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Rainbow Ends
Rainbow Ends

Rainbow Ends

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What should one expect from an artist who has made his first album in over 40 years? And when you have a fan base that worships the work you made as a pop music prodigy in your teens and twenties, what are they to make of new songs recorded by the same man at the age of 65? If spent much time pondering these questions while he was making , the first album he's released since 1973's , you don't hear it in the final product; has made an album that reflects the man he is today, not the guy who seemed like the new on his 1970 solo debut, and it's clear (as it should be) this isn't the work of a young man focused on life's possibilities. is a set of songs where looks back on his life, largely in terms of his relationships, and it most often focuses on the things that went wrong, whether he was the one who walked away ("Dog on a Chain"), he was the partner left alone and abandoned ("What's a Man to Do"), or he's still trying to figure out how it all went wrong ("This Wall Between Us" and "If I Knew Then"). Outside of "Put Some Rhythm to It," a witty tale of his failings as a dancer, is a litany of dark nights and broken hearts, and while the melodies often sound like the work of the man who wrote "Fresh as a Daisy" and "Live," these songs chart the path where the boy wonder grew into a rueful and cautious man. This music also has a different personality than ' classic work of the '70s for a very particular reason: while he multi-tracked himself into a one-man band on those albums, does little instrumental work on , and while he has an exceptionally good studio crew behind him (including power pop obsessives , , and , as well as 's and backing vocals from and ), this evokes the spirit of ' salad days but with a decidedly different sonic approach. As a songwriter, ' lyrics on are obsessively personal, but these songs rank with the most literate and direct material he's ever offered us, and his melodies have gained a certain sophistication while still sounding like manna for pop fanciers. Listeners who were hoping would sound or feel like or were probably fooling themselves, and that's certainly not what the songwriter and his colleagues were aiming for; instead, this is a mature, introspective work from a man looking for answers to the questions of life and love, and it's a brave and genuinely impressive return to the spotlight from a major talent. ~ Mark Deming
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