May 31, 2020

The Black Crowes - Lions (2001)

Lions is the sixth studio album by American rock band The Black Crowes.
It was released in 2001 as their first album on V2 Records following their departure from Columbia, and is their only studio album to feature guitarist Audley Freed.
Lions was recorded in New York City in January and February of that year, and was produced by Don Was.
Bass guitar duties were shared by Rich Robinson and Was, as Greg Rzab had left the band and was not replaced until the tour that followed the release of the album.

The album debuted on the Billboard 200 at its peak position of 20, selling more than 53,000 copies in its first week.
Lions received mixed reviews; although the overall sound of the album generally garnered praise, a frequent complaint was the lack of "memorable" songs.
The critics who rated Lions lowest considered it a poor imitation of the band's influences, such as Led Zeppelin.

If the Black Crowes are anything, they are survivors (and, reportedly, if Chris Robinson had his way, he'd be a genuine survivor, appearing on CBS' genius television show with his wife Kate Hudson), weathering years of popularity and disdain, before emerging at the end of the '90s as a rarity -- a real, road-weathered rock & roll band, in the classic sense.
And it wasn't just that they played classic rock -- they stayed out on the road constantly, bashing out albums when they weren't fighting record labels. By the dawn of the new millennium, there weren't many bands like that out on the market, and it was a mixed blessing -- it meant that they had an ugly breakup with their longtime label, American, but it also meant that there really wasn't anybody else for Jimmy Page to turn to when he wanted to tour in 1999.
These two events inform Lions, their first album for V2 records, and their most idiosyncratic album since 1994's neglected gem, Amorica.
Like that album, this record is instantly familiar, recalling many common and forgotten platters from the early '70s, yet twisted through a surprisingly individual voice from the Crowes.
And, like that record, this is more about the music and the texture than the songs, which is disconcerting for anybody looking for the knockout songwriting of their first two records, or even "Stop Kicking My Heart Around."
And, coming on the heels of that record, which was as tight a rock & roll album as they ever did, the diffuseness of Lions seems a bit off-kilter. Still, there's no denying that the group is stretching out and sounds terrific, and not just because Don Was is behind the boards.

The group is supple, laying into jams without seeming indulgent, and rocking like a bastard when the occasion calls for it. It's just too bad that there aren't many songs to remember here.
Some could argue that was the case with Amorica as well, but those never felt like excuses to play music, and the tone shifted dramatically from track to track.
Here, the songs can seem incomplete, as if they got the sound of the track down, but not the structure. Still, this is a powerful, textured hard rock record that covers a lot of ground, surging from powerful riffs to gospel choruses and funkier-than-expected riffs.
There are few bands of their time that could sound so versatile within the confines of hard rock, and if this doesn't really deliver memorable songs, tracks do jell on repeated plays, and the Black Crowes' kaleidoscopic vision of rock's history is reason enough to listen to this record -- even if you're left with a nagging suspicion that this could have been a knockout with some real songs in tow.


Tracklist
  1. "Midnight from the Inside Out" – 4:21
  2. "Lickin'" – 3:42
  3. "Come On" – 2:58
  4. "No Use Lying" – 4:57
  5. "Losing My Mind" – 4:26
  6. "Ozone Mama" – 3:54
  7. "Greasy Grass River" – 3:20
  8. "Soul Singing" – 3:54
  9. "Miracle to Me" – 4:42
  10. "Young Man, Old Man" – 4:14
  11. "Cosmic Friend" – 5:23
  12. "Cypress Tree" – 3:41
  13. "Lay It All on Me" – 5:29
Japanese version
  1. "Love Is Now" – 4:22
All songs written by Rich and Chris Robinson.


The Black Crowes
Additional musicians
  • Don Was – bass guitar on "Come On" and "Lay It All on Me"
  • Teese Gohl – string arrangement
  • Craig Ross – lead guitar on "Greasy Grass River"
  • Maxine Waters, Oren Waters, Rose Stone and Julie Waters – background vocals on "Soul Singing"
Production
  • Don Was – producer
  • Pete Angelus – personal manager
  • Amy Finkle – management
  • Chris Ribando – recording (Montana Rehearsal Studio and Theater 99)
  • Ray Martin – recording (Theater 99)
  • Raeann Zschokke – recording assistant
  • The Sickamore Avenue High School Mixing Squad – mixing (The Record Plant and Electric Lady Studios)
    • Don Was
    • Chris Ribando
    • Adam Olmstead
    • Steve Mandel – mixing assistant
  • Chris Lord-Alge – mixing ("Come On", "Losing My Mind" and "Soul Singing")
  • Derek Phelps – guitar tech
  • John "Noodles" Weber – drum tech
  • Jane Oppenheimer – minister of information
  • Jennifer Gunderson – production coordinator
  • Ron Kimball Studios – cover photograph
  • Zoren Gold – photography
  • Minori – retouching
  • V2 Image Control – art direction

Notes
Released: May 7, 2001 
Recorded: January–February 2001 at Montana Rehearsal Studios and Theater 99 Recording in New York City 
Genre: Southern rock, blues rock
Length: 59:34 

Label - V2 Records

May 26, 2020

Toto - 35th Anniversary - Live In Poland (2014)

A wildly successful band in their own right, Toto helped shaped the sound of pop music in the '70s and '80s not just with their own songs, but as studio musicians for Boz Scaggs, Steely Dan, and Michael Jackson.
Celebrating their 35th anniversary, the band that served as the backbone for some of the smoothest pop hits of their day take Europe by storm on 35th Anniversary Tour: Live in Poland.
Playing to a massive, standing-room-only crowd in Lodz, Poland, a lineup featuring Steve Lukather, Steve Porcaro, David Paich, and Joseph Williams take to the stage to deliver a stellar performance for their ecstatic European fans.
Featuring hits like "Africa," "Rosanna," and a rousing rendition of "Hold the Line," this live set does their old material justice, and will be a welcome addition to the collection of any die-hard Toto fan.

Over the last decade, Toto has put together a handful of live DVDs. One might think this is a band past its prime simply seeking to cash in on its middle-aged fan base who've got the cash to buy multiple DVDs from the favorite bands of their youth (i.e...I'm looking at you, Chicago). So when I got the new "Live in Poland," I was surprised at how much I enjoyed it. The lineup with Joseph Williams (featured on "Fahrenheit" and "The Seventh One") was, in my view, the best version of the band because it featured a variety of contrasting voices. The Bobby Kimball concerts of recent years were good, but Kimball's vocal was sometimes overpowering or just a bit over-the-top in its delivery. This DVD, featuring Joseph Williams as the lead vocalist on many songs, is truly excellent. J-Will's voice is still in top form. Even with the passage of time, he seems to understand the limits that may come with age and doesn't push where he can't go when he was in his 20's...but you won't miss those few notes. The songs are thoughtfully crafted with new touches, truly enjoyable.

David Paich (exclusively on piano) and Steve Lukather are still the driving musical forces behind the band. You can tell that these guys were all friends from high school who've been playing together for 35 years.

Highlights include "Going Home" (with its original writer, Williams, delivering the vocal the way it always should have been). On many of the songs that originally featured Bobby Kimball, Williams' voice is truly at home. He's not trying to do a Kimball imitation at all, yet he owns the songs, something Jason Scheff of Chicago could never say when singing Peter Cetera's songs. In many cases, these live versions are better than the originals. "It's a Feeling" never stood out to me on its original studio track, but it's now a new favorite. "White Sister" really rocks with Williams on the mic.

Steve Lukather still sounds the same on his vocals. Paich's jazzy piano puts a nice twist is put on "99," breathing some life into one of Toto's early hits that otherwise might not stand the test of time that well.


CD1
1.  Intro 13 
2.  Medley - 5:32
    (a) On The Run 
    (b) Child's Anthem 
    (c) Goodbye Elenore 
3.  Goin' Home - 5:04
4 . Hydra - 7:17
5.  St George And The Dragon - 5:45 
6.  I'll Be Over You - 5:19
7.  It's A Feeling - 3:37
8.  Rosanna - 9:43
9.  Wings Of Time - 9:35 
10.  Falling In Between - 4:02
11.  I Won't Hold You Back - 5:50
12.  Pamela - 6:11

