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Drastic Fantastic
Drastic Fantastic

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Artist: Kt Tunstall
Label: Virgin Records Us
Category: Music

List Price: $18.98
Buy New: $4.14
You Save: $14.84 (78%)



New (62) Used (30) from $4.14

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 68 reviews
Sales Rank: 1289

Format: Enhanced
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.7 x 0.4

MPN: 95618
UPC: 094639561827
EAN: 0094639561827
ASIN: B000RLIYZA

Release Date: September 18, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new and factory sealed. May have a small crack but is still a giftable item. In stock and ships today!

Tracks:

  • Little Favours
  • If Only
  • White Bird
  • Funnyman
  • Hold On
  • Hopeless
  • I Don't Want You Now
  • Saving My Face
  • Beauty Of Uncertainty
  • Someday Soon
  • Paper Aeroplane

Similar Items:

  • Eye to the Telescope
  • Songs of Mass Destruction
  • KT Tunstall's Acoustic Extravaganza
  • Raising Sand
  • All the Lost Souls

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Don't be put off by the cover photo on K.T. Tunstall's follow-up to the four-million selling Eye of the Telescope. Yes, it's startling to see her sporting Buck Rogers boots and wielding a glittery, oversized silver guitar. And what's up with the comic book images that make up the CD booklet? But if Tunstall is feeling a bit like her overnight success is something out of interplanetary fiction, the new graphic "positioning" doesn't mean the Scottish singer-songwriter has gone full-blown, diva-fied pop-rock. Rather, she's built on the success of the euphorically catchy "Suddenly I See" and "Black Horse and the Cherry Tree" to craft the bouncy kiss-off of "I Don't Want You Now," and the hypnotic beat of "Hold On," with its lyrical warning (shades of Bob Marley's "Judge Not") of karma and responsibility. The new repertoire, like her sensual, slightly slurred singing, is more authoritative, polished, and less bluesy and rough-edged as Eye…, despite a British urban influence. But Tunstall paves her continuum by again using producer Steve Osborne (U2, New Order, Happy Mondays), and with two songs she recorded for the first album--the driving pop-rock of the anti-plastic surgery anthem "Saving My Face" (with its irresistible "ooh-oohs" lifting the mood), and "Funnyman," a pop-alt-folk sonic blend that flirts with electronica. Best of all, Tunstall, who veers from playing a little electric lead guitar to ukulele on the album, is decidedly intent on reprising the spare framework of the songwriter. "White Bird," the most memorable of the four songs that spotlight her poetic, pensive side, amounts to a meditation ("Half of you is heavenly/Showing off your purity"). But whether meant as a metaphor or a literal descriptive paean, a la the romantic 19th-century poets, this melancholy, quiet song finds the 32-year-old musician more confident and on top of her craft than anything on her delicious debut. On the whole, then, this solid sophomore album isn't really such a "drastic" turn. But you just might agree with the second half of her title. --Alanna Nash

Amazon.com
Scottish singer-songwriter KT Tunstall burst onto the public consciousness last year with her gritty debut album Eye to the Telescope, a provocative sonic mesh of heartfelt pop, rootsy, electric blues, and left-field alt-rock. Eye spawned three hit singles — the Grammy-Award nominated "Black Horse and the Cherry Tree," "Suddenly I See," and "Other Side of the World" — all of which became omnipresent on radio, television, movies, and the Internet. Thanks to the multi-media exposure, Eye is certified platinum in the U.S., with worldwide sales exceeding 3.5 million copies.

Now Tunstall is readying her follow-up, entitled Drastic Fantastic, which will be released by Virgin Records on September 18th, 2007. It showcases the 31-year-old's growth as both a songwriter and musician on songs like the thumping "Hold On," the rollicking "Saving My Face," the jazz-inflected "Someday Soon," and the frisky pop gem "I Don't Want You Now." "I wanted to be braver," Tunstall says of the album. "I wanted to push the musicality. You can't let previous success scare you away from moving on."

KT Tunstall Photos

More from KT Tunstall


Eye to the Telescope


KT Tunstall Holiday Gift Pack [2 CDs, 1 DVD]


KT Tunstall' s Acoustic Extravaganza



Album Description
Drastic Fantastic is a collection of soaring Pop songs and intimate ballads. Produced by Steve Osbourne (producer of Eye To The Telescope) it sees Tunstall's considerable songwriting skills and unique vocals underpinned by a rawer musical backdrop than it's predecessor. Full of powerful lyrics, bold colorful melodies and adventurous musicianship, it's a very definite move forward for Tunstall. Pensive ballads like 'White Bird' and 'Beauty Of Uncertainty' are complimented by the infectious lead single 'Hold On', and rollicking pop gems like 'Saving My Face' and the folk-punk of 'I Don't Want You Now'. Virgin.

Album Details
2007 Release of the Scottishrocker's Critically Acclaimed Album that Includes the Added Bonus Track, a Live Version of her Hit "Suddenly I See".


