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Ryan Adams

Cold Roses

  • AMG Review of Cold Roses

    Amg
    Stephen Thomas Erlewine
    All Music Guide

    Last time we received a dispatch from Ryan Adams, the self-styled savior of ock & roll, it was in 2003, when he delivered his straight-up ock & roll record (aptly titled Rock N Roll) and his two-part mope-ock EP (later combined as one LP) Love Is Hell. Admirable records both, but not quite the sequel to Heartbreaker that fans craved. They also weren't quite as successful as all the hype surrounding their release suggested that they would be, so Adams briefly retreated from the spotlight to regroup, heading back in 2005 with a planned triptych of new albums, the first of which is the double-album Cold Roses, recorded with his new backing band the Cardinals and released at the beginning of May. Three albums in one year is overkill even for an artist predisposed to releasing his every whim, and while it's too early at this writing to judge whether he needed to release all three of the records, it's safe to say that Cold Roses is the record many fans have been waiting to hear -- a full-fledged, unapologetic return to the country-rock that made his reputation when he led Whiskeytown. Not that the album is a retreat, or a crass attempt to give the people what they want, but it's an assured, comfortable collection of 18 songs that play to Adams' strengths because they capture him not trying quite so hard. He settles into a warm, burnished, countryish groove not far removed from vintage Harvest-era Neil Young at the beginning and keeps it going over the course of a double-disc set that isn't all that long. With the first disc clocking in at 39:39 and the second at 36:29, this could easily have been released as a single-disc set, but splitting it into two and packaging it as a mock-gatefold LP is classic Ryan Adams, highlighting both his flair for ock classicism and his tendency to come across slightly affected. As always, he's so obsessive about fitting into classic ock's long lineage that he can be slightly embarrassing -- particularly on the intro to "Beautiful Sorta," which apes David Johansen's intro to the New York Dolls' "Looking for a Kiss" in a way that guarantees a cringe -- which is also a problem when he drifts toward lazy, profanity-riddled lyrics ("this sh*t just f*cks you up" on "Cherry Lane") that undercut a generally strong set of writing. But what makes Cold Roses a success, his first genuine one since Heartbreaker, is that it is a genuine band album, with the Cardinals not only getting co-writing credits but helping Adams relax and let the music flow naturally. It's not the sound of somebody striving to save ock & roll, or even to be important, but that's precisely why this is the easiest Ryan Adams to enjoy. The coming months with their coming LPs will reveal whether this is indeed a shift in his point of view, or just a brief break from his trademark blustering braggadocio.

Ryan Adams Angry Message to Jim DeRogatis
over 2 years ago

The voice-mail response critic Jim DeRogatis got from Ryan Adams after Jims not-so-positive review of one of Adams shows. Using discography as video, but the audio is the point...Some quotes from the review:"Note to Ryan Adams: Wish you were anywhere but here""Adams can release three CDs in a three-week span, but the fact remains that he still can't write one song as original or as heartfelt as...

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random..
8 months ago

let's hope this will work! YAY! i am really pumped about this new mog!

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Ryan Adams obsession!
over 2 years ago

Whenever I dream about a man, I can't get him out of my head. I know they say that people in your dreams just represent aspects of yourself, but I remember my dreams as vividly as my waking life, and those people are just themselves. As far as I am concerned, I spent a few of the wee hours of Wednesday morning wandering around urban streets and drinking wine with Ryan Adams. And now I can't sto...

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