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#62
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^^^ thanks for posting ! and I agree the review is spot on.It will be interesting to see what she scores on Metacritic for this album.
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Children of the world the forgotten chimpanzee..in the eyes of the world you have done so much for me. ..SLN. |
#63
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We'll you know Slant Magazine hates her so don't count on a good score there.
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Maybe they will think it is just a compilation and won't bother to review it.
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Children of the world the forgotten chimpanzee..in the eyes of the world you have done so much for me. ..SLN. |
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http://www.latimes.com/entertainment...006-story.html
Review Stevie Nicks looks back on shimmering '24 Karat Gold' LA Times Now that young bands such as Haim and One Direction are reviving the polished pop-rock of Fleetwood Mac, it seems only right that the group’s iconic frontwoman, Stevie Nicks, would look back as well. As its title suggests, “24 Karat Gold: Songs From the Vault” offers new recordings of tunes Nicks wrote as long ago as 1969; the most recent is from 1995. You can tell the material is old too. In the aching “Hard Advice” she sings about listening to the radio and hanging out in a record store. (Remember those?) But Nicks has always found fresh drama in the past -- think of “Rhiannon,” loosely inspired by an ancient Welsh legend -- and here she sounds no less energized chewing over bygone resentments in the throbbing title track and pondering bad decisions in “The Dealer,” which rides a silky groove reminiscent of the one in the Mac’s indelible “Dreams.” For “Mabel Normand” she reaches back further, sympathizing with a real-life silent film star thought to have struggled with cocaine. Recorded mostly in Nashville with Nicks’ longtime guitarist Waddy Wachtel and Dave Stewart (who also produced Nicks' excellent “In Your Dreams” from 2011), “24 Karat Gold” makes room amid the retrospection for some new sounds. “Cathouse Blues” touches unexpectedly on ragtime, while “Blue Water,” with backing vocals by Lady Antebellum, shimmers with traces of country and soul. . There’s also a couple of crunching hard-rock numbers, including “I Don’t Care,” that feel powered by the same aggression Fleetwood Mac channeled on its 2013 arena tour. (Now reunited with Christine McVie, the group launched yet another road show last week and will hit the Forum in November.) Whatever the arrangement, though, Nicks’ voice -- that signature drone that’s gotten only more appealingly imperious with age -- defines the music here. Her singing dominates as easily now as it ever did. ------------------- Stevie Nicks “24 Karat Gold: Songs From the Vault” (Warner Bros.) 3 ½ stars out of 4 Last edited by Ensorcled; 10-06-2014 at 05:36 PM.. |
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These are GREAT reviews! We're looking for a top 10 debut!
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Children of the world the forgotten chimpanzee..in the eyes of the world you have done so much for me. ..SLN. |
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It is really gratifying as a long time fan to see all these great reviews coming in..When Bella Donna came out it did get some good reviews but in those days there were quite a few critics that were just laying in wait to pan it no matter what it sounded like..Stevie may not be quite as famous now as she was then but she is much more respected IMHO.
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Children of the world the forgotten chimpanzee..in the eyes of the world you have done so much for me. ..SLN. |
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Hope these great reviews translate into a Grammy nomination or two.
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My wife was playing 24k at her desk and her coworker (who's not really a Stevie fan) said, "Is that Stevie?! - That sounds GOOD!"
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I usually find the All Music Guide reviews to be very spot on, so its quite gratifying to see them rate 24 Karat Gold so high. This is great!
