Amazon.com's Best of 1999
There's no way to offer a shortcut description of what Beth Orton sounds like. There are so many musical styles pulsing through
Central Reservation--jazz, folk, pop, rock, and dance--that the album could easily have ended up an empty exercise in genre-hopping. Instead, it's a bracing example of mongrel music at its best as Orton carves out a new musical vocabulary with deep roots in familiar sounds.
--Keith Moerer
Amazon.com
Is Beth Orton the folkie
Beck? Or is Beck an Orton with beats? Since both graze from genre to genre like goats feasting on whatever strikes their fancy, drawing parallels is tempting...and perhaps pointless. After all, both artists were born in 1970 and emerged at a time when musical categorization became an exercise in futility. English thrush Orton's third album--like her critically hailed
debut and the
Best Bit EP--prompts one to flash on an ever-swelling range of influences. Since she's blessed with the rich, warm voice of a true pop singer, it's easy to imagine her sharing space on some out-of-time radio playlist with
Dusty Springfield (listen to the elegant, string-laden "Sweetest Decline"), except Orton's music draws on '90s trip-hop elements as well the jazzy folk of
Tim Buckley and vet
Terry Callier (reprising his
Best Bit cameo). Orchestration, upright bass, vibes, and Orton's own resolute guitar give long, languid tracks such as "So Much More" and "Pass in Time" an
Astral Weeks-like feel. All those touchstones and no fewer than six producers might imply that
Central Reservation is something of a mishmash. In truth, Orton's overriding vision is all that's needed to create cohesion.
--Steven Stolder
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