CD2
1.  99 - 4:17 
2.  The Muse - 2:43
3.  White Sister - 7:13
4.  Better World - 8:13
5.  Africa - 10:24
6.  How Many Times - 5:51 
7.  Stop Loving You - 7:29
8.  Hold The Line - 5:14
9.  Home Of The Brave (Encore) - 10:11

Companies, etc.
Credits

Notes
Released: 2014
Recorded live at the Atlas Arena, Lodz, Poland June 25th 2013.
Genre: Rock
Style: Classic Rock, Soft Rock
Length: 2:09:37

Label - Eagle Records 


May 10, 2020

Bryan Ferry - Frantic (2002)

Frantic is the eleventh studio album by British singer Bryan Ferry, the former lead vocalist for Roxy Music.
It was released on Virgin Records in 2002. The majority of tracks were produced by the team of Rhett Davies, Colin Good, and Bryan Ferry; David A. Stewart and Robin Trower also co-produced several tracks.

Frantic manages to touch upon virtually every musical style of Bryan Ferry's career.
Ferry has proved to be as interested in covering other artists' material as penning original songs, and he straddles a smart mix of originals and covers here.
Two brilliant Bob Dylan songs appear among the opening tracks: "It's All Over Now Baby Blue" sees a return to the eclectic, energetic experimentation of Ferry's early albums with Roxy Music as a lush modern swirl of instruments mingles with the singer's stylized vocals and throwback harmonica; "Don't Think Twice It's Alright" completes the Dylan pair, as Ferry intones with confidence and again takes up harmonica over Colin Good's rolling piano.
The reverent Leadbelly cover "Goodnight Irene" reimagines Ferry as a kind of blues troubadour. "One Way Love" sees the Drifters' song reworked as a squall of distorted guitars and keyboards. Almost half of Frantic's songs originated from late-'90s sessions with Eurythmics' Dave Stewart, and Stewart is given a co-writer credit for these songs.
Though the Stewart songs tend to favor edginess over songwriting, a few of them manage to break through the bombast. "Goddess of Love" is probably the best song about Marilyn Monroe since Kitchens of Distinction's "When in Heaven," and there's a passing musical resemblance to that great song. "Hiroshima" works like an ominous take on Roxy Music's synth-heavy Avalon period, with raging guitar dynamics contributed by Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood. Roxy Music fans will find more reasons to rejoice with the superb album closer, "I Thought," which was co-written with Brian Eno, who sings backing vocals and plays keyboards.
Some listeners might suggest that an album this varied has an identity crisis, but with standout tracks as glorious as the Dylan covers and the Eno closer, Frantic is a fascinating addition to Bryan Ferry's accomplished discography.


Tracklist

1.  "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue"  (Bob Dylan) - 4:05
2.  "Cruel"  (Ferry, David A. Stewart) - 3:55
3.  "Goin' Down"  (Don Nix) - 3:08
4.  "Goddess of Love"  (Ferry, Stewart) - 3:33
5.  "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright"  (Dylan) - 4:05
6.  "Nobody Loves Me"  (Ferry, Stewart) - 3:23
7.  "Ja Nun Hons Pris"  (Richard Coeur de Lion, arr Ferry and Good) - 0:35
8.  "A Fool for Love"  (Ferry) - 4:44
9.  "Goodnight Irene"  (Huddie Ledbetter, Alan Lomax) - 3:20
10. "Hiroshima..."  (Ferry) - 3:13
11.  "San Simeon"  (Ferry, Stewart) - 4:36
12. "One Way Love"  (Bert Russell, Norman Meade) - 3:05
13.  "I Thought"  (Ferry, Brian Eno) - 5:40
14.  "I'll Forget More Than You'll Ever Know" (Japan only bonus track)  (Cecil Null) - 2:58

Personnel
Notes
Released: 15 April 2002
Genre: Art pop
Length: 50:20

Label - Virgin Records

May 09, 2020

Matisyahu - Live At Stubb's (2006)

Matthew Paul Miller (born June 30, 1979), known by his Hebrew and stage name Matisyahu (/ˌmɑːtɪsˈjɑːh/; מתּתיהו, "Gift of Yahu", a Hebrew name of God), is an American Jewish reggae singer, rapper, beatboxer, and alternative rock musician.

