Anatomy

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Anatomy album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 44:42

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Like Mission Bells

kjc

I don't hear any country music on this album. His version of "16 Tons" does not seem very country to me. It's an interesting & worthy alternative though. Overall, the album sounds more like ambient music. Mission Bells is very nice.

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Never Enough 16 Tons

cmonkeysb

You can never have enough versions of Sixteen Tons, nor enough homages to Tennessee Ernie Ford. The guy is a legend. And there's nothing wrong with an artist experimenting with other genres...thats what creative people do. They explore and grow. How boring if they didn't. Would we have "Imagine" if John Lennon had stuck to his earlier "She Loves You, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah" genre?

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Old-fashioned

OddballDance

What a shock! Stan has become a real country singer. I don't know but this sounds so old-fashioned, it makes me sick. And the songs are unremarkable too. All this considered, it is no wonder a cover version of a country classic made it to the record. Was it really necessary to do another version of “Sixteen Tons”?

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They Say All Music Guide

It’s hard to believe Stan Ridgway has never worked with David Lynch — these soundscapes from the former leader of Wall of Voodoo seem perfectly suited to the filmmaker’s dark tales — but his publicity bio reveals no evidence that he has. At any rate, if you recall Lynch’s Twin Peaks, you can probably conjure this up pretty well. Ridgway writes, as the bio notes, “about the darker side of things”; and his latest album, like its predecessors, is dominated by somber, limited-range vocals and moody, electronically augmented tales of strange characters in strange situations. Like Lynch, Ridgway flirts with the pretentious, and his downbeat confessions can occasionally leave you wondering, “Is this guy weird — or is he just making a career of trying to sound that way?” Consider: “Mama had a stove and daddy had a still/Then daddy ran away with his second cousin Jill.” And, from the same song: “I left home at 10/I joined a carnival/Washing down the elephants/Life was never dull.” The carnival’s clowns get drunk in the next verse, but it seems more likely that it was Ridgway who was drunk when he wrote this. Be that as it may, the artist’s approach works more often than not here, and such tracks as “Mission Bell” are memorable. Ridgway’s fans should like the album, especially after they pop it into a computer’s CD-ROM drive and discover its bonus: three live tracks in Liquid Audio format and a link to a website where they can download three more. It’s an interesting gimmick, and the extra tracks rank among the album’s best. Still, simply adding more tracks to the regular CD would have been preferable, since you can’t hear these unless you’re at your PC. – Jeff Burger

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