
Pink, The Truth About Love

Barbra Streisand, Release Me
Pink, The Truth About Love
In a world ruled by artificial pop princesses, Pink has always approached her music
with real-woman candor, whether she’s slamming horny dudes at the bar or
singing a true-life tale about her parents’ divorce. But this hell-raiser act,
which extends through her catchy-but-safe seventh album, is turning cocky into
caricature. The Truth About Love wants so hard to convince the world that
Pink, who had a kid not long ago, is still the biggest badass on the block that
it spends so much time proving a point when it should be using Pink’s mighty
ways as a singer and songwriter to crush the competition. (We know she can.)
The potty mouth, the man put-downs (she tells him, cheekily, to blow her) and a
duet with another often-misunderstood musician, Eminem – we get it; she’s still
a punk. Though Pink at her most "punk" was on the fierce commercial-dud Try
This, released nearly 10 years ago, it’s clear record execs won’t let this one
suffer the same fate: Second single "Try" fetches a generic credo of
perseverance but has a cool grunge sound, while "Walk of Shame," about a
one-night stand, is goofy super-pop that’s a lot of fun. But Pink, who has made
catchier songs about jerking off, is better than "Slut Like You." Her deftness
is demonstrated on "Beam Me Up," where she lets down her guard for a needy
moment of vulnerable release. It’s just too bad how hard The Truth About Love
tries to be another Funhouse, turning Pink into a brand instead of the artist
she always seemed destined to be.
Grade:
C+
Barbra
Streisand, Release Me
There’s a predictability to Babs that’s like comfort
food: Her rainy-day music tends to require a box of tissue, and she sings with
the same passion, precision and power that made the Brooklyn girl a star over
40 years ago. Simply put, there’s no one else like her in this
smoke-and-mirrors music industry. Not even Adele possesses the same purity as
Babs. Release Me, spanning decades as it reaches back into her song catalog
for 11 previously unreleased tracks, is a testament to her reign as a vocal
luminary who’s not just stood the test of time, but stands taller as the years
go by. But even in 1971, during her "Stoney End" era, Streisand’s capabilities
were so absolute that her cover of Randy Newman’s "I Think It’s Going to Rain
Today" was cut in one take, with a simple reading over Newman’s piano that
preserves the melancholic sorrow of the song without overdoing it. Better than
Bette’s version from Beaches? Not when it comes to heart. "Being Good Isn’t
Good Enough," from the 1967 Broadway musical Hallelujah, Baby! about
equality, goes all diva with an escalating orchestra that finally crescendos as
Babs sings her butt off. It’s also refreshing to hear Streisand, who’s gone the
contemporary love-song route, take on a song as theatrically thrilling as her up-tempo
version of "Home" from The Wiz. The song never made The Broadway Album as
planned – but it’s here, and it’s glorious.
Grade:
B+
Also
Out
Ryan
Bingham, Tomorrowland
Never
mind that Ryan Bingham won an Oscar for his fragile folk song "The Weary Kind"
from Crazy Heart; he’s a new man who’s, well, not so weary. At least by the
sound of his new DIY disc, where he’s without his signature band and former
label. He rocks hard on "Beg for Broken Legs" with his usual gruffness but also
a fiery attitude that’s almost inspiring. His heart, however, hasn’t strayed
too far: "Never Far Behind" ruminates quite poignantly on the difficulty of
moving on from a family member’s suicide. If Tomorrowland wasn’t so rooted in
yesterday’s rock, that awards mantle could be looking a lot fuller.
Pet
Shop Boys, Elysium
On
"Your Early Stuff," Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe – aka Pet Shop Boys – recall a
conversation with a cab driver who thought the U.K. duo was done for, but
admired their ’80s work. Since their 11th album tends to drag – its chill-out
vibe could really use a few more hits of adrenaline, and the songs aren’t
nearly as memorable as their classic stuff – who can blame the guy for wishing
they were still in their prime, singing about West End Girls? But the Pet Shop
Boys still pull off some splendid moments of loungetronica: "Hold On" is a
gospel beauty, and the dry-witted "Ego Music" satires celebrity vanity.
Otherwise, though, it’ll have you turning to the early stuff.