Review of Nirvana: From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah

Please read Alain DuPuis’ pick for Nirvana: From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah before reading and listening to our reviews below.

Quick Summary: 

Nirvana: From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah
  • Worth the hype?
  • Influence us and our tastes?
  • Would we recommend?
4

Summary and Overall Score

Alain’s pick this month took us back to the Grunge era. It turns out we were all already fans of Nirvana though none of us had ever really listened to this album. This album was a compilation of live recordings throughout Nirvana’s short lifespan of 1989 – 1994.
Though we all had some praise and did overall like this album there was some things we agreed were not great parts of this album. Listen to our reviews and then listen to the album yourself to see if you agree. As always, we would love to hear your comments.


Our Individual Review Scores
Darren Scott:
Overall opinion: 4.25
Would I recommend?: 4.5
Influenced my tastes: 4
Worth the hype? 4
Scott Coates:
Overall opinion: 3.5
Would I recommend?: 1
Influenced my tastes: 1
Worth the hype?: 1
Scott Gregory:
Overall opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 4
Worth the hype?4
Alain DuPuis:
Overall opinion: 4.5
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 4
Worth the hype? 4.5

Review of Frank Sinatra: Sinatra at the Sands

Please read Scott Coates’ pick for Frank Sinatra: Sinatra at the Sands before reading and listening to our reviews below.

Quick Summary: 

Frank Sinatra: Sinatra at the Sands
  • Worth the hype?
  • Influence us and our tastes?
  • Would we recommend?
4.5

Summary and Overall Score

Well, when I, Darren Scott, picked Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison last month as our first round at selecting influential live albums, I thought nobody would come close to matching such an epic album. I was wrong. Though our group rated this awesome album a little lower than Folsom, this was a very fun ride.
Frank Sinatra is at his best in this Quincey Jones arranged live album with Count Basie and his orchestra backing him up. It’s funny, well sung and sounds awesome. Give a listen to our reviews and interesting factoids about this American classic.

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Our Individual Review Scores
Darren Scott:
Overall opinion: 4.5
Would I recommend?: 5
Influenced my tastes: 4.5
Worth the hype? 5
Scott Coates:
Overall opinion: 4.5
Would I recommend?: –
Influenced my tastes: –
Worth the hype?: –
Scott Gregory:
Overall opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: –
Influenced my tastes: –
Worth the hype? –
Alain DuPuis:
Overall opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 3
Worth the hype? 4.5

Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison Review

Please read Darren Scott’s pick for Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison before reading and listening to our reviews below.

Quick Summary: 

Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison
  • Would we recommend?
  • Influence us and our tastes?
  • Worth the hype?
4.4

Summary and Overall Score

Darren Scott’s selection of Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison was well received by the group as we kicked off our round of live album selections. This classic album of Cash’s was just the type of album he needed as he had been recovering from addiction issues and was out of the spotlight for a few years. The atmosphere of the prison and the raw energy that this album produced was awesome. Just when you think Johnny cash couldn’t get any cooler, he did.
Though some of us were not the biggest country music fans and were not drawn to this music in our younger years, we all agreed that this album was great and a must listen. Definitely listen to the legacy edition. Please listen to our audio review and enjoy-we sure did!


Our Individual Review Scores
Darren Scott:
Overall opinion: 5
Would I recommend?: 5
Influenced my tastes: 5
Worth the hype? 5
Scott Coates:
Overall opinion: 5
Would I recommend?: 5
Influenced my tastes: 5
Worth the hype?: 5
Scott Gregory:
Overall opinion: 4.5
Would I recommend?: 5
Influenced my tastes: 4
Worth the hype? 5
Alain DuPuis:
Overall opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: 3.5
Influenced my tastes: 2
Worth the hype? 4
Greg Jorgensen:
Overall opinion: 3.5
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 0
Worth the hype? 4

Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison

As we have just completed a  rotation through our group again, we have now decided to do a round of live albums. We are also expanding our musical reviews by moving to audio reviews. This is a much better format and I am sure all our friends are just dying to hear our sweet voices. Ha ha.
johnny-cash-eating-cake-in-a-bush-highAt any rate, as I get to choose first I am very excited to choose the incomparable Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison. To be specific I am choosing Side 1 of the Legacy Edition of the album. I get into many amazing details about this album. Listen below and learn why I picked this cool album. If that’s not cool enough, what about this photo…. amiright…?
Spotify Album Link
iTunes Album Link
At Folsom Prison Wikipedia Page

Tears for Fears: Songs from the Big Chair Review

Please read Scott Gregory’s pick for Tears for Fears: Songs from the Big Chair before reading and listening to our reviews below.

Quick Summary: 

Tears for Fears: Songs from the Big Chair Review
  • Worth the hype?
  • Influence us and our tastes?
  • Would we recommend?
2.4

Summary

The songs we remembered from Tears for Fears, Songs from the Big Chair were great. Unfortunately, most of us felt that the other tracks on the album didn’t meet the same standard. This album was from 1985 and was very successful for Rowland Orazabal and Curt Smith who hailed from Bath, England.
You definitely have to keep in mind that this album is over 30 years old and skirts the line of 80s pop and new wave music, which was very popular at that time. We invite you to listen to all our praises and rantings.
Our new audio format is exciting for us and allows us to chat and compare our opinions instead of blindly writing them down. We hope you enjoy the new format!


 
Our Individual Review Scores
Scott Coates:
Overall opinion: 2 (two hit singles)
Would I recommend?: 1
Influenced my tastes: 0
Worth the hype?: 1
Darren Scott:
Overall opinion: 2.5
Would I recommend?: 2.5
Influenced our tastes: 2
Worth the hype? 2.5
Scott Gregory:
Overall opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: 5
Influenced our tastes: 4
Worth the hype? 4
Alain DuPuis:
Overall opinion: 3.5
Would I recommend?: 3.5
Influenced our tastes: 2
Worth the hype? 3.5
Greg Jorgensen:
Overall opinion: 2
Would I recommend?: 2
Influenced our tastes: 1
Worth the hype? 2

Review of George Thorogood & the Destroyers: Bad to the Bone

Please read Greg Jorgenson’ pick for George Thorogood & the Destroyers: Bad to the Bone before reading our reviews below.
Quick Summary: 
We like surprises in this group, and I think this album caught most of us off guard. Sure, some of us had fond memories of GT&TD but we weren’t sure how an album like Bad to the Bone would hold up.
Overall, we were impressed at the fact that that this album was still so fun. We had different opinions obviously, but most agreed that this album was a fun introduction into rockin’ blues. The band kept the rhythm and songs on point and it was just so fun. We would all recommend this album. Please read and listen to the reviews.
What was cool about this album:

  • Bad to the Bone. I mean… c’mon.
  • Introduced white kids to classic blues.
  • It just rocks.

