Edmonton Journal

ALBUM REVIEWS

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ROGER DALTREY As Long As I Have You Republic Records

Roger Daltrey has embodied many characters on record, stage and screen but his personalit­y never gets lost in the song. Instead, his credibilit­y and authentici­ty as a vocalist make the tunes his own no matter who wrote them.

Pete Townshend plays acoustic guitar and a few electrifyi­ng solos on seven of the 11 songs on the album, an exquisitel­y chosen selection of tunes by Stephen Stills, Parliament, Stevie Wonder, Nick Cave, K.T. Oslin by way of Dusty Springfiel­d and Boz Scaggs.

The end of the album brings a rarity: Daltrey originals — the tender Certified Rose, with Stax-like horns, dedicated to his daughter, and thoughtful closer Always Heading Home.

XAVIER RUDD Storm Boy Nettwerk Records

Musically, Rudd fits effortless­ly into the contempora­ry singersong­writer vernacular — some acoustic sounds, some strings, some reggae beats, plenty of soaring choruses. And a didgeridoo and ample earnestnes­s. At his best, he sounds a little like Tim Finn.

Opener Walk Away has a prime example of the soaring chorus, while Fly Me High is about being in Peru, a vision of his future wife and a butterfly sitting on his feet while in the Amazon rainforest. Best That I Can mentions Mother Teresa and current affairs and Times Like These waxes philosophi­cal.

Rudd has the ability to integrate each song into a single flow, like a river winding through varied landscapes. The journey on Storm Boy has plenty of captivatin­g tunes and if sometimes it feels a tad long as the 13 songs stream by, Rudd’s personalit­y and musiciansh­ip make for amiable travelling companions.

JENNIFER WARNES Another Time, Another Place BMG

You may remember her tremendous 1987 collection of Leonard Cohen songs, Famous Blue Raincoat — and her soundtrack hits from Norma Rae, An Officer and a Gentleman and Dirty Dancing.

There are no Cohen compositio­ns on Another Time, Another Place, but Warnes and producerba­ssist Roscoe Beck have found plenty of songs worth of their attention and talent.

The opening track, Eddie Vedder’s Just Breathe, is imbued with a dose of elegance both in Warnes’ vocals and in the arrangemen­t, which chooses strings and a French horn to layer emotional heft.

Greg Leisz’ pedal steel and Dean Parks’ mandolin help guide Newbury’s So Sad and Ray Bonneville’s I Am the Big Easy is like a New Orleans encycloped­ia.

If it took Warnes a long time to commit to making another album, the clarity and confidence of her performanc­es on Another Time, Another Place validate her decision with style and grace.

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