Stories by Subject
Adventure
Anger
Angels
Anxiety
Astral Projection
Balance
Birth Chart
Change
Dalai Lama
Depression
Disasters
Dreaming
Emotions
Faith
Feng Shui
Fitness
Forgiveness
Giving
Goals
Hypnosis
Laughter
Life Coach
Love
Manifestation
Meditation
Miracles
Motion
Mysticism
Networking
NLP
Numerology
Osho
Pain
Past Life Regression
Positive Thinking
Psychics
Purpose
James Arthur Ray
Reiki
Relationships
Religion
Setting Goals
Spiritual Awakening
Sports
Subliminal Messages
Tamara Levitt
Tarot Cards
Eckhart Tolle
Work

Working on
Procrastination

Top Writers
John Beaudin
Carol Carnes
Andrea Connell
Mary Giuffre
Tim Smith
 
 
 
Join the "What's Invisible" Twitter page for Updates on our launch. Click here
 

WHAT'S INVISIBLE TOP 50 ALBUMS

TW LM ARTIST ALBUM
1 - Michael Stribling Paradise Lost
2 - Devin Rice & Erin Aas Arrival
3 - Lisa Hilton Nuance
4 - Ann Licater Doorway to a Dream
5 - Eric Harry Fly
6 - David Mauk Ground Swell
7 - Robin Spielberg Sea to Shining Sea
8 - David Nevue Revelation
9 - Jim Wilson Leader of the Band
10 - Craig Urquhart Within Memory
Check out the whole chart here
 

 

 

 

Where Did The Name "What's Invisible" Come From?
What’s Invisible? My Three First Books

I came up with the name What’s Invisible on the night of the infamous Harmonic Convergence, the planetary alignment associated with the Mayan calendar. More
 
HOME ABOUT US ADVERTISE CONTACT US FAITH INTERIVEWS
JOBS LISTEN LIVE MUSIC NEWS REVIEWS TOOLS

A Disappointing Return for Sade
REVIEW - Sade – Soldier of Love
June 16, 2010 – There’s always been an understated value to everything that Sade does and sameness to her entire repertoire. That quality of old wine has served the singer/band well… until now. Unlike Norah Jones who has, at least, tried to mix-up-the-pot, Sade really needs to stop wearing the same dress to every party.

Not to be taken lightly, Sade, the lady and band, has only released 6 albums of original music but stand as one of the most successful musical outlets of the last 25 years. Staying power is rare but Sade certainly has it and her voice, even on this album, is the stuff of angels. Still haunting, peaceful and distinctive, it's a quality that's truly rare in music and it's as captivating as the sirens song.

The album kicks off with “The Moon and the Sky” which, without comparisons to the past, sounds like a garden-variety album track from a generic Smooth Jazz vocalist but it’s still drop-dead boring and gloomy at that.

The first single and title track, which I consider the most exasperating radio song since Jennifer Nettles of Sugarland tortured us with her unbearable twang on ‘All I Want to Do,’ is clunky in technical effects and marching drum beats. The extra production just seems unnecessary and sounds like Charlie Brown’s parents falling down a set of stairs. It simply sounds like a dire demo but because of the publics thirst for a comeback it did extremely well on peripheral charts but only peaked in the Top 50 on Billboards top 100. The song seriously makes me ill. To her defence it, at least, seems like an attempt to throw new ingredients in the soup, unfortunately the results were hokey.

'Morning Bird’ is another vacuous hole of nothingness that could serve as a soundtrack for anything depressing. I found myself asking, “Really, this is all you could come up with after 10 years of being away?” The song is as slow and dreary as it is derivative. A bad imitation of songs before and simply not interesting.

Another one of the singles ‘BabyFather’ does show tons of promise but, like many of the tunes on the disc, sounds unfinished.

‘Long Hard Road,’ at least, displays some beauty. It’s a slow, lightly produced, ditty with a message of eventual optimism. Maybe she/they got up on the right side of the bed that day.

Another bright spot on the project is ‘Be That Easy’ that mixes traditional country music feel and twang with late night Jazz effects and it works perfectly. Well worth many spins but still isn’t strong enough to save this album.

Even though we play a few tracks off ‘Soldier of Love’ on our station Smooth Jazz Now.com it’s still the worst vocal album from an “A” list singer that I’ve listened to in years. The last one, ‘Lovers Rock’ (from 2000) would never make my Top 100 list but I got those songs and understood why her/their audience appreciated that comeback (that one came after an absence of 8 years). ‘Soldier of Love’ sounds like an outtakes project and its title song, an experiment in production gone badly.

Unfortunately, enough fans rewarded their lackluster effort by buying this album but I have to admit I'm still interested on what will come next. Let’s catch up in ten years, maybe the singer and band will return with new inspiration and ideas. They are certainly capable of doing so. – by John Beaudin (courtesy of www.smoothjazznow.com)