By JANE STEVENSON, SUN MEDIA
Gimmicks aren\’t high on my list when it comes to good music.
But somehow this concept album featuring Ono\’s vocals from her back catalogue remade to new 21st century music actually works.
And that\’s largely due to the esteemed list of either hugely respected or avant-garde collaborators ranging from The Flaming Lips to The Polyphonic Spree to Cat Power to Toronto\’s own Peaches.
If anything, the disc validates the 74-year-old Ono, whose love it or hate it music has always inspired much debate, as an artist ahead of her time.
She also reclaims her reputation as rock\’s dragon lady with the cheeky album title taken from an actual track of the same name.
As you might imagine, it\’s an eclectic-sounding collection with it\’s strengths found in both dance music and moodier, big-sounding, orchestral treatments.
Standouts of the dance floor variety are Peaches\’ clap-happy electro-clash version of Kiss Kiss Kiss — complete with Ono\’s famous yowls — Shitake Monkey\’s funky-soul groove-fest O\’Oh and Blow Up\’s Kinks-meets-Blondie take on Everyman … Everywoman.
Also good are Le Tigre\’s snappy Sisters O Sisters, The Brother Brothers\’ psych-rock take on the title track, The Polyphonic Spree\’s bouncy, flute-and-harp-laden You And I, and The Flaming Lips\’ big-beat version of Cambridge 1969 that recalls a hip-shaker from The Chemical Brothers in their prime.
In a slower vein, highlights are Porcupine Tree\’s poignant, folky-electronica version of Death Of Samantha, DJ Spooky\’s moody, atmospheric rendition of Rising, Cat Power\’s simple piano version of Revelations as she trades verses with Ono, Spiritualized leader Jason Pierce\’s powerful, noisy, orchestral, space rock take on Walking On Thin Ice and Antony of Antony And The Johnsons\’ dreamy and beautiful Toyboat.
Not everything works, however.
The Apples In Stereo\’s overblown, orchestral treatment of Nobody Sees Me Like You Do and The Sleepy Jackson\’s trippy, psychedelic version of I\’m Moving On both fall flat but are rare missteps here.
Also, among the creative innovators that I wish had been invited to this particular Ono party are Gnarls Barkley, Imogen Heap, Beck, The Dust Brothers, Buck 65, The Chemical Brothers, Air, Fatboy Slim, and William Orbit just to see what they might have come up with.
Maybe on the dance remix album of these same tunes that\’s coming next?
Also in the cards, an Ono tour of major cities.
SEEK THIS TRACK
O\’Oh (3:38)
Shitake Monkey wisely samples Grover Washington Jr\’s classic Mister Magic to provide the soulful groove that drives the album\’s standout as Ono emotes about her beloved Manhattan: \”O\’Oh Central park, O\’Oh, evening skyline.\” Would make a great opening to a film set in NYC.
SKIP THIS TRACK
Nobody Sees Me Like You Do (3:55)
Despite a promising opening — Ono demanding in a deadpann voice \”I need a ginger tea\” — The Apples In Stereo get a little too far up Ono\’s you know what for their own good here. Too much reverence and too many instruments get in the way.
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YES, I\’M A WITCH
Yoko Ono
Astralwerks
Sun Rating: 4 out of 5