What we didn’t find so cool:

  • Sounded similar across several songs
  • Not groundbreaking music at the time, but hit the right people at the right time..

We have also implemented a rating scale that you will see below in the reviews. All ratings are out of 5.
Our Reviews Average:
Overall opinion: 4
Would we recommend?: 4
Influenced our tastes: 2
Worth the hype? 4
Read our full individual reviews below. 
Don’t agree with us? Have a comment or suggestions? We’d love to hear from you. Leave a comment or contact us.

Our Full Reviews

Greg-JorgensenGreg Jorgensen’s Review
The first time I heard this album – back when “rock and roll” meant Def Leppard to my untrained ears – music like this was fun but strange. It had elements of badass rock and roll, but also seemed aimed at the band camp geeks at school (who mixes electric guitar with saxophone??). And what’s with the drums? They were strong but not crazy, and of course I knew that REAL drummers threw their sticks up in the air and tossed their sweaty hair around. and just when things got going, the next song would be a slow shuffle where the drummer used one of those weird whisk things. What was this stuff?
What a blast from the past. It’s no wonder this one has stood the test of time. While listening it struck me that this would be the perfect set list of a live gig – hard, driving, blues songs broken up by slower pieces that show off the band’s talents on their individual instruments and let the front man connect with the crowd.
The songs were suitably different from each other that each one shined on its own merits. Standouts for me were Back to Wentzville, which started things off with a bang, New Boogie Chillen, and the down-tempo It’s a Sin/As the Years Go Passing By, both lovely, relaxed little pieces that are perfect stories to be told by George’s somewhat-shaky vocals. I liked Wanted Man too, but it somehow felt it should be a song by Bon Jovi from the Young Guns soundtrack.
And then there’s Bad to the Bone. Man, those guys sure struck gold on this one – there are only a handful of songs out there that are immediately recognizable from the first note, and even less that remain so toe-tappingly listenable after nearly 4 decades.
One of the negatives for me were that some songs sounded like a diary entry: “I was walkin’ down the street” followed by a rush of music. Then another statement: “And my shoe came off.” More music, as in No Particular Place to Go, which seemed to repeat the same few verses over and over. Not awful to listen to, just…stretching the boundaries of what a ‘song’ is I guess.
Overall this is a great listen, and I’d love to see a live set of this album from top to bottom. These guys are in total control on every song.
Overall Opinion: 4.5
Would I recommend: 5
Influenced my tastes: 0
Worth the hype: 4.5
smcoates-About-Picture-200x300Scott Coates’s Review
Bad to the Bone sounds about as classic as it gets. I’ve seemingly known the title track as long as I’ve been old enough to make my own musical choices. The opening guitar lick, lyrics and attitude exude rebelliousness in a pretty innocent way. Diving into the album as a complete work, I was quite surprised how vintage many of the songs sound despite being released in 1982. Not vintage in a bad way, but a good number of the tracks sound as though they’d fit better into the 1950s than the eighties when Bad to the Bone was released.
Thorogood was definitely tapping blues and jazz roots, laid down decades before by mostly black musicians who brought a new musical style to the forefront. He and the Destroyers put a safe Caucasian polish on the style, making it accessible to the masses. Most songs on the album are toe-tapping fun that can be listened to and enjoyed by a wide cross section of society. It’s a pretty safe and stylish format.
Bad to the Bone is a classic winner that will stand the test of time. No need to go on further about this very well known staple. It’s a Sin is one of the more surprising tracks on the album. It’s pure fifties I can imagine high school sweethearts dancing to at the annual Under the Sea ball. For that matter, it would have been a great song on the Back to the Future soundtrack. No Particular Place to Go was a standout, laying down some fun blues-rock vibes with lyrics that could be the soundtrack of any weekend strolling around town. Showing a side of diversity, Wanted Man grabbed my attention. It’s more of a country song than a rock or blues one and could just as easily appear on a George Straight album.
Overall Bad to the Bone is a fun, easy going album you could put on almost anytime, for any crowd and it wouldn’t offend. I’ll dive into some other Thorogood albums in the near future, but likely won’t come back to Bad to the Bone frequently as I found it a bit repetitive at times. That said, when I need something predictable, fun, and a bit rocking, it will grace my speakers.
Overall opinion: 3.5
Would I recommend?: 3.5
Influenced my tastes: 3
Worth the hype?: 4
Darren ScottDarren Scott’s Review 
Please check out my audio review of this album as we are trying new things here at The Sonic Collective. We figure it might be more informative and entertaining to have these reviews as audio or even video going forward. Hopefully we make the time to execute on this.

