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Tag: Music reviews

  • Music Review: ‘Wicked: For Good — The Soundtrack’ raises the stakes

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    Are you ready for more “Wicked”? “Wicked: For Good — The Soundtrack” offers a bulked-up take on the music of the original “Wicked” musical’s second act, grounded in yet-again stellar vocals from Cynthia Erivo as a misunderstood but defiant Elphaba and Ariana Grande as a conflicted but changing Glinda. New songs and lyrics raise the stakes — even if the music itself is at times weighed down by the plot it helps move along, like the film it accompanies.

    The soundtrack opens with “Every Day More Wicked,” a lengthened-version of a section of the original Act 2 opener “Thank Goodness” with new verses about Elphaba’s perceived wickedness and Glinda’s presumed goodness set to bold orchestration that matches the first film’s opening number, “No One Mourns the Wicked.” Drum beats and ensemble singers are the world builders here, twisting the melody into a march.

    The album’s first solo goes to Michelle Yeoh’s Madame Morrible, the sorceress at the center of a propaganda campaign against Elphaba — a choice that works for the plot, but which offsets the power of Erivo and Grande’s forthcoming vocals. They are introduced later, through brief interpolations of the Act 1 showstoppers “The Wizard and I” and “Popular.” All of that makes for a dynamic film opener — but is more fractured in audio form, sans the sumptuous visuals and character reveals that tie those musical references together on screen.

    Fortunately, “Thank Goodness / I Couldn’t Be Happier” quickly follows, bringing Grande center-stage — and providing a rare-here opportunity for her soprano head-voice to give way to a deeper belt (her passionate tone, like other Glindas before her, turns this almost nonsensical lyric, “There are bridges you cross you didn’t know you crossed until you’ve crossed them,” into a revelation). That’s not the last we hear from this capital “G” Good, Glinda. “Wonderful,” usually a duet between Elphaba and the Wizard of Oz, is ‘Galinda-fied,’ with Grande adding welcome harmonies — and a brief “Defying Gravity” interlude — to Jeff Goldblum’s Wizard romp.

    For this review, our de facto Gen Z correspondent Elise Ryan also saw ‘Wicked: For Good’ twice (she’s seeing it a third time tonight), rewatched the first movie and saw the Broadway production for the third time. Fourth, if you count the touring production she saw in fifth grade.

    It was always going to be hard for this album to live up to the soundtrack of the first “Wicked,” which ended with Erivo’s take on the iconic “Defying Gravity” battle cry, and saw Grande own the over-the-top glitz of “Popular.” But that grandness is replicated in key moments: In Grande’s operatic soprano, in Erivo and Jonathan Bailey’s sensual “As Long As You’re Mine,” in which Bailey as Fiyero manages to keep up with Erivo’s beckoning vocals, and in “No Good Deed,” the album’s sonic peak.

    At 44 minutes and 52 seconds, the soundtrack adds over 15 minutes of music to the runtime of the original Broadway cast recording’s second act. That includes two brand new songs written for the film (making them eligible for Oscar consideration), one for Erivo’s Elphaba and one for Grande’s Glinda. In lengthening the shorter second act into a 2 hour and 17 minute long film, director Jon M. Chu stretches some of these songs across scenes, filling them out with dialogue, additional verses from composer and lyricist Stephen Schwartz and additional scoring from composer John Powell. All of that is a double-edged sword (broom? wand?), at times deflating the power of the tight original tracks, at others adding felt emotional stakes ripe for satisfying listening.

    For example: Some of the drama of Marissa Bode, Ethan Slater and Erivo’s “Wicked Witch of the East,” a song performed on Broadway that was also left off the original cast recording, is weakened by which pieces of the interspersed dialogue remain, and which don’t, in the soundtrack version of the song. Like the Tin Man, it feels a bit piecemeal.

    But the new tracks are highlights, fleshing out the album. Erivo’s “No Place Like Home” pulls on the iconic line said by Dorothy in “The Wizard of Oz,” providing this Oz-inspired show its take on the theme, like another Oz-inspired show, “The Wiz,” found before. (“Home,” that show’s nod to the line, was sung by Erivo at this year’s Oscars ceremony). The song is the most inherently political, a timely tale of borders, defiance and community. It starts with Erivo’s voice almost isolated, strings swelling behind her, and ends with the first of her transcendent vocal runs, restored to a full open note (after being cut short by the Cowardly Lion on screen) in the album.

    That power is felt tenfold in Erivo’s take on “No Good Deed.” The film may belong to Glinda’s emotional trajectory, but it is Erivo who steals the soundtrack’s climax. Drums return as the agony heard in her voice intensifies, the strings crescendoing with her final call.

    Glinda’s emotional journey may at first be more subtle, but Grande portrays it deftly. Airy and introspective, “Girl in the Bubble” serves as turning point, filling in gaps about Glinda’s internal reckoning. Her voice is restrained but emotional, Schwartz’s lyrics straightforward with a cheese that feels earned, and thus earnest. This is Glinda after all, not Grande.

