2013-10-10
After a long hiatus, Sting returns with a series of songs for a play about shipbuilders in Newcastle (his home town)--their failing industry, lives, loves and families. It comes off as a soundtrack, and not especially riveting listening without the action on the stage. Only a couple of songs feel like they work apart from the action: "And Yet," which takes a Sting-classic jazz approach and "August Winds," a gorgeous number that stands alone. Sting handles all of the vocals here, with only two exceptions, and again, listening to the narrative about ships and harbors song after song doesn't give the disc-listener a lot with which to connect. I can imagine the production on stage going well, with this music the perfect companion. But alone, not as much. 10/13 Michael J.
OF MONTREAL
Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer?
THE DIAMOND UNDERGROUND
Serve the Song
BLACK LIPS
Two Hundred Million Thousand
Jonathan Richmond
Because Her Beauty is Raw and Wild
THE KOOKS
Konk
MELISSA RUTH & THE LIKELY STORIES
Ain't No Whiskey
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