| | Ken Stringfellow Soft Commands CD Ken Stringfellow Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
 |
|
Our Price: $13.79 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
Our Price: $8.99
|  |
Ex-Posies frontman Ken Stringfellow returns for another round of intricate pop/rock confections with the FM-ready Soft Commands. This time around, the singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist broadens his horizons with forays into Burt Bacharach soft rock, soul, and even dub. Writing and recording all over the world -- New York, Senegal, Stockholm, Seattle, Paris, Vancouver, and Hollywood -- Stringfellow has concocted a frustratingly obtuse record that's as beautiful and bold as it is shapeless and erratic. Soft Commands plays like a compilation, taking on Jackson Browne pop ("You Drew"), experimental reggae ("You Became the Dawn"), and heavily orchestrated Phil Spector bliss ("When You Find Someone") with varying results -- the latter sounds like a sequel to the Walker Brothers' 1966 classic "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore." Stringfellow's crystal-clear vocals have always been among his stronger attributes, and they couldn't be any better on tracks like the gorgeous and epic closer "Death of a City," but when he attempts a multi-note soul croon on the bluesy "Let Me Do," the cool confidence that rings true within the confines of his pop material is rendered shaky and thin by a milieu he may be better off appreciating from afar. Soft Commands is full of the intricate arrangements and clever wordplay that power pop fans have come to expect from the artist, and nowhere is that more apparent than on the serpentine rocker "Don't Die," a heavy, complex, and blissfully Posie-esque rumination on death that requires several listens before attaching itself to your brain like a remora to a shark. It's a reminder that despite the occasional deviation, Stringfellow is still capable of balancing beauty and danger within the confines of the four-minute pop song, and for fans of melodic rock everywhere, that's a damn good thing. ~ James Christopher Monger
Recording information: Ironwood, Seattle, WA (11/06/2004); Mr. Small's Funhouse, Millvale, PA (11/06/2004); Qrispy Qreme, New York, NY (11/06/2004); Soundhouse, Seattle, WA (11/06/2004); Studio 44, Stockholm, Sweden (11/06/2004).
Photographer: Bootsy Holler.
Arranger: Phil Peterson.
Personnel: Ken Stringfellow (vocals, guitar, autoharp, mandolin, piano, organ, omnichord, keyboards, synthesizer, vibraphone, drums, cymbals, guiro, tambourine, percussion, programming); Ken Stringfellow; Emily McIntosh (vocals); John Roderick (acoustic guitar); Sarah Edin (violin); Phil Peterson (cello); Tiffany Wilson (vocals); Pelle Halvarsson (cello, Theremin); Craig Flory (saxophone, tenor saxophone); Mark Taylor (alto saxophone); Jay Thomas (trumpet); Chris Stover (trombone); Larry Knechtel (piano, electric piano, organ); Jill Sobule, Bill Rieflin (drums); Gaffa Man, Sarah Shannon, Matt Harris, Jorgen Wall, Darius "Take One" Minwalla.
Audio Mixers: Ken Stringfellow; Kip Beelman; Scott Colburn.
Uncut (p.102) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[T]he bulk of SOFT COMMANDS is given over to rolling, near-baroque piano balladry..." Mojo (Publisher) (p.116) - 4 stars out of 5 - "Sounding like lost transmissions from classic '70s AM radio, it's Stringfellow's best yet." Soft Commands Music | List Price | $15.97 (You save $2.18) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Rock CDs | | Label | Yep Roc | | Orig Year | 2004 | | All Time Sales Rank | 52898  | | CD Universe Part number | 6738166 | | Catalog number | 2067 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Jul 13, 2004 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Ken Stringfellow; Kip Beelman; Ken Stringfellow; Kip Beelman; Jorgen Wall | | Engineer | Kip Beelman; Larry Luther; David Shuman | | Personnel | Larry Knechtel - piano, electric piano, organ Mark Taylor - alto saxophone Bill Rieflin - drums Phil Peterson - cello Matt Harris Craig Flory - saxophone, tenor saxophone John Roderick - acoustic guitar Ken Stringfellow - vocals, guitar, autoharp, mandolin, piano, organ, omnichord, keyboards, synthesizer, vibraphone, drums, cymbals, guiro, tambourine, percussion, programming Jay Thomas - trumpet Darius "Take One" Minwalla
List all 19 contributors
|
Ken Stringfellow Soft Commands Songs Soft Commands Music Review Purchase Soft Commands CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Neil Young On The Beach CD (1974) Remastered
Soft Commands album
$8.99
| | Very Best Of The Eagles CDs (1994) Remastered; Digipak
Soft Commands CD music
$20.25
| | Lucinda Williams Live @ The Fillmore West CDs (2005) Digipak
