| 98er CD der kaum einschätzbaren Skandinavierin, die eine ganz eigene 
        Art des spröden Singer-Songwritertums entwickelt hat. Auf ihrem neuen 
        Werk überrascht sie durch die Songauswahl, die kein eigenes Material, 
        sondern eine Auswahl von Coverversionen und Folksongs & Traditionals 
        des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts. Unter den Coverversionen finden sich u.a. 
        das Titelstück (Doors), Princes Purple Rain und Cohens 
        Bird On The Wire. (Glitterhouse) | 
  
    | The cover notes of People Are Strange state that the songs have been 
        heard before. And at the first look, the choice of songs seems strange 
        and brave, if not foolhardy, starting off with the somewhat overexposed 
        "Sailing" sung to a simplistic piano and strings. This sets 
        the tone, swerving far from the original versions. Track number three, 
        only a half-minute long, mumbling, with a distant piano and an even more 
        distant car passing, turns out to be Gram Parson's "Love Hurts." 
        But one needs to check out the credits to be sure. Prince's classic "Purple 
        Rain" is treated with total lack of respect, given sampled industrial 
        sounds for drums and sung in a sad way, giving the song a completely new 
        meaning without changing the lyrics. And this is what it is all about, 
        and what maybe covers should be about -- giving songs a new meaning, making 
        them all her own, as artists are so often called to do. Stina Nordenstam 
        manages this in a way second only to Johnny Cash, though he does not need 
        the samplers. The album also does the good deed of reviving songs that 
        seemed totally dead. Even the original version of "Sailing" 
        gets interesting to hear again after hearing it sung with the fragile 
        whispering voice Nordenstam used on And She Closed Her Eyes. But on the 
        total, this album has left the naïveté and girlishness of 
        that album behind, as it has with the distorted guitars of Dynamite, keeping 
        the melancholy. (by Lars Lovén, AMG) |