New York Daily News, September 17, 2013: Difference between revisions
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The striking and sophisticated use of rhythm in no way eclipses the CD's melody. The hardest songs have tunes you can sing, like the sumptuous, R&B ballad "Tripwire." Even the monochromatic melody of the title track rivets. Lyrically, the album may paint things black, spewing one dire social and political pronouncement after another. But the music sweetens the dread with excitement. | The striking and sophisticated use of rhythm in no way eclipses the CD's melody. The hardest songs have tunes you can sing, like the sumptuous, R&B ballad "Tripwire." Even the monochromatic melody of the title track rivets. Lyrically, the album may paint things black, spewing one dire social and political pronouncement after another. But the music sweetens the dread with excitement. | ||
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{{tags}}[[Wise Up Ghost]] {{-}} [[The Roots]] {{-}} [[Paul McCartney]] {{-}} [[Burt Bacharach]] {{-}} [[Anne Sofie von Otter]] {{-}} [[Allen Toussaint]] {{-}} [[Late Night With Jimmy Fallon]] {{-}} [[Questlove]] {{-}} [[Get Happy!!]] {{-}} [[Tamla]] {{-}} [[Motown]] {{-}} [[Walk Us Uptown]] {{-}} [[Refuse To Be Saved]] {{-}} [[Curtis Mayfield]] {{-}} [[Tripwire]] | |||
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Latest revision as of 05:59, 21 March 2020
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