Live at Stubb's is a live album by Matisyahu. It was recorded live at Stubb's in Austin, Texas on February 19, 2005 under his record label Or Music.
Matisyahu's 2005 single "King Without a Crown" was a Top 40 hit in the United States.

Offering a taste of Matisyahu's exhilarating live show along with being an alternative to his more complex debut, Live at Stubb's presents "the Hasidic Reggae Superstar" in top form.
While Shake Off the Dust...Arise had its dreamy, mystical, and more relaxed side, Stubb's is filled with rousing energy, with Matisyahu delivering his spiritual message with the punch of Elephant Man, Beenie Man, or whichever dancehall king you care to mention.
The nothing-but-fun "Beat Box" represents how over the top and freewheeling the singer can be, while the between-song banter displays an approachable artist who feeds off an audience's enthusiasm.
The highlights of Arise are all here, more anthemic sounding than ever, and Matisyahu's band is incredibly tight and responsive.
A debut and then a live album might be a quirky release schedule, but following Arise with Stubb's is smart. His debut painted him as a thoughtful architect in the studio, while Stubb's suggests you better catch this exciting showman first chance you get.

Track listing

  1. "Sea to Sea" – 4:07
  2. "Chop 'Em Down" – 4:03
  3. "Warrior" – 7:58
  4. "Lord Raise Me Up" – 3:52
  5. "King Without a Crown" – 4:48
  6. "Aish Tamid" – 6:55
  7. "Beat Box" – 5:05
  8. "Fire and Heights" – 4:20
  9. "Exaltation" – 6:57
  10. "Refuge" – 4:02
  11. "Heights" – 3:23
  12. "Close My Eyes" – 4:26
  • All songs written by Matisyahu Miller and Josh Werner except Lord Raise Me Up written by Benjamin Hesse and Matisyahu Miller.

Personnel

Roots Tonic:

Production

  • Michael Caplan – Producer
  • Angelo Montrone – Producer, Mixing, Mastering, Recording Engineer
  • Jacob Harris – Producer, Manager (JDub Music)
  • Charlie Boswell – Recording
  • Kelly Stuart – Recording
  • Micheal O'Reilly – Mixing
  • Cambria Harkey – Photographer
  • Malcom H. Harper – Recording Assistant Engineer
  • Greg Klinginsmith – Assistant Engineer
  • Gerard Bustos – Assistant Engineer
  • Will Harrison – Assistant Engineer

Notes
Released: August 23, 2005 
Recorded: Stubb's, Austin, Texas, February 19, 2005 
Genre: Reggae, alternative hip hop
Length: 59:56 

Label - Or Music, JDub

May 08, 2020

Jimmy Page & Robert Plant - Walking Into Clarksdale (1998)

Walking into Clarksdale is the only studio album by Jimmy Page and Robert Plant, both formerly of English rock band Led Zeppelin. It was released by Atlantic Records on 21 April 1998. Walking into Clarksdale took 35 days to record.
The album was recorded and mixed by Steve Albini over a five-month period at Abbey Road Studios. The single "Most High" was awarded a Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance in 1999.

Clarksdale is a town in the Mississippi Delta, a historical home of Delta blues music.

For all of the acclaim it received, there's no denying that No Quarter was a tentative reunion for Page & Plant, containing only a handful of new songs that were scattered among many reworked old favorites. Since its supporting tour went well, the duo decided to make their reunion permanent, setting to work on an album of entirely new material.

Taking the world music dabblings of No Quarter as a cue, Page & Plant tempered their eclecticism with a healthy dose of their monolithic guitar army, hiring Steve Albini, the indie rock producer notorious for his harsh, brutal recordings, to helm the boards.
In other words, it sounds perfect on paper -- groundbreaking veteran artists still taking chances and working with younger collaborators who would challenge them. If only Walking into Clarksdale actually played that way.
It's certainly possible to hear where the duo was intending to go, since the circular melodies, Mideastern drones, sawing strings, drum loops, and sledgehammer riffs all add up to an effective update and progression of the classic Zeppelin sound. The problem is, the new sound doesn't go anywhere.

