Roddy Frame Western Skies Raritan

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Roddy Frame Western Skies Raritan 3,9/5 6566 reviews

Ok, so as a huge Aztec Camera fanatic, I have absolutely no excuse for not having every single Roddy Frame album within days of its respective release. But, being as the North Star and Western Skies are still import only, I was less than enthusiastic about paying those hefty import prices right away. I know, I know. My fandom should've overcome such seemingly irrelevant things as pricetag, but a budget is a budget, bottom line. Well, I recently completed my catalogue of his three solo albums, so here are some extended thoughts on each.The North Star (1998)After 's uncharacteristic and misguided attempts at adult contempo soft rock radio stardom, the North Star is like the next proper Aztec Camera album after Dreamland. It's the same sort of midtempo jangle rock, but the songs here are actually considered as full pieces of artistic representation.

  1. Roddy Frame In My Life
  2. Roddy Frame Western Skies Raritan Ny
  3. Roddy Frame Surf Review

In other words, Roddy actually sounds like he cares about what the session players are doing with his songs this time around. And that's the weird thing here: the songs are pretty much in the same vein as Frestonia, but the band plays them here like they actually matter. Frestonia had some excellent tunes, but they were drown out by schlock and awful overplaying. On the North Star, the songs are noticeably toned down and played in the purposely low-key mode that Roddy seems to have finally come to the realization that his songs should be played in all the time.

It's a genius move. The tunes are of the middle calibre of Roddy Frame's accuracy.

Consistently good compared to anyone else, but sort of crowd-pleasing and unsurprisingly adequate for longtime fans. But, because of the newly rediscovered sparse 'as it is' presentation of the songs, it sounds like a mini-revelation.

Ledoux

Roddy Frame In My Life

Like Roddy's just gotten over his entire bout with A&R people and producers for good and this album was the first thing he was able to do free of their (in hindsight) negative influence. The downplaying of everything here is an all around plus. For the first time in several albums, Roddy genuinely sounds like he's having fun and that makes for fun listens even on songs that aren't that interesting. This shines through in the pronounced optimism of the material, especially on the single 'Reason for Living.' As far as other highlights, the one-two combo of the album's opening tracks ('Back to the One' and the title track) is just about as good as it gets here. Jangly, catchy and completely sincere, both songs are exemplary of Roddy Frame at his best.

It's just one of those undeniably strong albums that isn't an out-and-out masterpiece, but whose enduring melodies and modest spirit make the twentieth listen infinitely better than the first or second. Definitely a feel good album.

And the sparse closing track ('Hymn to Grace') is a great preview for his next move.Surf (2002)Well, here it is. Easily his best work since and (and maybe even since ). It was Roddy's first true 'solo' album, as he performed everything you hear. He wrote the songs, he sang the words and he played the acoustic guitar. Isn't this what all those stuffy NME folks would've loved to have all of their readers believe he was capable of back in 1984? Make no mistake, friends, I friggin' love this album like few other things. The pronounced and consistent love of music that is addressed at several points throughout the album's lyrics is just awesome and I can completely relate because I internalize music to an unhealthy degree, so it's nice to hear my feelings vaguely mirrored in such an intimate, immediately resounding setting.

But ignoring all that highfalutin heady hogwash, these are truly some of Roddy's best tunes ever. Stripped down to their barest of essentials, the melodies flourish and the performances feel like near perfection. His skills as a guitarist and captivating singer are finally given the spotlight they deserved all along and the record is all the better for it. A song like 'I Can't Start Now' is not only a beautifully aching ballad, but a true listen and consideration of the lyrics reveals Roddy at arguably his peak. There is an unmistakable sense to the whole thing of personal revelation. And I know it was completely cliche for the 'all acoustic' album to indicate some sort of (perhaps forced) poignancy by 2002, but Roddy actually pulls it off with Surf (even though I truly doubt his integrity would have let him subscribe to such a philosophy by this point; perhaps further enhancing the album's seemingly unending earnest appeal). I can't say enough good about it, honestly.

Dune 1984 the alternative edition v2 subtitleseeker movie. It's just wonderful music from a musician that feels like he has fulfilled his complete potential for the first time in over a decade. Every song here is damn near perfect and fans of heartfelt music will have a hard time not loving it.

