[ Lost Highway / CD ]
Release Date: Thursday 22 December 2005
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Singer / songwriter Ryan Adams is following through on his pledge to release three separate albums in 2005. On the heels of 'Cold Roses' and 'Jacksonville City Nights', the series concludes superbly with '29'.
Singer / songwriter Ryan Adams is following through on his pledge to release three separate albums in 2005. On the heels of May's 'Cold Roses' and September's 'Jacksonville City Nights', the series concludes superbly with '29'.
With this recording Ryan Adams takes a break from his band, the Cardinals, to fashion an introspective song cycle with stripped-down arrangements focused on acoustic guitar or solo piano.
After the propulsive, self-mythologizing title track opens the album in brazen fashion, forging an unlikely bond of comparison between John Lennon's Plastic Ono Band and the early '70s Grateful Dead, much of the rest of 29 finds Adams at his dreamiest (the reveries of "Strawberry Wine" and "Elizabeth, You Were Born to Play That Part") and most rapturously romantic (the aching falsetto on the lovesick "Starlite Diner"). He continues to take chances and not all of them pay off, with the underwatery echo of "Night Birds" and the over-the-top dramatics of "The Sadness" showing the downside of self-indulgence, though "Carolina Rain" suggests he can return to the alt-country prime
of Whiskeytown whenever the mood strikes.
With the intimacy of the closing "Voices," Adams sounds less like he is singing a song than sharing a secret. Refusing to rein himself in or pin himself down, he sings on the title track, "You can't hang on to something that won't stop moving."
1. 29
2. Strawberry Wine
3. Night Birds
4. Blue Sky Blues
5. Carolina Rain
6. Starlite Diner
7. Sadness
8. Elizabeth You Were Born To Play That Part
9. Voices