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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good...but over far too soon, October 9, 2009
It took me a few listens to wrap my mind around Devil's Halo. Being a big Meshell fan I understand how she changes from one release to the next but there were two things that felt weird about this one. 1) It's short 2) the default track order didn't work for me. The first issue is particularly shocking because the actual instrumentation is great. The selection starts with "Slaughter" which begins hauntingly subtle and turns dark and a bit chaotic with the chorus. Very interesting and not surprising in itself to any Meshell fan that has listened to Bitter or Comfort Woman. What is surprising is that when the listener gets to Hair of the Dog, Devil's Halo or even Bright Sunny Morning, the tracks are beautifully produced but are too short. This wouldn't be a problem if the CD as a whole was longer. If Devil's Halo was a crappy release then we could take solace in the ear bleeding torture being over in short order. But the music presented here is beautifully played...Blood on the Curb is a very catchy, mellow tune that comes to mind. Die Young has a great old school 80's feel with awesome use of s synth bass that really pronounces the song at the half way point. Devil's Halo lyrics are true Meshell (as the song titles suggest) but it's ironic to hear them over such beautifully play music.
Personally I had to change the track order. The default setup just didn't feel right with Die Young and Crying in Your Beer ending the CD. Moving Die Young to track 3, Love You Down to Track 2 and Hair of the Dog to track four seemed to have better flow to me. Once I did that I was able to enjoy Devil's Halo a lot more. Changing track orders may seem like nit picking but I have every Meshell CD released and I've never felt the need to do this with her music before. With that in mind I thought this was worthy of mentioning.
In short...great music from a great musician that's hindered because it's over too soon. It would be 5 star otherwise.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Cry in your beer, November 26, 2009
Since its release was greeted with what seems to be silence by all musical press, I hope to think some fans out there will still seek out Ndegeocello - I myself, a long time fan, wouldn't have even heard about it had I not been searching for a vinyl copy of The World Has Made Me The Man Of My Dreams, the loud, defiant 2006 record that had moments of afro-punk insouciance as well as jazz seduction and techno pummeling (anyone know if it's available on vinyl?).
That album, like Devil's Halo, and like every previous album, is a product of Ndegeocello's strongest characteristic - the ability to immerse an album fully in her conceptual approach and direction. The World... was triumphant, but also a little more worn than when she'd worn her anger so compellingly on 2002's Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape. In the same way, Devil's Halo is like 1999's Bitter ten years later. That revelatory album took a strings and piano approach to probe the essence of heartbreak, and Devil's Halo picks the theme up immediately in "Slaughter," warning lovers, "my love will lead you to slaughter/ if you see it coming, I'd run the other way." The album doesn't explore the truth of that statement so much as it explores the long-term sensation of feeling sad and alone.
In that, the album actually plays like a direct concept: a lonely night at the bar that goes well, but doesn't quite cure what ails her. She seems to find a potential lover in "Tie One On," which is a jazzy flirt of a song, and then wakes up hitting herself wondering "Did you really think you were special?" in "Lola." There's the drunken pit-of-depression revelation of "Hair Of The Dog," which simply repeats "One too many/not enough to forget you" over and over again, and you wallow and are released by Me'shell's sadness too.
Really, though, the album is flipped in half by a cover of Ready For The World's "Love You Down" which, like 1999's cover of Hendrix's "May This Be Love," plumbs the song for seductive honesty. Then, Ndegeocello finds some strength - the instrumental "Devil's Halo," the affirmation of strength "Bright Shiny Morning," and the smiling-at-a-new-day "Blood On The Curb" all show a rejuvinated Ndegeocello. By the time the album closes, with the blunt, wounding "Cry In Your Beer," Ndegeocello repeats the fear that she can't escape - a chorus that repeats "Don't let me die alone." Like all Ndegeocello albums, you're never quite sure you're hearing a masterpiece. You're also thankful for every second of its particular - and in this case imminently relatable - approach.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Slaughters the competition!, December 17, 2009
Looking like the lovechild of Beyoncé and Tiger Woods on the cover to her 8th album, Meshell Ndegeocello takes yet another stylistic turn. In a career that has seen her trapsaize from Funk to Rock to Hip Hop to Jazz, the sound this time is Alternative Rock/Soul, similar to that on her album "Bitter".
The 12 songs clock in at about 36 minutes and so cut straight to the chase, from opener the psychedelic sounding "Slaughter" ("She said she loved me/I ran away/ Don't say you love me/I'll run away"), the groovy rocker "White girl" (with loads of reverb effects and dubby bassline), to the beautiful ambient instrumental title track, everything is well thought out and beautiful.
"Lola" is a woozy rocker with opening lines "She drinks until she passes out on the floor" and some dramatic narrations, while the floaty ballad "Hair of the dog" has a nice piano coda. She turns in a fuzzy remake Ready For The World's hit "Love me down" (with distorted guitars and static for effect), "Bright sunny morning" is sunny sounding and upbeat (the closest thing to straight-ahead Rock), but my favourite is "Mass transit" (this could find a home on any Smiths album), off kilter Rock with her voice a soft croon unaffected by the signature changes going on.
A musical chameleon who refuses to be categorized, this arty album is a masterpiece!
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