Showing posts with label Sarah Jane Morris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah Jane Morris. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Sarah Jane Morris - Sisterhood

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 53:14
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 122,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:29) 1. Sisterhood
(5:35) 2. Couldn't Be Without
(4:24) 3. Tomorrow Never Happens
(5:04) 4. So Much Love
(5:33) 5. Jazz Side Of The Road
(5:34) 6. Rimbaud of Suburbia
(4:34) 7. Sing Me A Picture
(4:33) 8. Junk In My Trunk
(5:07) 9. For The Voiceless
(7:17) 10. Miss Makeba

On International Women’s Day 8 March 2024, British soul, jazz and R&B singer Sarah Jane Morris launched her new album The Sisterhood.

It is her tribute to ten iconic women singers and songwriters, who have had a massive influence on the development of the popular song. This is Morris’s lock-down project. She and her husband artist Mark Pulsford spent the months of isolation studying the lives of pioneering singers and musicians, women whose music is world famous, but whose stories are less well known. Together Morris and Pulsford then wrote a series of song lyrics, each an illuminating, sometimes shocking tale from the lives of these remarkable women.

Morris then got together with her long time co-writer/co-producer/guitarist Tony Rémy to write the music. Each song would be absolutely contemporary, it would also reflect the styles, forms and influences of the artists depicted. The ten women chosen are: Bessie Smith, Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, Miriam Makeba, Aretha Franklin, Janis Joplin, Joni Mitchell, Rickie Lee Jones, Annie Lennox and Kate Bush representing a wide mixture of styles of popular music.

To honour the legacies of these stars, whilst creating new work demands a breadth of experience of different popular musical forms as well as great versatility in performance styles. Clearly Morris and Rmy have the necessary skills.

The Sisterhood is a musical tour de force. Right from the funky opening bars of the Aretha Franklin tribute Sisterhood, with its rousing refrain “We lock arms in sisterhood”, the wall of sound arrangement, and beautiful Jason Rebello piano solo, you know you are in for a musical ride. Bessie Smith gets a potted biography, Couldn’t Be Without, and a lovely horn arrangement courtesy of Byron Wallen. I was impressed by the way Rémy comfortably inhabits the wild man rock guitar of Big Brother and the Holding Company on the Janis Joplin inspired Tomorrow Never Happens. Morris, who once, inexplicably, was passed over by Hollywood to play Joplin in a biopic, a role for which she would have been perfect, is right at home in that rock genre.

The hit single of the album for me would be the Nina Simone homage So Much Love, for which Rémy has written a soul ballad with a smooth groove and Sally Herbert, former fellow-Communard violinist turned orchestral arranger, has provided a lush string arrangement it’s a lovely tune which deserves airplay.

Most of the lives of the women featured are extraordinary. Morris says of On the Jazz Side of the Road, the song she wrote for Rickie Lee Jones: “Her grandfather was a one-legged tap dancer in vaudeville. You couldn’t make that up. She went out for a year with Tom Waits. Dr John got her hooked on heroin. She was influenced by Van Morrison and she was hitching her way round America aged 12. It’s all in this song….”

Then comes a complete change, Rimbaud of Suburbia, Morris’s homage to Kate Bush whom she links to Rimbaud – both started their creative lives as young teenagers. There are guest appearances from Orphy Robinson on vibes, David Coulter on jaws harp, some appropriately electronic drums from Martyn Barker (echoes of Peter Gabriel in there somehow) and a dreamy pop string arrangement from Italian cellist Enrico Melozzi, with whom Morris has played over many years.

I am on more familiar territory with the next track, a homage to one of my favourites, Joni Mitchell. Nice details in this one something of a Tom Scott period feel, Patrick Clahar has a lovely solo, another set of strings from Melozzi, and the repeated line “Joni of starlight”.

And so the variety continues with, in my opinion the other hit single of the piece, the Billie Holiday tribute Junk in my Trunk. It’s a gentle jazz/hip hop number underpinned by drummer Westley Joseph, with a plethora of guitars and some gorgeous brass from Quentin Collins.

