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Goth cabaret female angst. Nov 04, 2009 Amanda Palmer (lead singer and pianist for the legendary band known as THE DRESDEN DOLLS) goes solo with a wicked album not far from her populur past. This is some swell recording (produced by Ben Fold of BEN FOLDS FIVE), great lyrics, imaginitive strings...great little CD. One to know. For fans of THE DRESDEN DOLLS, RASPUTINA, and TORI AMOS.
solid hit, with some misses Oct 20, 2009 This album is ok for me. There are some excellent tracks, but some that fall short. Astronaut, Ampersand, Leeds United, Have to Drive, The Point of All and Another Year are surprisingly very very good. The rest are ok. Oasis is terrible. Even if it weren't for the context or content or tone, the song is annoying carousel music from hell. Blake Says really grows on you. I can't judge to say if Dolls fans would like this or not, because this album has me pretty divided by the tracks, even if some tracks are just fab. She should use more horns on her album in the future. ;)
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Record Company is screwing Amanda over Sep 08, 2009 If you are a fan of Amanda Palmer please buy directly from HER her website, or in person at one of her shows.
The record company company is withholding all of the profits if you buy this anywhere other than directly from her.
Please re-post this review any where see any of her products for sale.
The vastly rich and rewarding intrigue of "Who Killed Amanda Palmer" Jul 29, 2009 While many may know Amanda Palmer as half of the Boston based "Brechtian Punk Cabaret" band The Dresden Dolls, in September of last year, Palmer took a hiatus from fellow Doll drummer Brian Viglione to release her first solo album, "Who Killed Amanda Palmer," produced by Ben Folds. The album, just like its enigmatic lead singer, is without categorization, but really, isn't that what art truly needs to be? If one can instantly label something by simply saying, "oh, it's clearly a mix of this band and that band," or "it really sounds a lot like such and such band," then why bother? Why not just listen to the original instead of something that is merely trying to emulate something it is not, and in the process, losing its soul? This is not the case with Amanda Palmer. When I first got the album I listened to it straight through and then promptly did so again without pause. Palmer has created something that is vividly rich and just yearning to be devoured. This is an album that will seduce you with its brilliance, and one that you will continue to try and discover more about on each listen.
What becomes immediately striking on first approaching the album is the dynamic nature of Palmer's voice. At one point it is almost a fairy tale, such as in the Judy Garland-esque song "What's the Use of Wondrin'?," yet then it can quickly become sultrily intoxicating like at the beginning of "Leeds United." At other times though it's just dripping with the rawness of a personal emotion, beautifully realized in the song "Ampersand." This is matched completely by Palmer's piano playing, at times delicate, but still able to convey such a power of emotion. It is here that the album distinguishes itself from others, for it feels as if it is almost morphing as you are listening to it, constantly changing and never able to be pinned down. It exists on multiple levels at the same time as art should, allowing listeners to discover something within it that speaks directly to them, making it uniquely personal depending on its audience.
This is something that Palmer has the uncanny ability to do, to connect on such a personal level with so many people. When Palmer was playing a benefit concert for the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund in San Diego last week, I asked Rachel, a girl standing in line waiting to see her idol, why she liked Palmer. After thinking for a moment, she told me, "She's brilliant. She's talented. She makes me feel like it's okay to be who I am as a person." I asked if she had ever met Palmer and she stated simply, "no, but it's like I really do know her. She's not fake at all." This intimate connection, the actual invitation for the audience to become part of the art and not just merely a detached observer of it is what sets Palmer apart from others. As Rachel and her friends waiting in line were glad to tell me, they not only follow Palmer on Twitter, but also read her blog religiously.
And Palmer's blog is not some celebrity drivel written by a publicist to appease hungry fans, but rather is just as reflective of the lyrics of Palmer's songs on "Who Killed Amanda Palmer." It's this deconstruction of the artist as an elevated and protected figure into something that is stripped and intensely personal, blurring the lines of the public and the private and showing someone who is not only accessible but, ultimately, real. This builds a trust within an audience, and Palmer's fans fervently support her. Even when the video for her song "Oasis" was banned on British television earlier this year since it contained lyrics such as: "when i got to the party / they gave me a forty / and i must've been thirsty / cause i drank it so quickly / when i got to the bedroom / there was somebody waiting / and it isn't my fault / that the barbarian raped me" delivered in a campy an upbeat pop tune, her fans quickly rallied behind her, with over one thousand comments posted to her blog declaring their support. As Palmer states, "When you cannot joke about the darkness of life, that's when the darkness takes over."
Art needs to be provocative, it needs to make people stop, think, and ultimately, to discuss it. It needs to challenge precepts and beliefs. "Who Killed Amanda Palmer" really cannot be defined as just an album then. It is also the hardcover book with short stories by the brilliant Neil Gaiman. It is the collection of videos to each of the songs. In the end, it is also the relationship she has built with her fans. It is all things at once. "Who Killed Amanda Palmer" is art.
Loves it! Jun 27, 2009 This album is awesome. Amanda Palmer is my favorite. Can't stop listening to it...
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