Little Black Dress - Anny Celsi

Man, there's a lot of great music out there - it drives me insane when people say "they just don't make 'em like they used to." In fact they do make 'em like they used to: right now artists are working successfully in virtually all styles and substyles and combinations of styles known to man since the dawn of recording.

Obviously there is better and worse music being made, and often the original impulse in a given genre is the freshest expression of that impulse, but that isn't close to being universally true and there is more fine music being made RIGHT NOW than in any time in history. Of course there is a lot of crap, too, but what else is new, and that's what Blogcritics is for: helping you to sort the schwingin' from the flaccid, the kernel from the husk, the dew from the doo.

Last month I reviewed an outstanding tribute to Lee Hazlewood, the song auteur who has used pop styles as a palette from which to paint sophisticated, noirish vignettes of relationships waxing and waning with a startling specificity.

Anny Celsi has proved the Hazlewood style of pop mining in the service of a pulp fiction song cycle is alive and thriving. I popped on her new Little Black Dress and Other Stories disc last night as I was recovering from strain of the Easter mini-vacation because the cover caught my eye: a striking Hopperesque, low-horizon illustration of a femme fatale in a little black dress perched on the shoulder of an open highway, emblematic Route 66 convertible slowing down to take a look.

The CD lives up to the cover: Chelsea's songwriting is amazingly in command of various pop-rock idioms as she tells her tale:

    She was at the end of the bar, giving me her profile as she threw down her third martini. She had a mouth like an inkstain and a laugh like a fire engine, loud enough to drown out the band. I wondered what she was celebrating. A girl like that, a laugh that loud – either she’d just buried her husband or she’d just gotten off shift at the Macy’s cosmetics counter. Either way was okay with me — I could use a good laugh tonight. I motioned to the bartender for another, then nodded toward the end of the bar, where Fire Engine was busy spilling her purse and rethinking her lipstick. "Buyin’ one for the party doll, eh?" He shrugged as he reached for the gin. "It’s your dime, buddy." Yeah. Everybody's a critic....
The CD package contains cool little story snippets such as this to set the mood for each song.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2

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Article Author: Eric Olsen

Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Anny

    Apr 22, 2003 at 5:32 pm

    PS - CD Baby also has an associates program that will help support your org. Go to their website & check it out -- A.

  • 2 - Eric Olsen

    Apr 22, 2003 at 6:12 pm

    Oops, sorry, deleted one extra comment too many, Anny. I am honored you stopped by and sorry to hear about Amazon not making it easy for indies. I love the album.

    Thanks for the tip about CD Baby, we should definitely sign up there as well.

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