Thanks!

Moderator: Andrew
steveo777 wrote:Well done sir! You have produced gold. I love it and it is worthy. I am playing it over and over again, while waiting for my actual CD to get here.
http://www.jeremeyfrederick.com/
Best money I have spent on a CD in years. It is that good!
When you buy the CD you get a download link for immediate gratification.
DO It now! There is nothing to lose and everything to gain!
Thank you Jeremey. It's great!
annie89509 wrote:steveo777 wrote:Well done sir! You have produced gold. I love it and it is worthy. I am playing it over and over again, while waiting for my actual CD to get here.
http://www.jeremeyfrederick.com/
Best money I have spent on a CD in years. It is that good!
When you buy the CD you get a download link for immediate gratification.
DO It now! There is nothing to lose and everything to gain!
Thank you Jeremey. It's great!
How do I hear samples of all the songs before I buy?
And is that Jeremey's wife on the cover?
annie89509 wrote:How do I hear samples of all the songs before I buy?
And is that Jeremey's wife on the cover?
Ehwmatt wrote:Jeremey is a good friend, so I can't give a review and pretend it's objective. But I'll try and sum my thoughts up briefly. First, two broad positive thoughts:
First, Jeremey has proved once and for all that he is a talented writer. He understands how to build a hook and he draws nicely on influences far beyond Journey/general AOR. On the album's strongest tracks, hooks abound. Listen no further than Can't You See He's Gone (1), Every Little Thing (2), Stay (3), What Can I Do (6), and the moody, Cure-esque Goodnight Song (8) (note: J is not credited with a writing credit for Goodnight Song, but it's a favorite for me). This should silence cynics who claim he contributed only sparingly to Never Walk Away and critics who deride tribute singers/bands in blanket fashion.
Second, Jeremey is in fine voice here. But the real showstopper on this CD is the vocal layers. Jeremey has used his vocal talent to track some stunning layered harmonies that would make Mutt Lange, Steve Perry, or even Brian Wilson proud. The first track, Can't You See He's Gone, assaults you with a vocal harmony barrage from the first second with an acapella clip from the chorus. It really makes for a dramatic intro to both the CD and a song that I've been enjoying in demo form for the last few years.
Now, on to the musicianship issue:
Some people here have questioned the "musicianship" on this album. The musicians on the disc are accomplished AOR players who could play circles around me if guitar were their second instrument. I do feel like the tracks could have used some more spontaneity in the instrumentation in some cases. For example, the guitar solo in the otherwise Can't You See He's Gone is nice, but a little too AOR solo by numbers for me. It's something I would have played over the track using my limited musical vocabulary. But there are some stunning moments. The guitar riffs and especially the solo on Every Little Thing are great: melodic, but fresh (and in the solo's case) with several slippery legato licks that make guitar players want to rewind after the solo trails off to try and work it out in their heads. And the guitar player is the same on both tracks. Similarly, I love the interesting little U2/Cure-esque guitar rhythm riff on Goodnight Song that plays before the chorus.
I suspect that the perceived "musicianship" issues are not so much due to a lack of skill, but because of the way I'm assuming this album was recorded (i.e., passing recorded session files among the musicians to track their own instruments and passing revisions back and forth). It's not easy to achieve a true band feel recording this way (especially with rhythm instruments, which probably drives most listeners' perceptions about what they're hearing), and I'm guessing that's what people are hearing when they cite the musicianship.
On a somewhat related note, I really like some of the risks Jeremey took with some of the songs he put on here, and I think some of those risks suffer a bit from the way this album was probably recorded. For example, I Think I Know takes a shot at a moody jazz feel, but it definitely would have benefited from having some jazz musicians, particularly on the horns (the multi-talented Jeremey handles everything but drums on this interesting track). Still though, a fun track.
Finally, the album is definitely at its best when it is rocking. Some of the slower tracks aren't my thing, but I think a lot of people will find something to love in songs like This Is Your Life (not my type of song, but a touching message and a demo of the aforementioned vocal layers) and Hoping For You. I'll probably stick to the rockers.
All in all, it's a really good effort by Jeremey, who managed to write and record this (presumably long distance with the other musicians) while touring with Frontiers and coping with vocal issues on the back end of things.
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