The Summary of my review is:
I’m sure not many under 35 music fans have any idea who George Thorogood & The Destroyers are, but I really loved this album though when I was in high school we listened to George Thorogood and The Destroyers live album which was a few years after the release of Bad to the Bone.
I don’t actually see his music style as an influence (name another boogie oogie blues band) but what he did was taught 80s white kids the blues. Think of a blues riff? Does it sound like Bad to the Bone? Yup. By introducing white north American kids to the blues he opened doors and eyes for young aspiring bands to seek out the roots of rock. This was very influential to upcoming rock artists. However, his style of music was a bit of a dying art form.
This is a great introduction to Blues and is fun as heck. Lots of covers here that many would not know they are covers. I really liked this album and had fun with it. Great band and worth a listen.
Overall opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 4
Worth the hype?: 4
Scott GregoryScott Gregory’s Review
I don’t know why, but I seriously couldn’t get into this album. I always considered myself a fan of George Thorogood, and who can argue with the pure testoterone oozing out of the titular track, Bad to the Bone, but I guess I’m a fan of George being spread out over a playlist. These reviews are about full albums, and I apparently can’t sit through a whole George Thorogood album.
He’s an incredible guitar player, and has one of those signature styles I really appreciate, but that didn’t seem to enough to carry me through. Rather than dwell on the negative, let’s talk about the one thing I definitely enjoyed: the slower tracks. I never associated George with a super bluesy slow jam, but there are a couple tracks that really forced me to expand my perception of GT.
As The Years Go Passing By is a very emotional track. I don’t listen to a lot of blues, so there could be tons better saxophone out there. I’m comparing it to George Michael’s Careless Whisper and Tim Capello’s I Still Believe off the Lost Boy’s soundtrack (great track), so that should let you know how qualified I am to judge sax work. Still, I know what I like, and I liked this one. You might like it too.
It’s A Sin is my second-most-favourite song titled It’s A Sin. While not quite as up-tempo and political as the Pet Shop Boys track, I think I can relate more to George’s plight. While I would gladly karaoke either song, I think George’s song would be easier after six or seven shots, and actually still sound very authentic. Plus, more sax. Maybe I’m turning in to a sax addict?
I think we’ve established I’m not a blues fan, new or old, even when performed by someone whom I think has a great voice and is a talented guitarist. If you’re in to the rhythm and blues thing, I think this one was meant for you instead.Bad to the Bone is on this album, and who can resist singing along to that?
Worth at least one listen, and if you don’t like it you can add that one song to your singing in the shower playlist and be done with it.
Overall Opinion: 3
Would I recommend: 3
Influenced my tastes: 1
Worth the hype: 3
alain-dupuisAlain Dupuis’ Review 
When I saw the email come in enlightening me that this month’s pick would be Bad to the Bone, I groaned. My knowledge of George Thorogood didn’t exceed any further than the title track, “Bad to the Bone”, a song that I really don’t care for. I figured I’d be in for a disappointing review this month. Happily, I was wrong. I actually really enjoyed this album. It has just the right mix of rock, country, blues,  and southern storytelling to keep me intrigued. It’s very different from the kind of music I tend to reach for.
Three songs on the album stood out to me as instantly likeable. The first track, Back to Wentzville is fun, fast-paced, and exudes rock and roll. It has all the hallmarks of one of those classic old-timey rock songs. Saxophone solos, pianos, blues guitar chords, and an ode to his car. Nobody But Me, and No Particular Place to Go are equally enjoyable for most of the same reasons, with varying degrees of bluesy guitar solos and sax solos. I loved the energy and the storytelling.
Where the album is weakest is with the slower songs. (I’d hesitate to call them ballads.) Songs like It’s a Sin just aren’t that fun to listen to. Thorogood’s vocals are…  well, lets just say he could be outshined by any of the regulars at the bar where I host Karaoke. Wanted Man is another one that really just doesn’t keep me too engaged. I’m not even gonna talk about Bad to the Bone because I hate it. I’ve heard it ad-nauseum since I was a little kid.
I liked the album overall. Does it hold up to modern music? Not a chance. The bravado-oozing, self-congratulatory lyrics are best served in hip-hop music these days. The songwriting isn’t groundbreaking. In fact, it’s pretty elementary. The vocal skills of George are not exactly gonna set hearts and minds on fire. But, all together with the skillful instrumentals to accompany him, listeners are able to just forget about the real world and enter a world where cruising around in a Cadillac Coupe DeVille trolling for  groupies all night appears to be the greatest thing ever. I don’t know what it is about the album, but I just really enjoyed it. Great pick, Greg! I’m glad I was wrong about this one.
Overall opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 3
Worth the hype? 4

Review of Sam Roberts: We Were All Born In a Flame

Please read Scott Coates’s selection article of Sam Roberts: We Were All Born In a Flame before reading our reviews below.
Quick Summary: 
Sam Roberts is a well-known Canadian artist that seemingly always has songs on the radio. That’s a good thing and a bad thing as it becomes like pop radio where all they do is kill pop songs until you can’t stand them anymore. If I hear Justin Timberlake’s Can’t Stop the Feeling one more time I’ll explode! The 3 of us living in Canada all agreed the hits were too overplayed and it turned us away from Sam Roberts slightly.
The great news is that when we now go back and listen to this album as a whole, we almost all(looking at you Greg) agreed there was so much more to Sam Roberts and to this album. It was a great listen and we all picked up on different nuances about it. Enjoy the individual reviews below and please take time to appreciate this great Canadian artist.
What was cool about this album:

  • The album was great beginning to end.
  • Songs like The Canadian Dream and Higher Learning were amazing songs we had not heard before. Sam Roberts is so much more than just those overplayed hits.
  • We get to post this review on Canada Day.

What we didn’t find so cool:

  • Canadian radio stations absolutely overplayed Sam Roberts singles which turned some of us off his music years ago.
  • Greg didn’t find the album that great. Sheesh Greg, you like Meatloaf and Skunk Anansie but not Sam Roberts? Ha ha…

We have also implemented a rating scale that you will see below in the reviews. All ratings are out of 5.
Our Reviews Average:
Overall opinion: 4
Would we recommend?: 4
Influenced our tastes: 2
Worth the hype? 3.5
Read our full individual reviews below. 
Don’t agree with us? Have a comment or suggestions? We’d love to hear from you. Leave a comment or contact us.

