Journey
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November kicks off with a bang, as country’s hottest-selling lass is back with her hotly-anticipated third album, which has her working with some eyebrow-raising collaborators. Dig in:
Pop music’s venerable Now series is back this week with a pair of new entries, as recent radio hits from A’s beloved Black Eyed Peas (their record-breaking number one smash “I Gotta Feeling”), Jordin Sparks (the terrific “Battlefield”), Katy Perry (“Waking Up in Vegas,” a guilty pleasure if I ever heard one), Michael Franti and Spearhead (their cheeky top 40 breakthrough “Say Hey (I Love You)”), and others punctuate Now That’s What I Call Music, Vol. 32; and a fascinating cross-section of unforgettable club smashes from the past three decades turn up on Now That’s What I Call Dance Classics!, including any number of one hit wonders from the likes of The Weather Girls (“It’s Raining Men,” with the amazing Martha Wash blowing the roof off the joint), CeCe Peniston (“Finally”), Rob Base and DJ EZ Rock (their oft-sampled touchstone “It Takes Two”), and others. This is all well and good, mind you, and will probably find its way into my collection, since I have a profound weakness for this kind of thing. But please don’t tell me I’m the only one who is shattered by the Now folks’ decision to omit Everything But the Girl’s legendary 1996 monster hit “Missing” from this tracklist. Gotta tell you, guys: Todd Terry’s brilliant decision to lay down a furiously insistent house beat just beneath Tracey Thorn’s abominably sexy croon made for what I call a dance classic every damn day o’ the week. Recognize.
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names dropped with reckless abandon: A, Andrea Bocelli, Bee Gees, Black Eyed Peas, Bob Dylan, Carrie Underwood, CeCe Peniston, Color Me Badd, Dave Grohl, Everything But the Girl, Foo Fighters, Heart, John Mellencamp, Jordin Sparks, Journey, Julian Casablancas, Kara DioGuardi, Kate Earl, Katy Perry, Kristin Chenoweth, Martha Wash, Matthew Morrison, Max Martin, Michael Franti and Spearhead, Michael Jackson, Mike Elizondo, Nirvana, Norah Jones, Orianthi, Rob Base and DJ EZ Rock, Shania Twain, Sherry Ann, Sheryl Crow, Taylor Swift, The Strokes, The Weather Girls, Todd Terry, Tracey Thorn
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As has become typical of late, between day job responsibilities and preparing for my radio show, I was so swamped last week that the record store report sadly fell to the bottom of the pile. (On that front, if you missed my blockbuster chat with the incredible Brett Claywell this past Tuesday night, be sure and check it out in the Buzz’s radio archive.) Hence, a super-sized doubleheader this week. The new release wall is hopping lately, kids. Get on board:
(PS: Full disclosure and all — A and I are initiating the brand new liquor cabinet this evening, so I’m writing this while sipping a Jack and Coke. Therefore, if something feels a bit… off… about the text contained herein, it might be because I am typing while tipsy.)
Despite being one of 2009’s most entrancing pieces of music, the risky, brilliant lead single “Dead Flowers” failed to take off at country radio last summer (which, sadly, I predicted in a Buzz post last May). And while it’s slowly climbing, I’m not sure how much better second single “White Liar” will ultimately fare in what is certain to be a Carrie-driven fall. Still, that magnificent spitfire Miranda Lambert has a whole passel of folks rooting for her success, and the fact that each of her first two albums are pushing platinum status despite minimal radio play means she must be doing something right. Don’t be afraid to dive in to her brand new third album, Revolution.