There's potential in this metallic worldbeat rock, but only a few cuts, such as the stately "Most High" and the shimmering "Shining in the Light," realize it. Much of the album disappears under its own mass, since their are no well-written songs, catchy riffs, or memorable melodies to support the sound. And that's what makes Walking into Clarksdale so frustrating -- you can hear the potential, and even enjoy the album on the musical surface, but there's nothing to make you return to the album once it's finished.
And that ultimately means that the album simply reiterates the promise of the reunited Page & Plant instead of fulfilling it.


Tracklist
  1. "Shining in the Light" – 4:01
  2. "When the World Was Young" – 6:13
  3. "Upon a Golden Horse" – 3:52
  4. "Blue Train" – 6:45
  5. "Please Read the Letter" – 4:21
  6. "Most High" – 5:36
  7. "Heart in Your Hand" – 3:50
  8. "Walking into Clarksdale" – 5:18
  9. "Burning Up" – 5:21
  10. "When I Was a Child" – 5:45
  11. "House of Love" – 5:35
  12. "Sons of Freedom" – 4:08
Japanese bonus track
  1. "Whiskey from the Glass" – 3:01

All songs by Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, Charlie Jones, and Michael Lee.

Note
  • "Most High" and "Shining in the Light" were released as singles, with a music video for the former. "Most High" was also featured as a CD single with the b-sides "Upon a Golden Horse" and "The Window".


Page & Plant
Additional personnel
Notes
Released:  21 April 1998 
Recordes:  Studio: Abbey Road Studios, London, England 
Genre:  Rock 
Length:  64:32 

Label - Atlantic Records

May 06, 2020

Depeche Mode - Exciter (2001)

Exciter is the tenth studio album by English electronic music band Depeche Mode.

Martin Gore had stated that he had been listening to more abstract electronic music in the lead up to recording Exciter, which could have influenced some of the more experimental soundscapes on the album.
The group also often cited producer Mark Bell as a major inspiration in the making of Exciter as Dave Gahan states that Mark Bell helped make him a more confident vocalist.
On top of the electronic soundscapes Depeche Mode also added elements of traditional blues, retro funk, progressive rock, and orchestral pop to its arrangements.

It's rare to find bands capable of keeping their own best qualities to the fore while trying something new each time out, but Depeche Mode demonstrate that balance in full on the marvelous Exciter. Arguably the first album made by the group as a cohesive unit since Violator (and bearing some resemblance to that record in overall title and song names -- compare "The Sweetest Condition" with "The Sweetest Perfection"), Exciter finds the trio again balancing pop catchiness with experimental depths.
As with Ultra, an outside producer helps focus the end results in new, intriguing directions -- in this case, said producer is Mark Bell, known for his work with Björk but also as part of Warp Records' flagship act LFO, which always acknowledged their own debut to Depeche.
Bell's ear for minimal, crisp beats and quick, subtle arrangements and changes suit Martin Gore's songs beautifully.
If there are few storming arena-shaking numbers this time out, the exquisite delicacy throughout is addicting, with Gore's guitar providing slippery and stinging leads to the smoky, romantic flow of Exciter. "When the Body Speaks" is a particular winner, his gentle work and a backing string section combining just right.
David Gahan's voice, already audibly benefiting from lessons on Ultra, is even more supple and passionate than before, ranging from the fuller delivery on the snaky charm of "Shine" to the haunting album-closer, "Goodnight Lovers," a romantic lullaby with perfect counterpoint backing vocals.
Gore's own singing remains equally fine, as does his lyrical obsessions on, well, obsession -- "Breathe," which quotes more Bible names per verse than most preachers, makes for a good example on both fronts.
When the band fully crank it up, the results work there too -- "The Dead of Night" makes for a far superior nod to Gore's glam roots and Depeche's own industrial dance descendants than Songs of Faith and Devotion's "Rush" did.


Tracklist

1. "Dream On" - 4:19
2. "Shine" - 5:32
3. "The Sweetest Condition" - 3:42
4. "When the Body Speaks" - 6:01
5. "The Dead of Night" - 4:50
6. "Lovetheme" - 2:02
7. "Freelove" - 6:10
8. "Comatose" - 3:24
9. "I Feel Loved" - 4:20
10. "Breathe" - 5:17
11. "Easy Tiger" - 2:05
12. "I Am You" - 5:10
13. "Goodnight Lovers" - 3:48

All tracks are written by Martin L. Gore.

