Wednesday, March 23, 2011

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JAY JAY JOHANSON (2011) Spellbound


Today I come with another one of my most anticipated albums of the year, and more specifically it even after being able to enjoy a juicy preview of three of the topics included in this Spellbound (as I like the album title) in his last concert last February in Barcelona which made another of those performance rubric anthologies how well the Swedish live is what the side of himself that in each performance reprensenta disk. Neither the disco facet of this multifaceted artist, personified in that distant Antenna, or its constant changes of skin have never been able to depart from it. Since its inception more crooner through their homage to the sound Bristol to dabbling with jazz or bossa-nova everything it touches Jay Jay Jahonson turns to gold and this, his eighth studio album, there would be less.

Living
its peak stylistic stability (the disk is simplistic line of his last works) , physical (may be the time I've seen the 4 healthiest I've seen him live) and mental (it now appears that his personal demons are less present in his lyrics), we face another one of those necessarily intimate and melancholic works of jewelry that Jay Jay and his inseparable companion of fatigue are capable of building.


Fragile distinctly defeatist melodies and a voice that fills every moment with a beautiful intensity is what we are accustomed the thin sickly Swedish and disheveled but this time has been achieved, if anything, a collection of songs even more intimate and fragile than usual coming to thrill anyone who is willing to be carried by so divine compositions. Making use and abuse dont piano to issues of special sensitivity and playing again with the warmth of her voice and cold contrast minimalist musical hand Jay Jay Johanson espectacualr so accentuates the nudity and the simplicity of its beautiful compositions gain a leading role in making their voices sweetly adorned with those beautiful musical details hides the disc resulting in a much more organic and light than usual.


Jay Jay once again demonstrates that his mastery of chiaroscuro lies much of the appeal of their music and that however much you get older your ability to move whole continues to gain by accumulated experience as an artist and mental stability that seems to enjoy the last few years. Another gets screwed 11 to the gentlemen.

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