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| Till the Sun Turns Black | 
enlarge | Artist: Ray Lamontagne Label: RCA Category: Music
List Price: $18.97 Buy New: $9.00 You Save: $9.97 (53%)
New (44) Used (20) from $7.87
Avg. Customer Rating: 99 reviews Sales Rank: 380
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.7 x 0.5
MPN: 83328 UPC: 828768332825 EAN: 0828768332825 ASIN: B000GPIPVU
Release Date: August 29, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Be Here Now | | • | Empty | | • | Barfly | | • | Three More Days | | • | Can I Stay | | • | You Can Bring Me Flowers | | • | Gone Away from Me | | • | Lesson Learned | | • | Truly, Madly, Deeply | | • | Till the Sun Turns Black | | • | Within You |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com How do you follow a debut record that achieved out-of-the-blue grandeur on its way to selling a quarter of a million copies? For Maine's Ray LaMontagne, it's all about shaking up the formula, evading repetition and delivering the unexpected. Till the Sun Turns Black finds the introspective singer/songwriter complementing his folk-country ways with traces of strings and horns and spooky soulful background voices. Songs like "You Can Bring Me Flowers" and "Three More Days" are the most R&B-influenced, the latter shuffling about ala The Band or Tony Joe White. Despite its brooding lyrics, "Empty" has a rollicking, almost breezy delivery, a perfect balance to either the hushed title track, the unnerving "Be Here Now" or the horn-fortified waltz, "Gone Away From Me." Throughout the 11-song sequence, and especially on the final song "Within You," LaMontagne's voice remains the record's most crucial element, as vibrant as it is tattered and as harsh as it is flawless. --Scott Holter
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| Customer Reviews: Read 94 more reviews...
Looking HIs Demons In The Eye/Soul On Display August 29, 2006 63 out of 73 found this review helpful
"Ray LaMontagne, a Jesus-esqu man just stood there singing with an ever-so-slightly sway his only movements. How perplexing, right? The point to this confession is that LaMontagne's gently gruff voice is entertainment enough. He's got this pitch and depth that seep in through your ears and make you feel like he's singing just over your shoulder. Not in a sexy kind of way, but in a soulful whisper kind of way." Interview for Rough Mix.
Ray Lamontagne has defied the odds and has turned his second CD into an eclectic mix of tunes that are awe-inspiring. He has been able to open up his wounds so to speak and displays them with minimum words. It is impossible not to feel an instant rapport with Ray LaMontagne. His whispered singing invites us closer to hear each word, and the musical delivery is smooth as silk. The tunes are beautiful and rich, and we hear in them the pain and the oft times joy that invade his soul. and then ours.
Twelve songs penned by Ray LaMontagne. I heard him on NPR with Scott Simon. A very soft voice and sometimes I wish he would speak up. He tells us he had difficulty relating to people until after he was 24. He doesn't explain, it was just that way. He lives with his family in Maine, and we know that he worked in a mill until one day he awoke, heard a song and knew instantly he needed to leave and felt an urge to write and sing. He will not talk about his family. That is his right. His soul is the one on display.
"Be Here Now"- simple enough, a somber work that paves the way for what is to come. Lovely,lyrical music-"Don't let your soul get lonely"
"Empty"-breathless rendition "Let go of my pain, look my demons in the eyes. Been to Hell and back so many times". Lovely guitar riffs. My favorite of them all, but it is so hard to choose.
"Barfly"- "Just a barfly, baby, uh huh" Low whispers, acoustic guitar. Just lovely.
"3 More Days"- that says it all, simply put-" 3 more days, girl, you know I will be coming home ". A deep groove that finds a connection between him and us.
"Can I Stay"-a loving refrain repeated over and over with an acoustic guitar background. "Rhyming tune, darling".
"You Can Brig Me Flowers"- "When I Am dead and Gone", one of my favorite of these new tunes. Bluesy/jazz.
"Gone Away From Me"- a Van Morrison like tune that opens the door. "For awhile I sat there staring at her photograph, now it's gone away from me".
"Lesson Learned"- "That I could have chosen another over her. You always said I was an actor, baby. I wear the brand of traitor, when I was so obviously framed." Lies and truths.
"Truly, Madly, Deeply"- is this love? Quietly , hopefully..
