Adam Levy - Washing Day

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Album Details

Title: Washing Day
Artist: Adam Levy
Release Date: 8/14/2007
Label: Lost Wax Records
UPC: 700261217406
Genre: Rock
Styles: Contemporary Pop/Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock
Moods: Confident, Literate, Earnest, Melancholy, Earthy, Passionate, Searching, Reflective, Gritty, Rousing, Self-Conscious, Insular
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Washing Day
  2. I Can Promise You That
  3. In the Morning
  4. I Put a Spell on You
  5. Breathe with Me
  6. Longest Day of the Year
  7. There Goes the Neighborhood
  8. I Shot Her Down
  9. Unspoken
  10. The Party Is Over
  11. Never Been Alone Like This

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2007CDLost Wax Records701

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Adam Levy's "day job" is playing guitar in Norah Jones' band. Not surprisingly, his own music holds some similarities to his boss'. They share certain laid-back musical qualities that swirl jazz, blues and country colorings into the singer/songwriter palette. In fact, Jones covered Levy's "In the Morning" on her Feels Like Home album. One main difference between the two, however, comes from the fact that Levy (not to be confused with the Adam Levy who fronts the Minneapolis roots rock band the Honeydogs) is a guitarist so his music naturally features a much more prominent guitar sound than Jones' piano-based music does. Not strictly a subtle strummer, Levy is not averse to attacking his guitar with enough ferocity to rattle the coffee cups at Starbucks. Both the blues "In the Morning" and the twangy stomper of a murder tale "I Shot Her Down" boast some raucous guitar work. Levy, however, doesn't showboat his guitar skills here, choosing instead to use his typically economical playing to service his songs. He fuels soulful rocker "I Can Promise You That" with a funky guitar line, while the jazzier "Breathe with Me" gets sparked by an eerie guitar figure that perfectly fits the song's nocturnal mood. When Levy slows down the pace on his spare, melancholic romantic laments "Unspoken" and "Longest Day of the Day," he suggest the craftsmanship of a Freedy Johnston. Levy's lyrical skills really shine on the evocatively rendered title track. He fills this relaxed early morning ode with little snapshots but then slips in the simple yet poetic observation -- "my secrets now just streaks of blue" -- after discovering an old, now laundered notebook in his dungarees. This disc opener bookends nicely with "The Party Is Over," a weary-eyed look at a long night that comes as the album winds down. The disc's concluding song, however, is something of a tempo-changer. "Never Been Alone Like This" is Levy's poppiest track, a jangly ditty that would improve any power pop album. Much like Jesse Harris has stepped out of Jones' shadow, Levy seems poised to do the same. ~ Michael Berick, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Adam LevyVocals, Guitar
Andy HessBass
Chris DiffordApplause
George MarinoMastering
John SiketEngineer, Mixing
Marvin EtzioniOrgan (Hammond), Mixing, Percussion, Piano, Tom-Tom, Producer
Todd ChalfantPhotography