POP/ROCK
Brandi Carlile, "By the Way, I Forgive You" (Elektra)
The title of Carlile's new album is a line that recurs throughout the opening track, "Every Time I Hear That Song." It's addressed to an ex-lover, and it contains sadness and regret and tenderness, but also a touch of getting-the-last-laugh vindication. In other words, it's full-blooded, emotionally nuanced, and true to life, and it sets the tone for the rest of this gripping set.
"Whatever You Do" is a stark portrait of someone caught between devotion and independence while "The Mother" is an unabashed celebration of renewal and redemption brought on by motherhood. "Sugartooth" is a wrenching portrayal of an addict, with a strong strain of empathy that also inhabits "The Joke."
The music incorporates country, folk, rock and pop, and even when strings are employed, as they often are, the arrangements remain terse and spare, sharpening the focus on Carlile and her songs.
"I don't always choose to stay on the sunny side," Carlile warns on "Harder to Forgive." That's true, but it's her ability to convey so many shades of emotion that makes her work here so powerful.
NICK CRISTIANO, Philadelphia Inquirer
Stone Temple Pilots, "Stone Temple Pilots" (Atlantic)
When Stone Temple Pilots were rolling out one grunge-tinged rock hit after another in the '90s, you could depend on the DeLeo brothers' raucous guitar work and singer Scott Weiland's unpredictability.