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names dropped with reckless abandon: "Ally McBeal", "American Idol", "Grey's Anatomy", A, Alice in Chains, Annie Lennox, Backstreet Boys, Barbra Streisand, Bette Midler, Big & Rich, Blake Lewis, Bob Schneider, Brandi Carlile, Brandon's Buzz Radio, Brett Claywell, Bruce Springsteen, Carrie Underwood, Cary Brothers, Curtis Stigers, Diana Krall, Elton John, Eminem, Foreigner, Harry Nilsson, Jann Arden, Johnny Cash, Journey, Kelly Hansen, Landon Pigg, Lights, Lou Gramm, Luke Bryan, Madonna, Mariah Carey, Michael Buble, Miranda Lambert, Nelly Furtado, OneRepublic, Patty Loveless, Rick Rubin, Rihanna, Rosanne Cash, Rufus Wainwright, Sherry Ann, Tegan and Sara, The Avett Brothers, Tiësto, Toby Keith, Wynonna
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Of all the ridonk, useless “deluxe editions” to which we’ve been subjected of late, this relatively busy week brings one whose original album — a genuine modern classic — actually merits the upgrade. Read on:
Obviously emboldened by the brilliantly triumphant ’80s mix
they assembled last spring, the folks at Now That’s What I Call Music! have trudged forth with a series of similarly themed compilations, and while subsequent editions (covering, among other genres, the best of country, classic rock, and Motown) have wholly failed to be as uniformly riveting as the ’80s set was, this week brings a fairly worthy successor, as Now That’s What I Call Power Ballads! lands in record stores. A sterling mix of evergreen chestnuts (Journey’s “Faithfully,” Night Ranger’s “Sister Christian,” Aerosmith’s “I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing,” Tesla’s “Love Song”) and forgotten favorites (Sheriff’s “When I’m With You” and Queensryche’s “Silent Lucidity,” a pair of tunes that haven’t crossed my mind in, literally, decades!), the only flaw that bars Ballads from reaching the same level as its vaunted ancestor is the complete and shameful absence of REO Speedwagon and Foreigner, a pair of pioneers who absolutely helped create the power ballad movement, and who could have easily been swapped out for subpar tracks by The Scorpions and Slaughter, neither of which deserves the coveted real estate (sandwiched in between Survivor’s heart-rending “The Search is Over” and Extreme’s smash throwback “More Than Words”) they have been inexplicably handed on this album. Also out this week: installment number 30 in the original Now! series, which passes muster with terrific radio hits from Lady GaGa, Britney Spears, Jason Mraz, Nickelback, and All-American Rejects.
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names dropped with reckless abandon: A, A.R. Rahman, Aerosmith, Alice in Chains, Alicia Keys, Amy Ray, Annie Lennox, Basia, Big & Rich, Billy Ray Cyrus, Blind Melon, Blue October, Bono, Britney Spears, Cole Porter, Eddie Vedder, Emily Saliers, Eric Church, Extreme, Foreigner, Indigo Girls, Jason Mraz, John Rich, Joni Mitchell, Journey, Justin Furstenfeld, Keri Hilson, Lady GaGa, Marc Cohn, Martina McBride, Michael Bolton, Michael Jackson, Miley Cyrus, Nickelback, Night Ranger, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Peter Gabriel, Pink, Queensryche, R.E.M., Radiohead, Rascal Flatts, REO Speedwagon, Sherry Ann, Slaughter, Smashing Pumpkins, Soundgarden, Stone Temple Pilots, Survivor, Taylor Swift, Tesla, The All-American Rejects, The Decemberists, The Scorpions, Timbaland, Vanessa Williams, Vanilla Ice
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The march toward February 3 continues in earnest, and while there’s not a hell of a lot here to jump up and down about, you might get reacquainted with a forgotten gem or two this week, and that’s also worth celebrating.
Sizzling cameos from modern blues legends
Doyle Bramhall II and Susan Tedeschi (who just happens to be the bandleader’s wife, wink wink) highlight Already Free, the sixth album from
The Derek Trucks Band. Free — which features a smashing cover of Bob Dylan’s “Down in the Flood” among its eleven originals — finds the band moving away from their bluesy roots and toward a more streamlined, soulful rock sound. I say talent this good is welcome in any capacity.
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names dropped with reckless abandon: Anastacia, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Christina Aguilera, Dan Fogelberg, Diana Ross & the Supremes, Doyle Bramhall II, Gladys Knight, Heather Headley, Indigo Girls, Journey, Kelly Clarkson, Marvin Gaye, Rick James, Smokey Robinson, Steve Perry, Susan Tedeschi, Taylor Dayne, The Cascades, The Derek Trucks Band, Whitney Houston
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So, we finally have a new president, which means we can finally get back to the important stuff: what we’ll be listening to when we realize that the cesspool of American politics will likely do to him exactly what it did to most of the rest of ‘em. Lucky for us, we’ll always have magnificent music on which to fall back.
Speaking of our new president, a compilation album which was commissioned Barack Obama’s campaign (and which, heretofore, was only available with a donation to the campaign’s website) has been granted a mass release.
Yes We Can: Voices of a Grassroots Movement features previously released tracks from Sheryl Crow, John Mayer, and Stevie Wonder, among others, as well as a new track from John Legend (an impassioned cover of U2’s “Pride (In the Name of Love)”) and a new collaboration — their second — between Kanye West and Maroon 5’s lead singer Adam Levine.
