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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Chris Isaak's first really big hit, thanks to David Lynch, 21 Dec 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Heart Shaped World (Audio CD)
This album sort of saved Chris Isaak's music career, when David Lynch heard two of its tracks, WICKED GAME and BLUE SPANISH SKY and decided to include them on his film WILD AT HEART. Isaak had already recorded two albums and the song BLUE HOTEL had been a minor-hit, but at his third album he was still going very much unnoticed. And this album is probably his first great one. On his previous works there was still sort of a naive feeling to his lyrics and music and so you can observe a more mature approach for HEART SHAPED WORLD. You can find here not only the two above mentioned well known songs but also DON'T MAKE ME DREAM ABOUT YOU, WRONG TO LOVE YOU and I'M NOT DANCING, all of them up-tempo tracks, and ballads HEART SHAPED WORLD, NOTHING'S CHANGED and KINGS OF THE HIGHWAY. Chris Isaak has always searched for a retro-feeling in his work, and you can find that feeling here, with DIDDLEY DADDY, FOREVER YOUNG and IN THE HEAT OF THE JUNGLE. All instruments are very well played and there's the real feeling of a band here. If you haven't done so yet, this is an album to discover.
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Cool cool cool cool cool cool cool cool cool., 3 Sep 2002
This review is from: Heart Shaped World (Audio CD)
Well hopefully by now you know how cool i think this album is. This is Chris Isaac's seminal work, many people think 'Wicked Game' was his Debut album or best work but this guys been rockin since 84 with his band silvertone. EVERY track on this compilation flows like a Chardonnay, from the lasciviously seductive 'Blue Spanish Sky' to the mournful 'Funeral In the Rain' and the hauntingly evocative, vocal and instrumental masterpiece that is 'Wicked Game'this album will break your heart and rock your soul, its a journey of music and the destination is back to Amazon to order more of this guys stuff. If your worried I am a sycophant dont be, I have been critical of one of of Isaacs future albums (Always Got Tonight). Most of the tracks on this album are slow moody numbers but theirs some rockin tracks too 'Diddley Diddley Daddy' is a far superior cover of i think sang originally by 'Yardbirds', also 'In the heat of the Jungle' is a fast moving number that gets the dance nerves pumping. My personal favourite is the track 'Nothings changed' its a song about reminiscence and loss of unrequited love and how nothings changed in the old house in which they used to live; but how everythings changed in his life and how derelict his soul is without her love, Chris Isaac has a rare gift for conveying his feelings in the coherence of his lyrics, the mood of his multi ranged vocals, and the delivery of the insiduosly affecting guitar, sax and other instruments everything comes together in this album and I have never tired of it in the 10 years of owning this CD. If one person is inspired to buy this then i have repaid Mr Isaac for such a perfect inspiring album. Enjoy !
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39 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wicked Heart, 5 April 2001
By Thomas Magnum - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Heart Shaped World (Audio CD)
Heart Shaped World was the album that made Chris Isaak a star, thanks to a song being included in David Lynch film. Mr. Isaak had released two critically acclaimed albums that sold poorly. Upon it's release in 1989, Heart Shaped World seemed destined to the same fate. But David Lynch used the dark and brooding song "Wicked Game" in his 1990 film Wild At Heart. The movie was heavily promoted and radio stations started playing the song. It really broke loose for the photogenic Mr. Isaak when MTV started playing the sexy black & white video for the song in late 1990 and over a year after the album's release, he finally had a much deserved top song and album. "Wicked Game" is a classic, but the album is full of equally great songs. The title track has a stinging guitar riff and an eerie reverb-filled vocal, "Blue Spanish Sky" has a slow, languid rhythm punctuated by a Latin jazz horn fill at the end, "In The Heart Of The Jungle" is a lengthy number with screeching feedback and fuzz guitars and a wild vocal, "Diddly Daddy" is a rockabilly rave up and "Wrong To Love You" may be the best song on the album and has a perfect vocal from Mr. Isaak. Heart Shaped World has so far turned out to be his only top ten album, but its success has helped keep an unique talent from sinking into obscurity and have a moderate degree of success despite making music that is far from the mainstream.
29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Isaak's best and richest CD, 1 Jun 2000
By kireviewer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Heart Shaped World (Audio CD)
About the other Chris Isaak CD's, I have written that one CD is nearly indistinquishable from the next. They all have some brooding numbers, some rockabilly numbers, some country influenced numbers and some rockers. I also wrote that the self-titled CD "Chris Isaak" may be the best one and that "Speak of the Devil" was the most musically complex CD. Then I relistened to "Heart Shaped World", after not playing it for a year. "Heart Shaped World" still sounds like a typical Isaak CD, but it stands out from the rest. It is the richest, most musically complex CD. Each song tends to grab you and stay with you. This is opposed to the other CD's where most of the songs are good but forgettable. Plus it has three monster tracks (including Wicked Game) while the other CD's only have one or two.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A rare combination: musical talent & sexual magnetism, 15 May 2002
By 30-year old wallflower "Eric N Andrews" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Heart Shaped World (Audio CD)
When Chris Isaak debuted with his first album SILVERTONE in 1985, he was definitely an anomaly. In the time when everyone was going electronic & a song wasn't complete without the synthesizer arrangements, Chris's backtrack approach to music was light years away. His influences were only as recent as the early 1960s & his voice was definitely inspired by Roy Orbison. Because it wasn't the flavor of the month, SILVERTONE had to settle for critical acclaim than commercial, jeopardizing the self-titled follow-up that came in 1986. However, Chris didn't give in to the times & released his 3rd album HEART SHAPED WORLD in 1989. Again, it seemed like another "under-the-radar" record that would be loved by critics & a small amount of fans without any mainstream exposure. Then the following year, David Lynch used the song "Wicked Game" in a pivotal scene in his 1990 film WILD AT HEART. While the film was not a box office success, Chris's record label decided to take a chance & release the song as a single. Excellent move, for it became a top 10 hit & gave both HEART SHAPED WORLD & Chris Isaak's career a much-needed shot in the arm. Of course, the classically erotic video for "Wicked Game" had a hand in it, too. This guy who couldn't even get a gold record was now a sex symbol! However, "Wicked Game" isn't the extent of HEART SHAPED WORLD, which even now is probably Chris's best album. True to his idol Roy Orbison, Chris mostly concentrates on moody ballads that go well with both a broken heart & a late-night love session. The title track, the Spanish-laced "Blue Spanish Sky" (does that horn solo spell seduction or what?), "Nothing's Changed", "I'm Not Waiting" & "Don't Make Me Dream About You" are the perfect songs to either cry in your beer to or woo your mate, whichever comes first. Still, Chris can rock out as good as anyone, it's just he prefers to do it only in moderation. HEART SHAPED WORLD has some of Chris's best uptempo tunes with "Wrong To Love You", "Kings Of The Highway", "Forever Young" & "In The Heat Of The Jungle" (the scariest 6 minutes you'll ever hear). Furthermore, the cover of Bo Diddley's "Diddley Daddy" is surprisingly faithful, considering that as an idol to most rockers from the 1960s, he was more butchered than celebrated. It took a while, but Chris Isaak finally got the acclaim he had deserved ever since his 1985 debut. While it was thanks more to his sex appeal than his musical abilities, you have to take it where you can get it, I guess. But after the novelty died down, HEART SHAPED WORLD was still a great piece of music & a good introduction to an artist who deserved a breakthrough all along. Even better, it proved a sex symbol can have much more going for them than their looks.
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