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Harps and Angels | 
| Artist: Randy Newman Label: Nonesuch Category: Music
List Price: £15.99 Buy New: £8.98 You Save: £7.01 (44%)
New (30) Used (11) from £7.00
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 56
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.3
MPN: 122812 UPC: 075597998931 EAN: 0075597998931 ASIN: B001AN5BNM
Release Date: August 4, 2008 (New: Last 30 Days) Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Tracks:
| • | Harps and Angels (5:07) | | • | Losing You (2:42) | | • | Laugh and Be Happy (2:19) | | • | A Few Words in Defense of Our Country (4:13) | | • | A Piece of the Pie (2:42) | | • | Easy Street (3:14) | | • | Korean Parents (3:27) | | • | Only a Girl (2:44) | | • | Potholes (3:42) | | • | Feels Like Home (4:51) |
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Prowling his constituency again..... August 14, 2008 Randy's back...prowling his constituency with laser wit, astringency and poignancy; delivering three minute vignettes of the present American landscape that make you wince, laugh and cry. A master craftsman in iron control of his material. With Randy back it certainly "Feels like Home."
Sorry, Randy, we've heard it all before August 11, 2008 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
After the depth and variety of the likes of Land of Dreams and Bad Love, this latest offering is tame fayre indeed. I felt underwhelmed and almost cheated by this lack-lustre, second-rate collection of songs. Poor Randy just can't shake off his post-Toy Story hubris. File 13 for this one!
Reasons To Be Cheerful x 10 August 8, 2008 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Sound The Trumpet ! Bang The Drum ! Mr Newman's Back In Town !
It's almost a decade since the pointed and poignant pleasures of 'Bad Love' filled The Wolf Cave with its' intimately bitter-sweet strains.
Make no mistake - 'Harps and Angels' is music that matters. Music which truly does make the world, in a small but tangible way, a better place. It carries within it a warts-and-all jaded optimism born out of a deep engagement with and understanding of his home country and its' increasingly fragile place within a wider global context.
Whether in the big picture - 'A Few Words In Defence Of Our Country' - a sweet and savagely ironic song which the maestro has been playing live for some time now - or in the small tender snapshot - 'Only A Girl' - Mr Newman's innate humanism is always present and warmly correct.
Dignity in the face of dissolution.
The big themes - growing older; ambivalence; love and family; prejudice and injustice are all here, sewn together in a tapestry of scintillatingly brilliant orchestral arrangements. (The band is a real wonder !).
It will make you laugh out loud - 'A Piece Of The Pie' and 'Korean Parents' - but it will also touch your heart - 'Losing You' and 'Potholes' - and in the end it may even just fill a small, vacant, yearning space in your soul.
With the closing number - 'Feels Like Home' - we find ourselves frozen in the presence of true greatness. A heartbreaking performance of a profoundly beautiful song.
The Wolf's album of the year. I am confident it will not be bettered.
Essential.
On a cloud passing you soon ...well worth keeping an eye out for. August 7, 2008 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
This is a review written by someone who tends to dip randomly in and out of Randy Newman's work so cannot be classed in any shape or form a Newman-phile. In truth I tend to find a lot of his work a tad too fussy and ornate for my taste , yet the universal positive reviews for Harps And Angels drew me in and I'm glad they did for this is, in the main ,a hugely enjoyable album . And being Randy Newman it has a lot to say about America as well and says it with his usual verbose wit and eloquence. Most of Harps & Angels, like much of Newman's back catalogue is wonderful, if austere, whimsy. His excellent backing band, comprising producer Mitchell Froom on keyboards, Attractions drummer Pete Thomas, virtuoso jazz bassist Greg Cohen, veteran session guitarist Steve Donnelly and pedal steel player Greg Leisz, collaborate with a fulsome orchestra to produce country ballads, Dixieland balladry, oriental pop and even one song- "Laugh And be Happy"- that sounds like a 1930,s show tune, though I ,ve got to confess it's too capricious for my taste. The title track is a jazzy piano led a tale of a man who believes he's drawing his last breath but us told by a celestial being that "Someone very dear to me has made another clerical error " . "Losing You " is a sumptuous ballad about bereavement that shows that Newman sticking to the simple things is probably the best thing of all. There is also the lovely closing track "Feels Like Home"( which first appeared on 1995's "Faust: Original Soundtrack", sung by Bonnie Raitt, and has since been covered by Emmylou Harris and Chantal Krevaziuk, among others) where his voice is really stretched to it,s limits. I also love "Korean Parents " , which far from being racist recommends that children be brought up by immigrant parents who are far more like likely to make a decent job of it. The oriental arrangement is beautifully observed. Probably the most amusing track is "A Few Words In Defence Of Our Country" is a pedal steel enhanced errr defence of America , though that defence is basically constructed around the argument that "Now the leaders we have / While they're the worst that we've had/ Are hardly the worst this poor world has seen.". Now saying that Dubya and his neo -cons aren't quite as bad as the Caesars and King Leopold is a flimsy argument as I,m sure is the point but is also none the less funny. Elsewhere he rails against the erasing of memory by age on the swaggering pomp of "Potholes" and on the overly frilly but comical "Piece Of The Pie" he fulminates against inequality in the U.S. but because "Bono,s off in Africa -he's never around" the country's saviour is Jackson Browne. "Easy Street" is a nice lugubrious swinging number and contrasts with the finicky arrangement of "Only A Girl" . Where this sits in the whole pantheon of Randy Newman releases, well you will have to ask someone else . But of what I have heard this rates pretty damm high. Only "Sail Away: Remastered & Expanded " , "Land of Dreams" and "12 Songs" are on a par with Harps And Angels.On a cloud passing you soon. Watch the skies , keep looking .. The neck ache will be well worth
Another Newman Treat August 6, 2008 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
As soon as you hear the opening bars of Newman's rolling New Orleans piano you know you're in for another musical treat. Heavily influenced by Fats Domino, Tin Pan Alley and Dixieland his musical style allows no concessions to fashion but his great trick is to let the music accommodate and absorb his sardonic view of the world in general and the USA in particular.
Reserving much of his barbed wit for the Bush administration he does at least remind us, "In A Few Words In Defense Of Our Country" that George is not as bad as the Caesars, Hitler, Stalin or King Leopold of Belgium who plundered the Congo of gold, silver and diamonds and left the natives with...... malaria!
Then there is "A Piece Of The Pie" where "If you are living in the richest country in the world/wouldn't you think you'd have a better life" and observes that only Jackson Browne gives a sh*t.
In "Korean Parents" he shares his satirical view that American adolescents would have fewer problems and be less dangerous if they were brought up by Korean parents who seemed to have the necessary skills well honed which has a resonance with Asian parents in our own country.
But there are gentler numbers such as "Feels Like Home", "Only A Girl" and "Losing You" proving that Randy still has a sentimental side.
Produced by lifelong friend, Lenny Waronker, this album, his first studio effort in 9 years, has all of the strengths associated with Randy Newman: lush arrangements, full orchestral sounds, musically and lyrically astute songs, his shuffling, bluesey delivery and that wonderful stride piano.
Visited by Harps and Angels as he almost dies (due to a clerical error!) he says: "So actually the main thing about this story is for me/there really is an afterlife/and I hope to see all of you there/Let's go get a drink."
Amen to that, Randy.
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