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From no-wave skronk guitarist to casual sambista, Arto Lindsay continues a journey into the music of his youth that has been as unexpected as it has been beautiful. Since his excellent SUBTLE BODY in 1996, Lindsay has found more and more fluid ways of merging the earthy dip and sway of Brazilian music with the angular barbs of avant-garde jazz and noise-pop. But as a missionary's son raised in the tropics, Lindsay's no stranger to the push-pull of desire and taboo, sweetness and poison. There's always a sinister shadow behind the lightness of his soft, engaging vocals (often in Portuguese) and the jarring beauty of dramatically contrasting and textured music. Brittle imagery decorates skeletal arrangements: Arto sings of cuts and scratches, reason and lust; snares crackle behind him, a guitar slashes, cool horns sigh in bossa nova harmonies. PRIZE might be Lindsay's most singular exploration into Brazilian influences -- working once again with bassist Melvin Gibbs and producer/multi-instrumentalist Andres Levin, Lindsay manages to come across as tropical even when not dipping into samba rhythms, and the lightest bossa moments have a dissolute urban cast. Already a significant influence on Brazilian artists such as Caetano Veloso and Vinicius Cantuaria, Lindsay crafts rewarding cutting-edge music that cuts deep, indeed. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble