
Kinky Boots (Original Broadway Cast Recording)

The National, Trouble Will Find Me
Kinky
Boots (Original Broadway Cast Recording)
"The
world seemed brighter six inches off the ground." So goes the drag-inspired
fabulousness of the British indie-turned-Broadway hit Kinky Boots, a love
letter to anyone who’s ever felt different, rejected and like they’d look hawt
in a pair of stilettos; it’s self-discovery set to music. Who knows a thing or
two about true colors shining through? About following your heart? Cyndi
Lauper, of course. The pop icon takes the music-writing reins in this passion
project, the culmination of a career that’s not only positioned her as a
chart-topper but as Mama Bear to her queer cubs. The heartbreaking honesty of
"Not My Father’s Son," then, is something Lauper can empathize with – and that
Billy Porter sings with gut-wrenching pathos and a bravo finish. "Hold Me in
Your Heart," the other slow-building centerpiece, is another showstopper; as
Lola, Porter shows that song who’s boss with a very "And I Am Telling You ..."
moment of climatic vocal heat. Other highlights on a recording full of them:
"Sex is in the Heel," with its Scissor Sisters likeness; the other lead,
Charlie (Stark Sands), on "Take What You Got"; and the finale, "Raise You
Up/Just Be," an empowerment pick-me-up echoing Rick Astley’s "Never Gonna Give
You Up." Even without live drag queens strutting in sequins and glitter, the
Kinky Boots music alone sparkles.
Grade:
B+
The
National, Trouble Will Find Me
It’s
still early in the year, but hold a spot for The National on your best-of list.
Trouble Will Find Me is a gloriously rich, life-changing listen that knows
how to elicit emotion (see: sadness, more sadness) without overblown
superfluity. The Ohio indie-rockers’ sixth release knows that subtlety can be
just as, if not more, powerful – especially when heard alone in a dark room,
these mellow slow-burners washing over you in peaceful solitude. With
pensiveness that gets you in the gut ("I don’t know why we had to lose the ones
who took so little space") and the gentle ambiance of glistening guitars, "Hard
to Find" is the perfect outro. The same quiet beauty is captured on the wistful
standout "I Need My Girl," an utterly gorgeous bass rumble carrying the track
into a sublime state of shifting splendor as frontman Matt Berninger laments
regret and being "a 45 percenter then"; "Pink Rabbits," too, carries an
emotional heaviness despite its feather-weight melody. It’s the case with a lot
of this perfectly rendered work – more delicately produced than the band’s
esteemed Boxer, or even 2010’s High Violet (though Berninger’s baritone
still packs an aching punch), but no less affecting as it hangs over you long
after the coda disappears into the horizon.
Grade:
A-
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