Home   >   Music   >   Counting Crows - Hard Candy
Counting Crows - Hard Candy
Click photo to enlarge
 

Counting Crows - Hard Candy

Facts

Hard Candy
Music Price: $9.97
As of May 13 20:10 EDT (details)

Buy from Amazon.co.ukBuy from Amazon.co.uk
Artist(s)Counting Crows
StudioGeffen Records
Release DateJuly 9, 2002
UPC Code606949335625
Buy this item$9.97 at Amazon.com
As of May 13 20:10 EDT (details)
1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Enhanced
 

About Counting Crows - Hard Candy

Hard Candy is, most certainly, just another Counting Crows album. But it's difficult to imagine that there's ever going to be too many. For a band that formed during the grunge-dominated early 1990s, Counting Crows did something remarkably brave--though they helped themselves to the same legacy of 1970s and '80s FM radio rock as the Seattle groups, they chose not to subvert it with any punk influences. Counting Crows were determined to play Steve Miller and Tom Petty and Bruce Hornsby at their own game, and Hard Candy is the fourth astonishing album that has resulted. Counting Crows have now settled into a template with which they clearly feel comfortable--simple but elaborately orchestrated songs, buffed and polished to a high sheen, which serve as a glittering backdrop to Adam Duritz's lyrics. These, now as ever, are chiefly concerned with excitingly unattainable women and the roads he travels to get to or away from them. He tantalizes, as he often does, with specific names and places, but is never so solipsistic that the songs are robbed of a universal appeal. --Andrew Mueller Amazon.com

Tracks

  1. Hard Candy
  2. American Girls
  3. Good Time
  4. If I Could Give All My Love (Richard Manuel Is Dead)
  5. Goodnight L.A.
  6. Butterfly In Reverse
  7. Miami
  8. New Frontier
  9. Carriage
  10. Black And Blue
  11. Why Should You Come When I Call?
  12. Up All Night (Frankie Miller Goes To Hollywood)
  13. Holiday In Spain
  14. Big Yellow Taxi

Similar CDs

This Desert LifeRecovering the SatellitesAugust and Everything AfterSaturday Nights & Sunday MorningsAcross A Wire: Live In New York City
This Desert LifeRecovering the SatellitesAugust and Everything AfterSaturday Nights & Sunday MorningsAcross A Wire: Live In New York City

 

User Reviews

Average user review: 4.0 (247 reviews)

rating: 2 What do you do with hard candy?
Suck it! That's the sentiment I gathered from the band after listening to this album. The music is mediocre, polished with just one or two fairly bright spots. I was drawn to this album upon seeing names like Ethan Johns, Ryan Adams and Leona Naess listed in the credits. I was hoping they could save the Crows from churning out another soulless record, but I was let down. This one is going up for resale. May 13, 2008

rating: 5 Why the bad reviews - This is GREAT!
I can't understand why everyone doesn't like this album. I think Hard Candy is the best Crows work since August. I absolutely LOVE this. I - saddly - find myself hoping Adam stays sad because he is the true definition of a tortured artist. It's so obvious that he was completely heartbroken when writing these songs. I'm a fan for life. If you have any doubts, listen to the songs while reading the liner notes. It's amazing! March 30, 2008

rating: 5 Love it
I don't know how I hadn't bought this CD earlier. I can't stop listening to it! January 18, 2008

rating: 4 Candy Indeed
Some reviewers of "Hard Candy" have decried an apparent stylistic shift towards pop music in comparing it to previous Counting Crows' releases. Having listened to Counting Crows' earlier efforts, I think these reviewers have missed the point. Counting Crows make pop music and always have. They have tended to make good pop music, and "Hard Candy" is no different. And there should be no shame in making, or in enjoying, good pop music.

These songs are well written, with interesting, if not always profound, lyrics and nicely crafted melodies. "Good Time", "If I Could Give All My Love (Richard Manuel Is Dead)" and "Holiday In Spain" stand out as the best among equals here. As is typical of the band, the lush instrumentation and arrangement are also spot-on. The unexpected banjo on "Good Time", slide guitar and mandolin on "Holiday In Spain", retro-style synthesizer on "New Frontier" and background vocal harmonies on "American Girls" are prime examples of how to infuse a song with added power through arrangement. "Hard Candy" is candy, indeed, and sometimes candy is just what one needs.
September 12, 2007

rating: 5 Those Frickin' Crows!
I thought I knew what music was, man. That's all I have to say. I thought I knew what music was. May 14, 2007

More reviews at Amazon.com ...