Trinity Revisited CD DVD Music Cd

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Trinity Revisited [CD/DVD]
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Trinity Revisited [CD/DVD]
     Artist : Cowboy Junkies
     List Price : $19.98 USD  
     Your Price : $14.99 USD
     ProductGroup: Music
     Release Date : 2008-02-26
     Studio : Zoe Records
     Label : Zoe Records
     Avg. Customer Rating : (15 reviews)

     


 Reviews
Customer Reviews for Trinity Revisited CD DVD
     could it be even better than the original?
     Rating:
     Everyone has a copy of Trinity, as well they should. When I saw that the Junkies were going to re-record it, I was more than a bit apprehensive. My most recent experiences with an artist revisiting their old work, such as Tori Amos's re-working of several songs for her retrospective "Tales of a Librarian", left me cold. So this has been sitting on my shelf for a few months now, waiting for me to listen.

I'm now kicking myself for waiting so long. They didn't just re-record the old tracks, they took a fresh look at them. This fresh look is helped along by bringing in a surprising slate of guest artists: Natalie Merchant, Ryan Adams, and Vic Chesnutt. It works, it works really really well. I am in awe.

The album starts out with Margo doing "Mining for Gold". Even though it's acapella, and even though I don't think she's changed the phrasing, she made it sound more plaintive this time around. It's a great introduction to the album.

Next up is "Misguided Angel". I've listened to this song hundreds of times, and I've heard it live a couple of dozen times. Maybe it's my long association with this song, but it's also the song that I think is least well-served by the introduction of an additional voice. Natalie Merchant sings with Margo on this one. Natalie Merchant has a distinctive voice that I generally like, but which I don't think is a general-purpose voice. Margo could sing the phone book and I'd love it, but not Natalie. And here, Natalie's voice makes it feel like she's intruding on the song. On first listen, this gave me pause for the rest of the album. Thankfully, I needn't have worried.

Vic Chesnutt comes in on "Blue Moon Revisited", which is the first song that made me remember exactly why I like him so much. Vic is an acquired taste, to be sure, but this is probably one way to make him more accessible. His voice on this track, and even moreso on "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" and "Dreaming My Dreams with You" is nothing short of haunting. These three songs have been in constant rotation on my iPod for the past couple of weeks.

Ryan Adams can be heard playing guitar on most of the album, with his singing coming to the fore on "I Don't Get It". The song, while still sedate, becomes a bit more boisterous and fun. He's a great foil to Margo's singing here. Later on, his take on the slightly-melancholy "200 More Miles" is inspired.

Natalie Merchant returns to take on "To Love Is to Bury". This is a Junkies-free tune: she plays piano, and the unofficial (although I don't understand why he's unofficial) fifth Junkie Jeff Bird plays fiddle. The rest of the band is nowhere to be seen. This song shines, which serves to make the earlier "Misguided Angel" all that more disappointing. She's really well-suited to this song, and I think that she does a better version of it than the couple of live versions that I've heard from the Junkies themselves in the past few years. I feel a bit guilty for saying that, but there you have it.

"Working on a Building", "Sweet Jane", "Postcard Blues", and "Walking After Midnight" feature all of the musicians. "Working on a Building" and "Walking After Midnight" especially feel like the listener is getting a
special look at a group of people who are just playing together for the fun of it, and in the course of having fun, they're creating some exquisite music. Sometimes a band jams together and magic happens; four separate incidents of that occur on this album.

The DVD is just gorgeous. The artists are in a circle in the church, and the lighting and shooting make for a beautiful concert video, the likes of which haven't been seen before. The DVD intensifies the feeling of sneaking a peak into an intimate jam session.

I hesitate to throw around the term "instant classic", but I'm not sure if any other descriptor could possibly do it justice. It's so good that it begs the question of whether this album is better than the original. Both are great. The original is one of the seminal works of our time, the latter feels like it will get there after a few more listens. Is one better? I honestly can't answer that question -- and that underscores the strength of this album. I can't recommend this album highly enough.
   

Customer Reviews for Trinity Revisited CD DVD Cd
     Aaarghh....
     Rating:
     I so much wanted to like this CD. Love the Cowboy Junkies, and am a big Natalie Merchant fan as well. Listening to them collaborate in this setting, though, is just a nails-on-chalkboard experience.

Some great tastes don't go great together.



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