Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Katharine Whalen And Her Fascinators - Madly Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:08
Size: 82,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:15)  1. Madly Love
(3:17)  2. Roses And Pine
(4:04)  3. Chief Thunder
(2:48)  4. When I Dream
(2:24)  5. Same Turning In Place
(4:30)  6. I Know You Well
(2:28)  7. Elevate
(3:08)  8. Gasoline
(5:31)  9. Mother's Day
(2:40) 10. With You

Katharine Whalen seems like a time traveller out of a long-gone, idyllic Southern past. She resides on a farmhouse, complete with tin roof, in her native North Carolina, where she spends her time writing whimsical songs on her banjo. That is, when she’s not building dollhouses. This doesn’t make her an over-polite dame or make her music lighter than goose down. Rather, it lends a timeless authenticity to Madly Love, her first album in five years. Whalen got her start as a founder of the Squirrel Nut Zippers, an eclectic neo-folk/jazz/swing/etcetera band best known for their 1996 hit “Hell”. After the Zippers split, she released Katharine Whalen’s Jazz Squad in 1999. That album was what the title suggested, a straight-up cocktail jazz affair. Whalen took a seven-year break before returning with Dirty Little Secret, a contemporary yet unfocused take on adult alternative pop. It’s good to hear Whalen getting back to her more rustic roots on Madly Love. She finally sounds completely in her element, in no small thanks to the production. Simple yet full, the guitar/bass/drums sound is direct and positively anachronistic in its total lack of electronically-assisted studio sheen. The rich, unvarnished guitars rock and ripple as necessary. In more than a few places, you’re reminded of the Velvet Underground in their more studied moments.


This approach allows plenty of space for the songs themselves, as well as Whalen’s voice. The rub is that Madly Love is one of the many albums that gets off to a great start and spends the rest of the running order trying to measure up. The title track introduces everything with Whalen’s unaccompanied voice. This is a suiting start because that voice, which is warm and velvety when Whalen chooses to tame it but is usually thrillingly all-over-the-place, is the true centerpiece of the album. Eventually, a hard double-time rhythm kicks in with staccato guitar stabs. By the time it gets to Nathan Golub’s shivering, Link Wray-in-Hell guitar solo, “Madly Love” has indeed gone quite bonkers. Brilliant, as is the juxtaposition with “Roses & Pine”, which follows it. The album’s best track, “Roses & Pine” begins as a gentle, waltz-time lullaby, which has no problem recalling Lou Reed’s most affecting ballads. As the chorus swells, Whalen’s voice takes on a more sinister, shrill quality, which fits with the lyrics about “Naughty Jack” and the like. Something about this song, well, everything about it, conjures up that farmhouse, barn doors swinging as a storm rolls in. “Chief Thunder” takes a more straightforward, melancholic alt-rock approach, but is nearly as strong, thanks again to Whalen’s singing and storytelling along with strong playing and an arrangement that recalls vintage Go-Betweens. There’s an ‘80s reference you can get behind.

Having laid out such a powerful manifesto with those first three tracks, Madly Love then really has nowhere to go but to offer inferior, though hardly futile, variations on them. “Same Turning in Place” adds pedal steel to the pop for an alt-country vibe, and “Elevate” works a “Devil In Disguise”-type cha-cha-cha rhythm to fun effect. “I Know You Well” is the best of the rest, though. Like “Roses & Pine”, it starts out slow and twinkly before getting noisier, and like “Chief Thunder” features an “oooh”-ing, wordless refrain. The elements come together nicely. Though it doesn’t quite deliver on the promise of that opening trifecta, Madly Love is always rewarding. This is due mainly to Whalen’s voice. Within the same line, she can sound delicate as a little girl or as tough and sexy as Debbie Harry, whom she has been compared to. Yet she rarely overdoes it. The Fascinators, led by Golub’s sharp, multifaceted guitar work, also live up to their billing. They manage to get their own character into each song without overshadowing Whalen. If you want an easy reference point for Madly Love, imagine a less contrived She & Him, with Southern grit taking the place of all the coyness. Sounds pretty good, doesn’t it?
http://www.popmatters.com/review/144175-katharine-whalen-her-fascinators-madly-love/

Personnel: Katharine Whalen (vocals, tambourine); William Dawson (vocals, guitar, melodica, piano, organ, vibraphone, bass guitar); Nathan Golub (electric guitar, 12-string guitar); Thom Canova (whistle, hand claps); Brad Porter (bodhran, tambourine, percussion).

Madly Love

Sonny Greenwich - Sun Song (The Music of Sonny Greenwich)

Styles: Guitar Jazz
Year: 1975
Time: 40:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 91,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:15) 1. Lily (Lotus)
(12:08) 2. Peace Chant
(20:43) 3. Starlight/Parting

A gem of a record from the great Sonny Greenwich an open-toned guitarist with a style that's unlike anyone else we can think of a Canadian player who never got much exposure down here in the US, but who really stands apart from most of the jazz guitarists of his generation! There's this unusual sense of color and phrasing that really makes Sonny stand out chords that almost feel as if they're broken open and exposed from a Wes Montgomery sort of tightness able to move with a sense of fluidity, but a unique sense of rhythm that's definitely Greenwich's own.

The rest of the group here really match the spirit of his music maybe more so than on any other record of his as a leader a great lineup that includes Don Thompson on electric and acoustic piano, Rick Homme on bass, Terry Clarke on drums, and Clayton Johnson on percussion. All tracks are nice and long and titles include "Peace Chant", "Lilly Lotus", "Parting", and "Starlight". © 1996-2024, Dusty Groove, Inc.https://www.dustygroove.com/item/994223/Sonny-Greenwich:Sun-Song

Personnel: Guitar – Sonny Greenwich; Bass – Rick Homme; Drums – Terry Clarke; Percussion – Clayton Johnson; Piano – Don Thompson

Sun Song (The Music of Sonny Greenwich)

Charlie Pyne Quartet - Nature Is A Mother

Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 49:43
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 114,5 MB
Art: Front

(6:40) 1. On The Shore
(7:28) 2. Am I Doing It Right?
(5:02) 3. Blackberries
(6:38) 4. A Fistful Of Keys
(5:37) 5. Sisters
(5:45) 6. KP's Parrot
(3:06) 7. Solstice
(4:27) 8. Nature is a Mother
(4:56) 9. Gratitude

British jazz is currently blessed with vocal talents. Bandleader Charlie Pyne is just one sample from a spectrum that embraces big band fan James Hudson, who includes a cool version of Disney’s Feed the Birds on his second album of standards, Moonray, and songwriting diva Sarah L King, whose new album Fire Horse comes steeped in soul influences such as Nina Simone.

Charlie Pyne is different again, a bass player with her own quartet and, on this second album, a set of originals drawn from her experience as a woman and mother. Pyne sings with a high, bright voice that can soar when she chooses, though she is also happy to punch out her lyrics in tandem with her bass parts.

The quartet meld easily; drummer Katie Patterson urgent without being noisy, and pianist Liam Dunachie contributing melodic solos alongside Luke Pinkstone’s tenor (and occasional soprano) sax. On standout Am I Doing It Right? Pyne frets about motherhood, celebrating its triumphs on the title cut. Blackberries salutes autumn joyously while A Fistful of Keys provides a moodier moment, the keys in question being poised ready for a would-be assailant. An enjoyable, effervescent set.https://www.theguardian.com/music/2024/apr/06/charlie-pyne-quartet-nature-is-a-mother-review-soaring-effervescent-jazz

Nature Is A Mother