Arab Times

‘Family’ deliver real heart

Another Kanye … this time, darker

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F“Felix Culpa” (Family and Friends) The first full-length album by the indie folk-rock collective Family and Friends rings a few familiar bells.

There’s a jam-band vibe that echoes the work of Lord Huron and Local Natives, rollicking along with a strong bass rhythm underpinni­ng that gives it real forward lean.

It’s also hard to imagine that this ensemble, based out of Athens, Georgia, didn’t spend time soaking up the sound of U2, especially the finger-picked electric strumming of the Edge.

But the songs here offer more variety than Lord Huron and Local Natives, circumvent­ing the pitfall that makes much of what those bands produce sound the same.

And while there may not be anything that alters the trajectory of rock ‘n’ roll the way U2 did in its heyday, Family and Friends lay it out there with honesty, energy and enough nuance to reward repeated listening.

There’s the soaring urgency of “Hold On to Your Love,” a pour-itout anthem that would be at home on many a heartbreak playlist. So will “Better Days,” for that matter, another beautifull­y wistful anthem that also comes from the I’m-losing-you school of love songs.

That’s a theme throughout the album,

an apparent suicide at age 61, was among those who stood up for her on Twitter. The celebrity chef and TV host asked to meet her for coffee while she was on a media tour in New York, and he ended up publishing a book of her columns, “Grand

Holder

By Scott Stroud

Bourdain

though the approaches and pacing range around. Similar demons haunt one of the album’s best songs, “So Within/So Without.”

So no, this independen­tly-produced album may not be the most original record to surface in recent years. But it’s a fine early effort, delivered with real heart, from an emerging band that deserves more attention going forward.

The omnipresen­t Kanye West returned Friday with his second album in as many weeks, this time a darker take on life’s anxieties with his protege Kid Cudi.

After a year of silence in which he sought treatment for mental health, West roared back in April with typical headline-grabbing antics as he became a rare African American celebrity to support President Donald Trump.

West on June 1 returned with his eighth studio album, “Ye,” in which he turned introspect­ive about his insecuriti­es but, with a hasty seven tracks, showed himself to be less ambitious than when he put out sprawling opuses a decade ago.

The rap superstar made good on the schedule promised over his Twitter feed as he released another seventrack album on Friday, a collaborat­ion with Kid Cudi called “Kids See Ghosts.” (Agencies)

Forks: A History of American Dining in 128 Reviews.”

In the foreword, Bourdain wrote: “Anyone who comes away from this work anything less than charmed by Ms. Hagerty — and the places and characters she describes — has a heart of stone. This book kills snark dead.” (AP)

WASHINGTON:

With a judge set to rule in the trial over the merger of AT&T and Time Warner, any decision could have a far-reaching impact on the media and communicat­ions sector and the future course of antitrust enforcemen­t.

US District Judge Richard Leon is set to announce his verdict June 12 in the $85 billion merger of wireless and broadband giant AT&T with media-entertainm­ent conglomera­te Time Warner. (AFP)

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