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Twist In The Wind
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Twist In The Wind
Current price: $16.99


Barnes and Noble
Twist In The Wind
Current price: $16.99
Size: OS
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Jazz
fans may recognize
Tony Scherr
's name -- he got his professional start as a bassist with the
Woody Herman
band before settling in New York and playing alongside such celebrated names as
Bill Frisell
, the
Lounge Lizards
, and
Norah Jones
. But now his journey has taken him in a different direction, and
Twist in the Wind
finds him in a rootsy
singer/songwriter
mode. It turns out that he's a fine songwriter, and he's also probably a better singer than he lets on; as you listen to this album it's hard to escape the nagging suspicion that he can sing better than this, and that his wobbly intonation and laconic delivery are something of a put-on. Notice, for example, the album's opening track: a snappy, tightly-constructed piece of tuneful
folk-rock
that is undermined by lazy, swipe-at-the-melody singing. Elsewhere his approach feels more natural: the sloppy
jazz
feel of
"All That I Could Ask"
pushes nicely against the intensity of the lyrics ("It is worth my while to watch you napping/To love you madly"),
"Between"
is a fine and torchy rocker that makes up for what it lacks in hooks with a nicely corrosive guitar solo;
"Black Sheep"
incorporates strings to subtle and brilliant effect;
"While I Was Gone"
is a good
country
tune, while
"The Good Life"
is a willfully weird Latin one.
Scherr
's deconstruction of
Cheap Trick
's
"I Want You to Want Me"
is more interesting conceptually than it is enjoyable in practice, but it is interesting conceptually. Overall, this is an impressive and enjoyable sophomore effort. A little more vocal discipline will make future albums even better and more interesting. ~ Rick Anderson
fans may recognize
Tony Scherr
's name -- he got his professional start as a bassist with the
Woody Herman
band before settling in New York and playing alongside such celebrated names as
Bill Frisell
, the
Lounge Lizards
, and
Norah Jones
. But now his journey has taken him in a different direction, and
Twist in the Wind
finds him in a rootsy
singer/songwriter
mode. It turns out that he's a fine songwriter, and he's also probably a better singer than he lets on; as you listen to this album it's hard to escape the nagging suspicion that he can sing better than this, and that his wobbly intonation and laconic delivery are something of a put-on. Notice, for example, the album's opening track: a snappy, tightly-constructed piece of tuneful
folk-rock
that is undermined by lazy, swipe-at-the-melody singing. Elsewhere his approach feels more natural: the sloppy
jazz
feel of
"All That I Could Ask"
pushes nicely against the intensity of the lyrics ("It is worth my while to watch you napping/To love you madly"),
"Between"
is a fine and torchy rocker that makes up for what it lacks in hooks with a nicely corrosive guitar solo;
"Black Sheep"
incorporates strings to subtle and brilliant effect;
"While I Was Gone"
is a good
country
tune, while
"The Good Life"
is a willfully weird Latin one.
Scherr
's deconstruction of
Cheap Trick
's
"I Want You to Want Me"
is more interesting conceptually than it is enjoyable in practice, but it is interesting conceptually. Overall, this is an impressive and enjoyable sophomore effort. A little more vocal discipline will make future albums even better and more interesting. ~ Rick Anderson