Wie kent het nummer over zwarte paarden en een kersenboom niet? KT Tunstall heeft een knaller van een hit gemaakt in 2005. Tussen toen en nu heeft Katie vier albums gemaakt, waaronder de meest recente Tiger Suit. De plaat komt weliswaar uit oktober 2010, maar wegens het aankomende KT-optreden maakt FOK! een uitzondering. Worden wij verwend of geplaagd?
Read the rest of this review on Fok reviews (Dutch)
Via the VPRO Luisterpaal you can listen to a new CD release. This time it is the CD 'Tiger Suit' from 'KT Tunstall'. This is the track list.
KT Tunstall turned heads in 2004 with just the power of her voice and her guitar, but the intervening years have found her showing little interest in being just another worked-up folkie. On her third album, , she leavens sleek pop songs with her warm-whiskey rasp, clawing against the digitized guitar in "Difficulty" and rocketing up the center of the galloping, tribal "Uummannaq Song." Though the album was recorded in the same Berlin studio where U2 created , 's chief aim isn't experimentalism so much as empathy. "Push That Knot Away" may pivot on a pulsing dance beat and a tense, minor-key strum, but its lyrics are hellbent on encouragement: "May you always live in hope," Tunstall coos, as the storm builds behind her. That it can so nimbly navigate such contradictions is one of 's cleverest tricks.
Tunstall’s third album proves that a bit of “grrr” does the girl good.
It looks like a shapeless stripy jumper on the album cover, but KT Tunstall's Tiger Suit is her protection against the world, a clawed insurance in the face of critical brickbats and the pressures of having to go out there and be a star. It's served her well. Three albums in, Tunstall appears undamaged, an ordinary girl you'd want to spend time with and an honest performer it's hard to dislike.What sounds like faint praise is more charitably cast as recognition that Tunstall has settled into a familiar groove. Years of busking and almost wilful avoidance of the spotlight meant that by the time the Mercury-nominated Eye to the Telescope turned up in 2004, Tunstall was fully formed as an artist, equipped with an effects pedal and songs that sat just on the edgy side of AOR. Second album Drastic Fantastic barely tinkered with the formula, but suffered from a relatively short gestation.