"Til The Sun Turns Black"- Can you see the young and the old pushing their grocery carts through the park? Can you see the old man talking on the telephone til the sun turns black? Times goes slowly til the sun turns black"
"Without You"- ` A Beatle-like reminiscence, "Love,la,la ,ah, ah, ah , aha"
This may be the album of the year for me. Every tune is a must hear again and again. The music and lyrics are so in-tune with Ray LaMontange's whispery voice. They seem to be part of the same universe. Quietness and darkness permeate this CD. Esquire Magazine says it simply" His songs are grand mansions built on crumbling foundations, haunting tunes that document the propensity for real love. He'll be a superstar alright"
Highly, highly, highly recommended. prisrob 8-29-06
No Sophomore Slump August 29, 2006 38 out of 42 found this review helpful
Ray Lamontagne's new album TILL THE SUN TURNS BLACK makes a solid follow up to his great 2004 debut TROUBLE. TROUBLE introduced a singer who was favorably compared to such heavy weights as Van Morrison and Otis Redding.
While TROUBLE hit you over the head with it's great title track and then continued with some songs in a similar mode, the new album is a different beast altogether. TILL THE SUN TURNS BLACK moves at a slow simmer, rising only above a whisper on a couple of tunes. Despite it's subtlety, this album packs the same emotional punch as its predecessor. Lamontagne's songs are floated on quiet string and brass arrangements with acoustic guitar and stirring vocals to create a music that falls somewhere between the blues and the music of Nick Drake. It all shadows and smoke.
Fans of TROUBLE will no doubt find much to like here, but will need to approach this new release with patience. A point of reference for existing fans would be TROUBLE's closing track ALL THE WILD HORSES. It is an album that will reward the listener with more depth each time they play it.
One of the best albums of the year. The amazing Ray LaMontagne.. January 10, 2007 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
Sounding like a combination of southern rocker, singer-songwriter, and acoustic balladeer, it's rather surprising to learn Ray LaMontagne comes from New Hampshire. If you haven't heard his debut album "Trouble", then you will be picking it up soon once you hear his excellent second studio album, Til The Sun Turns Black. From the elegant opening bars of "Be Here Now" and the first gravely, rumbling vocals, you understand you are hearing real, unique talent. If you can fall in love with an artist after 2 songs, then this is one of those albums.
"Be Here Now" mixes a strong acoustic guitar melody with atmospheric strings that ebb and flow with the song's moods. LaMontagne's perfect voice is the glue holding the disparate elements together, a plaintive call to a lover (perhaps lost?). This song alone made me a fan. "Empty" is a Tom Petty-ish mid-tempo acoustic rocker with strings, as his elegantly poetic lyrics describe a world he is searching for. With his wild hair and bushy beard, LaMontagne looks as if he stepped off the stage in the 1970's, and his music certainly evokes that time. "Barfly" is a simple acoustic ode to a woman, "kiss me before you go...I'm going nowhere baby", with a soft harmony provided by singer Rachael Yamagata. Though he intertwines themes of loneliness and loss with love and hope, no songs feel depressing or dark; Ray's voice possesses so much life that you sense he sings with a wry detachment.
"Three More Days" takes in some keyboards and a southern blues drum beat, and lays LaMontagne's plaintive voice over the top "three more days...girl you know I'll be right there by your side baby..I can bring it on home..." Some well-mixed horns give the song some added life, but this is the most southern sounding of all the songs. "Can I Stay" is a James Taylor sounding ballad, "there is nothing I want more except to wake up on your floor", while "You Can Bring Me Flowers" incorporates some jazzy horns with a up-tempo electric guitar. "Gone Away From Me" is reminiscent of a funkier version of Chris Isaac. "Lesson Learned" and "Truly, Madly, Deeply" are soft ballads, and "Til the Sun Turns Black" echoes back to "Be Here Now" with its soft vocals, strings, and acoustic guitar. "Within You" is a upbeat closing track that fits the overall mood of the album and sends it off gently.
Despite its 44 minute running time, this album packs a punch of emotion and poetic lyrics. Ethan Johns did an excellent job keeping LaMontagne's voice as an instrument, its gravel rawness blended perfectly with acoustic and electric guitar, strings, and horns. This was an album that builds on the success of his debut Trouble, and demonstrates again that the gift of the singer-songwriter comes from within. Ray LaMontagne of New Hampshire and Lewiston, Maine has a unique gift, and was kind enough to share it with us. This is a must hear album, and on my Top 5 for 2006. Pick this one up today.