    Both songs boost the emotional payoff of the character’s finale duet, the fan-beloved tear-jerker “For Good.” And it’s no surprise, years into their own journey with the characters, that Erivo and Grande nail the chemistry of their character’s friendship.

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  • Music Review: Jon Batiste opts for chill vibe on stripped-down album, ‘Big Money’

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    On “Big Money,” Super Bowl-sized singer Jon Batiste opts for a surprisingly intimate sound.

    The just over 32-minute, nine-song set will be released Friday, and it’s not nearly as loud as the New Orleans’ jazzman’s eye-popping wardrobe. The stripped-down, mostly acoustic arrangements create a chill vibe. Simplicity somehow only intensifies the songs’ swing and sway.

    Batiste pairs lyrics about devotion, values, angels and ecology with music that mixes folk and funk, gospel and the blues. The range is such that Batiste even plays a little fiddle and mandolin, but he shines brightest on two songs featuring his solo piano.

    The first is a wonderful duet with Randy Newman, another piano man with New Orleans roots, who in recent years has been slowed by health issues and kept a low profile. They cover Doc Pomus’ “Lonely Avenue,” and Newman’s legendarily froggy tenor provides a comical contrast to Batiste’s vocal sheen. “I could die, I could die, I could die,” Newman sings. “It sounds like I’m dying.”

    Also stellar is “Maybe,” a ballad filled with thick chords and questions about the big picture. “Or maybe we should all just take a collective pause,” Batiste sings, before launching into a keyboard exploration worthy of Jelly Roll Morton.

    The bouncy “Lean on My Love” draws from Prince, Sly Stone and the Spinners as Batiste sings in unison with Andra Day. The equally buoyant title cut rhymes “money” and “dummy” in a strummy sing-along that includes backing vocals by the Womack Sisters, granddaughters of soul singer Sam Cooke.

    “Pinnacle” chooses a similar tempo to kick up Delta dust around a delightful word salad. “Hop scotch/Double Dutchie jumping rope/Twistin’ it and ya wobble it/And let it go,” he sings on one verse.

    Batiste’s gospel influences are most evident on the closing reggae tune “Angels” and the ballad “Do It All Again,” a love song that could be interpreted as secular or spiritual.

    “When I’m happy, it’s your shine,” Batiste sings. As always, he makes joy sound genuine.

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    More AP reviews: https://apnews.com/hub/music-reviews

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  • Chappell Roan Wraps Tour and Willie Nelson Surprises Everyone at ACL Fest Week 2

    Chappell Roan Wraps Tour and Willie Nelson Surprises Everyone at ACL Fest Week 2

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    The second weekend of Austin City Limits Festival has come and gone, and after a killer first week we were hot to go again for more sweat, sunscreen and music across the many stages in Zilker Park. We started our weekend with Mansfield High School alum Mickey Guyton on the IHG stage…

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    Rachel Parker

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  • Music Review: On ‘Cowboys and Dreamers,’ George Strait’s traditional country is still a heart warmer

    Music Review: On ‘Cowboys and Dreamers,’ George Strait’s traditional country is still a heart warmer

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    George Strait’s 31st studio album, the feel-good “Cowboys and Dreamers,” marks five decades of record releases; a titanic career for a Texas troubadour whose greatest ambition seems to have always been the same: Make pretty, plain-spoken songs about life’s true pains and pleasures, and listeners will find their own resonance within them.

    Across 13 songs in 47 minutes — his first collection since 2019’s “Honky Tonk Time Machine” — Strait plays to his traditionalist country style without ever sounding derivative of his former records. That’s the beauty of his particular songwriting: The songs on “Cowboys and Dreamers” could exist at any point in time across his career, not in a lazy atavistic fashion, but utilizing nostalgia as an effective art medium.

    There are standouts for every mood across “Cowboys and Dreamers,” best heard through an old truck’s speakers while driving down an empty back road: The joyful single “Honky Tonk Hall of Fame,” featuring Chris Stapleton, a cover of Waylon Jennings’ “Waymore’s Blues,” and the Jimmy Buffet-informed vacation stomper, “MIA Down in MIA.”

    Privacy is required for the tear-jerking ballads with pedal steel that sounds like crying: Like on “The Little Things,” “People Get Hurt Sometimes,” “The Journey Of Your Life” or, most severely, “Rent,” written by Guy Clark and Keith Gattis, that begins with Strait offering a spoken-word tribute to the late Gattis.

    “The war took my brother/The good Lord took my mother/And the years, well, I don’t know where they all went,” he later sings in its striking chorus. “Until that roll is called up yonder/All I can do is wonder/If I even did enough to make a dent/But I made a few good friends/And I always paid my rent.”

