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Trisha Yearwood, Jordin Sparks have new CDs

Also: New albums from Daft Punk, Jose Feliciano, Freeway and more

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  Trisha Yearwood on life and music
Nov. 16: The country singer talks about her husband, Garth Brooks, her 12th album and what she’ll cook for Thanksgiving dinner.

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  Interviews, performances  
  
  Shocking Jackson video released
July 16: US Weekly has released shocking new video of Michael Jackson’s 1984 Pepsi commercial accident. Some speculate the pain killers and plastic surgery for his recovery may have led to the addictions that plagued his life. NBC’s Jeff Rosen reports.

Billboard
updated 4:35 p.m. ET Nov. 26, 2007

NEW YORK - Trisha Yearwood, “Heaven, Heartache and the Power of Love”
On her debut for indie upstart Big Machine, Trisha Yearwood digs into a comfortable sweet spot midway between slick Nashville bang and rugged roots-music twang. With its rich combination of polish and pain, that’s precisely where her voice belongs. The material is strong throughout, but highlights include “Nothin’ ’Bout Memphis,” rich with horns; “The Dreaming Fields,” a pretty piano ballad wistful enough for a Disney-princess flick; and “Let the Wind Chase You,” a hushed plea for peace with handsome harmony vocals by Keith Urban and a dreamy string arrangement by Beck’s dad, David Campbell. “Cowboys Are My Weakness” could be a response to George Strait’s recent “How ’Bout Them Cowgirls.” Turns out Mrs. Garth Brooks is on the prowl for a guy with “a little bit of outlaw, a little bit of Jesus.”

Jordin Sparks, “Jordin Sparks”
With an all-star team of writer/producers (Stargate, the Underdogs), 17-year-old “American Idol” champ Jordin Sparks releases a first effort that’s all over the map — and works. The best news is that nobody’s trying to mold her into a fly ho or a torchy diva; these 13 songs sound like exactly what she should be singing at this age and juncture in her career. The overall effect is sophisticated teen pop marked by innocent good cheer and harmony-laden vocal arrangements, although the synthesizer and drum machine-dominated tracks work better in some cases (“Tattoo,” “One Step at a Time,” “Now You Tell Me”) than in others (“Shy Boy,” “Young and in Love”). “No Air,” Sparks’ duet with Chris Brown, has plenty of hit potential, while “Now You Tell Me,” with its swelling arrangement and muscular chorus, is the album’s gem.

Daft Punk, “Alive 2007”
Nothing can quite match the in-person thrills of the current Daft Punk live experience, what with the robot costumes, onstage pyramid and body-rattling beats radiating out into the blissed-out faithful. But “Alive 2007” comes pretty darn close, capturing a hometown Paris audience so jonesing for a Daft Punk fix that it loudly sings along with the synth melody on “Television Rules the Nation.” While it’s great to hear the classics (“Da Funk,” “One More Time”) even if they’re not played in full, perhaps the most useful service provided here is the rehabilitation of material from 2005’s underwhelming “Human After All.” That album’s massive “Robot Rock” proves a perfect table-setter for the dance party to come, while the industrial-strength house of “The Brainwasher” pushes things over the edge.

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Jose Feliciano, “Senor Bechata”
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Demi Moore gets sporty at the ESPY Awards, Paul McCartney returns to the Ed Sullivan Theater, the Emmy nominees are announced and more.

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It’s always a challenge to take an artist out of his or her established format and plunge him or her into another. So it’s a tribute to Jose Feliciano’s artistry that he’s able to navigate pop and tropical idioms with ease, and that his foray into bachata — perhaps the genre most alien to his long recording history — is convincing. The album title is a nod to Feliciano’s previous “Senor Bolero,” which found him singing bolero standards. Here, he does the same with Dominican bachata, pairing up with Dominican icon Millie Quezada, but also with salsa singer La India and urban/reggaeton duo Rakim & Ken-Y for a more youthful feel.

Freeway, “Free at Last”
This sophomore disc from Philadelphia’s Freeway hits stores four years after the release of the gruff-voiced MC’s much-admired debut. That’s an eternity in rap years, but if anyone’s in a position to capitalize on the frustration produced by music-industry politics, it’s Freeway, whose music depicts the struggle of a good man caught in a bad situation. On “Free at Last,” he demonstrates that being forced to cool his heels since 2003 hasn’t dulled the rough edges of his appealingly hectic flow; check out “Roc-a-Fella Billionaires,” a brash Broadway banger in which he compares stacks of cash with mentor Jay-Z. But the album also suggests that Freeway wouldn’t mind having a hit on hip-hop radio: On “Take It to the Top,” he trades goofy come-ons with 50 Cent over a synthed-up J.R. Rotem beat.


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