. On tracks like "UFO Suite," "Father of the Seventh Son," and "Song for Brian," this music sounds like a homebrewed approximation of a classic
Brian Wilson
session of the '60s, with a dash of
the Wrecking Crew
and
the Funk Brothers
for additional flavor. And
was absolutely right to create this kind of scenery for her songs;
strips away much of the social and political commentary of her early Anti-Folk material and instead gives a genuine sense of wonder to her tunes about love, humanity, and the curious world in which we exist, and as a vocalist and composer, she never sounded as eloquent or as fully engaged as she does here. In her way,
had just as much to say on
as on her first two albums, but the greater dynamics and scope of these performances elevate the songs and the result is the finest album of her career. [In 2019,
Omnivore Recordings
reissued
in an expanded edition that adds nine tracks to the original ten-song running order. Most of the extras are alternate versions of numbers that appeared on the original edition, but they do add to the listener's appreciation of how this album -- mostly cut live in a mere five days -- came together. The booklet also includes notes on the songs from
, and essays on the album from friends, admirers, and those involved in making the album. This edition is a genuine improvement on the original 1994 release, if not radically so, and it's more than welcome to have this gem back in print.] ~ Mark Deming
Deming