April
7, 2004
by Steven Mirkin
With male crooners such as Jamie Cullum and Michael Buble
garnering attention, the time may just be right for
Peter Salett.
Celebrating
the release of his fourth album, "After a While" (Dusty
Shoes Music), the Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter showed off
a winning personality at the Hotel Cafe. His warm, easy, dreamy
voice is perfectly suited for his atmospheric, sepia-tinged songs;
it floats along on the gentle waves of his acoustic guitar and
Matt Horn's piano. Catherine Popper and Bill Dobrow provide an
unhurried beat, and Don Piper on steel guitar adds hornlike leads
that nudge the songs toward country music. He's the kind of performer
who would have found a home on Asylum Records in the '70s; at
times, Salett comes across as a hybrid of labelmates Jackson
Browne and Tim Moore. It's an effective mix that has brought
him some high-profile soundtrack placements, including on Salma
Hayek-helmed "The Maldonado Miracle." Salett's songs
retain their cinematic quality in the Hotel Cafe's close quarters. "If
You're Dreaming" has a lovely, swelling melody, while "Halcyon
Days" moves with a heady lope. The album's title track moves
the farthest afield -- a cracked waltz with Horn adding a ghostly
synthesized calliope -- and is easily the evening's highlight.

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