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Artist:
Julia Douglass
Label: The Orchard Category: Music Average customer rating: Media: Audio CD Number Of Discs: 1 UPC: 669910016527 EAN: 0669910016527 ASIN: B00000HX6W Release Date: 2000-04-01 |
Tracks:
Customer Reviews:
I Could Listen Over and Over Again and Find New Inspiration Each Time.......2006-08-08
One great song. One very good song. That's it........2005-05-07
Review of Fetish for the Underdog.......2002-01-08
What's this? I thought. Good, textural music straining through the tin-plated speakers of Tracy's cheap, floor-mounted boom-box? After months of having to choose between Garth Brooks and the Best of the Eagles as the short list from her CD collection, here was something that sounded pretty good, at least at first.
"Who is this?" I asked.
"It's Julia Douglass!"
"Hmmm," said I, assuming the artist was a typical VH-1 pop diva, prompted by her swarms of publicists and songwriters into recording another album between stints on the Lilith tour. Then I listened for awhile.
I think that Fetish for the Underdog is one of the best recordings released in the late 1990s. To put this opinion into perspective, consider the fact that the other artist that I think put out the best stuff during this time period include Sublime, Ziggy Marley, Ben Harper and The Fugees. Julia's stuff ain't no wimpy bubble-gum dance-video soundtrack, and it ain't mad-at-the-world, ferrous, mosh-pit thrash neither. It is pop music with intellectual complexity and lyrics with psychological soul.
When you listen to the album, check out Julia's incredible vocal range, her hypnotic use of cadence, and the nuances in her voice. She handles genres from eerie jazz to rhythmic folk with equal mastery. And let's talk about lyrics. How many musicians are able to say something intelligent, relevant and evocative, and are able to do it in a way that flows poetic, conjuring images that echo in your mind?
To be fair, Julia's performance is not the only thing that's outstanding on the album. The back-up artists are also quite talented, playing fervently and flamboyantly but also, respectful to the lead. The production work on the album is perfect, not too glitzy, but far from understated. Together, everything works, and the music sounds sharp and fresh.
A recurring theme in many of the songs on the album is Julia's ability to see hilarity and hope in pathetic or despondent situations. Finding the beauty beneath the skin and within the lower castes. The celebration of the Underdog! Focusing on enrichment and learning from negativity rather than reveling in despair. Turning heartache into humor into absuridty, while still being poignantly cynical -- the perfect spin doctor for the vast populous of the Prozac Nation.
Wanna Bee, the album's opener is quirky, catchy and right on target. it is a recitation of the ubiquitous desires of the universal consciousness, the anthem of Everywoman/Everyman. This could easily be a Top 10 hit, right along side, or better yet in front of, songs from Alanis Morisette, Natalie Merchant and the Mother Madonna.
Another song, My Boyfriend is a Genius, is a real New York crowd-pleaser, a haunting, psychedelic ballad, rife with abject sarcasm.
Do you Think is something we haven't seen in awhile, an unabashed political message. Right on!
Long Hair is a song so deeply personaly and fraught with psychological innuendo that I'm afraid to talk about it for fear that I would need to spend another two years in therapy.
Jenny is a Sponge -- Again, political, cerebral, intriguing. A dose of reality.
I Can't Mother You -- There ain't no two ways about it, this is simply an awesome song. The beat is sharp and rocking, the lyrics are psychologically profound. Again, I won't touch this,
except to say there's probably a valuable lesson for men in here, except that I'm too weak and shallow a man to let it sink in. My favorite part of the song is Julia's colorful description of an idealized, developmentally synergistic relationship existing in a sort of beatnik, bourgeois utopia. Again, Julia shows us a positive resolution. She doesn't just spout bare criticism of how things are, she provides astute suggestions as to how they should be.
Thank You-- To me, Thank You is one of the most emotionally powerful and cathartic songs written and performed by any artist, whether they be an aspiring rock star or an established Hall of Famer. I once told Tracy that I could make myself cry every time I heard this -- the other day, I was able to do it just humming the song to myself. Anyone who identifies with the subject matter of the piece, a friend who died too young, will certainly be moved by this song. Again, Julia's bouyant spin is the clincher. Rather than moping about personal loss and wallowing in self-pity, the song is instead a celebration of a missing friend, a tribute to mischevious youth and extended adolescence, invoking images of skinny-dipping and prank phone falls. Like others on the album, it is a "happy sad" song, rather like a eulogy set to a snappy, perky, "Hanson-like" melody. For anyone, its an homage to those with whom you shared your treasured memories. What you learned from them. How you're friends and family make you what are you.
There are more gems on the album, and I strongly recommend (something I rarely do) that you go out and buy Fetish for the Underdog. Its one of those rare, wonderful albums by a new artist that sounds good when you first hear it
and gets better and better the more you listen to it. We can only hope that we hear more from Julia Douglass soon. Until then, Underdog is rich and complex enough to satisfy our fetish.
Rare and valuable.......2001-03-27
Album of the year !!.......1999-10-12
Music CD:
Music CD
40 More Reasons to Hate Us ~ A.C.
Eternal Summer ~ Driver Project
Yiddish-American Klezmer Music 1925-1956 ~ Dave Tarras
Where You Wanna Be ~ Markus James
Rajasthan: Music from the Desert Nomads ~ Kohinoor Langa Group
Baiao de Viramundo: Tribute to Luiz Gonzaga ~ Various Artists
Sports Rock & Jams, Vol. 3 ~ Various Artists