Startseite › Foren › Die Tonträger: Aktuell und Antiquariat › Aktuelle Platten › Howe Gelb – ‚Sno Angel Like You › Re: Howe Gelb – ‚Sno Angel Like You
From:
http://giantsand.com/comments/guestbook.cgi
Brian KC
-taken from The Sunday Times (Culture) Mar 26 2006
POP CD of the week
*****
When rock artists reach for the comforting embrace of a gospel choir, it’s usually indicative of desperation or delusion. Lining one up behind an X factor winner offsets their transparent falseness, and when Spiritualized laid gospel grooves over the heroin blues of Ladies and Gentlemen…, it suggested an unwarranted degree of profundity. But when Howe Gelb, front man of Tuscon’s Giant Sand and alt-country godfather, met the Voices of Praise gospel choir, he laid the groundwork for a brilliant album. ‚Sno Angel Like You is arguably unique among rock’s ignominious litany of gospel appropriations, in that Gelb and his percussionist appear to be working with the singers, playing to their strengths, rather than just performing alongside them. Here’s feedback and faith in perfect harmony, as the ensemble interpret a selection of Gelb’s songs, meshing spine-tingling spirituality with the usual sonic muck. People get ready. It’s garage gospel.
(Stewart Lee)
17:42 on Wednesday March 29 2006 – Cork, Ireland
Brian KC -taken from HOTPRESS magazine Feb 15 2006
CHOIR AS FOLK
Howe Gelb has produced moments of magic in the past, with some of the Giant Sand material and almost all of the OP8 album, recorded with Lisa Germano, fitting neatly into that category. But ‚Sno Angel Like You is arguably the most incredible music the Tuscon, Arizona native has ever created.
‚ Sno Angel is the name Gelb created for the loose collective who put this album together, whose members include singer Susan Odle, guitarist Jim Bryson and now-Arcade fire drummer, Jeremy Gara. All 14 songs feature Canadian gospel choir, Voices of Praise, who contribute so much to this uplifting, often glorious record. They recorded seven brand new Gelb composition, along with four gems from the Giant sand back catalogue and three Rainer Ptacek songs, making for a seamless collection that manages to mash blues, country, gospel, groove and even sleazy rock into a totally engrossing whole.
Apparently the one stipulation Voices of Praise had before recording with Gelb was that he kept the songs positive. He duly obliged and the resulting album is one of the most inspiring collections this reviewer has clapped ears on in some time, with songs like the monumental ‚But I Did Not‘, an infectious advertisement for sticking to the straight and narrow, even when the ditch might seem more enticing. In fact, there really isn’t one bad song here, but standouts include the soaring ‚Paradise Here Abouts‘, the powerful ‚Nail In The Sky‘, the squalling ‚Howlin‘ A Gale‘, the wild Biblical imagery that lurches through ‚Neon Filler‘ and Rainer Ptacek’s ‚That’s How Things Get Done‘, where Howe comes across like Beck’s funky uncle jamming with Booker T’s mob.
‚Sno Angel Like You goes a long way towards cementing Gelb’s place in the pantheon of classic trans-Atlantic songwriters, and may even raise him into the elite band of Cash, Cohen, Reed and Young. It manges to retain the scuzzy, down-home, come-into-the parlour-and-take-a-microscope-to-my-heart feel of Gelb’s previous work, while delivering some of the most uplifting, enthralling, soaringly beautiful and gloriously soulful music you’re likely to hear this year.
NINE/TEN
(John Walshe)
17:29 on Wednesday March 29 2006 – Cork, Ireland
--
“It's much harder to be a liberal than a conservative. Why? Because it is easier to give someone the finger than a helping hand.” — Mike Royko