Friday, December 2, 2011
NICE WRITE UP BY 2 X 2
http://twoplustwoequalsfive-tskyinc.blogspot.com/2011/12/ghost-of-chance.html
Susan Boyle's new album, Someone to Watch over Me, kills me.
And it's only partially because she won that big contest despite looking like a Neanderthal merged with Little Orphan Annie back in 2009. The songs she and/or her managers/producers have chosen have a resounding oddness and poetry simply because of her voice, status and charm, a bone-deep mysteriousness both from the musical arrangements and the singular, studied, mystical way Susan sings.
Susan actually offers up a rendition of "Enjoy the Silence" by Depeche Mode that brings me to tears. The way it's been produced, the song is no longer a vibrating neo-disco chant, but a sleepy, sophisticated, seductive ballad. I play it going on home visits, driving through rundown working-class neighborhoods. The journey kind of goes cinematic and spiritual, Susan's voice turning peeling vinyl siding and wet barking dogs and upside-down toys in the mud into images from a tragic, delicate independent movie in my head. Some sincere, enchanting documentary about abandoned hopes and dreams, etc.
"Enjoy the Silence" bleeds into Joni Mitchell's "Both Sides Now" and that ethereal treatise on something being lost and something being gained in living everyday bleeds into the late Jeff Buckley's "Lilac Wine," one of those songs that make you feel like you've dropped in on a dream while it's still in progress.
This is an album that makes you want to succumb to its bittersweet spell so you can officially be invisible.
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