![]() And in doing so, he manages to make certain songs sound even better than the originals - "Can't Change Me" certainly sounds better, while "Ground Zero" and "I Am The Highway" sound like they have been infused with an entirely different message of personal emotional rawness. Cornell's triumph here is in suggesting newness and individuality in songs we have heard a hundred times before, in investing someone else's songs (even those formerly sung by him) with touches of the newer, more mature Chris Cornell. In the context of that track's inclusion, "Songbook" feels more and more like catharsis for Cornell, who up until this point had toured with material ostensibly belonging to Audioslave and Soundgarden amongst his solo work - now, in their new guises, the songs feel more like Cornell solo tracks and the execution hints that they never needed the guitars and drums and bass to back up his vocals in the first place. And as a major fan of his voice, I can only hope that the direction is similar to that hinted on "The Keeper". Tagged onto the end of the album, but not out of place, is the studio version of Cornell's new acoustic track "The Keeper" (which is also featured on the soundtrack to Machine Gun Preacher) which perfectly knits together his past with his bright new future. We are not only experiencing his song choices stripped back, but also he himself, and listening to the album will undoubtedly make fans who missed out on the tour lament the fact (as it did with me). There are brief snatches here and there of Cornell's effortlessly cool charisma, in his spoken introductions to a number of the tracks - like the off-hand offering that "Imagine" is a perfect Easter song, and his anecdotal explanation prologuing "Can't Change Me" - and more than anything Songbook feels like a personal insight into his inner workings. On the first - of Led Zeppelin's "Thank You", the singer seats in the easy company of Robert Plant, forefronting similarities in the two men's vocal qualities that have never occurred so insistently before, and in the second, a hauntingly affecting reimagining of John Lennon's "Imagine" he confirms that even the most iconic songs can become something entirely new in his hands. The playlist is exceptionally well conceived, featuring stripped bare, emotionally piquant versions of his most famous former releases, including "Like A Stone" and the beautiful, brilliant "Black Hole Sun" as well as two perfectly pitched covers. And quite frankly, Cornell's voice could convince me of most things. It is proof that a voice can sell a song of any type, provided that voice in convincing and charismatic enough to carry a different agenda within the song than originally composed. Most importantly, for an artist who was somewhat cruelly criticised from some quarters about his decision to genre-hop for 2009's Scream (a critically lambasted relative failure, but underrated criminally in my opinion), the decision to strip back the famous songs is a statement outside of the concerns of genre. Cornell's voice has always been soaked in soul, as well as carrying an irresistible smokey edge that injected poignancy to even the most bold rock songs he lent it to in his former roles, and it has never sounded as good or as hard-hitting as when teamed up here with a simple guitar as company. Cornell takes up his acoustic guitar and leads the listener through sixteen careful chosen tracks with the engaging presence of a man completely at ease with his own abilities. Armed with just an acoustic guitar and his sumptuous, acrobatic voice, Cornell stripped back his trademark arena-sized theatrics in favor of subtlety and intimacy, and weighed in with some of the most compelling music of his career.Rating:5 As lead singer for Soundgarden and Audioslave, Chris Cornell carved out a reputation as one of the finest rock singers of his or any generation, and in Songbook, his brand new acoustic live solo album, he proves once again what that reputation was founded on. ![]() Rather like Nirvana’s widely-acclaimed MTV Unplugged In New York, Songbook was a revelatory experience for the listener. It was all about feeling and sounding just like it did in real life.” “So there are songs with mistakes – I hit the wrong chord or something like that. “My only criteria for picking these songs was that they needed to sound on tape just like they sounded live in the room, theatre or club,” Cornell told Spin. ![]() ![]() In fact, he enjoyed these intimate shows so much that he later performed gigs in South America and Australasia, though the recordings which appeared on the Songbook album were sourced from a half dozen of the dates on his initial U.S. and Canada during that year’s spring and early summer. Cornell turned his vow into a reality in 2011 when he embarked on an extensive 25-date acoustic tour of the U.S. ![]()
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