UPC: 015707820028
Format: CD
Release Date: May 08, 2012
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Audio Mixer: Greg Collins .
Landline, Greg Laswell's 2012 follow-up to the celebrated Take a Bow, may sound less tortured than its predecessor but there's plenty of pathos to go around. Recorded in a small church-turned-house that belongs to his in-laws, Laswell couches his songwriting in what he perceives to be adventurous production. He listened to many hip-hop records before he cut Landline, and the sound of its drums, loops, and synthetic percussion obviously enchanted him. But this is nothing like a hip-hop record. The album's first single is its opening cut, "Come Back Down," a duet with Sarah Bareilles (loudly trumpeted by Vanguard Records). Its crunchy tom-toms, repetitive piano riff, and Laswell's monotone vocals introduce it. Bareilles complements and elevates them by injecting emotion with her friendly style. The most compelling thing about the track is its lyric content, which may disguise itself as an admonition, but is instead a thinly veiled indictment of a subject who's hurt the protagonist. It comes to a big, nearly cinematic climax. There are three other collaborations with female vocalists, including "Back to You" (Elizabeth Ziman of Elizabeth and the Catapult), the jaunty "Dragging You Around" (Sia), and the closing title track with his wife, singer/songwriter Ingrid Michaelson. It's the last of these, a ballad, which works best -- though all of them work nicely. It's relatively simple; her voice with its plaintive appeal is a fine contrast to Laswell's angsty one. Tracks like "Nicely Played," with its insistent percussive layers, and "I Might Drop By," with its waltz tempo and blurred wash of instruments -- save for a piano which is crystalline -- have appealing hooks. Most of these songs have what it takes to get attention from radio programmers and online tune purveyors. Laswell's growing number of fans will be drawn to his "new" sounds, his studied hooks, and emotionalism; taken as a whole it feels like an album whose songs feel like they were written for poignant moments in film soundtracks. ~ Thom Jurek
Landline, Greg Laswell's 2012 follow-up to the celebrated Take a Bow, may sound less tortured than its predecessor but there's plenty of pathos to go around. Recorded in a small church-turned-house that belongs to his in-laws, Laswell couches his songwriting in what he perceives to be adventurous production. He listened to many hip-hop records before he cut Landline, and the sound of its drums, loops, and synthetic percussion obviously enchanted him. But this is nothing like a hip-hop record. The album's first single is its opening cut, "Come Back Down," a duet with Sarah Bareilles (loudly trumpeted by Vanguard Records). Its crunchy tom-toms, repetitive piano riff, and Laswell's monotone vocals introduce it. Bareilles complements and elevates them by injecting emotion with her friendly style. The most compelling thing about the track is its lyric content, which may disguise itself as an admonition, but is instead a thinly veiled indictment of a subject who's hurt the protagonist. It comes to a big, nearly cinematic climax. There are three other collaborations with female vocalists, including "Back to You" (Elizabeth Ziman of Elizabeth and the Catapult), the jaunty "Dragging You Around" (Sia), and the closing title track with his wife, singer/songwriter Ingrid Michaelson. It's the last of these, a ballad, which works best -- though all of them work nicely. It's relatively simple; her voice with its plaintive appeal is a fine contrast to Laswell's angsty one. Tracks like "Nicely Played," with its insistent percussive layers, and "I Might Drop By," with its waltz tempo and blurred wash of instruments -- save for a piano which is crystalline -- have appealing hooks. Most of these songs have what it takes to get attention from radio programmers and online tune purveyors. Laswell's growing number of fans will be drawn to his "new" sounds, his studied hooks, and emotionalism; taken as a whole it feels like an album whose songs feel like they were written for poignant moments in film soundtracks. ~ Thom Jurek
Tracks:
1 - Come Back Down
2 - I Might Drop By
3 - Another Life To Lose
4 - Eyes On You
5 - Back To You
6 - Late Arriving
7 - Dragging You Around
8 - Nicely Played
9 - New Year's Eves
10 - It's Settled Now
11 - Landline
2 - I Might Drop By
3 - Another Life To Lose
4 - Eyes On You
5 - Back To You
6 - Late Arriving
7 - Dragging You Around
8 - Nicely Played
9 - New Year's Eves
10 - It's Settled Now
11 - Landline