Billboard CD reviews
NEW YORK (Billboard) - As a producer more interested in atmospheric sensibilities than technical perfection, Daniel Lanois has masterminded career-defining albums for U2, Bob Dylan and Peter Gabriel, often reinventing their sound by adding layers of mystery and depth.
Recorded with jazz drummer Brian Blade and pianist Garth Hudson, Lanois' sixth studio album is an eclectic mix of richly textured rock songs, mellow vibes and hypnotic instrumentals, interspersed with snippets from philosophical conversations with mentor Brian Eno. Ghostly fuzz guitars hover over the title track, and the haunting "Where Will I Be," previously recorded by Emmylou Harris, reveals a soulful songwriter. Though limited in range, Lanois' hushed vocals are pure and soothing on the Dylan-inspired "Not Fighting Anymore," but he seems even more at home in the sublime, wordless waves of his pedal steel guitar.
ARTIST: YAEL NAIM
ALBUM: YAEL NAIM (Tot Ou Tard/Atlantic Records)
Apple scores again with its latest choice for sweet-voiced female ad singer. The airy vocals behind those MacBook Air promos are a French-Israeli import whose spare coffee shop of a U.S. debut feels pleasingly Euro, while maintaining enough spunk to pull off a Britney Spears cover and appeal to the Norah Jones/Sia set. "Yael Naim" is simple, lilting and lovely. Whisper-thin ballad "Lachlom" is near perfect as such things go, and the same goes for the twinkling "Far Far" ("How can you stay outside, there's a beautiful mess inside"), while Naim's cover of "Toxic" is a surprisingly fun trinket that carves a melodic core out of the original's sculpted pop shell. Come for "New Soul," stay for the full meal.
ARTIST: DIONNE WARWICK
ALBUM: WHY WE SING (Rhino Records)
While the several nods to a perfectly realized, contemporary gospel sound ("With All Heart," "I'm Going Up," Kirk Franklin's "Why We Sing") come across just fine on Dionne Warwick's latest, it's the down-home, classic Sunday-morning songs that delight. She shows an unparalleled master's touch on a fervent array of unapologetically seminal gospel ("Old Landmark," "Jesus Loves Me," "Rise, Shine and Give God the Glory"). A stirring celebration from a great talent, still at the top of her form.
ARTIST: DEVOTCHKA
ALBUM: A MAD AND FAITHFUL TELLING (Anti-)
Denver-based Devotchka delivers another batch of aching, spacious and histrionic tunes on "A Mad and Faithful Telling." Still included are sweeping strings and frontman Nick Urata's dusty, quivering narration, taking the ever-crescendoing melodies through alternating universes of international influence, from mariachi to the Balkans. A good example of this is "Transliterator," a hypnotically circular song that has repeating layers of horns and synths underlying Urata's croon. "Basso Profundo" kicks things off with a Quixotic song and beat construction, while "Comrade Z" is sweet but upbeat, arranged with an obvious amount of care. If you've missed out on Devotchka's own music or its contributions to "Little Miss Sunshine," it's about time you tried to dance -- or drink or cry -- along to its tunes.
ARTIST: ROCKO
ALBUM: SELF-MADE (Def Jam)
Last year, Atlanta's Rodney "Rocko" Hill told Billboard that money was his main incentive when he made the transition from artist development executive/producer to rapper. Today, riches are a recurrent theme on his debut album, which features head-bopping, neck-jerking production from Drumma Boi (Young Jeezy, Yung Joc) throughout. On the guitar-based "This Morning," Rocko daydreams about Ben Franklins, while on the appropriately titled "Hustlin'," he unabashedly admits his fear of going "back to being broke." The obsession is a bit much on tracks like the drum-heavy "Busy," where he claims to be so occupied making money that he can't even talk or walk. But Rocko comes off less avaricious on a dedication to his mother, "Thugs Need Love Too," with an assist from R&B singer/girlfriend Monica, and on the repentant "Karma," where he most effectively demonstrates his storytelling skills.
ARTIST: VARIOUS ARTISTS
ALBUM: UMALALI: THE GARIFUNA WOMEN'S PROJECT (Cumbancha/Stonetree Records) Continued...




