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Hard Candy (New UK Version)

Counting Crows

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Album Review

Hard Candy is the sound of a band at a creative and poetic summit. Over three previous studio recordings, Counting Crows have moved through varied musical territories as a way of conveying emotion through performance, texture, and nuance, the place where the mood-meets the heart-meets the mind. Hard Candy is both a radical departure from the band's previous method of recording, and contextually, an affirmation of what sets them apart from virtually every other band on the rock & roll scene: their commitment to songwriting as craft. These 13 tracks are strongly committed to conveying a song in the hook rather than in the lyric. They are tight, crisp, and razor sharp pop songs on a bright, shiny, rock record. Every backing vocal, every lilting string, trumpet line, or piano run, is meticulously crafted and scripted into this invigorating musical architecture — and lyrically, Adam Duritz offers at least as much as he's given on any other album. The set opens with the title track, a wide-open four/four rocker illustrated by shimmering piano lines and ringing Byrds-like 12-string electric guitars punching up the middle. Duritz sings with an Allen Ginsberg-like heroic candor: "On certain Sundays in November when the weather bothers me/I empty drawers of other summers/where my shadows used to be...You send your lover off to China and you wait for her to call/You put your girl up on a pedestal and you wait for her to fall/I put my summers back in a letter/All the regrets you can't forget are somehow pressed upon a picture in the face of such an ordinary girl." These lines reflect the entwined themes that run through virtually every song on the record: memory, the regret of loss due to ignorance, and pervasive loneliness in everyday life. Even the humorous songs here, such as the first single, "American Girls," offer candid meditations on these subjects. Other tracks, such as "Butterfly Reverse," co-written with Ryan Adams, offer stunningly textured instrumentation and wondrously pastoral pop melodies accented by a grand piano holding the middle against a huge wash of fawning strings and rim shots as the lyrics drip like dirty rainwater into a puddle in the middle of the street. Ultimately, this record, with its many seeming aberrations, will no doubt attract new fans without alienating the old. These 13 stories are as wondrously accessible in their sheeny glory, yet as moving and profound as anything pop music has to offer. [This U.K. version of the album includes a bonus track.]

Customer Reviews

just buy it and you'll see what i mean!

Going shopping with a friend one day he saw this CD and told me my music collection was incomplete without this. At first i thought he was exagerating a bit, now i realise this CD could make up a CD collection! It has been my most favourite CD for 3 years now, you can never tire of listening to its genius! Holiday in Spain has also been my favourite song since the moment i first heard it. This really is the best album i have ever listened to!!

Buy it!

A stunning album - one of those where you don't skip forward to get to the better tracks. It simply gets better each time you listen. Every track is worth listening to again and again. Personally I love Good Time and the achingly beautiful and sad Black and Blue, but next month I'll have a new favourite. It really is one of those albums you'll keep listening to!!

One of my favourite albums.

And also one of the best 'pop' albums made, in my opinion, for many years. This along with THis Desert Life and AaEA make up the Crows finest work, and this album is possibly the only thing they have done which deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as the latter. A joyous and upbeat intro with "Hard Candy" gives way to the comic "Americans Girls", then "Good Time" introspective, lyrically astounding and possibly for those looking for a "Anna Begins" melancholy the high point of this album. If I Could Give All My Love, Why Should You Come & Up All Night have a western tinge, which shadows all Crows songs, and are in my opinion the most memorable moments, the long dragged out intro to the chorus "sooooo-why should you come...." cheif amongst them. I rarely give 5*, Hendrix, early Crows and one blur album are the only which spring to mind; therefore this album must, by my harsh criteria, be EXCELLENT! 10/10

Biography

Formed: August, 1991 in San Francisco, CA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

With their angst-filled hybrid of Van Morrison, the Band, and R.E.M., Counting Crows became an overnight sensation in 1994. Only a year earlier, the band was a group of unknown musicians, filling in for the absent Van Morrison at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremony; they were introduced by an enthusiastic Robbie Robertson. Early in 1993, the band recorded their debut album, August and Everything After, with T-Bone Burnett. Released the fall, it was a dark and somber record, driven by the morose...
Full bio

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