Our Full Reviews

 
smcoates-About-Picture-200x300
Scott Coates’s Review
In the summer of 2003 I was visiting Canada (I live in Thailand) and it seemed there were two songs on the radio, both by Sam Roberts, Where Have all the Good People Gone and Brother Down. You couldn’t walk into a bar/restaurant without hearing at least one of these songs. I enjoyed the two tracks, returned to Thailand and that’s where my Sam Roberts experience ended.
This month was a highly enjoyable one, listening to We Were All Born in a Flame many, many times. This is a solid album from start to finish. And Canadian to boot! There’s such breadth and depth throughout. Truly an album for multiple occasions: over dinner, while working, reading a book, enjoying a bottle of wine, this is a very likeable and versatile collection.
While I like Where Have all the Good People Gone and Brother Down, the two biggest radio hits from the album, other tracks resonate more, particularly The Canadian Dream, which I’m still playing over and over. There’s a depth to this song that pulls me in each time I listen. Trippy guitars in the background, superbly Canadian lyrically imagery and an overall fantastic musical sound make this, easily the standout track of the album. Fantastic!
Debut albums are often artist’s best as they have a collection of songs they’ve honed for a long time, sometimes rendering follow-ups a bit of a disappointment. I’m not sure if this is the case with Sam Roberts but will be diving into his catalogue deeply in the coming months. We Were All Born in a Flame has captured my musical spirit, made me proud of Canadian artistry and seriously turned me on to Sam Roberts’ work.
Overall opinion: 5
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 3
Worth the hype?: 4
Darren Scott
Darren Scott’s Review 
When Scott picked Sam Roberts I was a little surprised. Scott Coates and our other member Greg Jorgensen have both lived in Thailand since about 1999. Even though both of them are Canadian it is obvious they would be a little removed from the Canadian music industry. For me, I had always liked Sam Roberts hits I heard on the radio and I bought most of the singles over the years. However, though I really liked Sam Roberts, I had not really bought an album or really dedicated much time to listening to his music. I would compare Sam Roberts to my wife Shaida’s hair. My wife has beautiful, exotic, curly, thick amazing hair and when people meet her they often comment on how much they love her hair. As we have been together since 1998 I see it every day and though I appreciate how awesome her hair looks I’m just used to it and don’t really think of it on a daily basis. Sam Roberts music seemed like that to me. When I started hearing him in the mid-90s on radio I liked it and knew who he was but listening to just singles it just came to a point where the music blended in with all the other music I listened too. I knew it was great music, I just heard it often and got used to it so I never thought of it day to day.
I owe Sam Roberts an apology. I’m so sorry Sam. As a proud Canadian and supporter of Canadian music I should have made time to really listen to his music. As soon as I got through the album for the first time I was blown away how great it was. Sure I heard the singles I knew and liked but the album was an amazing listen from beginning to end. When I finally reached the song The Canadian Dream I was fully converted. Wow, what a great song, and it spoke to me as a Canadian. So good.
The rest of the month I enjoyed this album each and every time I listened to it, which was often. I also took time and listened to his other albums which are also great. I don’t know how I somehow missed getting more into Sam Roberts the past 20 years but I won’t let that happen again. I now think he is one of the greatest Canadian artists I listen too and I’m actually surprised he didn’t garner more international fame.
As I sit here on Canada Day getting ready to go volunteer at the new National Music Centre here in Calgary, Alberta I feel proud that I got to rediscover such a great Canadian artist. Great pick Scott, great music Sam!
Overall opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 3
Worth the hype? 4
Scott GregoryScott Gregory’s Review
I think most of us had a superficial idea of Sam Roberts’ music coming in to this review. He received a good amount of airplay in Canada for many of his singles, and I think how we responded likely had to do a lot with what we were up to at the time.
I really caught the Sam Roberts wave when I went back to university, which worked out well for me. I don’t think Brother Down was quite as strong an album as We Were Born in a Flame, and luckily Flame was out when Roberts came to campus. I really got to appreciate him in the context of all the youthful energy of fellow students 10 years my junior. Don’t Walk Away Eileen is still one of my top-two favourite songs about women named Eileen.
Roberts is an incredibly gifted and diverse songwriter, and I appreciate how he can keep the instruments thrumming and have the lyrics thrive in front of it. He’s not afraid to let the guitars off the leash, but you get sucked back in by his measured vocals that include great transitions from solo to harmonizing. Truly a joy to listen to.
Already mentioned before, Don’t Walk Away Eileen is one of my all-time favourite songs, let alone by Roberts. You queue this up with Money City Maniacs by Sloan and you’re well on your way to a great air guitar session. It’s loud, it’s aggressive and it’s infectious without being coarse. If this makes sense, I think it’s an amazing example of a well polished unpolished song?
The start to Hard Road is my favourite part of this album. It’s fluid, low-key, and sits underneath Roberts’ vocal amazingly. You have to really be paying attention to catch the subtle shifts in the guitar as he moves through the various parts of the song. Once you’ve given it a couple listens, I highly encourage you to go back and listen to all the transitions.
It’s hard not to go with three of the singles as favourites, especially since half the album received airplay. Perhaps Rarefied? He lets the percussion take a larger role in this song, particularly the bass. The more-pronounced overdub on the backing vocals was fun and different as well. What’s better than Sam Roberts? Sam Roberts backing Sam Roberts of course!
It goes without saying that, patriotism aside, I really love this album and think it was a wonderful pick. I highly recommend anyone that likes a rockin’ time to give it a listen.
The numbers:
Overall Opinion: 4.5
Would I recommend: 5
Influenced my tastes: 4
Worth the hype: 4
Greg-JorgensenGreg Jorgensen’s Review

I’d never heard of Sam Roberts before, which isn’t surprising. Living overseas for 15 years will remove anyone from the sphere of pop culture influence from their home country. I didn’t know what to expect from Scott’s pick, because while we share a lot of common tastes, we also really disagree on a lot of music. We Were Born in a Flame fell somewhere in the middle.
This was a really pleasant album to listen to, and everyone involved is obviously very talented and competent. But it didn’t grab me, and fell into the “starts strong but trails off” category of albums. Save for a few tracks, almost every song made me feel a bit listless, like it would be a perfect listen for a rainy day stuck indoors. There was enthusiasm but no energy. Rock but no roll. Spirit but no vigor. I listened to it half a dozen times but maybe I was just in the mood for something a little harder each time…?
It started off well, and Hard Road was a fun song. Don’t Walk Away Eileen was a good choice as one of the album’s singles, and Brother Down had me tapping my toes. Taj Mahal had a beautiful melody, but the rest kind of faded after that.
I don’t really have a lot to say about this album except that it was perfectly fine, but not something I’d specifically choose again. If it came on, I’d be happy to listen, but I don’t think it will be in rotation on my playlist.
Overall opinion: 2.5
Would we recommend?: 2.5
Influenced our tastes: 0
Worth the hype? 2.5
alain-dupuisAlain Dupuis’ Review 
I vividly remember when this album came out. As it was Canadian Content, the Calgary radio stations would play singles like Brother Down and Where Have All The Good People Gone ad-nauseum. I think it kinda left me sour about anything to do with Sam Roberts. Additionally, because his music lacked the aggressive guitars and snarling vocals that I really loved in my music at the time as well, he didn’t rank very high on my list of bands to give a shit about. But that was then, and this is now. How does it hold up against a matured musical palate?
Here’s the thing. This album came out in June of 2003. It’s been a long time since it was first released and I still can’t stand the singles. If I never hear Brother Down, Where Have All The Good People Gone, and Don’t Walk Away Eileen again, I will not be sad. I guess that’s the downside to the Can-Con regulations. (If you aren’t aware, the Canadian Government mandates that Canadian radio stations play between somewhere between 35% and 40% Canadian artists every hour. This should be a great exposure boost for emerging artists, however, in my observations, what actually happens is that the same few proven hit-makers see proportionally higher rotations on the air. That means a lot of repeated Nickelback, Sam Roberts, and Avril Lavigne tracks.)
The good news: The non-single tracks on this album are actually pretty good! I’m really happy Scott chose this pick. I wouldn’t have otherwise delved into Sam Robert’ discography.
I think my favourite track on the album was Higher learning. I enjoyed the energy. It sounded more rock n’ roll than the singles I’d heard before it. Frankly I’m a little surprised this song wasn’t picked as a single – it’s very catchy!
On the Run had a really rad base line and a sense of frenetic energy to it that had me moving my head to it. That song earns a spot on my permanent rotation for sure. Despite the fact it’s a pretty basic tune that features a whopping 4 chords, it’s a fun throwback to before music took itself so seriously.
Dead End, and No Sleep were also fun tunes to bump to. They sounded fresh to me, and again had me wondering why more tracks from this album weren’t getting radio play.
Overall I enjoyed We Were All Born In A Flame much more than I expected to, despite some of the tracks having worn themselves out on me from years of radio play. The album has a garage-band feel to it, but maintains a level of tightness that I appreciate. Lyrically, a lot of the tracks are relatable and totally reek of Canadiana, which I dig as a proud Canuck. It’s accessible, and fun overall. Go give it a listen!
My personal opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 1
Worth the hype? 3.5