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names dropped with reckless abandon: "SexyBack", AC/DC, Adam Levine, Annie Lennox, Backstreet Boys, Barack Obama, Brian McKnight, Bruce Springsteen, Celine Dion, Christina Aguilera, Curtis Mayfield, Damien Rice, David Archuleta, David Cook, David Foster, Deborah Cox, Dinah Washington, Ed Kowalczyk, Elton John, Enrique Iglesias, Enya, Gnarls Barkley, Goo Goo Dolls, Guns 'n Roses, Hanson, Hilary Duff, Jack Johnson, Janet Jackson, Janie Fricke, Jessica Simpson, John Legend, John Mayer, Josh Groban, Journey, Justin Timberlake, Kanye West, Katy Perry, Lenny Kravitz, Leona Lewis, Lisa Hannigan, Live, Luciano Pavarotti, Marcy Playground, Maroon 5, Matt Nathanson, Michael Buble, Natasha Bedingfield, Nickelback, Oasis, Patti LuPone, Pink, Pink Floyd, Radiohead, Ray LaMontagne, Rihanna, Robbie Williams, Rogue Wave, Sam Cooke, Saving Abel, Seal, Sheryl Crow, Spice Girls, Stevie Wonder, Sting, Taylor Swift, The Beatles, The Eagles, The Fray, Tim McGraw, Tracy Chapman, U2, Whitney Houston
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After a series of wallet-busting weeks, we get a brief reprieve this Tuesday, with only a couple of major releases vying for your attention. But don’t be fooled: with new stuff coming next week from Snow Patrol, John Legend, Queen, and Pink (whose red-hot smash “So What” is currently the most-played track at top 40 radio, despite being not half as fun as her instant classic “U + Ur Hand”), among many others, this week is hardly a harbinger of what’s to come. In other words, enjoy this breather while you can.


She’s had a tough climb in the near-decade since her iconic smash “I Hope You Dance” carried her to the (ultimately fleeting) Shania-level of stardom: despite its vastly underrated title track, her uneven 2002 effort Something Worth Leaving Behind was an across the board failure, having been deemed too pop for country stations to play, and vice versa; in 2005, she made a sharp U-turn back to the twangy side with the hilariously retrograde There’s More Where That Came From, and while the critical hosannas were free-flowing (deservedly so, too, especially where the devastating lead single “I May Hate Myself in the Morning” was concerned), that record likewise failed to fly off the store shelves. Now back with her sixth album Call Me Crazy, Lee Ann Womack finds herself at a peculiar career crossroads: having been supplanted in her native realm by young upstarts like Taylor Swift, Miranda Lambert, and Carrie Underwood, it remains to be seen if Womack can downshift into the already-crowded arena of country’s elder stateswomen. (With Reba, Martina, and Trisha comfortably holding court there, and with the format still largely viewed as a man’s game, that seems far from a sure bet.) Nevertheless, Womack continues to prove herself as a vital, eternally intriguing artist, and Crazy should extend her streak of worthy efforts.
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names dropped with reckless abandon: AC/DC, Carrie Underwood, John Legend, Journey, Kenny Chesney, Lee Ann Womack, Lenny Kravitz, Martina McBride, Miranda Lambert, Nona Hendryx, Patti LaBelle, Pink, Queen, Reba McEntire, Sarah Dash, Shania Twain, Snow Patrol, Sugarland, Taylor Swift, The Eagles, Trisha Yearwood, Waylon Jennings
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One of the most consistently fabulous voices in country music belongs to the peerless Martina McBride, whose chops are on full display in her new CD/DVD set Live in Concert. Taken from a September 2007 stop on her Waking Up Laughing tour, the set list for Live hopscotches recklessly across the thrilling breadth of McBride’s catalogue, from her first big hits “My Baby Loves Me” and “Wild Angels” to her classics “Independence Day” and “Broken Wing” to her newer smashes like “This One’s for the Girls” and “Anyway.” She also closes the DVD with a pair of daring covers, one of Pat Benatar’s milestone “Hit Me With Your Best Shot” (which brings to mind the terrific 2003 installment of CMT’s “Crossroads” the two women shared) and the other of Journey’s iconic “Don’t Stop Believin’” (on which McBride turns in a surprisingly mean facsimile of the one and only Steve Perry).
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names dropped with reckless abandon: A, Gretchen Peters, Journey, Martina McBride, Pat Benatar, Steve Perry
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