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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Despite The Covers, Nowhere To Hide. (5/10),
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This review is from: All Dressed Up And Smelling Of Strangers (Audio CD)
First, to state the obvious, this latest offering from the gravel-voiced singer-wongwriter Mr Hinson is a covers album split over two CDs. One is labelled folk, the other alternative. Whilst there are some decent covers to be found across the two, no single example is better than the original (or other subsequent cover), such is the dizzingly-high standard of records chosen to cover.The Bob Dylan cover seems lacklustre against the hard-hitting original. The Leonard Cohen is too shrugworthily similar to its original, but without the necessary vocal gravitas. The Frank Sinatra classic is actually quite painful and tuneless. The alternative disc is considerably more interesting. The Elvis example is made Hinson's own with a different brand of tristesse interwoven with the inclusion of an organ. The often covered, 'In The Pines' is slyly affecting, introducing Hinson's own disquieting unease. The feedback-heavy cover of Buddy Holly is particularly tasty. Nevertheless, the feeling is that this is for completists and extreme fans only. Approach with caution, certainly the 'folk' disc. For original, and excellent Hinson work, check last year's Micah P. Hinson and the Red Empire Orchestra.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
He Did It His Way ....,
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This review is from: All Dressed Up And Smelling Of Strangers (Audio CD)
Question : Why should you buy an album of other people'ssongs by a relatively obscure bloke with a guitar ? Answer : Well you might not but I did and I shall spend the next few minutes trying to persuade you to give him a try too. The 2005 recording 'Micah P. Hinson and The Gospel Of Progress' was a stunning debut. Edgy, idiosyncratic and chock-full of strange, elusive magic. 2008's 'M.P.H. and The Red Empire Orchestra' fleshed out his singular vision still further. 'Tell Me It Ain't So' from the latter is a composition of near visionary intensity. 'All Dressed Up and Smelling Of Strangers' is a different kettle of carp entirely. The sixteen stripped-down covers on this new collection find Mr Hinson confronting both his angels and more than a few of his demons. This is NOT easy listening by any measure known to man but give it a chance to get under your skin and the rewards may well justify the effort expended. Sinatra's 'My Way' is simultaneously crucified and resurrected. Mr Hinson's mission to grasp the big top notes elude him but what might have been an affair as painful as hearing the song slaughtered by the fat man with the red face at your local pub's karaoke night is somehow transformed into a weirdly sincere and affecting cris de coeur. A near disaster is miraculously averted! His rendition of Roy Orbison's 'Running Scared' is more secure. It is a fine gravely-voiced performance with just the right amount of reverb in the mix to capture some of the essence of the original's powerful charm. It is a fine re-imagining rather than a vulgar attempt at re-creation. So too the dense and grinding take on Patsy Cline's 'Stop The World'. Two and a bit minutes of raucous fun. The late-night, low (very low!) voiced, performance of Mr Presley's 'Are You Lonesome Tonight', with its echoing barroom piano and reedy electric organ, creates an atmosphere of warm-hearted, slightly intoxicated affection (with just a little dread mixed in!) It's a very brave man indeed who'd choose to take on Leonard Cohen's 'Suzanne'. Mr Hinson does so and has no cause to be ashamed of the final result. He fully captures the raw, nervous energy of the original. The effect is somehow both sacred and profane. You're probably getting my drift by now, so I shan't press on with a track-by-track dissection. Mr Hinson has concocted something both viscerally honest and singularly peculiar here. Trust me - it's a grower ! Highly Recommended.
0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Micah P Hinson - all dressed up and smelling of strangers,
By
This review is from: All Dressed Up And Smelling Of Strangers (Audio CD)
I found this album to be another master piece, which does compare and exceed the previous works. The deep passionate presentation of the music will touch that inner sense, which provide happiness, of those who are Micah fans.
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