Rock/Pop
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Dressed Up For The Let Down (UK)

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2007年03月05日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルPolydor
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 1715537
SKU 602517155374

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Richard Swift threw his dice down a lo-fi Tin Pan Alley on the Novelist/Walking Without Effort, a collection of sepia-toned curios that spanned 2001 to 2004 but sounded like visionary pop acetates from the 1904 World's Fair. The native Minnesotan and closet anglophile taps his cane down "Penny Lane" on Dressed Up for the Letdown, a warm and deceptively inviting celebration of post-Revolver "Fab Four" ("Kisses for the Misses" is pure, amiable McCartney despair). Swift's laconic delivery is often compared to contemporaries like Ron Sexsmith and Rufus Wainwright, but when he tosses off self-directed barbs like "I played your heart but I broke two strings Jesus Christ, you're a lovely thing" from the swooning "Buildings in America," it's a Ray Davies or Elvis Costello comparison that he's more deserving of. While the album as a whole does wallow a bit, it never suffers melodically. The Richard Hawley-esque "Ballad of You Know Who" may conjure up images of a cocktail-cherry-covered beverage napkin, but it feels more like a wink than a teardrop, the ambling title cut perks up as a ghostly horn trio wanders in from the cold, and the cabaret-style closer paints John the Baptist as "The Opening Band" for Jesus Christ. Dressed Up for the Letdown feels like the wee hours of morning, and that may keep some listeners from breaking it out as often as they should, but like all good slices of melancholy pie, it's best enjoyed in your basement while the rest of the world is asleep. ~ James Christopher Monger

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Dressed Up For The Letdown

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

    2. 2.
      The Songs Of National Freedom

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

    3. 3.
      Most Of What I Know

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

    4. 4.
      Buildings In America

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

    5. 5.
      Artist & Repertoire

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

    6. 6.
      Kisses For The Misses

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

    7. 7.
      P.S. It All Falls Down

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

    8. 8.
      Ballad Of You Know Who

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

    9. 9.
      The Million Dollar Baby

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

    10. 10.
      The Opening Band

      録音:Studio

      アーティスト: Richard Swift

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Richard Swift

その他

商品の紹介

Spin - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "[With] modest piano and guitar...suggesting cabaret pop from the garage." Uncut - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[I]t's fitting that the most striking songs here are crestfallen ballads....Swift is as vivid a newcomer as Joanna Newsom or early Rufus Wainwright." Q - 4 stars out of 5 -- "Swift is funny as well as clever....He might be a man out of time, but his music's timeless." Mojo - 4 stars out of 5 -- "DRESSED UP FOR THE LETDOWN is vividly of-the-moment, rich in melody and wry optimism." Magnet - "Swift writes uneasily contagious melodies without giving songs, arrangements or his grainy croon over to hokey-ness."
Rovi

Richard Swift threw his dice down a lo-fi Tin Pan Alley on the Novelist/Walking Without Effort, a collection of sepia-toned curios that spanned 2001 to 2004 but sounded like visionary pop acetates from the 1904 World's Fair. The native Minnesotan and closet anglophile taps his cane down "Penny Lane" on Dressed Up for the Letdown, a warm and deceptively inviting celebration of post-Revolver "Fab Four" ("Kisses for the Misses" is pure, amiable McCartney despair). Swift's laconic delivery is often compared to contemporaries like Ron Sexsmith and Rufus Wainwright, but when he tosses off self-directed barbs like "I played your heart but I broke two strings Jesus Christ, you're a lovely thing" from the swooning "Buildings in America," it's a Ray Davies or Elvis Costello comparison that he's more deserving of. While the album as a whole does wallow a bit, it never suffers melodically. The Richard Hawley-esque "Ballad of You Know Who" may conjure up images of a cocktail-cherry-covered beverage napkin, but it feels more like a wink than a teardrop, the ambling title cut perks up as a ghostly horn trio wanders in from the cold, and the cabaret-style closer paints John the Baptist as "The Opening Band" for Jesus Christ. Dressed Up for the Letdown feels like the wee hours of morning, and that may keep some listeners from breaking it out as often as they should, but like all good slices of melancholy pie, it's best enjoyed in your basement while the rest of the world is asleep. ~ James Christopher Monger|
Rovi

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