Review of Robert Johnson: King Of The Delta Blues Singers

Please read Darren Scott’s selection article of Robert Johnson: King Of The Delta Blues Singers before reading our reviews below.
Quick Summary: 
Our little music club is getting very interesting and lately we have had many picks that divide our opinions. That’s a good thing. We were again were a bit all over the map in this pick.
We all agree that there is no denying the historical significance of this album but that doesn’t necessarily mean that anyone will actually like the music. One of the largest hurdles that everyone mentioned was the quality of the recording. As a poor black man in 1930s southern USA Robert Johnson didn’t have access or the money to record at world-class studio. It makes it hard to consume these tracks that influenced so many. Also, as the album near 80 years old and this was the birth of blues, it sounds very basic. Check out what else we had to say below.
What was cool about this album:

  • This influence of this album can be heard today 80+ years later. Holy shit! You know that guitar riff? Yup, that one. That came from Robert Johnson.
  • His life story and death at 27 is a twisted and weird story.

What we didn’t find so cool:

  • The recording quality and age were hard to overcome and sounded basic.

We have also implemented a rating scale that you will see below in the reviews. All ratings are out of 5.
Our Reviews Average:
Overall opinion: 3
Would we recommend?: 3.5
Influenced our tastes: 2
Worth the hype? 4
Read our full individual reviews below. 
Don’t agree with us? Have a comment or suggestions? We’d love to hear from you. Leave a comment or contact us.

Our Full Reviews

 
Darren Scott
Darren Scott’s Review 
Picking this past month was hard for me. I felt like we should not always stick to rock music and that we should be really looking at what influenced the music we all love today. I considered jazz and lots of early soul music but I really love blues music and felt drawn to explore the roots of blues. This past October I was lucky enough to visit Memphis and Nashville, Tennessee and the music of Beale Street in Memphis and a tour through the historic Sun Records opened my eyes to the history of the Blues. I really love artists like B.B. King, Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Buddy Guy and John Lee Hooker, to name a few. However, most of the artists I love hit their stride in the late 50s and early 60s. I started to wonder who influenced these artists and their contemporaries. After some Googling and listening it became apparent that many roads lead to Robert Johnson.
Though I had heard the name Robert Johnson and knew of the movie Crossroads, I had not ever bought or really listened to any of his music. I’m still stunned knowing that there was only ever 37 songs recorded of his music. So with a bit of knowledge and an open mind I was excited to dive into his album King Of The Delta Blues Singers.
After a few listens I have to admit that I had some trouble getting past the crudeness of the recording. I did end up finding a remastered version that cleaned up much of the hiss and cracks on the recording and amplified the low vocals and that helped. As we are now used to standard blues riffs all throughout rock and more modern blues the old recording sounded like a very basic attempt to me as well. But then it struck me.
Holy shit! This was the first time riffs and music like this was ever played. Before Robert Johnson, and a few others at that time, there was only gospel and some traditional folk music. This guy literally changed the way music would evolve from that point in time. Here we are 105 years after he was born and his influences are heard on practically every radio station in every format available. Just that realization alone was enough for me to be grateful to such an influential icon and to really enjoy this album.
As the rest of the month went by I found I enjoyed the album more and more… but… I never did get over the basic and rough recording and music that it sounds like now. It is very hard to go back that far in time and listen to music objectively. I’ll admit that I probably won’t play his music much in the future, though I will probably get some on vinyl just as a collector. I much prefer the blues artists I mentioned above that took his music and escalated it and the rock artists he inspired.
All in all, I would recommend this if you are a music fan and collector as more of a historical artifact that is to be appreciated and enjoyed but I think many will find it too basic and rough for their enjoyment. Hey, I like history and stories but I rarely go reread history books. I’m glad I picked Robert Johnson and say thanks to him and other artists like him that break out of the normal to create something amazing. Thanks Robert!
Overall opinion: 3.5
Would I recommend?: 3.5
Influenced my tastes: 4
Worth the hype? 5
Scott GregoryScott Gregory’s Review
So, I remember this time when I thought I would really like steak tartar. I’d never had that specific dish, but I’d had some pretty rare steak before, onions, eggs… all the yummy stuff. What I found was that, even if I’d had them all before and had a close approximation of what it’d be like, I was totally disappointed when presented with the reality.
Welcome to my review of Robert Johnson’s King of the Delta Blues.
I’d heard blues before, often one song at a time, and I had a pretty good idea what I thought it was all about. What I didn’t realize was that I was physically incapable of listening to more than three blues song at any given time. Especially stripped-down versions with just a guitar and sometimes some drums in the mix. Stab me in the eye with an ice pick, please.
I could probably listen to any one of these songs as part of a thousand-song play list, but to listen to an album-full… no. Some of the guitar work is very impressive, particularly some of the picking. I understand that I’m in the presence of blues greatness, and if they’re your thing and you haven’t listend to this album you probably need to or consider your experience incomplete.
I also now understand I’m not into the blues.

Top 3 songs (?)

Ramblin’ On My Mind

I recognized this song! Eric Clapton covers this song, and it’s nice to know the history of this song. You might be interested in listening to the two side-by-side and see the slight variations in the approach taken by the two.

Kind Hearted Woman Blues

This song sounded slightly different than every other song on the album, which I appreciated immensely. It has a slightly more manic feel to the guitar work, like he was playing the music from the last song faster, backwards.

A Martyr for My Love For You by the White Stripes

Not on the album. But it’s the song I switched to the most often to clear my palate after forcing my way through another two or three songs on the album. Highly recommend it if you’re having problems getting through the album too.
Joking (not joking) aside, I’m glad I eventually got through a whole play-through of the album. I learned a piece of musical history, and that’s important to me. He inspired a lot of musicians after him, many of which (Dylan, Clapton) I enjoy immensely. It’s just not for me. Give the album a listen, see who from your favourite artists draw inspiration from him, and enjoy the history if not the music.

