REVIEW

Music Review: Chris Cornell — Carry On

Written by Chris Beaumont
Published June 07, 2007

Chris Cornell is someone whose career can be broken down into chapters, where solo albums act as the chapter breaks. In the early 1990s he rose to fame as the great voice and charismatic frontman of Soundgarden, a band that I did not immediately take to. I found myself a fan before long, what with the great songs on Badmotorfinger and Superunknown. Following the dissolution of that band, he released the excellent Euphoria Morning, a collection of more heartfelt voice-oriented songs that was decidedly different from Soundgarden. That was followed by the formation of Audioslave with the instrumentalists of Rage Against the Machine, and they proceeded to create a solid style of hard rock. Now with Audioslave apparently finished in the wake of a Rage reunion (one show, anyway), he has returned to the singer/songwriter circuit with this second solo outing. Carry On may not be Euphoria Morning, but it is still a light, sometimes haunting change of pace for one of rocks best voices.

If nothing else, Cornell has done different things at each stage of his career, never looking back, never attempting to recreate what has been done. Sure, I would welcome a return of Soundgarden, and I believe there is still room in the current musical landscape for more Soundgarden, but if that never happens we will still have the great albums they did release. His first solo outing stepped away from the high powered alt-grunge style and was a much more sedate excursion into a more personal side of Cornell's mind. Audioslave was another style still, not grunge, not alternative, but solid songwriting in a great hard rock coating. Now we have a return to that more personal style of his last solo album. It does not recreate what he did there, but it is in that style. I just love the different music he has been a part of for so many years.

Carry On is an album that may have a little more filler than I would have liked, but the highs are strong, and the lows really aren't all that low. There is an aura of introspection to the songs, a glimpse into shattered love, loss, and heartfelt emotion, at strong odds with his work as a part of a band. His voice is strong thoughout, and what a voice it is. This album covers gound that is distinctly Cornell, yet not really. It shows Cornell trying different things, some successful, some not, but never is it boring. It seems that some would rather he just repeat himself, recreate his glory years, rather than try to do something different, and then criticize him for that. This is Cornell going his own way, and I am happy with that.

The opening track, "No Such Thing," is a good introduction to this new sound Cornell. It is a blend of grunge inflected rock and acoustic mellowness that features that trademark voice soaring over it. That is followed by "Poison Eye" which feels like a Soundgarden track with some of the energy drained. It is not bad, but it is one of those songs that doesn't quite work. The slip doesn't last long as "Arms Around Your Love" has this nice morose acoustic pop feel to it that is comfortable and easy to listen to. It gets stronger from there with the beautiful "Safe and Sound."

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Christopher Beaumont spends much of his time writing about entertainment when he isn't sitting in a movie theater. He is known around the office as the "Movie Guy" and is always ready to talk about his favorite form of entertainment and offer up recommendations. Interests include science fiction, horror, and metal music. His writings can be found at Draven99's Musings.
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Music Review: Chris Cornell — Carry On
Published: June 07, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Rock
Writer: Chris Beaumont
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#1 — June 7, 2007 @ 06:19AM — Brian aka Guppusmaximus

Good Review... Though I disagree.

Chris Cornell has always attempted to work outside the Soundgarden scope with which I do appreciate & always look forward to. You forgot to mention not only [the great]Temple of the Dogwhich was a brilliant tribute to Andrew Wood but also his contributions to AIC on SAP,one my favorite songs on the Singles Soundtrack and much,much more:Wikipedia

Again, I don't provide commentary because I hate what Mr. Cornell has done here, I do it because I feel this album is very weak in comparison to what he is truly capable of. I know there is a point when you have to worry about the paycheck but I do feel a stronger effort would've covered that with his existing fans...Believe me, you should listen to alot more of his solo works.

#2 — June 7, 2007 @ 16:04PM — Douglas Mays [URL]

hhhmmm...naw, it is a good review. Did you see him on Leno last night? That was cool. I guess my point of view is a bit different from the standpoint of having the advantage of watching Cornell come up thru the proto-grunge era of Seattle music. I have seen the great bands that Soundgarden/Cornell/and every other grunge era band honed their chops to.

A very diversified scene in the late 70s-mid 80s. And very quality. I should sell my single made in 1985 that Cornell sang on with a band he was in called The Center for Disease Control Boys. It is great! And funny. Cornell playing stand up drums and wearing overalls and singing.

The point is that he has a lot of style input in his system. I like that we are seeing diversity. Give it a chance, it is probably better than we may think right now.

best,
DM

#3 — June 8, 2007 @ 15:42PM — Douglas Mays [URL]

Did you see him on Jimmy Kimmel last night? He had the advantage of performing on one of those live outdoor stages they sometimes use on late night TV.

It is all starting to make sense now. He was able to growl a bit more in the live atmosphere. He has something going on that is good in the long run...

best,
DM

#4 — June 8, 2007 @ 15:54PM — mindful

the album is not weak. it will still be spinning years and years from now. when this guy is gone one day you are gonna feel a real hole in rock music. soak it up.

#5 — June 20, 2007 @ 05:14AM — Audioslave

Disappointed!!! With the exception of four-five good songs, the album is nothing compared to what I had been expecting!! There are too many ballads in the album, and most of them aren't that good!! And, in some songs, his second voice which is female-like, is ridiculous!! He's my favourite singer but I never expected something like that from him!! Audioslave were my favourite band, though! And it was his biggest mistake to leave the band!! Bad move Chris!! Let's hope he comes to his senses and comes back to Audioslave!

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