| MUSIC ZONE
 Eminem — Encore (Universal)
 Saurabh & Gaurav
  Encore
        finds Marshall Mathers at the crossroads in his career. Thirtyone years
        old, rich and successful, he’s played the belligerent white trash
        outsider for five years now. Opener Evil Deeds suggests it could
        have been his In Utero - "The show’s over, you can all go
        home now", he shouts wearily, "but the curtain don’t close
        for me". He tries to continue this line of outstanding,
        introspective songs with his Bush-bashing second single Mosh, but
        fails due to the plodding and boring Dr Dre beat coupled with his
        complete lack of flow here. On Yellow Brick Road, he apologises
        for racist comments that surfaced last year on a tape he recorded as a
        teen. He continues making amends on Like Toy Soldiers, giving a
        detailed account of his conflict with Ray Benzino, co-owner of The
        Source magazine. Marshall Mathers continues to tackle timely topics
        with reflective maturity, and that sort of soul-baring will make Encore
        a long running performance.
 Best track: Curtains
        Down Worst track: Humming
        Bird Rating: ***   Britney Spears — My
        Prerogative:Greatest Hits (Sony Music) **
  Cheekily
        entitled Greatest Hits, the range of songs here is actually quite
        startling from a lady so young: she’s enlisted the might of production
        titans such as The Neptunes and songwriting skills of the likes of Cathy
        Dennis to turn out a well-crafted collection of pop tunes, all showing
        that she’s destined for big things.
 As a time capsule,
        Greatest Hits does its job well. It has all of her hits outside of "From
        the Bottom of My Broken Heart," a largely forgotten ballad from
        her debut, Oops!I Did It Again, and it contains two very good
        previously unreleased tunes, including the In the Zone outtake I’ve
        Just Begun (Having My Fun), an infectious spin on No Doubt’s Hella
        Good that outshines most of the songs that were featured on the
        album (it also has a remake of Bobby Brown’s My Prerogative,
        which seems to exist solely for its video). So, even if this isn’t a
        great listen as a cohesive album, Greatest Hits does perform the
        valuable function of offering all of Britney’s hits in one place, and
        it does work as a portrait of the time when Britney Spears was the
        defining figure of American pop culture. Best track: Baby One
        More Time Worst track: My
        Prerogative Rating: **   Vanessa Carlton —
        Harmonium (A&M)  In
        an era when young female singers tend to equate growing up with shedding
        clothes, Vanessa Carlton stands out as a woman who’s maturing the
        old-fashioned way - by exploring the truth of life and evolving her own
        musical style. After the large amount of success she received with Be
        Not Nobody, Vanessa Carlton has surpassed the "sophomore
        slump" by releasing Harmonium, a piano-driven album that can be
        considered her best work. The album, produced by Carlton’s boyfriend
        Stephan Jenkins of Third Eye Blind, supplies eager fans with 12 new
        original songs written by the artist. The first track on the album, White
        Houses, combines a unique piano melody into a fast-paced, energetic
        combination of string instruments and drums. While Vanessa tackles some
        pretty dark subjects on Harmonium — death (Annie),and
        depression (Half A Week Before the Winter) — there is also
        something decidedly settled and content about her brooding brand of pop.
 Best track: She
        Floats Worst track: C’est
        La Vie Rating: ****
      
 
 
        
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        Album of the month
             U2 — How to
            Dismantle an Atomic Bomb (Interscope)  How
            To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb continues U2’s campaign to win back
            the fans it had lost with its gratuitous devolution into
            electro-rock fusion. Compared to All That You Can’t Leave Behind,
            the album is immensely sincere, well-thought out, and meaningful.
            Atomic Bomb is loaded with catchy, and some thunderously affecting
            melodies. The first single, Vertigo, is a guitar-driven
            rocker with an infectious hook. The Edge’s trademark guitar sound
            is filled with portentously echoing harmonics. Driven by a
            ferociously powerful rhythm section, U2 sounds pleasingly raw,
            particularly next to the current wave of stadium rock pretenders,
            with their good causes and pained expressions and elegiac piano
            ballads. There’s U2 being reverential (Yahweh),
            heavy-handed (Love and Peace or Else), contemplative (One
            Step Closer), exuberant (All Because of You), and playful
            (Vertigo). And they’re not trying to hit all of those
            marks, or fill some kind of content quota - they’re simply being
            U2.
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 This
        feature was published on January 8, 2004
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