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Amy MacDonald is that proverbial old head on young shoulders, a Scottish singer-songwriter who, despite her tender 19 years, writes songs with the grace, wisdom, and proficiency of one with a score more on the clock. As influenced by the Libertines as by any venerable old folk hand, the eleven songs on
This Is the Life combine a traditional, acoustic folk-rock sound with a youthful spirit and self-assured lyrics that veer between the observational and the confessional. "Poison Prince" is a jagged guitar strut dedicated to some Doherty-like bad boy, a song every bit as pathos-laden as the Libertines at their doomed, romantic best with a closing treatise to find "An upbeat song/So we can dance the night away," while "Mr. Rock & Roll" begins as a wryly withering jibe at some perennial party animals, but by the chorus has softened into a subtle, touching tale of human coupling. MacDonald's age doesn't seem to have been an impediment--"Youth of Today," reportedly written when she was 15, is one of the better tracks here, while "Footballer's Wife" is a clear-headed attack on vapid Barbie-doll celebrity that suggests this girl is very much on the right track. "
Rolling Stone, here I come, watch out everyone/I'm singing my song," she sings on "Let's Start a Band." Let that be a warning to you. --
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The Boston Globe - James Reed
AMY MACDONALD From Scotland comes Amy MacDonald, a fetching 20-year-old lass with a guitar, a strong will, thick eyeliner, and a voice that snaps you to attention. MacDonald is on the rootsier side of pop - more KT Tunstall than Lily Allen - and the '60s aren't exactly her guiding light. Her songwriting themes are universal, but her perspective is decidedly youthful. "Poison Prince" is a salute to forever-in-trouble rocker Pete Doherty, and MacDonald makes her rock-star ambitions clear on "Let's Start a Band": "Give me a stage and I'll be a rock 'n' roll queen/ Your 20th-century cover of a magazine/ Rolling Stone, here I come/ Watch out, everyone/ I'm singing, I'm singing my song." MacDonald's album, "This Is the Life," will be released stateside in August, but she'll preview her songs April 28 with her debut US performance at cozy Great Scott in Allston. We give her a year before she's headlining the Orpheum.