| Despite borrowing its title from an old Sonny and Cher record, The Wondrous 
        World of Damon & Naomi is hardly the stuff of lightweight, breezy 
        pop fare; much too precious and affected for its own good, the album is 
        at once the duo's most challenging and most disappointing effort, so burdened 
        by its rigorous intellectual aspirations that its more elemental attractions 
        get lost in the shuffle. From the needlessly ponderous "The New Historicism" 
        to the off-putting "Tour of the World," with its ill-fitting 
        bursts of audience applause, the songs consistently fail to congeal  
        all too often, they suggest ideas and abstracts that never progressed 
        beyond the conceptual phase. Similarly, a heavy reliance on cover material 
        (including readings of Country Joe and the Fish's "Who Am I" 
        and the Band's "Whispering Pines") reinforces the scarcity of 
        strong original ideas. The Wondrous World's best moments are also its 
        most unapologetically simple, in particular the beatific opening duet 
        "In the Morning" along with "Pyewacket" and "New 
        York City," a pair of sweetly elegiac showcases for Naomi Yang's 
        angelic musings. 
       (by Jason Ankeny, All 
        Music Guide) |