Whether by design or by accident, the ladies dominate the new releases this week, as three very high profile female superstars release much-anticipated new albums.
Janet Jackson — who apparently wants to be called just "Janet" these days — releases her first post Nipplegate CD Discipline. The record is said to be a broad mix of innocent sounding R&B/pop, frenetic dance numbers, and an extension of the steamier stuff that got her into so much trouble at the Super Bowl. Live and learn I guess.
Erykah Badu has been making intoxicating records that mix old-school flavored R&B with hip-hop for about ten years now. The provocatively titled New Amerykah, Pt. 1: 4th World War is reportedly her most hip-hop, yet most adventurous, release to date. The album will also be the first in a series of similarly themed (and titled) releases. Badu gets help here from Sa-Ra, Madlib, 9th Wonder, and mainstays Karriem Riggins, James Poyser, and Ahmir Thompson.
Dolly Parton's Backwoods Barbie returns the country legend to more mainstream pop territory, after recent experiments with a bluegrass sound. The album mixes new original material with a few well-chosen covers, such as her version of Betsy Ulmer and Craig Wiseman's "Jesus & Gravity."
The 20th anniversary of the Cowboy Junkies' landmark Trinity Sessions is celebrated with the band going back into church, and taking another crack at those songs. On Trinity Revisited, the Junkies are joined by several guest vocalists including Ryan Adams, Natalie Merchant, and Vic Chesnutt. Highlights here include a new, longer-than-the-original version of their classic Lou Reed cover "Sweet Jane" (which Reed himself famously called the best version of the song he had ever heard), as well as Merchant's take on "To Love Is To Bury." This new reinterpretation of Trinity Sessions comes in a deluxe CD/DVD package that also includes a documentary film.
Forbes is the silken voice that drives Pink Martini, the self-described "...Hollywood musical of the 40's or 50's - but with a global perspective which is modern." On this solo record, Forbes takes leave of the Martini's world lounge, picks up the guitar, and gets personal. I'm ready for it.









Article comments
1 - Tom Johnson
Argh! Another brutal page break, and this time I'm the victim!
This is quite a funky lineup of releases to spotlight . . . "One of these things is not like the others, one of these things just doesn't belong."
2 - Glen Boyd
At least the page curcuimcisionists didn't snip you completely Tom, like they did Saleski last week.
Seriously though, the good news is I think were getting closer here. This week I tried to write less, hoping to hit it better. Next week, I may try writing more again (assuming there's anything worth writing about of course). The magic total is apparently 700 words, but I've just never written that way (counting as I write).
As for the lineup, hey I don't make the news...I just report it. ;.p
-Glen
3 - shannon
cool article
4 - Donald Gibson
I believe -- as the rule is written -- that you can only refer to Janet as Miss Jackson "if you're nasty"...
Thems the rules.
- Donald