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Todd Rundgren - Todd (2016) Hi-Res

Todd Rundgren - Todd (2016) Hi-Res

BAND/ARTIST: Todd Rundgren

Tracklist:

01. How About a Little Fanfare? (1:03)
02. I Think You Know (3:04)
03. The Spark of Life (6:23)
04. An Elpee's Worth of Toons (2:09)
05. A Dream Goes on Forever (2:21)
06. Lord Chancellor's Nightmare Song (3:32)
07. Drunken Blue Rooster (3:00)
08. The Last Ride (4:48)
09. Everybody's Going to Heaven / King Kong Reggae (6:38)
10. No. 1 Lowest Common Denominator (5:12)
11. Useless Begging (3:39)
12. Sidewalk Cafe (2:15)
13. Izzat Love? (1:55)
14. Heavy Metal Kids (4:17)
15. In and Out the Chakras We Go (Formerly Shaft Goes to Outer Space) (5:48)
16. Don't You Ever Learn? (6:06)
17. Sons of 1984 (4:34)

A futuristic Todd Rundgren crystal that adds a powerful and unique pop sensation by the newly formed unit, Utopia, to the beautiful barrard of the melody line. 1974 work.
Maybe some listeners thought that the sonic trip A Wizard, A True Star was a necessary exercise in indulgence and that Todd Rundgren would return to the sweet pop of Something/Anything? for its follow-up. Not a chance. As it turned out, A Wizard was the launch pad for further dementia, and, depending on your point of view, indulgence. Its follow-up was Todd, an impenetrable double album filled with detours, side roads, collisions and the occasional pop tune. That those pop tunes are among his best may come as little consolation to the lightweight fan who has stumbled upon Todd. Conceptually, A Wizard, A True Star may be the wilder record, but Todd is a more difficult listen, thanks to the layers of guitar solos and blind synth prog tunes, such as "In and Out the Chakras We Go." Large stretches of the album are purely instrumental, foreshadowing the years of synth experiments with Utopia that were just around the corner. The murk subsides every so often, revealing either exquisite ballads ("A Dream Goes on Forever"), blistering rock ("Heavy Metal Kids") or, more murk and dementia (particularly with how Gilbert & Sullivan rear their heads not only on the requisite novelty "An Elpee's Worth of Tunes," but an honest-to-goodness cover of "Lord Chancellor's Nightmare Song"). These are some major additions to his catalog, but the experiments and the excesses are too tedious to make Todd a necessary listen for anyone but the devoted. But for those listeners, the gems make the rough riding worthwhile.




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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 22:12
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Many Thanks for HR
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 13:48
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Many thanks for 24-192!!