Roddy Frame Western Skies Raritan Ny

The more I listen to it, the more I fall in love with it. Exceptional.Western Skies (2006)That subtle, but unmistakable, grin that graces the cover art is actually very representative of this album and, in the bigger picture, where Roddy Frame has arrived at as a singer and songwriter. He was 42 when Western Skies was released and, despite his voice still awesomely sounding like 22, with the pronounced wrinkles and slight shades of grey hair, he finally looks like something: a wise elder statesman that can just bang out some modest little genuine tunes for his modest little genuine fanbase every two or three years.

Make no mistakes, Western Skies is a no nonsense affair. Great tunes, humbly presented and no real surprises, but good lord, is it satisfying as hell for a longtime fan.

Sparse, three or four piece arrangements are par for the course here and the tunes overall may not even be his best, but damned if they don't all sound great right away. The presentation is perhaps the most appropriate ever for a Roddy Frame-performed album. There is one downright surprise here: 'Marble Arch' is a straight bossa nova tune. And it's awesome. Completely unexpected and surprisingly on the mark, I love it wholly. Elsewhere, the title track is the sort of yearning minor key alt-pop tune that sounds exactly like the sort of thing Roddy should be doing at this point, while the mini-epic 'Rock God' is probably the most ambitious he's been in quite some time.

Truly, there's not a bad song in the bunch and even though it may not be his most diverse material, it's the sort of jangly modern update of the classic Aztec Camera sound that transcends expectations and feels like the midlife revelation that it probably is. It often sounds like the most content album he's ever made. Flippin' satisfying as all get-out.EDIT:And there it is. Probably infamous for his inconsistency by the time he released the North Star, I find it more than a little ironic that he waited until he was releasing albums under his own name to get completely and truly dependable. Aztec Camera's catalogue is notoriously up and down, to the point that, by the time he released the North Star, nobody but the hardest of hardcore were paying any attention.

And that's a shame because the (so far) three albums he's released under his own name have been —maybe a bit surprisingly— undeniably good and consistent. By this point, after hearing and truly assessing these albums in the grand scheme of Roddy Frame, the same guy that did all those Aztec Camera albums, they are nothing like a musician simply going through the motions. On the contrary, these albums are the work of a musician that has truly found inner happiness and peace as a person.Of course, if your name is Roddy Frame, that translates to mean that, to your small and loyal fanbase, you're seemingly getting better.Wonderful stuff.Here's to a new album sometime soon.(which is to say: new album soon, please?)Austin.

Simply put, 's fourth solo album, 2014's, is one of the finest things he's done, rivaling his best work with and showing that even after over 30 years writing songs, he's not even close to running out of gas creatively. Coming a long time after his previous album, 2006's, the record is emotionally honest, musically pure and warm, and filled with lots of insightful, stripped bare emotionally lyrics. Played by and a small band, with very sympathetic production by longtime friend and his partner, the album has a very intimate feel and 's rich and unaged vocals ring loud and clear throughout. Some of the tracks bring up memories of early, with their quiet acoustic guitars and melancholy chord changes ('From a Train,' 'Rear View Mirror'), some are openhearted Dad rockers complete with harmonica ('Forty Days of Rain'), and quite a few are nicely jangling sophisticated songs that would have spruced up any album with their unvarnished sound.

Roddy Frame Surf Review

Loan

There's even the cheekily titled 'Postcard,' which sounds like it could have been a smash hit in an imagined world where L.A. Soft rock and U.K. Sophisti-pop merged in a holy blend of dreamy backing vocals, smart chord changes, and super smooth playing. Nice tip of the hat to the legendary guitar solo on 'Oblivious' too.

Throughout, sounds like he's looking back and taking stock, which gives the lyrics some real depth and feeling. It's not often that an artist who's been in the game this long can make an album this pure and true, touching on the past without reliving it and feeling like a rebirth instead of another installment in a career of similar steps. Thanks to his past triumphs, will always have a place in the hearts of fans of smart, difficult-to-pin-down guitar pop. With, he shows that he still deserves it.