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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Chaos and Creation Gets 4 Stars review from rolling stone (McCartney)
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Thread started 09/09/05 4:03pm

Sdldawn

Chaos and Creation Gets 4 Stars review from rolling stone (McCartney)

Chaos And Creation In The Backyard
****

The premise of Paul Mccartney working with Nigel Godrich was clear from the start. McCartney wanted a producer who appreciated his storied past but at the same time believed that, at sixty-three, he has a vital future. For his part, Godrich -- who is best-known for his work with Radiohead and Beck -- had expressed interest in collaborating with an established artist whose reputation extended further back than the Nineties. A win-win, right? Right. Chaos and Creation in the Backyard is the freshest-sounding McCartney album in years. It is as spare, in its way, as Driving Rain (2001), his most recent studio effort, but it's more daring, more assured and more surprising. For starters, Driving Rain was a band album, while this is a genuine solo album in that McCartney plays nearly all the instruments on it -- four of the album's thirteen tracks credit no other musicians. It's an approach that recalls McCartney, the homemade 1970 release that launched the singer's post-Beatles career. And as on that record, the tingling sense of a new beginning is palpable. Though it's clearly the product of a true partnership between the artist and his producer, Chaos is instantly recognizable as a McCartney album. For one thing, that voice is front and center, as wistful and full of yearning as ever, effortlessly lending these songs a rich sense of emotional conviction. And that grounding frees Godrich to roughen up McCartney's innate melodic smoothness. "Jenny Wren" is an acoustic ballad in the manner of "Mother Nature's Son." But a solo on duduk -- a haunting, hollow-sounding Armenian woodwind -- transports the song into an unsettled, dreamlike realm and darkens its mood. Similarly, the string arrangements that permeate the album rigorously avoid the romantic lushness typical of McCartney in the past. Instead, they slither in and out of the mix, providing eerie atmospherics to songs like "Riding to Vanity Fair." Instruments such as melodica, harmonium, harpsichord and spinet introduce distinctly non-rock elements into McCartney's sound and contribute to an overall feel of delicate, stately surrealism. All of the above means, alas, that, with a couple of exceptions, Chaos doesn't rock -- its most significant drawback. (When McCartney tears off a guitar solo on "Promise to You Girl," the effect is jolting.) But without feeling showy, Chaos seduces the listener into a playful world of musical ideas that shimmer and disappear. The sound bears a complex relationship to the album's theme, an autumnal assessment of the things that fade and the things that last. What fades are the enervating distractions of daily life, every ego-charged detail that seems critical at the moment but that causes us to lose "sight of life day by day." And, for McCartney, of course, what lasts is love -- the engine of the creation mentioned in the title, the ultimate weapon against chaos. This is not the silly love of "Silly Love Songs." It's the challenge of one of his most famous lyrics: "And in the end, the love you take/Is equal to the love you make." It's a call to a better self, in other words, and a promise that, as he sings in "Anyway," this album's closing track, "If a love is strong enough, it may never end."


ANTHONY DECURTIS
(Posted Sep 22, 2005)
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Reply #1 posted 09/09/05 4:31pm

PANDURITO

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This déjà vu feeling hmmm
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Reply #2 posted 09/09/05 9:03pm

Sdldawn

I dig the love songs. like "this never happened before".. it isnt a sappy love song.. its more of an acceptance of what has happened in life... and the chain of events that occured to lead u up to where your presently at.

the strings in the song arent "silly love songs" type.. its more of an eerie sounding strings.. I totally dig the dark, but hopeful vibe.



other songs have lines like...



Alot of lines like "Looking through the backyard of my life.. time so sweep the leaves away"... he refers to his past quite often..

other lines are like "Sometimes I'd rather run and hide.. then stay and face the fear inside"
.
[Edited 9/9/05 22:07pm]
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Reply #3 posted 09/10/05 12:48am

IstenSzek

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I give it star star star star too!


what a great album, i love it
all the way through.


thumbs up!
and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #4 posted 09/10/05 12:59am

PurpleKnight

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Eh, they also gave Musicology four stars.
The world is a comedy for those who think and a tragedy for those who feel.

"You still wanna take me to prison...just because I won't trade humanity for patriotism."
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Reply #5 posted 09/10/05 1:17am

IstenSzek

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PurpleKnight said:

Eh, they also gave Musicology four stars.


yeah but that was because Sony gave them $ 1000,-
and a vibrator with a lifetime supply of batteries

rolleyes
and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #6 posted 09/10/05 3:46am

PurpleKnight

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Any magazine that gives Musicology four stars is too lenient.
The world is a comedy for those who think and a tragedy for those who feel.

"You still wanna take me to prison...just because I won't trade humanity for patriotism."
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Reply #7 posted 09/10/05 5:19am

calldapplwonde
ry83

Depends on their system. If the max is 10 stars.... just being nit-picky.
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Reply #8 posted 09/27/05 9:16pm

Sdldawn

Album keeps getting better...



its possibly a 4 1/2 out of 5 for me... I didnt wanna give it a 5 due to my expectation for something as rocking as helter skelter.. but F that.. this album is bloody brilliant!
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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Chaos and Creation Gets 4 Stars review from rolling stone (McCartney)