Depeche Mode
Additional musicians
Technical
  • Mark Bell – production
  • Gareth Jones – engineering, pre-production, additional production
  • Paul Freegard – pre-production, additional production
  • Steve Fitzmaurice – mixing
  • Boris Aldridge – engineering assistance
  • Andrew Davies – engineering assistance
  • Andrew Griffiths – engineering assistance
  • Nick Sevilla – engineering assistance
  • Lisa Butterworth – engineering assistance
  • Jonathan Adler – engineering assistance
  • Alissa Myhowich – engineering assistance
  • James Chang – engineering assistance
  • Mike Marsh – mastering
Artwork
  • Anton Corbijn – photography, cover art, art direction
  • Form – design
Notes
Released:  14 May 2001 
Recorded:  June 2000 – February 2001 Studio RAK and Sarm West (London) Sound Design (Santa Barbara) Electric Lady and Sony (New York City)
Genre:  Electronic
Length:  56:40 

Label - Mute Records 

May 04, 2020

Blondie - Pollinator (2017)

Pollinator is the eleventh studio album by the American rock band Blondie, released on May 5, 2017 by BMG Rights Management.[

The album returns to a more band-oriented sound following the group's experimentation with electronic music for their previous release Ghosts of Download.
Many of the songs on the album were collaborations written by outside writers, including songs written by TV on the Radio's David Sitek, Johnny Marr, Sia, Nick Valensi from The Strokes, Charli XCX, Canadian YouTube personality Adam Johnston of YourMovieSucks (who records music under the name An Unkindness), and Dev Hynes.
Five of the album's tracks were written or co-written by Blondie bandmembers, with two songs written by Debbie Harry and Chris Stein (Harry also co-wrote one track with Hynes) and another two were written by Blondie keyboardist Matt Katz-Bohen with his wife Laurel.
Lead guitarist Chris Stein stated in an interview with Mojo, "We thought to ask people because there's so much good music swirling about", rather than it being a result of running thin on ideas.
"We sorted the contributors ourselves, or someone would send us a bunch of songs and we'd pick one" he continued, explaining that Blondie and producer John Congleton had curated the submissions.

As the third new Blondie album of the 2010s, Pollinator falls into something of a familiar pattern. Ever since 2011's Panic of Girls, the revived Blondie have been determined to fit within the confines of contemporary music, riding the remnants of the new wave revival and emphasizing electronics. Unlike Ghosts of Download, which was buried as a second disc with a collection of re-recordings of greatest hits in 2014, Pollinator pushes splashy guest stars.
Blood Orange co-writes "Long Time" with Debbie HarryJoan Jett guests on the opener "Doom or Destiny," Strokes guitarist Nick Valensi appears on "Best Day Ever," which he co-wrote with Sia Furler, and the group cover both Johnny Marr ("My Monster") and Charli XCX ("Gravity"). That's a lot of cooks, so it's not entirely a surprise that Pollinator can sometimes seem overheated, only settling into a simmer on "When I Gave Up on You" (which also features a guest in the form of the Gregory Brothers).
That said, the sheets of synths and sly nods to the group's disco-punk past don't seem desperate, no matter how aggressive the production is.
There's almost a charm in the way Blondie push so hard: it's hard to think of another legacy act so determined to play a part of the modern musical dialogue without losing their identity.
If they're not always successful, there's nevertheless something ingratiating about the ambition.


Tracklist

1. "Doom or Destiny" (featuring Joan Jett) - 2:54
2. "Long Time" - 4:35
3. "Already Naked" - 4:06
4. "Fun" - 4:19
5. "My Monster" Johnny Marr - 3:29
6. "Best Day Ever" - 3:58
7. "Gravity" - 3:47
8. "When I Gave Up on You" - 4:02
9. "Love Level" (featuring John Roberts) - 4:19
10. "Too Much" - 3:08
11. "Fragments" Adam Johnston - 6:57

CD hidden bonus track
12. "Tonight" (featuring Laurie Anderson) - 5:39

Blondie
Additional personnel
Notes
Released: May 5, 2017 
Recorded: 2015–2017 Studio The Magic Shop, New York City 
Genre: New wave, electronic rock, alternative rock 
Length: 45:34 

Label - BMG/Infectious

May 02, 2020

Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool (2016)

A Moon Shaped Pool is the ninth studio album by the English rock band Radiohead. It was released digitally on 8 May 2016, with CD and vinyl releases in June 2016 through XL Recordings.

