verb   adjective   noun   adverb   preposition   conjunction   gerund   participle   phrase   Gwen Stefani   clause   sentence   vocabulary   SAT   ACT   GRE   reading

Joe Henry - "Like She Was a Hammer"

Joe Henry - "Like She Was a Hammer" [mp3]

Fuse [Amazon]



If there's one thing you can count on in life, it's Joe Henry. Egregiously garnering renown for his relations (he's Madonna's brother-in-law, y'know) rather than his skills, Henry has quietly emerged as one of the more unique and talented songwriters plying the trade these days. Sprouting from folk roots in the early nineties, Henry quickly moved on, recording two beautiful roots-rock albums with the Jayhawks, Short Man's Room and Kindness of the World. The songs on these albums, along with eliciting some of that band's more inspired performances, revealed Henry's innate [existing from birth] ability to craft characters and tales at once tangible and surreal, but most importantly, compelling. Further solidifying his reputation as a songwriter and musical shape-shifter, Henry found unmitigated success dropping his country twang for heady, atmospheric pop on 1996's Trampoline. His work shined brightly against the backdrop of the album's sparse studio applications, especially on "Ohio Air Show Plane Crash," one of the finest songs penned this decade.

Though those airy arrangements remain, Fuse finds Henry transplanting a subdued soul for Trampoline's cold, voyeuristic heart. In fact, the smoldering groove and K.R. King's alto sax on "Angels," the cool funk of "Fat," and the jazzy instrumental "Curt Flood," exile Henry's country boy days to distant memory. Whereas Trampoline sounded like an experiment, the smoky Fuse showcases Henry confident and adventurous in his adopted surroundings. Though he may have found a more polished sound in the studio, his songs remain uncontainable. Fuse is peopled with Henry's usual cast of visceral and engaging vignettes: a forlorn suitor pines for his lover while caring for her monkey, angels abuse their wards, and even the unabashed commercial pop of "Skin and Teeth" has Henry loving like no other.

Along with his songs, Henry's gravely whine is a constant. While he has always acquitted himself singing, his vocals here are downright seductive. On "Like She Was a Hammer," Henry transforms his voice into a percussive instrument, reeling off a staccato slideshow of similes to describe a lover, and his placement of the phrase "oh" on "Great Lakes" is arguably the highlight of the album.

Source: Pitchfork.


dictionary.com:   egregious   garner   renown   elicit   innate   tangible   unmitigated   smoldering   visceral   vignette   forlorn   acquit

Mason Proper - "Miss Marylou Carreau"

Mason Proper - "Miss Marylou Carreau" [mp3]

There Is a Moth in Your Chest [Amazon]



This one is half crazed swampiness, half disciplined pop song. It's an inspired amalgam [a mixture, usually of a variety of items or elements]. I really have no idea what's going on here lyrically but I love the spill of tangible, baffling [confusing] words we get from singer Jonathan Visgr, such as: "She bought a mug of bubbles from a bauble-hawker at the bazaar,/Supposedly an ex-czar from lands afar," or "Her now ignored automatic attendent M.I.A. on the floor,/Amid discarded decor," and what really nails these words-which, I'll admit, sort of just sit there on the screen-are how they scan in the music, which swoops up and down via intriguing intervals and syncopations, rendering physical the strange jumps and blank spots in this impenetrable narrative. I don't really mind if lyrics don't make sense because I don't really tend to hear them except as part of the sound, and Mason Proper seems a band with a great feel for words-as-sounds. The persistent crunch of the band's variegated [composed of a variety of elements or colors] guitar arsenal is another ongoing highlight, and there is to be sure no shortage of guitar in this song, from the villainous riff that underpins the verse (heard for instance at 1:06) to the multifaceted [having a variety of elements, uses, or abilities], multi-guitar showdown that begins at 1:52 and ends in a high-pitched drone somewhere around 2:40. That's a nutty and juicy snack for all you guitar fans out there.

Source: Fingertips.


dictionary.com:   amalgam   tangible   baffling   render   variegated   arsenal   underpin   multifaceted   drone

Scarlett Johansson   Jennifer Aniston   Brad Pitt   Angelina Jolie   Orlando Bloom   Paris Hilton   Eva Longoria   Tom Cruise   Katie Holmes   Gwen Stefani   lindsay Lohan   Adam Brody   Britney Spears   Halle Berry   Nick Lachey   Madonna   Beyonce Knowles