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Free Music Notes for Hello...xFree Music Review: Good addition to the library Hit: 5 StarsMy girlfriend heard Tristan on the radio as asked me to pick up the album. After listening through the album a couple of times it reminded me a lot of Sarah McLachlan, Surfacing.
She has an angelic voice with light, poppy beats. Good to listen to when your studying or want some soft background music.
Free Music Review: One of the better albums of 2008 Hit: 5 StarsTristan Prettyman is just an amazing original talent still waiting to be discovered. Somewhere between Beth Orton's soulful vocals and Norah Jones' earthy tunes, Tristan holds her own distinctive voice and guitar play. Opening track "Hello" (one of my favorites) pulls you in with quirky guitar and edgy yet smooth vocals, and sets the tone for the rest of this folk-alt-pop album that will have you drift off to the country-side river or beach somewhere. The songs are inoffensive and light, yet never lack gut and emotion; this rare combination adds sophistication and entices many repeated listenings. As other reviewers have indicated, there isn't one bad track on this album. Definitely one of the better investments I've made this year and really a steal at this price point.
Free Music Review: refreshing Hit: 5 StarsTristen's sound is so relaxing but yet playful. I have really enjoyed this CD. The CD arrived timely and in good shape - I like it that more people are doing away with the hard plastic cases.
Free Music Review: I love it! Hit: 4 StarsI love this CD. I'm not even sure how I found out about it but I am so glad I did. Tristan's voice is wonderful and I've told all my friends about her. Kind of reminds me of Edie Brickell, love it love it love it!
Free Music Review: A greeting that can't be ignored. Hit: 4 StarsThe anticipated sequel to 2005's Twentythree, Hello...x introduces a Prettyman who's found her voice and a confidence to wail a little. Twentythree was a perfect beach album, camped in a wood-and-steel acoustic setting. On Hello...x, Prettyman judiciously adds handclaps, elcetric and slide guitar, and some very funky lyric rhythms to strike the perfect balance between intimate songwriting and Pro-Tools production precision. "Hello" starts with a single guitar and grows toa clap-happy conclusion. "Echo"'s kiss-off to a recalcitrant love juxtaposes a quarter-note lock-step bass with Prettyman's sixteenth-note lyric improvisations -- the charge followed by the evidence. On "Handshake," Prettyman tosses Last-Tango-in-Paris imagery atop and R&B bed with one "uh-huh" goal in mind. Like a Suzanne Vega minus the iciness, or a Shelby Lynne with less of a country air, Prettyman posts a greeting that can't be ignored.
More Free Music Notes: 1 2 3
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