Customer Reviews:   Read 63 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A Stunning Follow Up To Telescope   December 2, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Drastic Fantastic is KT Tunstall's 2nd studio release. After the enormous success of Eye To The Telescope it would not have been surprising if Tunstall had released a 2nd CD that was somewhat less inspiring. Drastic Fantastic is a superb release and is better in many ways than her debut. Her influences are widely varied while she still has the ability to maintain a very original voice. In her songs one can hear influences including but not limited to; Sinead O'Connor, Amy Grant, Christina Amphlet(Divynyls) Debbie Harry and Blondie, The Cardigans, Nora Jones,and Rickie Lee Jones to name only the most obvious. This composite of influences demonstrates an artist of extraordinary gifts and depth, something very rare in todays "flavor of the month" pop music landscape.

My favorite tracks are the 2 folk numbers White Bird, and Someday Soon. White Bird evokes vintage Phoebe Snow and perhaps a bit of McCartney Lennon on 1968's White Album and Black Bird. Someday Soon is reminiscent of Joni Mitchell and/or Rickie Lee Jones and is perhaps the best track on this excellent CD. The Rockers are also very well crafted and Little Favours is perhaps the shining example of these tunes as it reverts from a minor Key verse section to a major key chorus thus offering a nice contrast of tension and release. It is very reminiscent of songs from Sinead O'Connor's Lion and the Cobra cd released in 1988 though with a great deal less angst and anger. Hopeless is a 60's style Pop tune with a great hook and nice vocal vibrato from Tunstall.

There truly are no clunkers on this excellent CD and I would definately buy it if you haven't already. You will NOT be disappointed!



4 out of 5 stars Good Sophomore Effort, But Takes A Slightly Different Direction   November 17, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I was impressed with KT Tunstall's previous CDs Eye To The Telescope and KT Tunstall's Acoustic Extravaganza, and I was eager to see what Drastic Fantastic had to offer. While I like this CD, I didn't find it to be a step forward based on her overall body of work. I am going to have to disagree with the Editorial Review about the implications of the cover of the CD. Drastic Fantastic has a much more electric/overproduced sound to it that Tunstall's previous CDs. While "Funny Man" and "Saving My Face" are listed as having been recorded for Eye To The Telescope, they seem to fit much more with this collection of songs. Even the more low key songs such as "Beauty Of Uncertainty" come off rather polished.

Tunstall has not lost her lyrical edge, though. On "If Only" we find the gem "For hearts tell the truth/It isn't just a piston in an engine". Then on "White Bird" she writes "Half of you is heavenly/Showing off your purity/The rest of you is from the street/Like a line where they both meet". Others are more straightforward such as "I Don't Want You Now" that finds the more edgy side of Tunstall that we saw on "Ashes" from Acoustic Extravaganza.

At the end of the day, I expect that people will have a mixed reaction to Drastic Fantastic. People expecting a sequel to Eye To The Telescope will probably be disappointed. That does not make Drastic Fantastic a bad CD. It is just different. There are just as many catch songs here - see "Hold On" and "Saving My Face" - as her previous work. It just has a different feel to it. New listeners will enjoy the music at face value, but they will also be in for a bit of a surprise if they go back to her earlier material. There's room for all of Tunstall's CDs to be good so do yourself a favor and try them all.



5 out of 5 stars KT Tunstall_ one of the greatest female artist of all time   August 15, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

(In America) it is incredibly hard to know who the real artist are. The industry promotes so many over glamorized puppets, that we start to assume that all good looking artist must be fakes. This is not the case with KT Tunstall. Like Elvis, she has incredible musical talent, singing talent, and happens to be good looking. I was lucky enough to see her recently in concert and I swear she sounds (vocally and musically) even better live than on her album.

Drastic Fantastic is a really great album, which compliments her first album Eye to the Telescope very nicely. All of the tracks are good, but my two favorites are "If only" and "Hopeless".

If you liked the great alternative sound of the 1990's, give KT a listen.



4 out of 5 stars Almost Fantastic   June 27, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

KT Tunstall has become one of my favorite female artists quite quickly. I loved the Telescope CD, the Acoustic CD, and then with Drastic Fantastic here it continues to add to the catalog of great songs.
I still have a difficult time getting into slower tracks like "White Bird", "Someday Soon", and "Paper Aeroplanes" even after repeated listens I tend to skip those tracks. I do appreciated the slower songs, it's just the mood perhaps set by the other tracks that makes me wanna avoid the detour into this area. It's not that the songs are bad, it's just not my speed...but in time I may come to appreciate them....I just have a good time rocking out to her more upbeat tunes more often than the others.

My fav right now is "If Only", that one along with "Little Favour" is a great way to kick off the CD I think, "Saving My Face", and "Funnyman are a couple other up tempo favs along with "I Don't Want You Now". "Hold On" is a song I like somewhat, but it doesn't grab me quite like the other up tempo songs.

Overall some nice material that is continuing on what she accomplished on Eye To The Telescope. Which is the better CD I'm not really sure at this point, both are near perfect....not quite there yet perhaps, but she's putting out so much great material so soon, it's hard to keep up perhaps.

She has a great voice, great talent. It's nice to hear the real deal more often, there are more and more female artist out there who are making their own music their way, and it's good to know it can be done, and KT along a handful of others are in a class by themselves right now.



3 out of 5 stars Couple of good tunes.   June 8, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I think KT kicks major a--.
Drastic Fantastic feels a little rushed.
There are a couple of good tunes, perhaps if she took a little hiatus she can return to her greatness, but lets face it, great songs are a rareity and KT has already had many moments of greatness.
"Mr. GLM" White Plains, NY


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