Year: 2024
Time: 57:52
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 133,1 MB
Art: Front
(4:34) 1. Your Song
(3:48) 2. (They Long to Be) Close to You
(3:18) 3. Secret Heart
(3:54) 4. Sweet Happy Life
(3:46) 5. A Wish (Valentine)
(3:43) 6. How Deep Is Your Love
(3:55) 7. Pussywillows Cat-Tails
(3:37) 8. Here, There And Everywhere
(3:58) 9. You and I (Voce E Eu)
(5:13) 10. And I Love You So
(5:12) 11. Until It's Time For You To Go
(4:19) 12. Hey, That's No Way To Say Goodbye
(2:47) 13. Snow
(5:39) 14. Both Sides Now
Diana Panton has long been an artist of quiet yet undeniable depth, uniquely transforming melodies into deeply personal narratives. On Soft Winds and Roses, she focuses on modern classics from the 1960s onward, drawing from the songbooks of Elton John, Burt Bacharach, Gordon Lightfoot, Lennon and McCartney, Leonard Cohen, and Joni Mitchell, among many others. In doing so, she creates an album that is both a journey through timeless compositions and a meditation on love's delicate arc, marked by hesitant beginnings, profound connections, and inevitable farewells.
Panton collaborates with two of Canada's most sensitive and intuitive instrumentalists: Don Thompson, whose multifaceted presence on piano, vibraphone, and bass brings nuanced grace to the album, and Reg Schwager, whose guitar lines embody understated elegance. The trio's minimalist approach allows each phrase and silence to resonate with genuine emotion.
From the opening notes of Thompson's subtle piano on Elton John's "Your Song," Panton's singular weightless delivery embodies the tentative blush of new love. In Bacharach and David's " They Long to be Close to You," she offers an invitation wrapped in silk, accentuating its Latin undercurrent with Thompson's vibraphone voicing. The Bee Gee's popular hit "How Deep is Your Love" is filled with emotive modulation beautifully enhanced by Thompson's light- fingered touch. Canada's folk troubadour Gordon Lightfoot wrote "Pussywillows, Cat-Tails," which may be one of his lesser- known songs. Panton gives a heartfelt reading made all the more so by the in-the-moment support from Schwager and Thompson.
The album's middle section finds Panton at her most affecting. Lennon & McCartney's "Here, There, and Everywhere." The number is delivered with aching sincerity, and the simplicity of her phrasing makes the lyrics glow anew. Schwager has a solo that matches his singular reputation. Canadian singer, songwriter, poet and novelist Leonard Cohen wrote" Hey, That's No Way to Say Goodbye," perhaps the album's most poignant moment. Panton's voice is imbued with a hushed resignation that lingers long after the final note fades. Schwager's probing guitar captures the heartbreak of the moment.
Another internationally acclaimed singer-songwriter is Canadian Joni Mitchell. Her composition "Both Sides Now" carries the weight of wisdom earned. When Panton sings of clouds, love, and life's illusions, she does so with the kind of clarity that only a master interpreter can provide. The album is filled with quiet revelations, where the space between the words holds as much meaning as the words themselves.By Pierre Giroux
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/soft-winds-and-roses-diana-panton-self-produced
Personnel: Diana Panton - vocals; Reg Schwager - guitar; Don Thompson - bass
Panton collaborates with two of Canada's most sensitive and intuitive instrumentalists: Don Thompson, whose multifaceted presence on piano, vibraphone, and bass brings nuanced grace to the album, and Reg Schwager, whose guitar lines embody understated elegance. The trio's minimalist approach allows each phrase and silence to resonate with genuine emotion.
From the opening notes of Thompson's subtle piano on Elton John's "Your Song," Panton's singular weightless delivery embodies the tentative blush of new love. In Bacharach and David's " They Long to be Close to You," she offers an invitation wrapped in silk, accentuating its Latin undercurrent with Thompson's vibraphone voicing. The Bee Gee's popular hit "How Deep is Your Love" is filled with emotive modulation beautifully enhanced by Thompson's light- fingered touch. Canada's folk troubadour Gordon Lightfoot wrote "Pussywillows, Cat-Tails," which may be one of his lesser- known songs. Panton gives a heartfelt reading made all the more so by the in-the-moment support from Schwager and Thompson.
The album's middle section finds Panton at her most affecting. Lennon & McCartney's "Here, There, and Everywhere." The number is delivered with aching sincerity, and the simplicity of her phrasing makes the lyrics glow anew. Schwager has a solo that matches his singular reputation. Canadian singer, songwriter, poet and novelist Leonard Cohen wrote" Hey, That's No Way to Say Goodbye," perhaps the album's most poignant moment. Panton's voice is imbued with a hushed resignation that lingers long after the final note fades. Schwager's probing guitar captures the heartbreak of the moment.
Another internationally acclaimed singer-songwriter is Canadian Joni Mitchell. Her composition "Both Sides Now" carries the weight of wisdom earned. When Panton sings of clouds, love, and life's illusions, she does so with the kind of clarity that only a master interpreter can provide. The album is filled with quiet revelations, where the space between the words holds as much meaning as the words themselves.By Pierre Giroux
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/soft-winds-and-roses-diana-panton-self-produced
Personnel: Diana Panton - vocals; Reg Schwager - guitar; Don Thompson - bass
Soft Winds and Roses
No comments:
Post a Comment
ALWAYS include your name/nick/aka/anything!