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The Absolute Sound's 2004 Golden Ear Awards

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  • The Absolute Sound's 2004 Golden Ear Awards

    Film/Music Recommendations

    The Absolute Sound's 2004
    Golden Ear Awards
    http://www.avguide.com/film_music/music/musicreviews/tas151/ 2004_golden_music_awards.jsp

    Welcome to our annual Music Golden Ear Awards, with each writer choosing up
    to three of his favorite records and/or multi-disc series released in 2004,
    giving equal consideration to musical and sonic merits. The selections aren'
    t meant as the reviewers' definitive Top Three from 2004, but as three of
    the year's unequivocal best.

    BOB GENDRON
    Diamanda Galás: La Serpenta Canta. Blaise Dupuy, producer. Mute 9255 (2 CDs)
    Buy CD
    Diamanda Galás: Defixiones: Will and Testament, Orders From the Dead. Blaise
    Dupuy, producer. Mute 9254 (2 CDs) Buy CD

    An inimitable performer whose confrontational methods and avant-garde
    approaches are nearly as famous as her disarming four-octave vocal range,
    Diamanda Galás has returned after a five-year hiatus with two astonishing
    double albums, both recorded in concert during 2001 and '02. Each finds her
    sounding demonically possessed. A solo record of voice and piano, La
    Serpenta Canta is a harrowing set of blues, spiritual, soul, and country
    covers that Galás' fiery voice makes shiver, shriek, and haunt. Fiendish,
    mighty, and delicate, her radical reinterpretation of traditional American
    song probes the psychological depths of loss, death and horror with a stark,
    sacrificial vision. Gorgeously packaged in hardcover-book form with detailed
    liner notes and translations, Defixiones: Will and Testament is a
    multi-language song cycle of poems that speak to Armenian, Greek, and
    Assyrian genocides committed by Turkey in the early 20th century. Unearthing
    atrocities condoned by the Allied Nations, Galás invokes past historical
    injustices, her arresting passion and dramatic ache capturing human tragedy
    in an apocalyptically surreal manner. Galás turns piano keys into sharp
    icicles that prick and pierce. Faint electronic treatments provide chilling
    background ambiance. Against it all, her voice hisses like a snake,
    screeches like a bat, and bellows as if it were that of a sinner trapped in
    the bowels of hell. On both records, intimate sonics give listeners a
    carnage-splattered front seat to the world's ongoing social and political
    conflicts, and bring Galás' transfixing grief-stricken voice up-close and
    personal. Both sets close with a sensory-shattering rendition of Blind Lemon
    Jefferson's "See That My Grave Is Kept Clean," the singer's extreme cadence
    ricocheting as if the song's two white horses are being tied together and
    pulled in opposite directions until all that remain are shallow pools of
    blood.


    Elliott Smith: from a basement on a hill. Smith, et al., producers. Anti
    86741 Buy CD

    Initially deemed a suicide, Elliott Smith's death remains an unsolved
    mystery. The artist's battles with depression, isolation, and drugs-which
    provided him bittersweet inspiration, even here-were widely known. But
    according to close friends, before his untimely death, the sensitive
    Portland singer-songwriter was approaching life with newfound zest. If from
    a basement on a hill-circumstantially Smith's last album, 15 beautiful and
    often intimate songs he completed before passing-is any indication, he wasn'
    t a man planning to die. Sunshine bursts through even the thickest liquor
    hangovers and pharmaceutical hazes, Smith's mellifluous voice softly
    hovering over a harmonious blend of crashing cymbals, radiant rhythms,
    glowing acoustic strumming, light piano notes, and ballroom romance. He
    wistfully professes to being "strung out again," yet if this heartbreaking
    and hopeful batch of radiant pop waltzes, scintillating melodies, and
    shimmering poetry says anything, Smith was drunk on life's dreams. The album
    's sonics-from the warm washes of guitar chords to the finger-pick scraping
    of strings-make it painfully evident that, like Buckley and Cobain before
    him, this shooting star streaked across the sky much, much too soon.

    The Clash: London Calling (Legacy Edition). Mick Jones, producer; Tony
    Dixon, mastering. Columbia/Legacy 92923 (2 CDs) Buy CD
    Universally and justly regarded as one of the ten best albums in rock
    history, The Clash's London Calling has been significantly expanded and
    given the red-carpet treatment as a two-CD, one-DVD 25th Anniversary "Legacy
    Edition." Originally released in December 1979, the 19-song double-LP
    telegraphed punk's vital cry out to every corner of the world, lassoing
    reggae, soul, rock, blues, country, funk, and jazz as no artist had
    previously done. Featuring 21 unreleased performances-including four unknown
    Clash songs-the long-lost Vanilla Tape recordings, finally discovered in
    March by Mick Jones, fill disc two of this seminal set. Though of rough demo
    quality, they're a window on rehearsal sessions that went down at Vanilla
    Studios, the London car repair shop that functioned as the setting for
    material that became a generational juggernaut. Remastered and loaded with
    two booklets, superb liner notes, and photos, London Calling has never
    sounded better.
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