The numbers

Overall Opinion: 2
Would I recommend: 3
Influenced my tastes: 1
Worth the hype: 3
Greg-JorgensenGreg Jorgensen’s Review

One of the great things about being a member of the Sonic Collective is that I learn about myself as much as I do about music. I get better insights into what I like, what I don’t like, and how mainstream or alternative my opinions are. With King of the Delta Blues, I got yet another insight – perhaps I just don’t like what most in-the-know music fans see as a classic. This album just didn’t work for me.
There’s a big however here though. Despite this album not really resonating with me, I recognize and appreciate its influence; that there would have been no Elvis, no Chuck Berry, no Zeppelin, no Hendrix, no George Thorogood, no White Stripes without Robert Johnson. The fantastic Vanity Fair article linked in the “picks” section of the website described Johnson’s allure:
“…the preternatural quality of his guitar playing, the bone-deep sadness of some of his music and lyrics, the haunting quaver of his smooth, high voice, and the dark symbolism of his songs.”
Okay…I can see that I guess, but none of it jumped out at me. None of it was obvious to me, and that’s almost certainly a shortcoming of mine. I think when you go back and analyze recordings that serve as the skeletons of modern music – with which I’m much more familiar – you have to have a very keen ear and an understanding of the music on a much deeper level than mere “fan”. The fact that I can’t – and have never tried – to play a musical instrument probably has something to do with it.
I had a hard time telling when one song ended and another began, and they all really just bled into one sound for me. Johnson’s voice rose and fell, the strings were pulled and plucked…but that’s about all. The funny thing is, I would probably love these songs if they were being performed in a tiny little bar, stuffed with strangers and ordering drinks. There’s something much more appealing to bare-bones music like this being performed in a very intimate setting, where you can watch as well as listen.
But listening to a record…I just don’t know enough about music to judge this one fairly.
Overall opinion: 2
Would I recommend: 3
Influenced my tastes: 0
Worth the hype: 4
alain-dupuisAlain Dupuis’ Review 
I’ve never been formally introduced to the blues, so I was really excited to start diving into Robert Johnson’s music. I’d heard the old stories about how he’d supposedly encountered the devil late one night  in a plantation, and sold his soul in exchange for uncanny musical skills. It’s an interesting, Faustian story, and I always wondered who got the better deal out of that exchange. (Spoiler: The Devil did. Johnson lived to the ripe old age of 27.)
With an open mind, I put on KOTDVB, and learned that the Delta blues aren’t my jam.
I have a lot of respect for the legacy they’ve left, and the important role they played in shaping the future sounds of rock, country, pop, etc, but this music just didn’t turn the needle for me all that much. I found the formulaic style rather repetitive after a while, and there were moments where I had to check my playlist to see if I was accidentally looping the same track over and over.
From a lyrical standpoint, I value the storytelling. We’re talking about music that is 80 years old, from a time and a place vastly different from what we know today. Robert Johnson’s music offers an interesting perspective into his world.
Notably, there were no tracks I disliked on the album, which is a first for me on a review of a Sonic Collective pick, but I did have a few favourites.  Kind Hearted Woman is a fun song. I enjoy his foray into falsetto vocal ranges. I also enjoyed the song Come on in my Kitchen. It’s very soulful. Preachin’ Blues is one of those songs where you can’t help but tap your feet and envision the smile on the singer’s face.
Overall, It was a good album, but it didn’t really motivate me to further explore the Delta blues genre.  I’m sure that if I were in the audience witnessing a live performance, it’s one of those styles of music I’d be able to appreciate so much more. I think people should still give the album a rip or two, if only to experience something of historical significance.
My personal opinion: 3
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 1
Worth the hype? 3
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Scott Coates’s Review
Robert Johnson is the stuff of legends. An artist who tilted music on its head, knocked out a small catalogue in a short period of time and then died. Figuring out if you like Robert Johnson is a bit like trying to understand if you like the ingredients in food you enjoy. I enjoy pancakes. Flour is the main ingredient, but I’ve never learned about different types of flour, what gives it flavor and which variety is best for pancakes. Johnson is a bit like this. His music and style were brand new when he hit the scene. The sounds were cutting edge, offended many, turned some on and forever altered the course of music. Listening to Johnson is a bit like trying to make sense of different types of flour.
The limiting factor with King of the Delta Blues to a modern music enthusiast is the quality of the recordings. Johnson certainly didn’t have the best equipment at his disposal and the songs have been patched together from here and there, into this ‘album’ that is … Blues. The quality is far from what we’d consider passing grade today, but in a way, that’s part of the beauty. The substance and gold is there, but below the murky recording quality, if you listen for it, pay attention and dig.
It was marvelous to hear Traveling Riverside Blues and immediately recall Led Zeppelin’s version, not previously knowing they were not the original artists. And Zeppelin are just one of the many artists who have tapped in to Johnson’s genius: Eric Clapton, Fleetwood Mac, The Rolling Stones, The White Stripes and the list goes on. Johnson is also a member of the infamous 27-Club, comprised of rock artists who died at 27-years-of-age. There’s a mysterious air about him, as is the case with many musical geniuses who died before their time, as was portrayed in the 1986 film Crossroads, which centers around chasing one of Johnson’s lost songs.
I can put most albums on in the background while working, cooking and get some value from them. This is not the case with King of the Delta Blues. Perhaps it’s due to the shady quality of the recordings, or the depth to the songs that isn’t immediately apparent and requires more focus to take it all in. There’s a complexity to Johnson’s work that isn’t immediately evident, much like Shakespeare takes several readings to get the gist. King of the Delta Blues is like auditing a course in Rock History and flunking because you snoozed in the back of class and only read the CliffsNotes. To really ‘get it’, you have to pay attention, listen, re-listen, dig deep, and only then do you start to understand the musical base and inspiration Johnson provided to all those who came after him.
Overall opinion: 4
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 4
Worth the hype?: 4

