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iTunes Review

Loudon Wainwright’s early albums in the early 1970s were threadbare acoustic exercises that spotlighted an honest, idiosyncratic wit that had little in common with the warm, sentimental singer-songwriters of the era. Over the years, he grew more comfortable in the studio, learning to work with session musicians who could color his sentiments without steamrolling over his ideas. Roots-oriented producer Joe Henry worked with Wainwright for director Judd Apatow’s soundtrack to Knocked Up and the two hit the studio to rework this collection of overlooked Wainwright classics. Wainwright’s voice is deeper and more affecting. He sings with greater warmth and less angst and contempt. The pathetic, desperate singer-songwriter who tries to woo the potential groupie to his room for “Motel Blues” sounds almost resigned to his barren fate. The wariness over potential fame in “Saw Your Name In the Paper” now sounds like experience well learned. “New Paint” is now sung from the age it requires. But it’s Greg Leisz’s pedal steel, Jay Bellerose’s drums, and Patrick Warren’s keys that transform these tunes into full color films where they were once eerie sketches.

Customer Reviews

WOW

Loudon has never sounded better. Movies might be a mother to you, but music is a father to me. School Days really shows the seasoning of a great performer. It gave me goosebumps and I can't stop listening to it. Old Friend touched a personal spot in me too, along with Needless to Say. Way to go Loudon. You live again, and this time it will be better.

Hurray for Loudon

Yeah, the production, playing, singing, phrasing, et cetera, are all flawless on this LP. And the songwriting. 'swhat folks oughta aspire to. I stumbled upon Recovery whilst looking for a digital version of Be Careful There's a Baby in the House from Album II. I noticed that neither Album I or II are available from iTunes, alas. There's something about the hilarity and humanity of those productions that got inside me back then, when I was a kid -- life altering sh*t -- that couldn't possibly be resurrected in new versions. That said, these ditties deserve a showcase, and the new production does them more than justice. The guy's a f*cking Pro with a History -- ain't no way he's gonna set fire to his babies. So, yeah, way worth the price of admission. But, if you want to pee yer pants laughing and crying, filled with gratitude and swelling with anger, angst, humility -- hell, All The Gang -- listen to the originals.

first review!!!

this is a good album. good but not great

Biography

Born: September 5, 1946 in Chapel Hill, NC

Genre: Singer/Songwriter

Years Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Loudon Wainwright III grew up in the town of Bedford in wealthy Westchester County north of New York City, the son of Loudon S. Wainwright Jr., a writer and editor at Life magazine and a direct descendant of colonial governor Peter Stuyvesant. Wainwright became a folk singer/songwriter in the late '60s, singing humorous and nakedly honest autobiographical songs. Signed to Atlantic Records, he recorded Album I (1970) and Album II (1971), accompanying himself on acoustic guitar, before switching to...
Full Bio

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