Palms & Runes, Tarot & Tea: A Michael Penn Collection
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Lucky One (Version One)
- Bunker Hill (Previously Unreleased Version)
- Out Of My Hand (Album Version)
- Cupid's Got A Brand New Gun (Previously Unreleased Version)
- Coal
- Try (Alternate Version)
- No Myth
- Barely A Sound (Instrumental (Previously Unreleased))
- Don't Let Me Go (Album Version)
- All That That Implies (Album Version)
- Whole Truth (Album Version)
- Brave New World
- Me Around (Demo Version)
- Long Way Down (Look What The Cat Drug In) (Previously Unreleased
- Macy Day Parade (Album Version)
- Figment (Album Version)
- Bucket Brigade (Album Version)
- I Can Tell
- Walter Reed
- Opening (from the film, "Melvin Goes To Dinner") (Previously
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #26091 in Music
- Brand: Sony
- Released on: 2007-04-17
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Original recording remastered
- Dimensions: .23 pounds
Customer Reviews
A Must-Have for Penn Fans, and a Great Introduction for the Uninitiated
Palms & Runes, Tarot & Tea is a collection of never-heard-before alternate takes, brand new versions of old favorites, and best-of-the-best album cuts -- selections from all five of Michael Penn's albums, spanning the course of more than 15 years.
This CD is so much more than your typical "Best of..." with Penn himself hand-picking the tracks, as well as the order in which they appear on the CD.
It's worth buying solely for its revamped version of "Cupid's Got a Brand New Gun" with a completely different feel from the original (on Penn's debut album, March) featuring a bluesy piano, a freer vocal, and a driving chorus (horns and all!)
The CD also contains a beautiful new rendition of "Long Way Down" (Look What the Cat Drug In.) This song's lyrics expertly convey the melancholy resignation of staying in a relationship well past its expiration date ("...if I wear apathy's crown, don't call me Highness, it's a long way down") even though "I've got a feeling she's been sleeping with the whole wide world."
If Penn's delivery of that line doesn't touch your heart, you've never been in love (at least not with the wrong person!)
Michael Penn wraps his pessimistic (or realistic, take your pick) and insightful lyrics up in pretty hooks and harmonies, mixing the sweet and the sour, and taking the listener someplace unexpected but ultimately recognizable.
And Palms & Runes, Tarot & Tea is simply a darned good collection of well-written songs that any fan of pop/rock/singer-songwriters should appreciate.
Great collection - neat alternate versions of songs
I am a longtime MP fan and have all of his albums. I bought this to hear the "remastered" versions of original songs, as well as the alternate versions. I can say that it is neat hearing the different versions of songs. However, I was a little disappointed that "No Myth" (which I think is the greatest song ever written) sounded pretty much exactly the same as it does on my 15 yr old CD of March. I thought it would sound better since it was "remastered." I was also hoping MP would have recorded an new version of it, or even included the awesome acoustic version.
MP also left off "This and That" which was his only other radio hit. I have heard that at his live shows, he refuses to play this song. I wonder if he has something against it because it is also an awesome song.
Overall, it is still a good collection, especially if you're a first-time Michael Penn listener.
A missed opportunity?
As some have already stated, this is neither a proper greatest hits album nor a true treasure trove of outtakes and alternate cuts. It's a little of both, and while one may be drawn in by the qualities of each, neither truly satisfies; one must fall back on the overall quality of the songs themselves to appreciate this offering.
Sadly, there is also a conspicuous absense of live material, but from the looks of it, he has just rereleased his Hollywood album with a second bonus disc of live acoustic tracks. Perhaps they coupled it with the Hollywood album to boost sales, but that bonus disc would have been better served here among his best songs.