Robert Johnson: King Of The Delta Blues Singers

This months pick was hard for me. As there are 5 in our group now it is only every 5 months that your pick comes up again. It actually causes me anxiety to make a pick for a few reasons. Namely, you don’t want to pick a dud and you always want to honour a great musician. I also fret about those I don’t pick.
Like everyone else, I was saddened about the passing of Prince and I thought that perhaps I should pick one of his albums this month. I decided not to, though I am sure we will get to such a great artist.
I decided to go another route. Back, way back, to the very roots of rock itself. The Blues.
I have always like the blues and I own many great blues albums. However, I do not own one Robert Johnson song. After researching the most influential blues albums it was clear that I should choose this particular Robert Johnson piece.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TdJmkv9lyI
robert2It was picked as the 27th greatest album of all time by Rolling Stone. The album is actually a compilation of songs recorded in 2 sessions in 1936 and 1937. These songs were released as singles back then but someone finally decided to put them all together. Usually we say no compilations for our picks but this isn’t some “Best of..” crap, this is just the first time it was financially possible to have a collection like this released. The list of people that were influenced by this album is literally endless but Keith Richards and Jimmy Page stand out. These sounds are literally the foundation that all rock, alt-rock, metal, punk were built on. Wow.
Though I am sure I will recognize some of the songs I am anxious and excited to listen to this month’s pick and to the icon that is Robert Johnson. I hope you enjoy this pick. Be sure to come back and read our reviews on the 1st of June.
Links:
Official Website
Wikepedia Page
Vanity Fair Article about his strange short life
Other Blues Masters I considered:
Howlin’ Wolf
Muddy Waters
John Lee Hooker
B.B King
Enjoy
Darren Scott

Review of Chantal Kreviazuk: Colour Moving and Still

Please read Scott Gregory’s selection article of Chantal Kreviazuk: Colour Moving and Still before reading our reviews below.
Quick Summary: 
Maybe our collective group needed a break after reviewing Bat out of Hell because this easy-listening pick was just what we needed to chill out, relax, and for some of us, get the nasty taste of Meat Loaf out of our heads.
The five of us were similar in our reviews this month but for different reasons, but we all had to admit that Chantal’s voice, music, songwriting and beauty of her personality won us over. Colour, Moving and Still was a worthy addition to the amazing women vocalists of Canada in the 90s and her philanthropy and the use of her fame for good is truly noble. Check out what else we had to say and put on this album and chill out while you read.
What was cool about this album:

  • It’s a beautifully written, relaxing album that makes you feel good.
  • The more we learned about Chantal, the more we fell in love with her. So much talent and so much giving back. Thanks Chantal.

What we didn’t find so cool:

  • With exception of Scott Gregory we all commented that we usually don’t listen to albums that are in the adult contemporary, easy-listening genre.
  • As per the previous point, our scores for how this particular album influenced us was low as we just didn’t listen to this type of music 20 years ago.

We have also implemented a rating scale that you will see below in the reviews. All ratings are out of 5.
Our Reviews Average:
Overall opinion: 3.5
Would we recommend?: 4
Influenced our tastes: 2
Worth the hype? 4
Read our full individual reviews below. 
Don’t agree with us? Have a comment or suggestions? We’d love to hear from you. Leave a comment or contact us.

Our Full Reviews

 
Scott GregoryScott Gregory’s Review
I consider Chantal Kreviazuk one of Canada’s best contemporary singer/songwriters. And while I remember her mostly from a childhood filled with Much Music videos, these days it’s her humanitarian work and candid social media presence that’s drawn me in. That great musician just happened to be an all-around great person too! With that in mind, my 24 year-old awkward college-self finally found the courage to ask her second album out on a date.
The composition on this album is amazing. As much as I love the piano, I need it to either be crazy-brash like we saw on Meatloaf Bat out of Hell, or it needs to be in perfect harmony to avoid the instrumental version of lead-singer-disease. I’ve listened a bunch of times, and I can’t pick out anywhere she sells out a song to showcase her (amazing) piano skills.
I can’t help but love the whole album, because you can clearly feel it as a whole. I find myself stopping and thinking about these songs. Thinking about the choice in transitions, spikes and ebbs in emotion. I also find myself stopping in songs like Soul Searching trying to figure out just how to classify what I can only describe as the “shimmy shimmy” percussion going on, and how it’s defied any other classification.
While the entire album peels my heart and mind back in layers, I’ve pulled out the three songs that stand out for their own reasons:
Eve
I’ve spent an entire month with this song and I still don’t know exactly what is going on here! The opening haunts me. Like haunts me. I’m talking like instant hair standing up and mind at attention feelings. I’ve poured over the lyrics and I’ve moved from interpretations of loss of a child to loss of childhood, narrator to sibling looking in. I really need to know what she is forgiving!!! This song is costing me sleep and sanity. You should really check it out.
Until We Die
This song struck me as even more relevant today than it could have been 17 years ago. With far more people meeting online, be it through games, social media or dating sites, and the ease with which one can maintain a relationship through cheap phone, Skype, and other services, there are far more people going through the beautiful torture of a long distance relationship. I could clearly remember the angst and exaggerated highs and lows that “being here for you but not being there for you” can bring. I can only see this song becoming more powerful as time goes on.
Before you
When this single dropped, I was spellbound watching this video on Much Music. She was beautiful, gifted musically and the lyrics were simultaneously the love letter I hoped I’d one day receive from a woman and a checklist of what to do to get it. The joy just oozes out of every layer of this song. Listening to it again after all these years, I can safely say the battle of 1994 has finally been decided, Chantal has won the long-game against Raine and Before You has replaced Starseed on my shower karaoke rotation. Sorry man, it was a good run.
My review’s been pretty light on the instrumental or production sides, which is likely a byproduct of the emotional response I had. Overall I love the slow, groovy undertones that run through a large part of the album. I’m familiar with some of Jay Joyce’s later work with the Wallflowers and Cage the Elephant and you can see his influence production here. If you’re looking for a timeless, soul-searching, dynamic and challenging album from a duo of master musicians and producers, you’re going to love this one.
The numbers
Overall opinion: 5
Would I recommend: 5
Influenced my tastes: 3
Worth the hype: 5
 
