Thursday, December 18, 2008

Jim Allio New CD Rollout Begins!



Gettin' in my car and headin' towards ya, February 10, 2009, record #2, "Second Chance." Produced, arranged, written and sung by me, Jim Allio aka James Anthony.

Track list and more particulars to follow shortly.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Favorite Records 2008





So many excellent records came out in 2008 that it's hard to pick my very favorites, but I've narrowed it down to these, my personal Lucky 13 for 2008 (in no particular order, that would really be impossible!)"

MIA, Kala
Jazmine Sullivan, Fearless
Britney Spears, Circus
Lykke-Li, Youth Novels
Raphael Saadig, The Way I Feel
This Time Next Year, The Longest Way Home
Michelle Williams, Unexpected
Alanis Morrisette, Flavors of Entanglement
Solange Knowles, Sol-Angel and the Hadley Street Dreams
Coldplay, Viva La Vida
Madonna, Hard Candy
Q-Tip, The Renaissance
Beck, Modern Guilt

Also loved the 2008 releases by these artists: Jenny Lewis; Dwele; Mary J Blige; Lil Wayne; David Archuleta; N.E.R.D.; Ting Tings; Pussycat Dolls; Lady GaGa; Duffy; Kanye West.

Already can't stop listening to the new releases by Common; Keyshia Cole; Musiq Soulchild; Beyonce; Mya.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

For Your Consideration: Viola Davis and Beyonce Knowles




I saw two movies yesterday dealing with moral ambiguity in different settings: "Doubt," set within the confines of a Catholic parish in the early 60s and "Cadillac Records," which takes place in the music business during roughly the same period. Both were excellent films, engrossing and challenging on several levels, and both caused me to examine my own beliefs about right and wrong and my reactions to what occurred in the stories presented. "Doubt" is of course a big Hollywood award contender, but "Cadillac" is equally as powerful and accomplished.

I have to single out one performance in each film out of uniformly superb casts. In "Doubt," Viola Davis, usually seen in grim television police procedurals, is astounding as the mother of a young boy who may or may not have been molested by his priest, riveting and commanding. The play of emotions that wash over her face and in her eyes is amazing, and that same ability to reveal the inside of a character on the outside is also Beyonce Knowles' feat in her recreation of blues/jazz/rock singer, Etta James, in her early recording career days. Any thoughts of Knowles as a cookie cutter r&b diva or smart stunt casting to draw in a young audience will be immediately dispelled watching her transformation into the messy, conflicted force of nature that was James, particularly back then. There are two scenes in particular which are done quietly in tight close up of her face responding to something Adrien Brody as her mentor/lover, Leonard Chess, is saying that are as brilliant moments of acting as I have seen all year.

And, oh yeah, she sings the hell out of those Etta James standards, too, so all the purists can breathe normally.

Do not miss either performance. I expect to see both nominated for Academy Awards.