Butch Walker - Letters (CD)

Letters
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4.9 out of 5.0 stars 11 Ratings (11 Reviews)

Album Details: Letters

Release Date:09/01/2004
Label:Epic Japan
UPC:4547366016123

Other Available Formats: Letters

User Reviews: Letters

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    the Butch is back!

    By Mike  Sep 8, 2004 | 1 out of 1 found this Letters review helpful

    Pros: amazing lyrics and very catchy

    Cons: not as heavy as expected

    at first i was a bit confused. butch not rocking out with devil horns in the air? no screaming guitars and def leppard chorus? then i thought about it....this guy has been doing that for years.....he just did a full on acoustic tour....just him and h...is guitar. that's where it's all coming from (that's what i think anyway).after a few listens....i'm in. it's a great record. he really did some "new" stuff for butch on this album. i bought it the day it came out and have listened to it every day since. i support it 100%....besides he's a cool guy and from atlanta! rock on wif yo bad self mr. walker! Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    a great cd

    By delfino  Aug 28, 2004 | 1 out of 2 found this Letters review helpful

    Pros: the lyrics are more at home than any other band out there

    Cons: a little softer butch but good

    I feel that letter is going to be one of the best unknown cd this year. Butch was playing music out side his time with marvelous three and know that time has caught up with him he is making great music with a great ear for music. Along with havign ...catchy tunes as mixtape to a great ballad as thank-you note you can not go wrong with this cd. It is good from start to finsh. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Letters

  • All Music Guide

    Back in 2002, Butch Walker made a record for Arista that placed him somewhere between '80s solo troubadours like Rick Springfield and the distortion crackle of fin de siècle alternarock. Walker's a talented songwriter, so he largely pulled it off. Still, it did seem kinda forced, and the thing quickly disappeared. Walker's resurfaced in 2004 on Sony, and this time around things are much more comfy. From its handwritten liners to the obvious care with which its tracks were assembled in the studio, Letters feels like a direct communication from Butch's big Rundgren and Cheap Tricklovin' brain. Like Pete Yorn, he draws ably on the mustache rock of his youth to make this music stand out in the present check the clever lyrics and subtle synth processing of "Mixtape" to hear what '70s pop sounds like in a 21st century light. "1 Summer Jam"'s cheeky power pop has a definite (and welcome) ELO quality, and "Don't Move" figures out how to cross Radiohead with creepy old 10cc. He fits in some ba...llads ("Best Thing You Never Had"), exuberantly cynical rockers (the antiL.A. rant "Lights Out"), and gorgeous, vibetoned dusk pop is that the ghost of a young Jackson Browne floating through "So at Last"? There's no theft here. Rather, Walker sounds like a music fan given a golden opportunity to make a private gatefold masterpiece. Sure, "Mixtape" and "Summer Jam" can and should be hits. But it's likely true that Walker doesn't care if they are. Letters' ending proves this. "Promise" is a syrupy, achy, even funny little love song done up in drippy reverb and plaintive acoustic strum, while "Thank You Note" is just Butch and a piano and a strikingly personal tribute to a fallen friend. These quieter songs ground the album's more colorful moments; they help create the cycle that's so often missing from records these days. Walker's made an album for all the mornings after. - Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Butch Walker

After a brief taste of major-label success with his former band Marvelous 3 during the late '90s, Butch Walker traded his bandmates for a solo career and made his second bid for rock roll success in the early 2000s. The singer/songwriter/guitarist/producer's three-album run with Marvelous 3 peaked in 1998, when the song "Freak of the Week" became a sizable hit. However... Read more