A Double Dose of Garth Brooks Is a Real Deee-Lite
- Share via
Keeping up with what’s fresh in pop music on a budget of $25 per month ($40 for CD fans).
November
Garth Brooks’ “Garth Brooks” (Capitol)--Brooks, the hottest newcomer in country music, is a good but not great singer--and he’s not able to always come up with dazzling material. But see him live--where he sells his best songs with a genuineness that is hard to resist--and you’ll become a fan.
Garth Brooks’ “No Fences” (Capitol)--Brooks has enough good material for one excellent album, but it’s spread over two collections. After seeing him on stage, where he expresses country’s blue-collar dreams and frustrations as well as anyone in a decade, you’ll probably be willing to buy both albums so you can listen to the best songs.
Deee-Lite’s “World Clique” (Elektra)--It’s normally wise to avoid any group that begins its album with a self-introduction, but this New York-based trio overcomes the self-consciousness and delivers some of the year’s most witty and inviting dance-pop, including “Groove Is in the Heart.” The B-52’s of the ‘90s?
December
Black Box’s “Dreamland” (RCA)--The framework of this dance music from Italy (dubbed “spaghetti house” by Q magazine), is conventional, but the beats are infectious and the key vocals bring a sensual edge to the music that is reminiscent of Gloria Gaynor’s best disco-related work.
Gear Daddies’ “Billy’s Live Bait” (Polydor)--Martin Zellar’s songs touch on the struggle between childhood ideals and adult responsibilities with an insight and conviction reminiscent of Paul Westerberg and Bob Forrest, and it is delivered with a lonesome rock intensity that keeps drawing you back. One of the year’s 10 best albums. See Page 71.
Lush’s “Gala” (4AD/Reprise)--Don’t let the recent New Musical Express cover story comparing this British group to ABBA fool you into thinking you’ll find another “Fernando” or “Dancing Queen” here. But “Gala”--with its harsher textures and tales of stained innocence--offers deliciously appealing art-pop.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.