Radiohead recorded A Moon Shaped Pool in southern France with longtime producer Nigel Godrich. It features strings and choral vocals arranged by guitarist Jonny Greenwood and performed by the London Contemporary Orchestra.
Several songs, such as "True Love Waits" and "Burn the Witch", were written years earlier. The lyrics address climate change, groupthink, and heartbreak; many critics saw them as a response to singer Thom Yorke's split from his partner Rachel Owen. The artwork was created by Yorke with longtime collaborator Stanley Donwood, who created abstract works by exposing his paintings to weather.

A cursory glance at A Moon Shaped Pool may suggest a certain measure of indifference on the part of Radiohead. Its 11 songs are sequenced in alphabetical order -- a stunt befitting a Pixies concert or perhaps a Frank Black box set, not a proper album -- and many of these tunes are of an older vintage: the group began work on the opening "Burn the Witch" at the turn of the century, while the closing "True Love Waits" first appeared in concerts way back in 1995.
These are the elements of a clearinghouse, but with Radiohead appearances are always deceiving. A Moon Shaped Pool doesn't play like an ill-considered collection of leftovers; it unfurls with understated ease, each silvery song shimmering into the next.

The pulse rarely quickens and the arrangements seldom agitate, yet the album never quite feels monochromatic.
Sly, dissonant strings grace some cuts, acoustic guitars provide a pastoral counterpoint to an electronic pulse, Thom Yorke's voice floats through the music, often functioning as nothing more than an element of a mix; what he's saying matters not as much as how he murmurs. Such subtle, shifting textures emphasize Radiohead's musicianship, a point underscored when this version of "True Love Waits" is compared to its 2001 incarnation.
There, Yorke accompanied himself with a simple acoustic guitar and he seemed earnest and yearning, but here, supported by piano and strings, he sounds weary and weathered, a man who has lost his innocence.
What he and Radiohead have gained, however, is some measure of maturity, and with this, their music has deepened. Certainly, sections of A Moon Shaped Pool contain an eerie, disconcerting glimmer, usually attained through power kept in reserve -- nothing stabs as hard as the sawing fanfare of "Burn the Witch," while the winding, intersecting guitars that conclude "Identikit" provide the noisiest element -- yet the album as a whole doesn't feel unsettling. Instead, there's a melancholic comfort to its ebb and flow, a gentle rocking motion that feels comforting; it's a tonic to the cloistered, scattered King of Limbs and even the sleek alienation of Kid A. Radiohead are recognizably the same band that made that pioneering piece of electronica-rock but they're older and wiser on A Moon Shaped Pool, deciding not to push at the borders of their sound but rather settle into the territory they've marked as their own.
This may not result in a radical shift in sound but rather a welcome change in tone: for the first time Radiohead feel comfortable in their own skin.


Tracklist

1.  "Burn the Witch"  - 3:40
2.  "Daydreaming" - 6:24
3.  "Decks Dark" - 4:41
4.  "Desert Island Disk" - 3:44
5.  "Ful Stop" - 6:07
6.  "Glass Eyes" - 2:52
7.  "Identikit" - 4:26
8.  "The Numbers" - 5:45
9.  "Present Tense" - 5:06
10.  "Tinker Tailor Soldier Sailor Rich Man Poor Man Beggar Man Thief" - 5:03
11.  "True Love Waits" - 4:43

Special edition bonus disc
12.  "Ill Wind" - 4:16
13.  "Spectre" - 3:19

All tracks are written by Radiohead.


Radiohead
Additional musicians
Production
  • Nigel Godrich – production, mixing, engineering
  • Sam Petts-Davies – engineering
  • Maxime LeGuil – assistant engineering
  • Bob Ludwig – mastering
  • Tim Plank – studio crew
  • Graeme Stewart – studio crew
  • Michelle Shearer – studio crew
Artwork and design
Notes
Released: 8 May 2016 
Recorded: September 2014–2016 Studio La Fabrique (Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France) RAK (London)
Genre:  Art rock, Chamber pop 
Length: 60:06 

Label - XL Records