Genre: Rock
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© 2002 Universal Records
AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
At their best, cover albums have a strange way of
galvanizing an artist by returning to the songs that inspired them; the
artists can find the reason why they made music in the first place,
perhaps finding a new reason to make music. Robert Plant's Dreamland
-- his first solo album in nearly ten years and one of the best records
he's ever done, either as a solo artist or as a member of Led Zeppelin -- fulfills that simple definition of a covers album and goes beyond it, finding Plant
sounding reinvigorated and as restless as a new artist. Part of the
reason why this album works so well is that he has a new band -- not a
group of supporting musicians, but a real band whose members can
challenge him because they tap into the same eerie, post-folk mysticism
that fueled Led Zeppelin III, among other haunting moments in the Zep
catalog. Another reason why this album works so well is that it finds
the band working from a similar aesthetic point as classic Zeppelin,
who, at their peak, often reinterpreted and extrapolated their
inspirations, piecing them together to create something startlingly
original. That's the spirit here, most explicitly on the blues medley
"Win My Train Fare Home (If I Ever Get Lucky)," but also throughout the
record, as he offers radical reinventions of such cult favorites as Bob Dylan's "One More Cup of Coffee," Tim Buckley's "Song to the Siren," and the Youngbloods'
"Darkness, Darkness," along with such staples as "I Believe I'm Fixin'
to Die" and "Hey Joe." What's amazing about this album is that it is as
adventurous and forward-thinking -- perhaps even more so -- as anything
he's ever done. He's abandoned the synthesizers that distinguished each
of his solo albums and replaced them with a restless, searching band
that pushes every one of these songs past conventional expectations
(and, in the case of the two strong originals, they make the new tunes
sound as one with the covers). Dreamland rarely sounds like Led Zeppelin, but its spirit is pure Zeppelin; this, in a sense, is what he was trying to do with the Page and Plant
albums -- find a way back into the mystic by blending folk, worldbeat,
blues, rock, and experimentalism into music that is at once grounded in
the past and ceaselessly moving forward. He might have co-authored only
two pieces here, but Dreamland
is a fully realized product of his own vision -- as unpredictable and
idiosyncratic, as fulfilling and full of mystery as anything he's ever
released.
tags: robert plant, dreamland, dream land, 2002, flac,
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ReplyDeleteOriginal comment(s): "Hi there - please could you re-up this one? Thanks."
Delete"Hi. You're an idiot and here's why."
- This publication contains 2 different links and you've failed to specify which one needs a "re-up"
. Don't believe me?
- Your words: Hi there - please could you "re-up" this "one"? Thanks.
- "one" = singular, meaning 1 not 2 or 3
- "re-up" what? FLAC, AAC?
>>> Visitor lacks common sense.
- Visitor failed to both see and read the disclaimer/link found on the disclaimer in regards to properly reporting dead links.
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. Uploading screenshot of the disclaimer....... 100% complete
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>>> "You're also blind"
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Argh. Apologies. I'm sick at the moment (not a certain virus, thankfully) and it seems to be addling my brain. It's the FLAC link that's down.
ReplyDeleteThe FLAC link has been updated.
DeleteThanks for your time and patience, Sentinel.
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