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 Post subject: Lhasa - The Living Road
PostPosted: Tue Aug 09, 2005 7:58 am 
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Anyone else heard or like this? I picked this up last week on a whim (its on the Nettwerk label) and a vague recollection of a good review I read awhile ago and I wasn't disappointed. It's been stuck in my car's cd player this whole week. I think other Obners might like this too. The best way to describe it is a foreign PJ Harvey fronting Dead Can Dance. Though most of the album is sung in Spanish and French, the track Anywhere On This Road is in English and is particularly haunting.

Check it out: http://s18.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=2ATI6SNSWR7OZ1FJDKC6HK3SHR



Here's a review:

Already a star in Canada and France, the gifted singer/songwriter Lhasa sets her sights on America with this remarkable multi-cultural effort. The Living Road, the follow-up to her 1998 debut, features her smoky vocals (in French, English, and Spanish) in front with wonderfully understated support that draws upon Mexican folk styles, French chansons, Spanish ballads, and modern-sounding songwriters like Joe Henry or Jim White. The accompaniment is exceptional, but it's Lhasa's voice and lyrics that set her apart. Whereas fellow Mexican-American singer Lila Downs dives into large cultural and political issues, this modern-day torch singer sings about intensely personal experiences and inner thoughts--much of the lyrics are sung in the first person or directed toward another, as if she's writing a letter to a lover. Her sensual phrasing perfectly fits the intimate subject matter, particularly when she sings in French, while her husky timbre exudes inner strength that beyond question. Six years is a long time between albums, but The Living Road was worth the wait.

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PostPosted: Tue Aug 09, 2005 8:28 am 
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sounds like i need to find this.


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PostPosted: Tue Aug 09, 2005 9:16 am 
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Several people on here have recommended this to me, and I've still yet to get it. I don't know why, I'm an international music junkie.


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 Post subject: Re: Lhasa - The Living Road
PostPosted: Tue Aug 09, 2005 11:18 am 
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[quote="south pacificThe best way to describe it is a foreign PJ Harvey fronting Dead Can Dance. [/quote]

I love that album, it was my favorite album from last year and its held up great. I don't like your description that much though. PJ Harvey bores me to tears and I don't find much I like in Dead Can Dance either.

Here's the review that hooked me in to buying it:

Quote:
If Leonard Cohen, on a European tour during 1970, had spent an evening with Nico, exchanging pleasantries, playing cards and sharing a drink or two, Lhasa could be the living embodiment of the virtual child they might have conceived, had they been so inclined. And if they were now to listen together to this consummate creation by the product of their imaginary consummation, they would surely be pleased and proud.

In fact, Lhasa’s real life parents are exotic enough, a Mexican father and American mother, who traveled throughout the United States as circus performers before finally settling in Montreal, where Lhasa still makes her base. Appropriately, life on the road is the unifying theme of this album’s songs, which are sung in French, English and Spanish. Helpfully, the sleeve presents most of the lyrics in all three languages, and it intrigues me to wonder what makes her decide which language to choose for each song.

There’s a tendency for deep voices, whether male or female, to sound solemn, and rather than deny it, Lhasa prefers to go with the mournful flow, using different instrumental textures as decoration. On some songs, muted trumpet plays a counter melody to the vocal; on others, violin, cello or flanged guitar explore the spaces between the words. The result is a very coherent suite of songs, among which three command particular attention.

For this English-speaking listener, ‘Anywhere on this Road’ is the pivot, showcasing the sublime trumpet of Ibrahim Maalouf and revealing a macabre sense of humour in the third verse: “I love a man who’s afraid of me, He believes if he doesn’t stand guard with a knife, I’ll make him my slave for the rest of his life.” ‘Con Toda Palabra’ (With All Words) is pushed along by what sounds like a banjo but, as no musician is credited with playing one, maybe it’s Rick Haworth playing ‘guitar plastique’. In any case, it’s distinctive and memorable and works well against the small string section that frames the song. Sung in French, ‘La Confession’ has more of that dry Cohenesque humour: ‘I’m not afraid to say that I betrayed you, out of pure laziness….between you and the devil, I chose the most comfortable.’ And there’s that trumpet again, not shrill but subtle, not shiny but matte.

If you have records by Tindersticks or Gillian Welch on your shelves, The Living Road will sit nicely alongside either or both of them and will take you to places they never dreamed of.


Pollysix and a few others are fans too. She really should have more fans here though.


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PostPosted: Tue Aug 09, 2005 12:06 pm 
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this album was in my top ten last year. amazing beautiful voice. time to pull this one out again...thanks for the reminder!

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PostPosted: Tue Aug 09, 2005 12:33 pm 
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After reading the previous thread, I downloaded La Llorona and really got into it. Having had my mom listen to a song or two, I realized that many (or at least a few) of these songs are based on traditional spanish(-language) songs. I don't know if all her work is like that, though, or just this album.


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PostPosted: Tue Aug 09, 2005 4:53 pm 
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I love her and have both her albums, and would highly recommend seeing her live. I saw her live on a recommendation from this board, and was not disappointed.

She's multilingual, so her influences are all over the place.

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PostPosted: Tue Aug 09, 2005 5:05 pm 
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I dl'ed the tune this morning but have yet to listen to it. Will do so when I get home tonight.


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PostPosted: Tue Aug 09, 2005 6:01 pm 
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good album which almost made my top 20 of that year. smooth songs. kind of an indie, multilingual more-rockin sade. (i'm obviously not good at the riyl game.) looking forward to a new album (whenever that is)

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PostPosted: Wed Aug 10, 2005 2:06 am 
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I would say RIYL: Calexico, Tori Amos, Marianne Faithfull.

Yeah, I suck at this, too.

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