"Good Music For Good People"

Search for Artist/Title or "Sounds Like"
Find Pop!
New Order Line: 970-581-4644
CART TOTAL : $0 | VIEW CART  | CHECKOUT     

Shake Some Action!

Shake Some Action: The Ultimate Power Pop Guide
(Book w/ CD)Click Here For Details!
Click Here to hear more!

Home     About Not Lame     Contact Us     Customer Service     Goodies    The Clubhouse    
Email:
ClubID:
Join!The Clubhouse
LATE APRIL - NEW RELEASES
EARLY APRIL - NEW RELEASES
NEW - MARCH NEW RELEASES
NEW - FEBRUARY NEW RELEASES
NEW - JANUARY NEW RELEASES!
Browse by Artist
Browse by Label
Not Lame Recordings
Compilations
Good Music For Good People
                

Ryan Adams


Easy Tiger


 
Ryan Adams - Easy Tiger
Show All Titles and/or Sounds Like

Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Quantity :  
Item Number: CDADAMS6
List Price:$17.50
Notlame Price: $14.50
IN STOCK - Ready to Ship!
RSS
 Recommend to a friend
You could save 5% more now!!!
Join the Notlame Clubhouse
  Add to Wish List

Ryan Adams - Easy Tiger


Easy Tiger, Ryan Adams's ninth solo studio album, is a return to form in every way. He's already shown that he can bash out three albums in one year--not to mention the hilarious fake hip-hop records posted for free on his Web site--and that he can sound as much like the Grateful Dead as he wants to in his constant subsequent touring. Backed once again by the Cardinals, Adams synthesizes and refines his approach to smooth, gorgeous country-pop. "Tears of Gold" is one of the best songs he's written in ages, while "Two" is a slowly percolating, sweet little number that recalls Sean Hayes in its soulful folksiness (someone named Sheryl Crow accompanies Adams on vocals). One of the greatest treats of this languorous, twangy album is the subtle ways that genre gets played with. "I Taught Myself How to Grow Old" is the best Harvest outtake Neil Young never wrote, while the treated, synth-sounding guitar solo on the druggy, chooglin' "Halloweenhead" sounds like it comes straight out of Journey. And "The Sun Also Sets" sounds more than a little like Rufus Wainwright covering Fred McDowell's "Write Me a Few of Your Lines." It bursts with enough melodrama as to border on musical theater. But, as is clear on these songs of love and loss, Adams has always been at his best when giving into his most mellow, dramatic side.

"While prolific to the point of compulsion nothing he's done has rivaled his classic solo debut, 2000's uniformly gorgeous Heartbreaker…until now. ...great tracks include the churning, almost violent ode to self-destruction, "Halloween Head," the traditional folk ballad "Pearls On a String," and "These Girls," a spare confessional that would fit perfectly next to "Sylvia Plath" on Gold or "Call Me On Your Way Back Home" on Heartbreaker. Easy Tiger seems to prove that Adams - having for years indulged his jones for Grateful Dead-inspired jam band impersonation (and other dubious cravings) - is once again as in touch with the delicate tragedies of life and love as he's ever been."-Rolling Stone.

power pop, independent music Goodnight Rose - mp3

  Customer Reviews
                

Home  |  About Not Lame  |  Contact Us  |  Customer Service  |  Goodies  |  The Clubhouse

©Not Lame Recordings