Search - Cyndi Lauper :: Body Acoustic

Body Acoustic
Cyndi Lauper
Body Acoustic
Genres: Alternative Rock, Folk, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

Cyndi Lauper may have been mocked as a ditz when she emerged in 1983, but her songs have proven to be a lot more enduring than those by more critically respected artists of the 1980s. "Time After Time," for instance, has b...  more »

     
3

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Cyndi Lauper
Title: Body Acoustic
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sony
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 11/8/2005
Genres: Alternative Rock, Folk, Pop, Rock
Styles: New Wave & Post-Punk, Adult Contemporary, Singer-Songwriters, Adult Alternative
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 827969456927, 828767767222, 828768043424

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Cyndi Lauper may have been mocked as a ditz when she emerged in 1983, but her songs have proven to be a lot more enduring than those by more critically respected artists of the 1980s. "Time After Time," for instance, has been covered by everybody from Miles Davis to Faith Hill to Uncle Kracker. That stylistic range can also be found on The Body Acoustic, on which Lauper--her voice now endearingly raspy--revisits her best-known songs with the help of an impressive gallery of guest stars. Sarah McLachlan comes in for "Time After Time," while the likes of Adam Lazzara (from emo band Taking Back Sunday), Shaggy, and Ani DiFranco also pay their respects. Okay, so we knew Lauper was a good songwriter, but what's been emerging lately is her talent as an interpreter. Here she does to her own material what she did to standards on 2003's At Last. Among the standouts are the stark "She Bop" and the catch-in-the-throat "True Colors" (both sans guests), and the superbly emotional "I'll Be Your River" (with Vivian Green). But lest you think Lauper had gone all serious on us, the album concludes with the bouncy "Girls Just Want to Have Fun"; Japanese duo Puffy Ami Yumi (a direct visual descendent of Lauper's early days) sings the chorus while Lauper herself lets loose on a new ska arrangement. --Elisabeth Vincentelli

Similarly Requested CDs

 

CD Reviews

An Awesome Album!!!
Scott | 12/04/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I just want to advise everyone that this is the clean version

(without XCP copy protection), of this great album, the Dual Disc is clean too (that one never had XCP on it).



This is a great album (she really made her biggest hits fresh and new,

and the new songs on here are great too, it's of super high quality.



Cyndi said her next album will have all new songs,

so don't worry that Cyndi isn't writing a lot of new songs,

but this album is awesome anyway!





Sony really should appologize to Cyndi and her fans

for putting the XCP on the first version of this,

but at least they just released this clean version,

hopefully fans will be able to find it."
Great Reworkings.....Now Bring On The New Original Material!
Jef Fazekas | Newport Beach, California United States | 01/23/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"With her latest release, the stripped-down THE BODY ACOUSTIC, Cyndi Lauper continues to reinvent herself and relaunch her stalled career. Starting with 2003's AT LAST, both Lauper and her label have been trying to make people forget that she was the Girl Who Just Wanted To Have Fun, and instead recast her as a serious singer/songwriter. THE BODY ACOUSTIC does a good job in advancing this goal....stripped down to an acoustic setting, Lauper's lyrics are at the forefront like never before, while her voice just shines. A prime example is the opening cut, the rollicking "Money Changes Everything." One of the key tracks off of Lauper's SHE'S SO UNUSUAL debut, the song's edgy new-wave groove has been replaced with a stomping alt-country one. Amid handclaps and harmonica, this song about true friends and fame (and maybe, just maybe, record company politics) takes on a totally different vibe twenty-two years down the road; you can just hear the experience and hard-won knowledge in Lauper's voice as she sings the lines "They shake your hand and they smile/And they buy you a drink/They say we'll be your friends/We'll stick with you until the end/Ah but everybody's only/Looking out for themselves." Still a true winner! "All Through The Night" has a quiet elegance to it, and could have done very nicely on it's own without Shaggy's rasta rap, which seems calculated and tacked on at the last minute for the guest star x-factor. "Time After Time" is probably one of the most beautiful ballads of the last 45 years, and it's hard to imagine Lauper improving upon the original, but she does just that. Presented here as a duet with Sarah McLachlan, the track is even more delicate and lovely than the first time around. Once again, it seems as if Lauper (and McLachlan for that matter!) is able to draw from years of experience now, and infuses the cut with all that knowledge, pain and insight. I don't use the word "masterpiece" very often, but this is one time when it truly fits! "She Bop" is one of the tracks that most benefits from THE BODY ACOUSTIC's starker arrangements. Devoid of the frantic pace and synth-heavy tempo of the original, this ode to that greatest of taboos (for those of you who've been in a coma the last 23 years.....that would be self-pleasuring!!) takes on a more intimate, almost pleading, vibe, reaching it's zenith with a line that pretty much got buried in the original version's mix ("I bop...you bop...a...they bop/Be bop...be bop...a...lu...she bop/I hope He will understand"). The whistling is also a nice touch. VERY cool! From here we segue into the disc's two new tracks, the sublime "Above The Clouds" and the emotional "I'll Be Your River." "Above The Clouds" (written for Lauper's young son) has a muted quality to it, which is actually a good thing...it allows both Lauper's heartfelt vocal and Jeff Beck's tasteful guitar to absolutely sparkle. "I'll Be Your River", a soul-tinged torch ballad for Lauper's husband, is a mix of fear, heat, yearning, support, devotion and trepidation....in other words, it covers all the bases of love and commitment, much like a real relationship. Lauper has rarely sounded so soulful and earthy, and the lyrics are both touching and painful ("Here stands a fortress built with great walls of silence/Ready to crumble at the slightest word/Finding the right one is becoming a science/I'd like to scream but I ain't gonna be heard"). Yet, in the end, Lauper lets us know that, even with all the pain and work and uncertainty, it just might be worth it after all ("What if all these fears/That we both buy into/Melt away and disappear"). Lovely! The thing that becomes most apparent upon hearing these two tracks is that it's time for Lauper to get in the studio and record a full album of new original material: between these two tracks and a number of the lost SHINE cuts, she's writing some of the best songs of her career. I've always felt that "Sisters Of Avalon" never got it's just dues, in large part due to record company politics (Lauper's label had pretty much written her off by the time the album of the same name came out in 1997). There's a pulsating, driving energy to the song that's still evident in this more unadorned version, and Lauper's vocals soar, particularly on the boarderline rapped bridge ("They brought her in in a new white dress/But the stain left an ache on her mother's breast/Now all that's left are the ghostly steps from a distant corridor"). Anchored by a throbbing baseline and Ani DiFranco's and Vivian Green's sterling harmony vocals, this is still an undiscovered gem! The same can't be said for "Shine"....as a relatively new cut - the title cut of Lauper's non-US released 2001 CD - the singer makes the mistake of doing an almost note for note version of the original track. It would have been much cooler to see her do it as, say, an almost spoken word ballad, just to shake things up. "True Colors" is both sweet and raw (as well as a tad bit pitchy!), while "Water's Edge" is nakedly haunting. The disc could have easily ended on a strong note with "Fearless", all folksy and bare-boned. Instead, we get the only real bomb on TBA, a frantic, silly version of "Girls Just Want To Have Fun", featuring Japanese super-stars (?) Puffi AmiYumi. This signature song of Lauper's has been remixed and rerecorded so many times that this would have been the perfect time to try something new, say, a hushed, bare bones acoustic arrangement. Too bad. But, overall, I've got to say THE BODY ACOUSTIC is a very nice reworking of some classic Cyndi Lauper material. However, I also have to reiterate...it's time for Lauper to get back in the studio and record an album of new original material (As with all my reviews, I'm giving the disc an extra half a star for including the lyrics, something extra rare on best-of's and re-recording packages)."
Cover Me(self)
Gregor von Kallahann | 03/28/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"You know, I've read a lot of reviews for this CD and I don't think I've ever seen ANY commentary on the cover shot. I can't be the only one who's found the positioning of Cyndi's right hand a little--shall we say--suggestive? I mean, c'mon: is she 'bopping' there or what? Well, she does include a remake of her diddling ditty on the record, so the visual is not inappropriate (thematically, at least).



