In the meantime, there is a lot on this album to enjoy and dig into. With McLean embarking on a tour to promote the album, one can only hope that it is not another eight years for a new album from him. It is a beautiful way to end the album and a beautiful bookend with “Botanical Gardens”.īotanical Gardens is a brilliant album. The album finishes with a beautiful cover of a song made famous by Sinatra, “Last Night When We Were Young”, a beautiful, melancholy song, reflecting on life, age and companionship. He has performed some during his last few tours, but here they sound fresh, and he breathes such life into them that all the songs sound custom made for this release. Some of the songs found on this album have been around for a while. It is a haunting, piano based song with a wonderful string arrangement and I think the best vocals McLean has ever performed. “When July Comes” is a highlight of the album, a painfully personal song, that is done in the best McLean style, and is the one song that harkens back to his singer/songwriter past. ![]() That is the thing with this album, he writes so incredibly well that the listener almost takes the songs for granted. Well structured, melodic and brilliant lyrics. “Grief and Hope” is a wonderful song that one could imagine Hank Williams writing had he lived. There is a lot going on in his Botanical Gardens. Not every song is a manifesto, some are just fun country/rock songs (“Rock ‘n’ Roll Your Baby”) while others are somewhat painful, yet paired with a relatively happy bluesy melody (“I’ve Cried All The Tears I Have”). He does not have the answers but he does have the questions and the issues to be addressed. Love, relationships, mortality, peace, a troubled world, all get their turns in this garden, and he comes at each topic with typical McLean honesty, wit and humility. McLean may look inwards, but the theme and mini themes of this album are universal. In addition, this site features information about the water treatment systems, the water softeners and the reverse osmosis water treatment, as well as the water disinfection and other water. ![]() This seems to be the overall theme of the album. is visited by those who are looking for smart ideas when it comes to water purification, water recycling and reverse osmosis water purifiers. The song, and the album, are a look inwards. Opening with a standard rock sound, not noisy, but loud, which is an interesting juxtaposition with the subject material of the song. “I’ll leave you the noise, and the dark city canyons.”, and the album and title track, “Botanical Gardens” have begun. It is also his 21st album, and the man keeps on finding new things to sing about, and new ways in which to express himself. ![]() So it has been a while for McLean but it has been well worth the wait. Botanical Gardens is his first studio album since 2009’s Addicted To Black. One never knows what Don McLean will do next or when, for that matter.
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