2007 Fall music preview
By Todd Martens, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
Key fall releases
Sept. 11
50 Cent
Kenny Chesney
Animal Collective
Kanye West
Sept. 18
James Blunt
KT Tunstall
Sept. 25
Foo Fighters
PJ Harvey(pictured)
Iron & Wine
Continued..... (Ringo H.W. Chiu / For The Times)
Key fall releases continued
Sept. 25
Rascal Flatts
Bettye LaVette
Will.I.Am
Oct. 2
Bruce Springsteen (pictured)
Matchbox 20
Oct. 9
Beirut
Band of Horses
Oct. 16
Underworld
Oct. 23
Serj Tankian
Back to start. (Mark Seliger / AP)
Kanye West Graduation
One of those most popular yet blunt artists in America, Graduation tracks Kanye Wests journey into adulthood. Early listens reveal an album rich in keyboard tones, and steeped in old-school soul. The honesty and complexity that has made West such an arresting figure doesnt appear to have diminished, as West is eager to boast yet not afraid to admit his mistakes (see the solemn Cant Tell Me Nothing).
Back to schedule. (Brian Kersey / AP)
50 Cent Curtis
The music industry will be counting on the likes of 50 Cent and Kanye West to boost 2007s sales numbers. Hopes are high for Curtis, which was originally slated to be released back in June. But even with the expanded lead time, initial singles Straight to the Bank and Amusement Park failed to generate much buzz, but Ayo Technology is slowly picking up steam.
Back to schedule. (Carolyn Cole / LAT)
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Kenny Chesney Just Who I Am: Poets & Pirates
Kenny Chesneys new album cant come quick enough for country fans, as initial singles Dont Blink and Never Wanted Nothing More are already summer hits. Despite his superstar status, the first listens of his new tunes show an artist still capable of writing middle class anthems. Check the ultra-crisp guitars of Never Wanted Nothing More, which lend support to a narrator who finds bliss on a date by the river with $6 bottle of wine.
Back to schedule. (John Haeger / AP)
Rascal Flatts Still Feels Good
Rascal Flatts struck country gold with last years Me and My Gang, and album that has sold beyond the 4 million mark. The bands fifth release wont deviate too much from its easy-going, down-home Nashville pop, at least if first single and arena-ready ballad Take Me There is any indication. As an added bonus, the song was penned by proven hitmaker Kenny Chesney.
Back to schedule. (Rusty Russell / Getty Images)
Bettye LaVette Scene of the Crime
This is contender for album of the year. The vocals from recently rediscovered soul veteran Bettye LaVette are sweltering on this 10 song collection, which sees LaVette bringing an aged, no-nonsense wisdom to the songs of Elton John, Willie Nelson and Ray Charles, among others. At the backbone of the album are the arrangements from Southern rockers Drive-By Truckers, who frame the tantalizing vocalist with some dive-bar soul.
Back to schedule. (Christine Cotter / LAT)
Will.I.Am Songs About Girls
The Black Eyed Peas principle has been riding a hot streak of late. Not only was he behind the boards on a hit album from bandmate Fergie, but Will.I.Am. has recently worked with the likes of Macy Gray, Talib Kweli, Whitney Houston and is tipped to be recording Michael Jackons comeback album. Songs About Girls should keep Will.I.Am on the charts through the holidays, serving up more or his party-inspired hip-hop.
Back to schedule. (Richard Hartog / LAT)
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Bruce Springsteen Magic
For his first new album with the E Street Band since 2002s The Rising, Bruce Springsteen has supposedly dropped the generic politics that watered down that record, and has returned to some high-energy heartland rock. First single Radio Nowhere lives up to the promise, and should work swell in the gigantic arenas this album was seemingly built for.
Back to schedule. (Jeff Christensen / AP)