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The Los Angeles Times October 6, 2014, 2:04 PM
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment...006-story.html Now that young bands such as Haim and One Direction are reviving the polished pop-rock of Fleetwood Mac, it seems only right that the group’s iconic frontwoman, Stevie Nicks, would look back as well.. As its title suggests, “24 Karat Gold: Songs From the Vault” offers new recordings of tunes Nicks wrote as long ago as 1969; the most recent is from 1995. You can tell the material is old too. In the aching “Hard Advice” she sings about listening to the radio and hanging out in a record store. (Remember those?) But Nicks has always found fresh drama in the past -- think of “Rhiannon,” loosely inspired by an ancient Welsh legend -- and here she sounds no less energized chewing over bygone resentments in the throbbing title track and pondering bad decisions in “The Dealer,” which rides a silky groove reminiscent of the one in the Mac’s indelible “Dreams.” For “Mabel Normand” she reaches back further, sympathizing with a real-life silent film star thought to have struggled with cocaine. Recorded mostly in Nashville with Nicks’ longtime guitarist Waddy Wachtel and Dave Stewart (who also produced Nicks' excellent “In Your Dreams” from 2011), “24 Karat Gold” makes room amid the retrospection for some new sounds. “Cathouse Blues” touches unexpectedly on ragtime, while “Blue Water,” with backing vocals by Lady Antebellum, shimmers with traces of country and soul. There’s also a couple of crunching hard-rock numbers, including “I Don’t Care,” that feel powered by the same aggression Fleetwood Mac channeled on its 2013 arena tour. (Now reunited with Christine McVie, the group launched yet another road show last week and will hit the Forum in November.) Whatever the arrangement, though, Nicks’ voice -- that signature drone that’s gotten only more appealingly imperious with age -- defines the music here. Her singing dominates as easily now as it ever did |
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New York Daily News by Jim Farber
'24 Karat Gold: Songs From the Vault,' music review New Stevie Nicks collection holds both riches and rejects from Fleetwood Mac star's past NEW YORK DAILY NEWS / Tuesday, October 7, 2014, 2:00 AM http://www.nydailynews.com/entertain...icle-1.1965210 Catchy music can obscure the meaning of a song just as surely as it can enhance it. When a melody achieves perfection, it steals attention from the lyrical core. That dynamic forms a key part of the puzzle of pop. But it has special relevance to the latest release from Stevie Nicks. Unlike her beautifully pruned work with Fleetwood Mac, many songs on her latest solo work fray at the seams, or wander outside the confines of an ideal melody. The album does contains a few must-have highlights, but key parts feature lyrics that wobble awkwardly on their tunes. Yet those very flaws and indulgences wind up casting a clearer light on Nicks’ character, and concerns, than ever. There’s good reason for the music’s wavering quality: The album is a collection of castoff songs from Nicks’ 45-year career. True, Nicks recorded all the music anew over the last year, but she wrote most of the material between 1969 and 1987. A few songs date from 1994-95. Any Nicks-oholic will immediately notice her trademark lyrical tics. Words like “silver,” “dream” and “chains” keep turning up. She’s often left “alone in a room” or found standing “out in the rain.” There’s also her tendency to split her inner voice into a conversation between what “I said” and what “she said.” Nicks’ broader themes also hold — the tug between professional achievement and personal relationships, between the desire to connect and the need for free-range love. The most finely formed songs use those themes to raise goosebumps. In the piquant “Hard Advice,” Nicks recounts the tough words from a friend who told her to quit pining for a famous musician who has already moved on. As with many Nicks songs, speculation on the boldfaced lover’s identity is very much encouraged. “Lady” pushes further, with its grand melody and gripping lyrics that find Nicks wondering if her loneliness will one day devour her. The sole cover — of Vanessa Carlton’s “Carousel” — both furthers the theme and breaks up the melodic familiarity. Otherwise, the album meanders through songs of significant energy, but with middling tunes (the Tom Petty-esque “Starshine”), or with lyrics tha turn *verbose (the mess “Mabel Normand”). If Lindsey Buckingham had his way, this stuff would surely have been sharpened. But there’s a happy consequence to his absence. We get pure Stevie — needier than some might find comfortable, but also unexpectedly wise. It’s too much for the casual listener but catnip for the devoted. Stevie Nicks appears with Fleetwood Mac at the Garden Tuesday. |
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