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| 1. Everything In Its Right Place |
| 2. Knives Out |
| 3. Black Star |
| 4. Karma Police |
| 5. Let Down |
| 6. Airbag |
| 7. Subterranean Homesick Alien |
| 8. Thinking About You |
| 9. Exit Music (For A Film) |
| 10. You |
| 11. Bulletproof |
| 12. Fake Plastic Trees |
| 13. I Can't |
| 14. True Love Waits |
| 15. Motion Picture Soundtrack |
As piano pieces, True Love Waits is a very mixed bag. Throughout - and, indeed, in passages of virtually every piece - you will hear what may strike you as New Age Pulse Music - the languid, lovely title song, the pretty Knives Out, even Everything In Its Right Place (although the darkly throbbing chords seem a tad too ominous for Windham Hill). In its repetitive motifs, Let Down almost sounds as though it spiraled out of the Philip Glass songbook.
And some of this music will strike you as squarely within the Elton John-Billy Joel genre of banged out block chords, with O'Riley flooring the "loud pedal" for extra sonic effect. I refer specifically to Black Star, but you can also hear this throughout in most of the forte passages.
Still other time we hear lovely, lyrical moments - in, say, Karma Police or Fake Plastic Trees or Subterranean Homesick Alien (I've always loved that title's Dylan reference) - and sweetly wistful sounds that wouldn't seem inappropriate in a piano bar, tinkling-wafting up from a dark corner out over solitary drinkers hunched around their glasses.
... Read more ›Any Radiohead fan with any piano skills whatsoever has already worked out rudimentary versions of piano-friendly classics like "Knives Out," "Everything In Its Right Place," or "Karma Police." But O'Riley is a much more talented technical player than most of us, and his fingerwork allows for some subtle, sometimes startling revisions of songs we thought we knew. Where Brad Mehldau demonstrated the potential for improvisation just below the surface of songs like "Exit Music...", O'Riley teases out their classical perfection.
I was particularly impressed with the song choices. He manages a fairly even spread, pulling selections from "Pablo Honey," "The Bends," and "Kid A" (although three from the former does seem excessive, especially with only two from the "Amnesiac" era), but passing over some of the more obvious favorites in favor of less popular choices like "Thinking About You," "Black Star," and "Motion Picture Soundtrack." At the end of the day, this record has more to say than Mehldau's interpretations and holds more interest than the string quartet recording of "Ok Computer" released a few years back.
A great CD. A nice change of pace for Radiohead fans. It makes you appreciate not just the talent of Mr. O'Riley (which is considerable) but also how the music of Radiohead translates on so many different levels.