A.G. Corwin St Louis, MO
More inspired Ray LaMontagne songcraft August 30, 2006 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
"Can you see the wise man simply living, loving quietly..." so sings Ray LaMontagne on the title track of his latest release Till The Sun Turns Black. It's a lyric, you sense, that is close to the singer-songwriters heart, if not even some sort of personal credo. For Ray LaMontagne and his music are most determinedly not of this ever more frenetic age - and thank goodness for that. It's comforting to know that there are still genuine, unadulterated back-woods musical geniuses out there. LaMontagne's songs seem to naturally embody the same sort of spirit, feel and grain of artists like Otis Redding, Van Morrison, Stephen Stills, and Ray Charles and yet even after just one album, his voice and style are umistakably his own. One listen to Ray LaMontagne and you don't soon forget it. Quite simply, the man moves me, and he also soothes my soul. I'm sure I'm not alone in feeling this.
It's wonderful to discover then, that after the success of LaMontagne's 2004 debut Trouble, his new songs have lost nothing in the way of their original unpretensious, heart-on-sleeve earthiness. If anything, Till The Sun Turns Black is a touch more somber than Trouble, with a profound sense of melancholy running through even the lighter moments. Songs about hard times, self-doubt, and lost love can generally be relied upon to be compelling, but rarely are they so effortlessly graceful, hauntingly sincere and unutterably beautiful as they are on Till The Sun Turns Black. Aided once more by the brilliant multi-instrumentalist Ethan Johns (it's hard to imagine any other producer for LaMontagne) the two prove beyond all doubt that Trouble was no fluke. It was in fact, only the beginning. Without altering his style drastically, LaMontagne has really broadened his approach here.
The fragile, bewitching Be Here Now opens proceedings, and immediately you are transfixed by waves of cascading piano, guitar, violins, atmospheric touches and LaMontagne himself repeating the title like a man possessed. It's a tremendously moving start, and quite different to anything we've heard from him before - and it gets even better. `Empty' follows, in all of it's broken-down, desolate glory, and it's about as beautiful a Ray LaMontagne song as is possible to imagine. Over stirring, elegant strings the singer sets the scene - " She lifts her skirt up to her knees... walks through the garden rows with her barefeet laughing" before proceeding to knock that pretty image down with a crushing blow - "I've never learned to count my blessings but choose instead to dwell in my disasters". Clearly, the hellhounds on his trail have not been so easy to shake off. Like much of the songwriters work, `Empty' has a truly widescreen, cinematic feel. You could imagine it working brilliantly in a recent film like Brokeback Mountain, or, going back a few years, something like Badlands. More than once during the course of this song, as well as on other tracks like the stirring `Lesson Learned' or the Lennon-esque album closer `Within You' - the thought has struck me - how can one man's voice convey so much feeling? It's not only abundantly present in the soulful timbre of his voice, but also in the way he delivers a line. By turns hesitant, wistful, vulnerable, and impassioned.
It's tempting at this point in my review to go through and dissect each successive track on Till The Sun Turns Black, but I'll spare you all of my gushing praise and leave it for your ears to experience, rather than your eyes. Suffice to say though, whether LaMontagne turns his hand to funky, rump-shaking soul (Three More Days) or simple, unaffected balladry (Can I Stay) or rough-hewn, down & out blues (You Can Bring Me Flowers), the resulting songs, without exception, succeed on all counts. Till The Sun Turns Black is another wonderfully assured step forward for this enigmatic, deeply talented artist.
Highlights: Be Here Now, Empty, Three More Days, Lesson Learned, Till The Sun Turns Black
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A Little Disappointing September 6, 2006 6 out of 8 found this review helpful
Of the many, many songs available for his sophomore release, LaMontagne didn't choose his strongest - or set them for the maximum "bang" - in my opinion. I'm sure there was a method and a reason why he chose what he did, and that's his prerogative. Maybe I'm jaded having seen most of them live - simple and powerful, standing on their own without all the padding - but at any rate, I'm a little disappointed.
The arrangement of Can I Stay reminds me of something I'd hear in the background of a "Lifetime Women's Network" movie - sappy. It would have been so much better, so much more personal were it just Ray and his guitar, as he does it live.
And the horns on Three More Days just sound cheezy.
I am pleased with the title track & Lesson Learned. You Can Bring Me Flowers is funky but again, the horns are cheezy.
New tunes Barfly, Be Here Now and Truly, Madly, Deeply are "perfectly Ray", though.
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