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Home to Oblivion: Elliott Smith Tribute
Christopher O'Riley
Home to Oblivion: Elliott Smith Tribute
Genres: New Age, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (18) - Disc #1

Christopher O'Riley has gained recent renown for his two albums of piano adaptations of Radiohead songs, Hold Me To This and True Love Waits. He successfully found the inner classical composer in Thom Yorke, and turned th...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Christopher O'Riley
Title: Home to Oblivion: Elliott Smith Tribute
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: World Village USA
Original Release Date: 1/1/2006
Re-Release Date: 4/11/2006
Genres: New Age, Pop, Rock
Style: Tributes
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 713746805623

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Christopher O'Riley has gained recent renown for his two albums of piano adaptations of Radiohead songs, Hold Me To This and True Love Waits. He successfully found the inner classical composer in Thom Yorke, and turned the art-rock group's ambitious songs into symphonic excursions for solo piano. O'Riley brings the same technique to bear on Elliott Smith, a singer-songwriter of considerably more fragile design but who still reveled in idiosyncratic song structures and dense arrangements. Like the Radiohead albums, this isn't Smith turned into Muzak. O'Riley probes the dark underside of Smith's lyrics instrumentally, with shrouded chord clusters and tonal washes. He'll often go toward the angular more than the melodic, fracturing songs sideways. The approach is challenging and sometimes oppressive. It's a relief when he emerges from a storm of overtones to an almost baroque minuet on "Coast to Coast." So goes it for most of Home to Oblivion, as O'Riley makes Smith's music his own. "Independence Day" comes off almost as a jaunty boogie-woogie in O'Riley's hands, while "Cupid's Tricks" is a delirious swirl with piano lines tumbling over each other against aggressive left-hand chord stabs. O'Riley finds echoes of Chopin, Mozart, and Satie in Smith's ruminations. I confess that I've not plumbed the depths of the Elliott Smith oeuvre as Christopher O'Riley has so lovingly and obsessively done. But I suspect that fans of the singer-songwriter might find this CD almost worth it just for the pianist's liner-notes meditation on the life and music of Smith, who committed suicide in 2003. --John Diliberto

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CD Reviews

A Demanding Listen, but a Great One
Alfonso Mangione | Chicago, IL United States | 05/07/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"It ain't easy being an interpreter.



Christopher O'Riley's an accomplished classical pianist, but his biggest claims to fame are three piano interpretations of modern musicians--two discs worth or re-imagined Radiohead, and now this excellent exploration of Elliott Smith.



Most respectable classical musicians don't do this sort of thing--they usually stick to what are deemed respectable composers. And the ones who do bother with anything composed after, say, 1925 and played on anything other than orchestra instruments? They become a little trashy by association, exuding a faint odor of music whoredom as they ride the rock n' roll gravy train from the New Release section to the Bargain Bin. (This happens whether they're re-interpreting the Rolling Stones or Pink Floyd or, heaven help us, Metallica.) Heck, most musicians in general are fearful of doing too much of someone else's work, lest they be seen as bar-band ready tribute acts rather than as the sainted singer-songwriters they'd like to be.



Thank heavens O'Riley's not like most musicians. He seems to see interpretation as something like what it used to be in the Frank Sinatra heydey--something anyone can and should do as much as they want to, provided they're patient enough to really take their time about it and bold enough to make someone else's songs their own. For that's the true test of a musician--not whether or not they cover other people's work, but whether they put in the effort to give their audience something more than a tracing-paper copy of a song's original outlines.



By that standard, O'Riley's latest outing's a smashing success. It is a demanding listen--don't just pop in while riding the subway to work. I'm thinking headphones at home, late night, no distractions, just you and Chris and Chris's piano and Elliott's ghost.



On his previous outings, O'Riley had an easier task--on most Radiohead songs, lyrics and musical tone match pretty well. (Paranoid songs sound paranoid. Unhappy songs sound unhappy. And...well, that just about covers it, actually. Not that I'm complaining, Thom.) But what made Elliott special, among other things, was the way he so frequently married bleak lyrics about depression and addiction and self-loathing to poppy little tunes as radio-friendly as anything this side of the early 60s Beatles.



So O'Riley's opted here for re-imaginings that somehow capture the trajectory of the original songs while giving them the melancholy feel of Elliot's tragic lyrics and aching voice. (Check out "I Didn't Understand" or "Speed Trials" or especially the sad scared rumble of "Independence Day" if you want to know what I'm talking about.) As usual, O'Riley goes above and beyond the call of duty in scouring the back catalog for songs to play. (If you're like me, that means you might miss "Pitselah" but feel comforted that someone out there's a much more devoted and appreciative Elliott Smith fan than you'll ever be.)



It's a shame this sort of thing doesn't happen more often. Then again, there aren't too many modern musicians respectable enough to deserve the O'Riley treatment."
Stunning
Evan Geller | Farmington Hills, MI United States | 04/18/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I can't get over how moved I was when I first put this cd on yesterday. My goodness. Christopher ORiley truly captured the essence of Elliott. Haunting and vibrant are buzz words I could use to describe it. But, I am hesitant to use words to describe these interpretations, cause ORiley conveys the emotional undercurrent so well without the use of words. This is music that truly speaks for itself."
O'Reiley will take you "Home to Oblivion"
Alfonso Mangione | 05/01/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Since Elliott's passing, a handfull of tribute albums have trickled out of the woodwork. Some good, and some not so good. Elliott's elequent music inspired many. His dark meloncolly lyrics shook the shattered hearts of lost souls like me.



O'reily who is known by many for his beutifull renditions of Radiohead's masterful songs has yet again created a near perfect gem. One can tell that he could relate to Smith's music. The mood and atmosphere that is created by Elliott's music still shines trough on O'reiley's effort yet with something more.



Elements of classical masterpieces such as Beethoven's 5th or the darker works of Chopin are alluded to in this somewhat esoteric album. O'reiley grabs Elliott's music by it's fiery horns and submits it to a glorious reworking that i think would make Elliott proud.



Some Key tracks that Seem to reign high on top are track 3. i didn't understand, track 9. cupid's trick, track 13. christian brothers, as well as Track 14. everything means nothing to me. Although nearly all of tracks hold there own weight.



This album although very good does have its few flaws. To one that is not a fan of or is not famillar with Elliott's music, this album may seen foreign. At the times on tracks such as Coast to Coast and Roman Candle the piano work sounds slightly jumbled, although this adds to the mood of these songs.



One final word or words should i say. O'reiley Will not cease to amaze you.











Note: I am not under 13, I am using a public computer.

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