Cheap Extended Player - 24:26 (Music) (Johnathan Rice) Price
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$7.98
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| ARTIST: | Johnathan Rice |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Warner Brothers |
| FEATURES: | EP |
| TYPE: | Pop, Rock |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| TRACKS: | Break So Easy, My Mother's Son, Put Me in Your Holy War, Mid November, Stay at Home, Acrobat |
| UPC: | 093624878322 |
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Customer Reviews of Extended Player - 24:26
Brilliant This is an amazing piece of music. Johnathan Rice's voice is beautiful and haunting, and his words resonate with a depth of meaning and poetic expression rarely found at all these days. I'm reminded a bit of early Bob Dylan and Cat Stevens, although his sound is completely his own. The raw, pure emotion is clearly felt in each song ("The Acrobat" is particularly affecting), and the mocking spite in the anti-war song "Put Me in Your Holy War" is biting in its irony. All I can say is, I wish I hadn't missed him live here in Brooklyn, and I cannot wait to hear the full-length "Trouble Is Real"...
nice debut
The six-song Extended Player 24:26 introduces the world to the brooding rasp of 21-year-old Johnathan Rice, a name that should be household after his future full length release, Trouble is Real.
Personal and simple, the EP displays Rice's unpretentious role in today's music scene. With a voice like John Mayer and a soul like Van Morrison, Rice can appeal to teen girls as well as true music fans.
Songs like "Break So Easy" and "The Acrobat" display the soft elegance of Rice's voice over acoustic guitar, while "My Mother's Son" and "Stay At Home" feature orchestral explosions that take the EP to the next level.
Fans of Ryan Adams and Shawn Mullins should definitely give this youngster a listen, and if things go like they should, Johnathan Rice will be around for a while.
A bit overshadowed by his own music
There was a time when noisy hip-hop and disposable teen pop seemed to be anything but an option for frantic ears. But in a post emo/TRL phase we have rediscovered the need for more personal and simple textured music. Here is where Johnathan Rice's record fits in. This debut EP succeeds in exposing us to a particular writer who is not afraid to share topics that otherwise would sound trivial in hands of, say, a diva. His main strength is, without a doubt, his songwriting and that can be tasted on every track, particularly in "Break so easy", "Acrobat" and "Mid november", which hopefully will be given the attention it deserves by the media. However, mister Rice's decision to surround himself with adorned orchestration fails to capture that energy he displays on his live shows, where his only tools are his guitar and that singular voice that gets buried in the otherwise stunning "Stay at home" or ""My mother's son". If he continues on the right path, we may see a remarkable full length CD in no time. Let us wish he doesn't join the infamous label of forgotten wannabes.