CD - Includes Compact Disk / DVD
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| CD | $15.09 |
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Disc
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| 1 | My Life and Times DVD Track |
| 2 | Rivers We Can't Cross DVD Track |
| 3 | Mary Star of the Sea DVD Track |
| 4 | Love Lies in Ruin DVD Track |
| 5 | For Your Love DVD Track |
| 6 | Down, Down, Down DVD Track |
| 7 | A New Poetry DVD Track |
| 8 | W.P. DVD Track |
| 9 | Jesus, I DVD Track |
| 10 | God's Gonna Set This World on Fire DVD Track |
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With the Pumpkins smashed once and for all, Billy Corgan sets sail for new waters on this free-ranging disc -- and ends up making some mighty interesting discoveries. Zwan's basic sound doesn't diverge all that much from that of the Pumpkins, with the emphasis squarely on guitars that ring, squeal, and radiate shimmering waves of color, particularly on "Baby, Let's Rock" and "Yeah," both of which resonate with the sort of wistful rock nostalgia that marked "1977." What's new is the tonal palette, however, since Corgan is flanked by a pair of guitarists who take off in opposite directions before converging on each song's core: Between the angular strumming of Matt Sweeney (formerly of Chavez) and the pointillist interjections of Dave Pajo (the guitar guru whose work in Slint launched a thousand indie bands), Corgan wails soulfully, even subtly, nicely abetted by the sweet vocal backing of bassist Paz Lechantin (of A Perfect Circle). Where Corgan used to bemoan things lost, he now sounds like a man intent on praising things found: faith, happiness, and even, seemingly, a profound sense of spirituality. That last element is most evident on a 15-minute medley comprising the album's densely layered title track and an emotion-drenched take on the traditional spiritual "Jesus, I Have Taken Up My Cross" (during which Corgan intones the word "reborn" like a mantra and sings enthusiastically that "God and Heaven are all my own"). There's more corporeal contentment as well, as heard in the blissed-out "Honestly" and the country-flavored album closer "Come with Me." Those who pine for Billy's days of whine and neuroses won't walk away totally empty-handed, though, since the spare, glacially paced "Of a Broken Heart" makes the possibility of death-by-divorce sound eerily plausible. As sonically daunting as most of Corgan's previous work, Mary, Star of the Sea spends at least as much energy in laying bare the singer's heart, and for Billy Corgan, it's a surprising and gratifying evolution. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble