To: Elliott From: Portland

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 4.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

7764 To: Elliott From: Portland

“Between the bars”


Dans les notes de To: Elliott From: Portland, le président d’Expunged Records, Anthony Davis écrit : “Elliott Smith était quelqu’un qui vous racontait une histoire triste et vous faisait imaginer que vous n’étiez pas seul.”
Avec ceci en tête, Davis a sorti un album hommage au chanteur disparu, qui comprend des reprises d’autres musiciens originaires de Portland (la ville que Smith appelait la sienne).
La star du spectacle est une reprise d’une chanson inédite, “High Times” de son ancien colocataire Sean Croghan, dont la guitare et la voix énervées se font le reflet du sentiment que ressentent tous ceux que Smith a touchés : la tristesse d’une promesse perdue avec son ami disparu trop tôt. ~ Marisa Brown, All Music Guide




In the notes in To: Elliott From: Portland, Expunged Records president Anthony Davis writes, “Elliott Smith was someone who told your sad story and made you feel like you were not alone.” With this in mind, Davis set out to release a tribute album to the late singer, featuring covers from other Portland musicians (the city that Smith called home) with whom Smith’s distinct, fragile style resonated and who counted themselves among his many fans. Tribute albums are always accompanied with much dissent, because almost never are the new versions of the songs better than the originals, but Smith’s songs had touched too many people to not make one. Though die-hard fans will most certainly object to Lifesavas’ hip-hop rendition of “Happiness,” or To Live & Die in L.A.’s made-for-modern-rock-radio “King’s Crossing,” for the most part, the artists stay true — almost too true — to the original versions, keeping the sparse, melancholic arrangements, the breathy vocals, the quavering, emotional voice. While “The Ballad of Big Nothing,” performed by the Thermals (and mixed by Joanna Bolme, Smith’s ex-girlfriend), is a near copy of the original, and very good, the most successful arrangements are in fact those that are willing to stray slightly from Smith’s already proven path.
Amelia’s version of “Between the Bars” brings a fantastic song to greater heights as vocalist Teisha Helgerson pulls even more emotion out of the melody, and the electronica-esque “Angeles,” by Crosstide, shows how well Smith’s songs can transfer from genre to genre (the same cannot be said, sadly, of Lifesavas’ version of “Happiness,” which doesn’t actually come together as a song until the very end).
But the star of the show is a cover of the previously unreleased “High Times,” by former roommate Sean Croghan, whose angry guitar and angry voice reflect the feelings shared by everyone Smith had affected: the sadness for the promise lost with his friend’s early death. ~ Marisa Brown, All Music Guide




Tracklist :

1 – Clementine (4:25) – Alternative

2 – Satellite (3:18) – Alternative

3 – The biggest lie (3:17) – Alternative

4 – Ballad of big nothing (2:43) – Alternative

5 – I didn’t understand (2:35) – Alternative

6 – Rose parade (4:22) – Alternative

7 – Between the bars (2:41) – Alternative

8 – Needle in the hay (4:34) – Alternative

9 – Division day (3:19) – Alternative

10 – Angeles (2:31) – Alternative

11 – Wouldn’t mama be proud (4:02) – Alternative

12 – Speed trials (4:13) – Alternative

13 – King’s crossing (3:06) – Alternative

14 – Happiness (3:57) – Alternative

15 – High times (4:17) – Alternative



About the Author