The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Big Hurt  |  CD Reviews  |  Classical  |  Jazz  |  Live Reviews  |  Music Features
unsexy2011_1000x50b

Gil Scott-Heron | I’m New Here

XL (2010)
By MIKAEL WOOD  |  February 23, 2010
3.0 3.0 Stars

 OTR022610_GilScott_main

It's always easy to forecast others' doom, announces Gil Scott-Heron near the end of his first album since 1994. Never having been one for the easy route — remember that, working in the early '70s, Scott-Heron did much of the heavy lifting involved in the invention of hip-hop — this most old-school of New York City griots instead examines his own drama here, narrating from a place he defines in "Your Soul and Mine" as both a wilderness of heartbreak and a desert of despair.

Drug trouble, family strife, too many years spent behind bars: Scott-Heron is unsparing in his confessions, as producer (and XL chief) Richard Russell fashions a kind of creaky industrial folk music out of beats, strums, even a looped snippet of Kanye West's "Flashing Lights." Playing Rick Rubin to Scott-Heron's Johnny Cash, Russell sets the singer/rapper on a number of unlikely covers intended to emphasize the effects of age.

Scott-Heron's roughed-up reading of Bill "(Smog)" Callahan's title track certainly does the trick, though his tender take on the Bobby Blue Bland hit "I'll Take Care of You" only makes you realize how much life he's got left in him.

Related: Molten metal, Hustle and flow, Ye gods!, More more >
  Topics: CD Reviews , Entertainment, Entertainment, Music,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 12/09 ]   Dan Blake and Jason Palmer  @ Wally's Café
[ 12/09 ]   Esperanza Spalding + Geri Allen + Toni Lyne Carrington  @ Scullers Jazz Club
[ 12/09 ]   Mos Def  @ Wilbur Theatre
ARTICLES BY MIKAEL WOOD
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS | FURTHER  |  July 07, 2010
    Astralwerks (2010)
  •   DEVO | SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY  |  July 01, 2010
    Given the theory of de-evolution these Ohio brainiacs began expounding more than 30 years ago, it makes a sad kind of sense that Devo's first album since 1990's Smooth Noodle Maps offers such a charmless, base-level version of the band's synth-addled new wave.
  •   TAIO CRUZ | ROKSTARR  |  June 24, 2010
    When Taio Cruz sings, "I can't live without you," in "Take Me Back," pop-song conventions tell us he's referring to a lover.
  •   THE FUTUREHEADS | THE CHAOS  |  June 16, 2010
    "I wish that I could stop the noise," sings Barry Hyde not long into The Chaos . It sure doesn't seem that way.
  •   BETTYE LAVETTE | INTERPRETATIONS: THE BRITISH ROCK SONGBOOK  |  June 01, 2010
    Bettye LaVette’s previous two albums had titles that required a little digging to unpack.

 See all articles by: MIKAEL WOOD

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed