Hard Candy [Enhanced]

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Hard Candy is, most certainly, just another Counting Crows album. But it's difficult to imagine that there's ever going to be too many. For a band that formed during the grunge-dominated early 1990s, Counting Crows did something remarkably brave--though they helped themselves to the same legacy of 1970s and '80s FM radio rock as the Seattle groups, they chose not to subvert it with any punk influences. Counting Crows were determined to play Steve Miller and Tom Petty and Bruce Hornsby at their own game, and Hard Candy is the fourth astonishing album that has resulted. Counting Crows have now settled into a template with which they clearly feel comfortable--simple but elaborately orchestrated songs, buffed and polished to a high sheen, which serve as a glittering backdrop to Adam Duritz's lyrics. These, now as ever, are chiefly concerned with excitingly unattainable women and the roads he travels to get to or away from them. He tantalizes, as he often does, with specific names and places, but is never so solipsistic that the songs are robbed of a universal appeal. --Andrew Mueller

Music Review:

  1. Heathen Chemistry
  2. Hello Nasty
  3. Here I Go Impossible Again [EP] [CD-single]
  4. Hollywood Town Hall
  5. I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One
  6. Kerosene Hat
  7. Laid
  8. Learning to Crawl
  9. Let It Be [Original recording remastered]
  10. Little Creatures

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Dr. Who: Music From the Tenth Planet [Soundtrack] [Import]

Telemann: Twelve Fantasias for Violin

Tchaikovsky: Serenade for Strings; String Quartet No. 1;

Music: TJ's Popular Dancing Party Tunes [Karaoke]

Super Eurobeat: Best of Euromach 2001 [Import]

The World of Italian Hits of the 70's [Import]

Tom Jobim V.5 [Import]

This Or That [Explicit Lyrics]

Trance Planet, Vol. 3

Soprano 2

The New Oscar Pettiford Sextet

Tina May : I'll Take Romance

This Is the Way It's Done, Not the Way It Should Be Done

Mathias: Dance Overture, Op. 16; Divertimento/Op.25/Sinfonietta, Op.34; Laudi, Op. 62; Vistas, Op. 69

1938-1940