Think Twice David Roth

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CD

  • Release Date: 02/03/2004
  • 2 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 202,688
  • Label: WIND RIVER
  • UPC: 045507402926
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

David Roth occupies the musical ground where folksingers, confessional poets, and protest singers meet. He's comfortable jumping from Rosa Parks' famous bus ride to childhood memories of Halloween; from one child overcoming his fear to make friends with a bully to the resilience of the U.S. following 9-11. Roth's love of storytelling ties all of these disparate elements together into a happy package with the hopeful message that love can overcome ignorance, violence, and fear. The songs on Think Twice work best when Roth sticks to less descriptive material and fills out the arrangement with extra vocalists. On the opener, "Round and Round," he's joined by Cindy Mangsen and Sloan Wainwright for a lovely vocal rendition of the simple lyrics, "Round and round the earth is turning, turning onto morning, then from morning round to night." The bigger production of "Seven Wonders" turns the song into an inspired bit of nonsense with a catchy chorus supported vocally by Wainwright and Penny Nichols. Roth spends most of his time delving into social issues and politics, and since he's a folksinger, he's naturally a liberal. It's not too big of a surprise, then, when he writes songs like "Rose and the Three K's" -- as in Rosa Parks and the Klu Klux Klan -- and "Gush or Bore." The messages here are predictable -- Rosa Parks was a hero; 2000s election was really screwed up -- and are mostly good for making liberals feel good for the duration of the song. While Think Twice will undoubtedly bolster up depressed liberals in the post-millennium, the singer/songwriter crowd may find Roth's message a bit labored. Ronnie D. Lankford Jr., All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Think Twiceby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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November 19, 2005: David Roth is a true, profound, original talent, both in his songwriting and his mastery of many instruments: guitar, piano, ocarina. This is evident in all of his work except this one, but it's not the musicianship, or even the songwriting technique. I think the chief problem with this CD is the concept -- he just didn't seem to have much to say in these songs in his characteristic profound, multi-dimensional manner -- there was no "Twilight Zone" twist at song end there was no universality to his message. Compare these songs to "Seconds and Thirds" in Irreconciliable Similarities. Every time I hear that song, I weep. Or the one about corporate pizza -- it zings you at the end and it's so great. But nothing like that in this CD. For the most part, these songs are linear, simplistic, thin, with messages I have heard before. I just wasn't moved. He could have done a lot better. Well -- you can't win 'em all, and I'm looking forward to the next CD.