| 1. Paul's Last Letter, Pt. 1 - 2 [Sermon] |
Paul's Last Letter,Rev. R.D. Holloway,Jewel Records,Gospel,Pop
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The Juliet Letters
Manufacturer: Warner Bros / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002MI4 Release Date: 1993-01-19 |
Tracks:
- Deliver Us
- For Other Eyes
- Swine
- Expert Rites
- Dead Letter
- I Almost Had A Weakness
- Why?
- Who Do You Think You Are?
- Taking My Life In Your Hands
- This Offer Is Unrepeatable
- Dear Sweet Filthy World
- The Letter Home
- Jacksons, Monk And Rowe
- This Sad Burlesque
- Romeo's Seance
- I Thought I'd Write To Juliet
- Last Post
- The First To Leave
- Damnation's Cellar
- The Birds Will Still Be Singing
Amazon.com
Good on Elvis for risking the ridicule of a blinkered pop world with this unprecedented (for him, certainly, and most anyone short of Kurt Weill) and quite lovely album of bitchy, wise, and funny art songs accompanied by strings. His freshest, most evolved work in years. --Jeff BatemanCustomer Reviews:
The definition of Musical Genius.......2007-05-22
You will sob. You will laugh. You will rage. You will be haunted.
From a purely musical perspective, when you listen to this CD you are in the presence of great genius.
Listen to it alone, at least at first. Listen in the dark and let the imagery flow over you like fog.
Epistolary reflections on Costellian themes..........2006-01-16
Like a Richardson novel, letters provide the basis for the project. Failed and frustrated relationships abound. "Thank you for the flowers / I threw them on the fire / And I burned the photographs that you had enclosed / GOD they were ugly children" Costello sings venemously on the driving "I Almost Had a Weakness". After all, nothing seeps loneliness more than an unanswered love letter. But more than love gets the treatment here. Other songs include a suicide note ("Dear Sweet Filthy World"), a letter from a soldier to a stranger ("I Thought I'd Write to Juliet"), a bizarre experiment in selective exhumation ("Damnation's Cellar"), a reflection on separation ("Why?"), and a letter full of hope in the face of despair ("The Birds Will Still Be Singing"). Many songs explore the sad one-sided nature of letter writing. And no song responds to any other song. This fills the songs that deal with ineffable questions with an almost desparing isolation. But not everything is doom and gloom. "This Offer is Unrepeatable" picks up the mood with a humorously exaggerated letter from a scam artist (and it more than a little resembles the Tom Waits' classic "Step Right Up"). The final song injects some hope into the stark themes in the manner of "Old Man River": "Banish all dismay / Extinguish every sorrow / If I'm lost or I'm forgiven / The birds will still be singing". So in the end, things aren't as bad as they seem. The world goes on regardless of our ephemeral concerns. And as long as the world goes on hope exists.
This CD contains a lot of very beautiful and moving music. Two violins, a viola, a violincello, and voice provide all of the instrumentation. Costello branched out into something very different here. And not all of his fans appreciated it. Regardless, in retrospect "The Juliet Letters" pointed to the future. This year Costello will tour orchestra halls. Not only that, he also wrote a full orchestral score ("Il Sogno"). Strings appear more frequently in his recent music. And year by year he seems to embrace "classical" music more intensely. Still, he hasn't abandoned rock and pop (as "When I Was Cruel" and "The Delivery Man" testify). Though this early collaboration remains somewhat underappreciated, it nonetheless fully showcases Elvis Costello's diverse, adaptable, and broad musical scope. Costello will doubtless appear somewhere on the list of accomplished twentieth and twenty-first century musicians.
Beauty? Truth? You Can't Handle Either!!.......2006-01-06
Deep and moving music from Elvis Costello........2005-06-18
neither fish nor fowl (classical or pop) it's just a musical
exercise. The strings are some of my favorite compositions,
(viola, cello and violin). Elvis Costello not only got the Brodsky Quartet a bigger audience but he inspired them to
write their own music (a third of the songs are composed by the Quartet).
While it might not be everyones cup of tea, the music is brilliant and Elvis reaches octave levels I thought I would never imagine he could ever attain. Maybe sometime in the near future he'll work with them again. I applaud him for taking such a bold step in making a non-commercial album.
Highly recommended.
Give it a Try.......2004-03-03
Three stars because some of this simply doesn't work. But this is a work anyone who likes Elvis or the Brodsky's should have in their collection.
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