<rss version='0.91'><channel><title>Michael Carpenter - Hopefulness</title><link>http://www.notlame.com/NLCARP2.html</link><description>Michael Carpenter - Hopefulness</description><item><title>Michael Carpenter - Hopefulness</title><description>SPECIAL PRICE UNTIL NOVEMBER, 30th, 2006 in celebration of &quot;The World Turns Around Him&quot;, a tribute to Gene Clark.   &lt;p&gt; Australian-based Carpenter has a reputation as being the Brad Jones of production for the music scene in his homeland, but his 1999 solo debut &quot;Baby&quot; had tongues wagging as to his own brand of music talent that exceeded his knob-turning talents. Now, his follow-up, &quot;Hopefulness&quot; reveals a bona-fide pop visionary was birthed with his previous disc. Filled with confident steps forward to his B-troika of influence (Beach Boys, Beatles, Big Star), the guitars continually jangle, the vocals affect, the 
polish of the arrangements enhance every moment of recorded, taking the listener to a journey of `hopefulness`. A personal 
testament of immediate pop innovation that will grab you right out of the gate. &lt;p&gt;
&quot;3 stars..Michael Carpenter`s debut album Baby was a stunningly diverse collection of good rock &amp; roll and, most importantly, good production. Carpenter is, first and foremost, a producer; so not only are the songs important, but the execution matters for every bit as much. That`s why Baby succeeded, and why ultimately Hopefulness does too. Carpenter`s second solo album is a concept album -- of sorts. The set of 12 tracks is lyrically and thematically all tied to Carpenter`s recent marriage. On paper, that sounds forced and terribly sappy, of course, but when listening to the actual album, the emotion comes through. Carpenter has had little trouble showing affection for what he loves; his influences are worn on his sleeve, and now he doesn`t hide his emotions about his marriage, either. It`s hardly typical rock music fodder -- no fast, red sports cars, no &quot;hot girls in love&quot; as Loverboy once sang about -- just one contented, honest songwriter who wants to invite all his fans to his wedding reception, via this CD. Carpenter does get that intimate with the listener, too, and that`s why this is such a warm and inviting listen. Those who were intrigued by Baby may find there`s a lot to love here: the opening &quot;Kailee Anne&quot; sounds a lot like early Joe Jackson, and the rollicking anthem &quot;Faith&quot; would not have been out of place on the debut. The album is mellower than Baby, too, and this does produce mixed results -- but there is not enough of a reinvention here to possibly scare away anyone impressed with Carpenter`s prior work. To round out the album, Carpenter throws in two excellent covers: one of the Beach Boys` rocker &quot;You Need a Mess of Help to Stand Alone&quot; and Sam Cooke`s &quot;Wonderful World.&quot;&quot;-AMG.
&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.frii.com/~popmusic/sounds/nlcarp201.mp3&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://www.notlame.com/images/ear.jpg&quot; width=&quot;20&quot; border=0 alt=&quot;power pop, independent music&quot;&gt;&lt;/a&gt; &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.frii.com/~popmusic/sounds/nlcarp201.mp3&quot;&gt;Kailee Anne&lt;/a&gt; - mp3&lt;br&gt;</description><link>http://www.notlame.com/Michael_Carpenter/Page_1/NLCARP2.html</link></item></channel></rss>