INDIE ROUND-UP for July 14 2005

Part of: New Indie CDs

This special Bastille Day edition of the Indie Round-Up comes to you from my own prison cell of the mind. Fortunately there is music. But will there be fireworks? Read on. It's brief - there's only one CD review. (Got a couple of others but they were too uninspiring to write about. Also the air here in New York City is like thick soup these days; it takes musical sounds a long time to penetrate through it to your ears.)

(ABBREVIATED) INDIE ROUND-UP for July 14 2005

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Jodelle, The Adventures of Jodelle

Dimwit that I am, I persist in hoping for something new and different, sometime, from some piano-based female singer-songwriter somewhere.

Jodelle's CD packaging, with the singer cast as the comic strip character of the same name, seems to promise something urbanely witty, or at least enjoyably over-the-top. Instead it's dense, earnest, fairly standard singer-songwriter fare, with a sensibility more Kate Bush than Tori Amos, more Paula Cole than Evanescence (except for the rocking "Rabbit Cage.")

So, within that context, how does the CD stack up? Jodelle has a knack for dramatic, velvety piano themes with interesting voicings. Her best lyrics draw vivid pictures of wandering souls and lost worlds, as in "Messenger":

Big eyes, thin legs

Your arms bent to beg

I don't understand what you said

You don't talk like me you're different in the head

Old Indian spirit

On the decline...

You're weighing on branches

You're praying for answers in the wind

Blending in silence

Sending enemies signs

Other songs address more concrete matters. "Stick Figure" makes a strong statement about women's body image, and "Happy Song" speaks with authority about the artistic temperament.

The full-bodied arrangements include tasteful strings, solid keyboard work from the artist, and a good supporting band. But Jodelle's voice, at least as recorded here, has a closed-up, tight quality that makes the lyrics often seem disconnected from the melodies, and sometimes hard to understand. A singer with a limited instrument needs to be recorded just so. Even more important - especially with heavy orchestration - she needs an appropriate mix that puts her voice up front and shows it in its best light. Jodelle gets neither here. In fact, to be fair, it's a little hard to even tell from this CD how good a singer she is or isn't.

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Article Author: Jon Sobel

Jon Sobel is Blogcritics' Culture and Theater Editor. In addition to reviewing NYC theater, he writes a semi-regular round-up of independent music releases. By day he is a computer professional and a freelance writer and editor, and at night he's a …

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