Terence Trent D'Arby's/
Sananda Maitreya Wildcard!
[The Joker's Edition]

At: www.allmusic.com/
| Artist |
Sananda Maitreya |
| Album Title |
Terence Trent D'Arby's/Sananda Maitreya Wildcard!
[The Joker's Edition] |
| Date of Release |
Jul 15, 2002 |
| AMG Rating |
 |
| Genre |
Rock |
AMG REVIEW: Where have you gone,
Terence Trent D'Arby? It's a question that must have entered the minds
of even casual Terence Trent D'Arby fans during his six-plus-year absence
from the spotlight following TTD's Vibrator. In fact, it was an extraordinarily
eventful period for the artist, during which, among other things, he fought
for and finally won his freedom from Sony, set up shop in Italy, experienced
a profound personal and spiritual rebirth, altered his name accordingly,
signed a deal with producer Glen Ballard's small Java imprint, spent much
of 1998 recording three albums' worth of songs, had a creative falling
out and parted ways with Ballard, started his own record label, spent
several years putting the finishing touches on and whittling down a set
of songs for a comeback tentatively titled "The Solar Return of TTD,"
then finally re-emerged with the 19-track Terence Trent D'Arby's/Sananda
Maitreya Wildcard!.
Those with the patience to stick by D'Arby/Maitreya were
rewarded with this incomparably rich masterpiece, arguably his finest
recording yet, and inarguably as bold, ambitious, and uncategorizable
a return as anyone could have hoped for or imagined. Let's call it "Introducing
the Hardline According to Sananda Maitreya." It is a shame, then,
that the American music industry lacked the wisdom and pluck to release
it. On the other hand, a record this adventurous rarely makes it through
the red tape, so it is fitting that Wildcard! found its own way to the
public.
Fitting also that it introduces itself by way of the
ebullient brass blowout "O Divina," quaint clawhammer banjo
giving way to swooping, Chicago-esque horn charts and a gutsy, gymnastic
tenor as sweet as Sam Cooke's was smooth. The song may be something of
a throwback, but the rest of the album is decidedly forward-looking, whether
reinventing R&B for the 21st century (the gauzy "Girl,"
mellow "Some Birds Blue," and the roboto-funk of "SRR-636*"
and "My Dark Places," the latter like a futuristic Earth, Wind
& Fire fronted by Al Green), staying a few loops ahead of the electronica
curve (the Dallas Austin-produced "Drivin' Me Crazy" and "Ev'rythang,"
which can only be labeled if it must trip-hop), or extending
the sensual jazz fusion of Vibrator's "Undeniably" on "Shalom."
That still leaves copious room for honeyed pop like "Sweetness"
(with a guest spot by Wendy Melvoin) and "Sayin' About You"
and the creamy rock of "And They Will Never Know" and "Goodbye
Diane." All that and the newly metamorphosed Maitreya gives a remarkably
sublime vocal performance throughout. Wildcard! is soul music with a capital
"S" and in the broadest, most stirring, and visionary sense.
Stanton Swihart
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