Greg-JorgensenGreg Jorgensen’s Review
When this pick was put up on the website, it was a nice surprise. Chantal Kreviazuk is a name I haven’t heard, nor thought about, in years. To put a fine point on it, not since 1999, when Colour Moving and Still came out. That was 2 years before I moved to Thailand and largely left Canadian pop culture behind me, so it’s no surprise that she hasn’t played a role in the intervening years.
But I remember the singles from this album being on the radio all the time, and liked them a lot. I’d never listened to the whole album, so it was an interesting one for me. That being said – despite Kreviazuk’s gorgeous voice, powerful vocals, and clear songwriting talent, adult contemporary just isn’t a genre I ever really got into, and this album isn’t any different.
Before You was the big hit on CMaS, and it’s a beautiful song with a fantastic hook – I’ve actually been singing it in my head for the past 3 weeks. I do remember listening to CJ92 and rocking out to this one quite happily on my bright yellow Sony walkman, and it was a pleasure to listen to again. None of the other songs, however, really blew my (ahem) hair back. Dear Life was a nice, peppy listen, and Far Away had some gorgeous vocals, especially near the end.
I’m sure I won’t be the only one to say this, but I can’t help but get a secondary Alanis vibe from the whole shebang. That’s not saying it’s because Kreviazuk is any less or more of a songwriter/performer, or that Canadians shouldn’t be any less proud that she’s one of ours, but any album from the mid-to-late 90s from a Canadian female singer is likely to be compared to Morisette – and simply by the fact that Jagged Little Pill was such a juggernaut, any album from the same or similar genre will likely be overshadowed.
Beyond that, I found CMaS to be a very nice album, but nothing that really grabbed me in any notable way.
Overall opinion: 3
Would we recommend?: 3
Influenced our tastes: 1
Worth the hype? 3
alain-dupuisAlain Dupuis’ Review 
This was a really tough review for me. I don’t often deliberately listen to anything that qualifies as “adult contemporary”. The genre has just never really moved the needle for me. When Scott listed this album as his pick for the month, I was eager to give it a listen, but quickly found myself really struggling to get into it. It took quite a few repeats before I started to really appreciate it.
Chantal is clearly a very talented singer / songwriter. Each track has a unique sound, which is actually not a compliment I can bestow on at least half the albums I’ve reviewed for the Sonic Collective. The album comes together really well. Props to the production team, they did a really great job with bringing these songs together and making them each sound unique but cohesive. I even like how the tracks are arranged, mixing it up between the slower songs and the high-energy songs.
Souls won me over, becoming my favourite track on the album, despite the fact I really didn’t like it the first few times I heard it. That segue from a really pretty ambient intro, quietly building into a verse driven by an arpeggiated piano, and then rising into a loud chorus led by strong vocals really sealed it for me.
Several other songs make the cut for me too, such as Dear Life, a fun 90’s alt-rock-ish-sounding take on a relationship on the rocks, and Soul Searching, a jazzy track that could have just as easily found a home on Alanis Morisette’s album Jagged Little Pill – Trust me, that’s meant as a big compliment.
I wasn’t a fan of Before You back in 1999 when it made waves as a hit single and I was a closed-minded metalhead, but I’m sad to report it still hasn’t won me over. The song Until We Die also didn’t turn my crank. I have always had trouble getting into slow sappy piano ballads, and I struggled with this one all month, despite really trying. (Ironically, it seamlessly transitions right into Souls, which I previously mentioned as being favourite track.)
Final thoughts
As the month progressed, I went from being really eager to give Colour Moving And Still a chance, to having a lot of trouble making it through the whole thing without giving up, but it eventually grew on me as a whole, and I found myself gravitating towards several tracks in particular. The production on the album is really well done. I like the subtle reverb used on the vocals, the instruments – particularly the piano – sound rock solid, and I really like the variances in dynamic range found on most of the tracks. Sonically, this is a really really good album. Everything is tight without being overproduced. There’s a very warm, human feel to it.
My biggest barrier to really LOVING the album is my general aversion to sappy, stripped-down ballads, of which Colour has a fair number. It’s totally a subjective thing, but I’m just not there yet. Maybe one day down the road, I’ll revisit it and find that my tastes have changed.
Overall opinion: 3.5
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 2
Worth the hype? 3.5
 
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Scott Coates’s Review
While I semi-regularly listen to lighter pop music, Chantal Kreviazuk’s form of adult contemporary isn’t part of my typical rotation. I was aware of her name, can’t remember the hit single I no doubt heard many times when living back in Canada in the 1990s, and quite enjoyed Colour and Moving Still.
This is ideal music for lounging on the couch while reading a magazine on a Sunday morning, enjoying dinner and a bottle of wine with your significant other, or painting (if I was a painter). The point – it’s relaxing, soulful, introspective stuff. Kreviazuk’s voice is rich, full of range, and seemed very familiar, like an old friend who’s returned after being away for quite some time.
Dear Life is pretty upbeat, got me thinking about life each time it came on, and put me in the mood to give my wife a big hug. In many ways it seems (in a good way) like the kind of song that could have been featured on an episode of Friends. Soul Searching features a nice blend of pop and soulful vocals and also appealed. Far Away was the high point, putting me at ease and making me feel confident about challenges in life and grabbing life by the balls.
Each listen I was reminded of Alanis Morissette and Sarah McLachlan, finding the songs on this album blended the best of both artists, but in a new and unique way. Overall the tracks on Colour and Moving Still seemed like they could be on the soundtrack to any number of romantic comedies. I kept seeing John Cusack walking away from the girl he loves, tear running down his cheek, only to turn around and see her standing there staring at him. This is a good thing.
Colour and Moving Still was a nice addition to our monthly picks, put me in a very relaxing place on many occasions and I’ll be sure to check out some of her other albums. If you’re seeking a mellow and enjoyable background track while hanging with a loved one, or while baking, this is a solid bet.
Overall opinion: 3.5
Would I recommend?: 3.5
Influenced my tastes: 3
Worth the hype?: 3.5
 
Darren Scott
Darren Scott’s Review 
Chantal Kreviazuk’s Colour, Moving and Still album choice excited me this month. I am a very proud supporter of Canadian music and musicians. I, of course, knew who she was and that she has a very long and successful career, but her music wasn’t necessarily my style. I tend to be more drawn to fast tempo, upbeat music and as I age the rift between anything labelled pop music and my taste widens. I’m not saying you can classify her music as just pop, but that is where it got the most radio play here in Canada. I always liked the songs I heard but had never really thought about buying her albums. No offense Chantal, I just have a massive queue of music I love and you just didn’t crack my personal list.
Again, this is why our music collective is great. Someone will pick an album that you would not have picked, and it forces you to take the time to listen and expand your knowledge of that artist.
As soon as I found out the pick I listened to the album twice in a row and proceeded to read what I could find about Chantal, this album and her career. Though I wasn’t sure what to expect I found myself really liking this album and enjoying Chantal’s story. I was also enamored with her social views and how she is using her fame to make our world a better place. Read her commentary on Kim Kardashian, it’s great.
Though her music was more mellow than I usually listen to at length I was really drawn to the beauty of her voice and the fact that she is an amazing songwriter. I, not unpredictably was drawn to the more upbeat songs like Dear Life and Before You but I did enjoy the others as well.
Her impact on music in Canada and across the world is undeniable and we thank her for that.
I was also impressed that Chantal herself actually responded to our social media posts by favoriting a few tweets. She just seems super cool to me and someone you could have a few beers with and have some laughs.
I really enjoyed this album and I would recommend that, if you haven’t already, you take the time to listen to her great songwriting and music.
Overall opinion: 3.5
Would I recommend?: 4
Influenced my tastes: 2
Worth the hype? 4