    Over the last two years, Strait has been on tour with Stapleton and Little Big Town. He’s filled stadiums in states maybe not stereotypically associated with country music, but deep appreciators of the stuff, nonetheless. In June, at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium not far from New York City, Strait turned a space of tens of thousands across many demographics into something resembling the intimacy of those honky tonks he’s always singing about. Strait performed with a big band and a lot of heart, in a Western shirt and stiff, straight-starched jeans. (The closest a person can get to levitation is singing along to “Amarillo by Morning” in a stadium of tens of thousands, anyway.) There, as on “Cowboys and Dreamers,” Strait’s powers were in full force: Familiar sounds in a modern context. If you love Strait, you love him — and that makes it classic.

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    For more AP reviews of recent music releases, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/music-reviews

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  • Tim McGraw lets his music do the talking at Orlando concert | Review

    Tim McGraw lets his music do the talking at Orlando concert | Review

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    Country-music superstar Tim McGraw was a man of his word Saturday night. And by that, I mean a man of few words.

    “Y’all know if you’ve been to my shows before I don’t talk a lot,” he said to the audience after singing the first four songs of his set without interruption. “We just like to play music.”

    Without a lot of chitchat, McGraw was able to fit 20 hits into his 95-minute show at Orlando’s Kia Center, just the third stop on his brand-new “Standing Room Only” tour. That tour title is not bragging from the singer who delivered a poignant “Humble & Kind” as one of his encores. The title comes from his latest studio album, McGraw’s 16th, released last summer.

    McGraw has been making music consistently since the 1990s, which means that even with 20 songs on the setlist multiple favorites didn’t make the cut. They were mostly from McGraw’s sentimental side — early ballads such as “Please Remember Me,” Can’t Be Really Gone,” “Not a Moment Too Soon,” and “Don’t Take the Girl,” which admittedly would have been out of place in the rockin’ party atmosphere McGraw created.

    Pictures: Country Superstar Tim McGraw Concert Orlando

    He emerged through a cloud of smoke to launch into a bass-heavy “Truck Yeah,” the rocker looking for those who’ve “gotta little redneck in their blood.” That likely applied to many in the sea of cowboy hats as they drank cocktails out of mason jars.

    Like his music, McGraw straddled the line between country and rock: Big belt buckle, big hat, tight jeans and tighter black T-shirt (Bro has been working out).

    The singer still hits the high notes in his cover of Elton John’s “Tiny Dancer,” though the sound mix was increasingly fuzzy the louder the song got. More successful was a rendition of “Over and Over,” his collaboration with Nelly, which segued seamlessly into a driving (pun intended) “Shotgun Rider.”

    Lights add drama to Tim McGraw’s March 16 concert at the Kia Center in Orlando. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)

    Generally, McGraw’s voice rose above the mix better in the gentler songs: a rolling “Watch the Wind Blow By,” a lyrical “Where the Green Grass Grows,” a percolating “Just to See You Smile” with the percussion helping the song lightly chug along.

    On the biggest hits, McGraw let the eager audience sing lines from the chorus — though he caught out his friend Khristian Dentley from Take 6, who was in the audience and missed a lyric from the banging honky-tonker “I Like It, I Love It.”

    “Man, you’ve got to know this one,” McGraw exclaimed good-naturedly. The rest of the packed Kia Center certainly did.

    Opening act Carly Pearce, rhinestone boots glittering in the stage lights, gave a solid set of predominantly radio-friendly midtempo songs.

    Tim McGraw takes the stage at the Kia Center in Orlando on March 16, through a cloud of smoke. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)
    Tim McGraw takes the stage at the Kia Center in Orlando on March 16, through a cloud of smoke. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)

    She sang both her own and Ashley McBryde’s parts in big hit “Never Wanted to Be That Girl,” a cheating song that’s this generation’s “Does He Love You?”

    Pearce, who called herself “the luckiest girl ever,” still has a glow of excitement over her success, even though she’s been getting airplay since 2017’s “Every Little Thing.”

    “I don’t have to clean Air B&B’s anymore,” she enthused with a laugh, referring to the job she held before “Every Little Thing” hit big.

    Pictured at his rocking "Standing Room Only" tour stop at Orlando's Kia Center on March 16, Tim McGraw looks like he's been hitting the gym. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)

    Pictured at his rocking “Standing Room Only” tour stop at Orlando’s Kia Center on March 16, Tim McGraw looks like he’s been hitting the gym. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)Pearce upped the tempo in her set for a rollicking cover of “Let’s Go to Vegas” — originally a hit for McGraw’s wife, Faith Hill — as well as a sassy “Next, Girl” and a blazing “Truck on Fire,” a new song in the classic woman-scorned genre with the memorable raging chorus of “Liar, liar, truck on fire; flames rollin’ off of your Goodyear tires.”

    She closed with another ill-treated woman song, the crowd-pleasing “What He Didn’t Do.”

    For his part, McGraw also wrapped things up with a crowd pleaser, “Live Like You Were Dying,” before departing as he arrived, through a cloud of smoke, still a man of few words.

    Follow me at facebook.com/matthew.j.palm or email me at mpalm@orlandosentinel.com. Find more arts news at OrlandoSentinel.com/entertainment.

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