Till the Sun Turns Black Ray LaMontagne

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CD

  • Release Date: 08/29/2006
  • Sales Rank: 889
  • Label: RCA
  • UPC: 828768332825
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Vinyl LP$16.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Till the Sun Turns Black

1LISTENBe Here Now 6:23
2LISTENEmpty 5:17
3LISTENBarfly 3:55
4LISTENThree More Days 3:36
5LISTENCan I Stay 3:41
6LISTENYou Can Bring Me Flowers 4:12
7LISTENGone Away from Me 4:27
8LISTENLesson Learned 4:39
9LISTENTruly, Madly, Deeply 1:52
10LISTENTill the Sun Turns Black 4:28
11LISTENWithin You 5:43

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

To put a twist on an enduring adage, this reserved singer-songwriter speaks softly but packs a mighty big punch. On this, his sophomore outing, Ray LaMontagne entrances with his flair for keeping passion burning over a low blue flame, rather than allowing it to boil over -- a mood that's set with the meditative opener, "Be Here Now," which wafts along on a subtle-but-insistent string arrangement and naggingly evocative piano line. Till the Sun Turns Black has a bit more stylistic variety than the New Englander's debut, balancing the gruff, Van Morrison-esque Celt-soul (still evident on songs like the affably soft-focused "Barfly") with forays into country-rock and the nearer fringes of jazz-pop. He's particularly adept at the former, as borne out by "Empty," an ambling piece that suggests Gram Parsons at his most sentimental. That's not to say that LaMontagne constantly wears his heart on his sleeve. While there's no shortage of emotion in these grooves, he's just as capable of letting loose a wizened stream-of-consciousness, as on the jut-jawed folk strummer "Lesson Learned," or bringing it all back home in the manner of an itinerant bluesman, as on the ambling "You Can Bring Me Flowers." That restlessness, while palpable throughout the disc, never seems like experimentation for its own sake -- it's merely the sound of an artist stretching his wings and taking flight on a vivid, intriguing trip. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



More Reviews and Recommendations

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 5Reviews: 2

Beautiful...just beautifulby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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January 19, 2007: If it's possible, this is better than his first release. Ray's voice is just so beautiful.

Ray Couldn't Sound Better!by Anonymous

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September 05, 2006: I purchased this album the day it came out, and I haven't stopped listening to it since. I loved Trouble and was anxious to hear this one. The sound is quite different, but the addition of strings and horns to some of the songs was a fantastic choice. His voice is haunting and beautiful and full of emotion, and every song on this CD is wonderful. He is truly a gifted singer/songwriter, and I hope this is only the beginning of what Ray Lamontagne has to offer. I would have paid double the cost of this cd--it's that good. Actually, it's better.