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Barnes and Noble

I Will Set You Free

Current price: $16.99
I Will Set You Free
I Will Set You Free

Barnes and Noble

I Will Set You Free

Current price: $16.99
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Size: CD

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In the four years since
Barry Adamson
issued the tour de force that was
Back to the Cat
, he's participated in at least one
Magazine
reunion tour. He was an original member before leaving to join the first version of
Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds
.
Adamson
's influence is clearly felt on their first three albums and singles.
I Will Set You Free
purposely evokes the swaggering, sleazy rock & roll of
the Bad Seeds
and the restrained menace of
's post-punk moodiness -- as well as other stops along his idiosyncratic musical journey. Though he doesn't emphasize the imaginary soundtrack moves of his early records, it doesn't mean they aren't here -- check "The Trigger City Blues," with its spooky organ and sound effects (breaking glass, ringing telephones, etc.).
kicks off the ten-song set with "Get Your Mind Right," fueled by a throbbing, rumbling, distorted bassline that recalls the early
Bad Seeds
. He also cops part of the
Rolling Stones
' "Street Fightin' Man" lyrically and melodically at the end of each line in the refrain. "Black Holes in My Brain" is a fingerpopping shuffler that evokes
's trademark lounge lizard persona as well as his deep love of swinging, bluesy jazz, though he undergirds it all with his thoroughly funk-drenched bassline for admirable contrast. 'Turnaround" uses the melodic, alienated menace of post-punk, though
turns the tables by using it in a straight-up love song. "Destination" is pure sonic attack, directly referencing
the Stooges
"Penetration." On the refrain, however,
throws a change-up: he slips an irresistible pop hook into the refrain and bridge without losing stride. "Looking to Love Somebody" is a shimmering, soulful, 21st century funk driven by harpsichord, rubbery bassline, wah-wah guitars and breaks. "The Sun and the Sea" features layers of guitars but actively suggests
's "Secondhand Daylight."
's
Howard Devoto
-esque alienated prophet contradicts the song's bright tempo; highlighting the influence further are keyboards in the instrumental interlude. "If You Love Her" unabashedly references
Scott Walker
's passionate, theatrical croon from
Scott 4
with
Piero Piccioni
-esque production. (
has the vocal chops to pull it off.) The set closes with an even stranger homage: to
David Bowie
Ziggy Stardust
if it had been produced by
David Axelrod
. Even with the pop music encyclopedia at his disposal, his songs reflect his signature iconoclasm. With their wildly various, crowded musical architectures, his songs' lyrics address desire and death, and celebrate the spiritual impossibility of living "purely." In
's subjective universe, the standalone "I" may occasionally wish to enter the collective "We" but accepts that it cannot.
is the sound of
's liberation as a songwriter, producer, and arranger. He feels comfortable in his skin on this wonderfully sequenced collection of songs that makes no attempt to hide his past; if anything, he celebrates it as he moves ever forward. ~ Thom Jurek

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