SOUND CHECK.PAUL MCCARTNEY: ``Chaos and Creation in the Backyard'' (Capitol) - Three stars For his most satisfying effort since side one of ``Band on the Run,'' McCartney stows the overblown strings-laden trifles that make his post-Beatles output so easy to ignore. Here, working with producer Nigel Godrich, the Radiohead and Beck collaborator (for whatever that's worth), it's back to basics - which doesn't mean Chuck Berry-inspired rockers. The seductive new disc instead resembles one of McCartney's earliest solo albums, handcrafted hand·craft n. Variant of handicraft. tr.v. hand·craft·ed, hand·craft·ing, hand·crafts To fashion or make by hand. hand·craft and tumbledown tum·ble·down adj. Being in such bad repair as to seem in danger of collapsing; very dilapidated or rickety: a tumbledown shack. , with Paul playing all the instruments on many of the 13 tracks. But, thankfully, Sir Plucky pluck·y adj. pluck·i·er, pluck·i·est Having or showing courage and spirit in trying circumstances. See Synonyms at brave. pluck is hiding in the shadows. This is the brooding Paul, and a welcome tension is evident in the album's most strikingly introspective in·tro·spect intr.v. in·tro·spect·ed, in·tro·spect·ing, in·tro·spects To engage in introspection. [Latin intr moments, ``At the Mercy'' and ``Riding to Vanity Fair,'' both downbeat down·beat n. 1. Music a. The downward stroke made by a conductor to indicate the first beat of a measure. b. The first beat of a measure. 2. Informal A period of stagnation or inactivity. , gray and approaching bitterness. In the world of ``Chaos and Creation,'' silly love songs and ebony-and-ivory platitudes are kept in the cupboard. The mood is not totally overcast. Pretty melodies, never really remarkable, and Beatles references abound - ``English Tea'' brings to mind ``Martha My Dear'' and the marvelous ``Jenny Wren'' could be an alt version of ``Blackbird.'' Nice balance to an unexpected album. - Fred Shuster ROLLING STONES: ``A Bigger Bang'' (Virgin) - Two stars The party line on every Stones album since 1978 is ``it's a return to form - their best since `Some Girls!' '' Then a week later, the used bins are overflowing and you never hear about it again. Like those now-forgotten discs, ``A Bigger Bang'' has a moment or two. Opener ``Rough Justice'' is the best of it, a beautifully ragged formula of edge-of-disaster drums, inane lyrics and rhythm guitar that makes you want to reach for an adult beverage. Little else has legs, partly because the material is mediocre and partly because the entire enterprise is just tiresome. - F.S. TIM TIM Timothy TIM Technical Interchange Meeting TIM Transient Intermodulation Distortion TIM Time Is Money TIM The Invisible Man (movie) TIM Telecom Italia Mobile (Italian cellular provider) RIES RIES Reset Internet Explorer Settings (Microsoft) : ``The Rolling Stones Project'' (Concord) - Three and one half stars Saxophonist Ries, who has played with the Stones on tour since 1999, has produced a fabulously entertaining jazz set of Jagger-Richards songs that delivers plenty of satisfaction whether you get your Charlies from Parker or Watts. Keef, Ron Wood and Watts are among the big-name guests, but the standout is Norah Jones' stunning reading of ``Wild Horses,'' accompanied by Ries and guitarist Bill Frisell, offering a bigger bang than anything on the new Stones album. - Glenn Whipp JAMES McMURTRY: ``Childish Things'' (Compadre com·pa·dre n. Chiefly Southwestern U.S. A close friend or associate; a companion. [Spanish, joint father, godfather, friend, from Medieval Latin compater, ) - Three and one half stars It's no mystery why McMurtry is one of Texas' most effective musical storytellers; it's in the genes inherited from his dad, ``Lonesome lone·some adj. 1. a. Dejected because of a lack of companionship. See Synonyms at alone. b. Producing such dejection: a lonesome hour at the bar. 2. Dove'' author Larry McMurtry. A talk-singer with a sure sense of detail and a blistering back-up band, McMurtry's casts a typically jaundiced jaun·diced adj. 1. Affected with jaundice. 2. Yellow or yellowish. 3. Affected by or exhibiting envy, prejudice, or hostility. jaundiced Adjective 1. eye on family, nostalgia and - unusual for him - America, in the snarling tour of 21st-century problems ``We Can't Make It Here.'' That one's been called ``brave'' and sounds like everything Steve Earle's protested for the last five years, but for the most part this latest album is a rambling, raucous celebration of rock and wordcraft. - Bob Strauss VARIOUS: ``Sounds Eclectico'' (Nacional) - Four stars The latest in this long-running series goes for Latin musicians as diverse as their dialects. From Sidestepper's hypnotic Colombian-influenced electronic groove ``Deja'' to Cuban diva Omara Portuondo's stunning bolero bolero (bəlâr`ō), national dance of Spain, introduced c.1780 by Sebastian Zerezo, or Cerezo. Of Moroccan origin, it resembles the fandango. ``No Me Vayas a Enganar,'' the set of live cuts really works. Other goodies include Oscar-winning Uruguayan singer-songwriter Jorge Drexler, who offers his gorgeous ``El Pianista del Gueto Varsovia,'' based on ``The Pianist,'' Wladyslaw Szpilman's autobiography. Colombian group Aterciopelados also brings a winner with ``Baracunatana,'' before Los Lobos hits a grand slam with ``Carabina 30-30.'' - Sandra Barrera CAPTION(S): 6 photos Photo: (1) no caption (Paul McCartney) Jo Hale/Getty Images (2 -- 6) no caption (CD covers) |
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