Soft Commands music CDs
$15.09
| | Gram Parsons Complete Reprise Sessions CDs (2006) Remastered; Boxed Set
Soft Commands songs
$24.29
| | Electric Light Orchestra A New World Record - Expanded Edition CD (1976) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Soft Commands album
$7.59
| | Brandon Fields Traveler CD (1988)
Soft Commands CD music
$9.69
| | This Is Oi! CD (1993) (Import) Canada
Soft Commands music CDs
$19.69
| | Ultimate Rock & Roll Collection: The '50S CD (1997)
Soft Commands songs
$12.09 Surprisingly, The Ultimate Rock & Roll Collection: The 50s features more actual rock & roll than either of the volumes of the series devoted to the '60s or the '70s, including early rock classics like Elvis Presley's "Jailhouse Rock," "Heartbreak Hotel," and "Hound Dog"; Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode"; and Ritchie Valens' "La Bamba." The rest of the album falls more into the pop territory of the era, including favorites such as Fats Domino's "Blueberry Hill," Johnny Mathis' "Chances Are," and the Platters' "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes." Like most oldies collections, The Ultimate Rock & Roll Collection: The 50s is somewhat scattered, but the whole album is enjoyable nevertheless. ~ Heather Phares
The first volume of Collectables' Ultimate Jukebox Hits of the '50s is much like the others -- a grab-bag assortment. These compilations work best for wedding DJs and those who aren't too picky about having definitive compilations in their music collection. While these discs offer a fair representation of the time period being covered, the process in selecting the tracks for each disc was seemingly done with the aid of a blindfold. Included on this particular volume are Fats Domino's "Blueberry Hill," Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel," the Isley Brothers' "Shout," Danny & the Juniors' "At the Hop," Buddy Holly's "Peggy Sue," and the Big Bopper's "Chantilly Lace." There are dozens of similar compilations available -- this one is hardly the worst or the best. ~ Andy Kellman
WCBS FM 101.1 25th Anniversary Edition, Vol. 1: The 50s collects 24 classic rock & roll tracks that are perennial favorites on the New York radio station, including Danny & the Juniors "At the Hop," Paul Anka's "Diana," Santo & Johnny's "Sleepwalk," the Everly Brothers' "Bye Bye Love," Ritchie Valens "La Bamba," Johnny Mathis' "Chances Are" and Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode." It's a solid but unexceptional oldies collection that should please casual fans; more dedicated collectors will find its predictable song selection a little ...
| | James Brown Rem-Embering Roots Of Soul 3 Soul Brothers CD (2002) (Import) United Kingdom
Soft Commands album
$17.09 Includes James Brown tracks originally recorded for King Records between September, 1960 and September, 1961.
Although there's much fine early-'60s soul music on this CD, it's a curious and rather arbitrary pairing of two albums by different artists, the slender common bond being that they happened to have been issued in the U.K. by the Ember label. The first 12 tracks are the ones that comprised James Brown's early-'60s LP The Amazing James Brown, which was retitled Tell Me What You're Gonna Do when it was issued in the U.K. in 1964 (as the first of Brown's studio albums to become available in Britain). Under whatever title it was released, this was about as good as an early-'60s soul album got, catching Brown just at the point where he was moving from gospel-fired R&B to dynamic, jazzy, and rhythmically innovative soul. The ballads "I Don't Mind" and "Lost Someone" were pretty big hits, but the rest of the tracks are in same ballpark of quality and cover a lot of ground. Covers of jump blues (Roy Brown's "Love Don't Love Nobody") and doo wop (Billy Ward's "The Bells") are homages to Brown's roots, but the funky jazz licks and eccentric tempos in "Dancin' Little Thing" and "And I Do Just What I Want" are clear signposts to the singer's mid-'60s funk breakthroughs. The eight Eddie Floyd tracks were recorded circa 1962-1964 (the lengthy liner notes are frustratingly cloudy about the exact dates) for the LuPine and SAFICE labels, ...
| | Best Of April Wine CD (2003) Import
Soft Commands CD music
$15.15
| | Emerson, Lake, And Palmer Works, Vol. 1 CDs (1977)
Soft Commands music CDs
$19.79 The larger-than-life music created by ELP was dependent upon the equally sizable musical/personal egos of its members. By 1977, the inevitable acrimony between the three had caused an aesthetic and spiritual decline. On the two separately ...
| | Jubilee Faith CD (2007)
Soft Commands songs
$5.69
| | 20 Exitos Romanticos A Voces Y Guitarras CD (1999)
$10.65 |
|
|