Eli And The Thirteenth Confession

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Eli And The Thirteenth Confession album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK
  • Artist: Laura Nyro (See All Albums by Laura Nyro)
  • Date Released: Jun 25, 2002

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Pop

  • Label: Columbia/Legacy

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 56:48

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Jim Farber

eMusic Contributor

Jim Farber has been writing about music since the Ramones were new. For the last 21 years, he has been chief music critic for the New York Daily News. In additi...more »

06.30.09
Catchy, embraceable music, plus Nyro's signature strangeness
2002 | Label: Columbia/Legacy

What kind of music did Laura Nyro make?

Listening to the strange keys and sudden tempo shifts on her seminal albums like Eli and the Thirteen Confession argues for jazz, but the theatrical melodies scream Broadway; the gravity and introspection of her delivery suggest a singer-songwriter's art, but the tunes 'blissful soul play straight to the heart of Berry Gordy.

Small wonder a daunting range of artists clamored to cover Nyro's compositions in her '60s and '70s prime. They included Barbra Streisand, The Fifth Dimension, Three Dog Night and Blood Sweat and Tears. If that list sounds too loungey or corny for your taste, don't fret. While those artists recognized the terrific craft of Nyro's work, they planed down the glorious strangeness she reveals in on her own recordings.

When you listen to Eli (Nyro's breakthrough album on Columbia Records, following a more obscure debut on Verve) you'll hear a full menagerie of eccentricities. As Nyro runs through her undulating piano changes, and howls out wild lines in a key you can't name, you'll recognize sounds that later inspired artists as out-there as Tori Amos and Sufjan Stevens.

Eli includes several songs that became giant hits for others ("Eli's Comin'"… read more »

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Awesome!

scrhythm

Nyro wrote some great late 60s songs including Stoney End, Wedding Bell Blues and Save the Country that were made famous by other artists. Here you get not just her songwriting at its best but also the raw energy and original style of her own singing. These tracks have so much soul - none of them will disappoint.

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Wow!

bernieodonnell80

Just discovering this album now and it is absolutely blowing my mind. Download it now.

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The Language of the Soul.

BlueHawaiian

If eyes really are the window to to one's soul, and music the language it speaks,Laura was extraordinarily fluent.Her sphere of influence is as strong as some kind of rip current below the surface of the ocean. Detectable still.

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you need this

pdbruce

utterly essential to any rock collection.

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a tough act to follow...

EMUSIC-0086C7D6

...and in many ways, she never really did; still, you put this together with her first album, and you have a body of intensely personal and hugely idiosycratic work -- she didn't sound like anyone before her, yet it's been hard for every singer/songwriter since to not sound a at least a little bit like her..

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They Say All Music Guide

Nyro peaked early, and Eli and the Thirteenth Confession, just her second album, remains her best. It’s not only because it contains the original versions of no less than three songs that were big hits for other artists: “Sweet Blindness” (covered by the 5th Dimension), “Stoned Soul Picnic” (also covered by the 5th Dimension), and “Eli’s Comin’” (done by Three Dog Night). It’s not even just because those three songs are so outstanding. It’s because the album as a whole is so outstanding, with its invigorating blend of blue-eyed soul, New York pop, and early confessional singer/songwriting. Nyro sang of love, inscrutably enigmatic romantic daredevils, getting drunk, lonely women, and sensual desire with an infectious joie de vivre. The arrangements superbly complemented the material with lively brass, wailing counterpoint backup vocals, and Nyro’s own ebullient piano. The 2002 CD reissue adds three previously unreleased demos, with no instrumental accompaniment save piano, of “Lu,” “Stoned Soul Picnic,” and “Emmie.” – Richie Unterberger

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