Laura Nyro – Smile [1976; CBS, CBS/Sony, Columbia]

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Sweet-hearted folk and gentle pop blend with teases of jazz and blues in this album, released almost a decade after Laura Nyro’s debut LP, with a string of others between the two.  Nyro’s voice comes off as the strongest part of the songs by far, with a range from clear soprano to deeper huskiness, and the rather generic mid-’70s soft rock instrumentation which surrounds her singing gives it little competition.  At the same time, the usual breathiness of her vocal style can leave some of the lyrics indistinct without attentive listening, so while the music is pleasant, it doesn’t go out of its way to grab attention (the use of koto in the closing title track notwithstanding).

Acid Dream – The Acid Dream Embryo / Repeating Dreams of Killing Siddhartha [2014; Supernaut Records]

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In this one-track single, Acid Dream go on a leisurely doom metal cruise,
lightly sprinkled with samples, pursuing one main riff through slight
permutations.  The tone and production are well-suited to the
material, but the whole thing feels rather dull, without much sense
of inspiration or excitement from the band behind it.  Decent enough
as background noise, but rather slim on content.