After tackling the Gypsy folk songs of ostracized Soviet troubadour Vadim Kozin on 2009s Orpheus in Exile, 80s pop icon Marc Almond continues to pursue his avant-garde sensibilities on his 12th studio album, Feasting with Panthers, a joint effort with experimental composer Michael Cashmore (Current 93) that includes 13 musical interpretations of his favorite homoerotic poems. Its an intriguing concept that breathes new life into classic pieces by the likes of Rimbaud ("The Sleeper in the Valley"), Gerard de Nerval ("El Desdichado"), and Jean Genet ("The Man Condemned to Death"), as well as showcasing the literary talents of celebrated poet Jeremy Reed on several new compositions ("Boy Caesar," "Patron Saint of Lipstick"). But by sticking to the piano-led torch song arrangements of their previous collaboration (Current 93s adaptation of 1763 methodist hymn "Idumea"), the pair fails to deliver anything as majestic as the source material. Almond is in fine form, toning down his sometimes theatrical tendencies in favor of a more restrained vocal style that allows the new translations to take center stage. But other than the Hammond organ-driven "The Song of the Unwept Tear," the softly brushed rhythms of the epic seven-minute title track, and the subtle sweeping strings of "Hotel de France and Poetry," the latter of which provides the albums only memorable melody, the low-key stripped-back production is just too one-note to be considered as anything other than highbrow background music. One has to admire Almonds refusal to conform to commercial constraints, but he would have been much better confining his creative flow to the duos previous two-track EP (the Count Eric Stenbock poems "Gabriel" and "The Lunatic Lover," also featured here) than trying to extend it to this highly ambitious but ultimately flawed full-length album. ~ Jon OBrien
Rovi