Singers who have lengthy careers and one or more signature tunes (and, yes, you CAN have more than one) often wind up re-recording them, sometimes more than once. What might end up feeding the arguements Cyndi's harsher critics is the fact that so many of these "self-covers" come from her first solo album. (I'm referring to those folks who maintain to this day that SHE'S SO UNUSUAL is the ONLY essential Cyndi Lauper record). Throw in "True Colors" from the 2nd record, and you're pretty much admitting that Cyndi was an artist who peaked early and never re-captured that initial magic.



Of course, there are those of us who believe the actual case is quite the opposite. We maintain that--despite relative the lack of sales--she has continued to develop and grow as a singer and songwriter, and if the larger public AND the rock-crit establishment hasn't caught on to that fact, well, it's THEIR loss.



Some of the best re-makes on this record are the tunes that many listeners will find unfamiliar in the first place. "Sisters of Avalon"--the feminist anthem that should have been --is just as rousing here as the original was in '96. And "Shine"--the title track from the ALBUM that never (fully) was (except in Japan)--is as much an emotional tour de force as it was in its original version, maybe moreso.



As a project album, BODY ACOUSTIC (a title that is a great literary pun, by the way, proving once and for all that one of America's favorite high school drop-out's is no dummy--if there was ever any doubt) is certainly a worthy successor to her previous "cover" classic AT LAST. It should not be regarded as a career summary or overview, but just as what it is, a collection of new versions of her classic songs (several actual hits and others, as the liner notes put it, fan favorites.) One can argue over the selections. I could have used fewer hits like "Money Changes Everything" and "She-Bop," although they're certainly sung well and it's understandable why they were included. I love the tunes, but I don't think they necessarily translate all that well into acoustic setting. Particularly the latter, which was just made for a cheesy 80s style synth arrangement: it was giddy fun in '84. By comparison, the '05 version seems rather staid.



By comparison, however, the "new" Cyndi Lauper is rather more serious than the '84 version. The gorgeous new compositions "Above the Clouds" and "I'll Be Your River" are thoughtful and heartfelt. As are some of the other ballad selections. "Fearless," originally from AVALON is very much a sequel to such previous efforts as "Time After Time" and "True Colors." Still, Cyn is still a girl who likes her fun, as the new, even funner version of "Girls Just Wanna..." demonstrates. It's ska, it's Japanese, it's as exhiliarating as it was in any of it's previous incarnations.



Both BODY ACOUSTIC and AT LAST served as proof positive to the skeptical that Cyndi Lauper could really sing--and interpret. Those of us who have followed her career closely already knew that, of course. She has always been an artist to reckon with, and these two "project" albums drive home the point.





"