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| | Sweet Life | | | Music Artist : | | Catie Curtis | | Music Style : | | General | | Record Label : | | Compass Records | | Release Date : | | 2008-09-09 | | Store Price : | | $17.98 | | Artistopia's Price: $17.98 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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CD Tracks/Songs
Disc 11. Sweet Life 2. Are You Ready to Fly? 3. Everything Waiting to Grow 4. For Now 5. Happy 6. What You Can't Believe 7. Lovely 8. Sing 9. Soul Meets Body 10. Fools 11. Princess and the Mermaid 12. Over
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Other Artist Albums
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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Disappointed in the packaging Submitted on: 2009-01-18 |
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| They use to provide jewel boxes with CD's. This just came in ia card board box. Music and artwork good though. Uncle's Rule |
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A Step Down For Curtis Submitted on: 2008-12-27 |
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| I'm a big fan of Catie Curtis', but this album is her worst that I've heard so far. "Long Night Moon" is her strongest, but it sounds like she's badly losing her voice on this album, makes me really sad. It's like she can barely make a sound or something. I hope it's just a temporary thing and not that she has some type of permanent damage to her amazing instrument... |
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Sweet Life Submitted on: 2008-12-24 |
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| Catie Curtis has again captured stories about family, lovers, partners, and change. I really appreciate her perspective and I know there are a lot of parents who can relate to her songs. "Sing" is by far my favorite song on this album. Music saves lives every day. |
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Sparkler In Mid-Air Submitted on: 2008-09-20 |
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When Catie Curtis hit the scene with her marvelous self-titled CD Catie Curtis and bolstered her reputation with strong sets like A Crash Course in Roses, she was a marvelous new voice on the folk scene. With her last CD Long Night Moon, she was still in top form as she focused on becoming an adoptive parent. This CD on the Compass label is another strong set with Catie's unique sense of melody and her vocals at times breathless and vulnerable, at times swooping and ecstatic. "Sweet Life" has a crack instrumental backing with Andrea Zonn who released her own solo set Love Goes On singing supporting vocals on seven tracks. Alison Prestwood who has worked with Bonnie Raitt also contributes with a lively bass.
The set focuses on the joys of domestic life. On her web site, Catie is quoted about the sunny focus of this set, "There are lots of reasons to be unhappy or anxious at this time, and I think the album is as much about resilience as anything. In order to stay sane & keep moving forward, you have to be able to look at all the bad news around you and still see the beauty that is there alongside the trouble."
The title track echoes overcoming adversity, "I had lots of big plans for tomorrow, most of them probably won't come true, And maybe it's a bitter pill to swallow, but it led me here to this sweet life beside you." "Are You Ready to Fly" charms with memories of good friends who part when summer ends, "On we go down crooked roads, alone to who knows where, Burning this moment like a sparkler in mid-air." "For Now" shines soft & slow with a gentle melody like an adult lullaby, "Let go of all your heart's holding, everything weighing you down; And lay here with me, let the world be for now." "Happy" is a ray of sunshine that reminds me of a different song with the same name that is the excellent title track on David Carn's excellent CD Happy. "Sing" puts a smile on your face with Catie's resolve to get through adversity, "To sing through all the danger, through all the thunder & the pouring rain, we sing to draw a circle around us, when trouble has found us, sing." Catie covers Death Cab for Cutie's "Soul Meets Body" and adopts the lovely melody so completely that one has to look closely to see it is the only song on the set she did not write, "I want to live where soul meets body & let the sun wrap its arms around me." When I first listened to this set, I thought it was a good Curtis album. However, with repeated listenings, depth is revealed. This is a GREAT Curtis set. Songs such as the vaudeville-like "Lovely," the beautiful melody on "Fools" and the parental confusion of "The Princess & the Mermaid" allow for no weak tracks. Catie concludes the set with the powerful song "Over" that regrets an ending, "Every end is a beginning & the thread lies underneath; A river born in the mountains starts over in the sea; And if we're only, only tiny grains of sand, then hold me, hold me, Don't let me slip through your hands." Catie Curtis is in fine form on this outstanding CD. Bravo! |
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