Album III (Vinyl LP) Indie Punk & AlternativeLoudon Wainwright's third album marked a major change in production approach, which is to say that there was one; Wainwright's first two releases were solo acoustic affairs. But with famed producer Thomas Jefferson Kaye on board, Album III featured full band backing from some of the best session players around (David Sanborn, Hugh McCracken, etc.), and consequently, a move toward folk rock. Perhaps not coincidentally, the album earned Wainwright his
presenting a singer having discovered the type of love that is shared between a mother and a child for the first time
but her long standing role as a producer and musician
"Give Me" shifts from demand ("Give me your loving") to begging ("Give me your loving") in the sweetest and sexiest way
the 1975 EP expands on Stratosphere's slacker-positive dreamscape
But the surprises don't stop there: Ibrahim Ferrer's appearance on "Latin Simone" could have come straight from Buena Vista Social Club but for the obvious Blur-influenced piano style
along with plenty of beautifully-moving St
recorded happenings
his backing band has been newly christened: The Boy-Friends are dead
Circles is the product of a long winter's isolation in the rocky mountains
She sings every song on this album with a demonic
especially Middle Eastern and Brazilian music
Ewald's latest offering brings expanded arrangements and sharpened storytelling as he taps into salad days over slacker rock ("Do You Understand")