Mighty Sound
2005
Don't Ask Don't Tell
About This Album
Described by its creator as "Short Sharp Shocked all grown up," Don't Ask, Don't Tell doesn't bear all that close a surface resemblance to Michelle Shocked's first studio album beyond the fact that it's easily her most straightforward and accessible piece of roots-influenced pop/rock since she went into the studio with Pete Anderson back in 1988. Produced by Dusty Wakeman, Don't Ask, Don't Tell is strongly informed by the rhythm and blues accents that have been increasingly prominent in Shocked's music in recent years, especially on tunes like "Hardly Gonna Miss Him," "Don't Ask," and "Used Car Lot," though the album also finds Shocked dipping her toes into laid-back jazz grooves ("Goodbye"), lonesome country moods ("Elaborate Sabotage"), and funky New Orleans rhythms ( "Don't Tell"). She also tosses in two fine mid-tempo rock tunes that sound like the sort of thing Mercury were begging her to write from Captain Swing onward, "Fools Like Us" and "How You Play the Game." One of the long-standing bugaboos of Shocked's eclecticism is that her gumbo of influences don't always cohere into a good soup, and that problem dogs Don't Ask, Don't Tell from time to time -- while Shocked is in solid voice here and has written some lovely melodies, this set of songs doesn't seem to have a strong enough center to make it all seem like a coherent whole, and the album's lyrical voice isn't nearly as strong as the music (especially when she slips in broadly theatrical delivery on the two title cuts).
Track List (try tracks 3,4,5,6,7 and 10)

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