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Todd Rundgren - Liars (Jpn) (DVDA)

Liars (Jpn)
$9.99 - $19.99
5 out of 5.0 stars 2 Ratings (1 Review)

Album Details: Liars (Jpn)

Release Date:01/02/2006
Label:Silverline
UPC:676628826294

Other Available Formats: Liars (Jpn)

User Reviews: Liars (Jpn)

  • Overall:

    Return of the Wizard A True Star!

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  May 3, 2004 | 1 out of 1 found this Liars (Jpn) review helpful

    Pros: Best CD since Todd's Nearly Human CD over 10 years ago!

    Cons: None!

    Rock's Wizard A True Star Todd Rundgren makes his Sanctuary debut with his Best work since his earth shattering early Bearsville albums. This collection recorded mostly by himself just like Something Anything and Hermit of Mink Hollow is a perfec...t mix of techno, pop, soul, r and b, and hard rockers.Opening with the rousing 'Truth' and climaxing with a sublime reading of Post 911's 'Liar', the entire set is at once fiery and also at times deftly subdued. The centerpieces are 'Sweet' an epic homage to the truth being sweet, and Mammon, a stormy meditation on worshiping money in a God-like way. 'Did you have to rub our face in it'? Todd Roars! Almost in a way as if he was shouting at Bin Laden himself! But more sedate tracks like 'Stood Up', 'Past', and 'The Wondering' should not be ignored by radio programmers. 'Liars' is destined for many year-end Top 10 Lists! Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Liars (Jpn)

  • All Music Guide

    It has been so long since Todd Rundgren has seemed to take his recording career seriously, that it's easy to assume that his 2004 album Liars would fit right alongside such follies as the awkwardly interactive TRi or the bossa nova tribute With a Twist or perhaps that it's merely an endearingly messy collection of tunes, One Long Year. After nearly 15 years of these kinds of releases, it seemed like Rundgren had drifted into the wilderness, where he was more concerned with technology than crafting albums, so it's an utter shock that Liars isn't only a carefully considered, carefully constructed record, but that it's his best pop album in over 20 years. Like any of his best albums, it benefits by having a loose theme or at least an overriding concept that focuses Rundgren. The title makes plain what the theme is, but in case you didn't catch it, Todd spells it out in the liner notes: "All of thse songs are about a paucity of truth. At first they may seem to be about other things, but th...at is just a reflection of how much dishonesty we have accepted in our daily lives." Rundgren is furious about lies, whether they come from the government, religion, family or entertainment. He's angry that the bright optomistic future he was promised as a kid hasn't arrived, he's angry that all the promises of the '60s have been tattered, he's angry that music he's loved has been cheapened and removed of soul, he's angry and despairing about his country and the world, and that anger has lead him to shed some of his musical crutches particularly an overindulgence on new technology and a penchant for cuteness and deliver a tuneful, visceral, catchy album where even the softer, sweeter songs have heavy themes. Perhaps he decided that the only way his thoughts could be clearly heard is through pop songs both elaborate or simple, but whatever the case, this is the first time he hasn't seemed embarrassed to be writing pop songs since Tortured Artist, but this album has a gravity and urgency that record lacked. He hasn't sounded this engaged or impassioned since The Hermit of Mink Hollow, giving slow, soulful tunes like "Sweet" and "Past" a touchingly bittersweet feel and harder numbers like "ManMon" and "Liars" a visceral, gutlevel impact; few angry protest albums have been this catchy. Rundgren has so much to say he lets Liars run long longer than A Wizard, A True Star or Todd, actually but it's always absorbing and often quite gripping, proof that he not only still retains the ability to surprise, but that he can make an album as provocative and successful as he did at his '70s peak. And that makes Liars one hell of a comeback. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Todd Rundgren

Todd Rundgren's best-known songs -- the Carole King pastiche "I Saw the Light," the ballads "Hello, It's Me" and "Can We Still Be Friends," and the goofy novelty "Bang on the Drum All Day" -- suggest that he is a talented pop craftsman, but nothing more than that. On one level, that perception is true since he is undoubtedly a gifted pop songwriter, but at his core Rund... Read more