A classy piece dedicated to Annie Lennox For the Voiceless celebrates both her music, and her work for human rights charities, before the tribute to Miriam Makeba brings the album (and the live show too) to a rousing close, with the huge sound of the Soweto Gospel Choir, Morris’s voice weaving in and out, above and below.

Morris and Rémy play with their usual bandmates Henry Thomas on bass guitar, Tim Cansfield on guitar, and new member Jason Rebello on piano and keyboards. The band is augmented by many starry friends and colleagues and there are guest appearances from Courtney Pine and Dominic Miller too, arrangements from The Chaps, with sterling work from backing singers Gina Foster and Beverley Skeete.

Rémy’s guitar runs through the album, though so chameleon-like is his playing that you may need to check the sleeve notes, as I did to see who was playing which guitar bits on Miss Makeba (answer Tony Rémy – all guitars). His range is astonishing, playing every kind of guitar, including bass, but also keyboards, and even occasionally drums and drum programming.

What ties this varied collection of songs together is Morris’s magnificent voice. As John Fordham writes in the liner notes, on first hearing Morris in the 1980s: “Sarah Jane’s sound caught the raw majesty of legends like Janis Joplin and Nina Simone, and her octave-vaulting contralto range stretched from sonorous reverberating low tones to a searingly soulful falsetto.” https://londonjazznews.com/2024/03/14/sarah-jane-morris-the-sisterhood/

Sisterhood

Saturday, July 24, 2021

Papik, Sarah Jane Morris - Let The Music Play

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:28
Size: 103,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:03) 1. Let The Music Play
(4:17) 2. You Are The Best Thing
(4:51) 3. Jericho
(3:49) 4. Hold On To Love
(3:39) 5. Hello It's Me
(3:49) 6. I Really Feel You So (featuring Sarah Jane Morris)
(3:52) 7. Appetite
(4:17) 8. Missing
(3:36) 9. Sweet Love
(4:02) 10. Looking For A Rainbow
(4:09) 11. Lovely Day

Papik is a musical project born from an idea of the Roman arranger and composer Nerio Poggi, a successful author and producer ranging from pop , jazz, from Bossa nova to Soul and who has collaborated, among others, with Mario Biondi. The collaboration between Sarah and Papik begins on the song "I really feel you so" , an unreleased song, while later they work on the cover of Barry White that gives the title to the project and to the album released for Irma Records "Let the music play!".

On the disc the trusted collaborator Tony Remy plays the guitar, all the other musicians are of the Papik project precisely because the disc has a precise sound world that distinguishes the producer. It is a tribute to the '80s, the period from which Sarah's success with “Don't leave this way” comes with the Communards. Sarah has chosen songs by artists she is particularly attached to such as Bill Withers ( "Lovely Day" ), Everything but the girl ( "Missing" ), Simply Red ( "Jericho" ), Tod Rundgren ( "Hello It's me" ) to name some. Sarah's charisma and voice and Papik's sound world give a new light to these songs, create a sunny, cheerful but refined atmosphere, a live that brings back to that magic and lightness we so much need these days.Translate By Google https://casadeljazz.com/evento/sarah-jane-morris-let-the-music-play/

Personnel: Sarah Jane Morris - vocals; Tony Remy - guitar ; Papik

Let The Music Play

Monday, January 2, 2017

Sarah Jane Morris & Antonio Forcione - Compared To What

Styles: Vocal And Guitar Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:26
Size: 117,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:40)  1. Awestruck
(4:24)  2. Comfort Zone
(4:46)  3. Message In A Bottle
(4:53)  4. The Sea
(3:48)  5. All I Want Is You
(4:44)  6. I Bare My Soul
(2:51)  7. Northern Light
(3:55)  8. Superstition
(3:06)  9. I'll See You There
(2:56) 10. Moving Forward My Friend
(4:12) 11. Compared To What
(6:05) 12. Blowing In The Wind

Sarah Jane Morris and Antonio Forcione come together in a worldwide tour to promote the launch of their collaborative album: Compared to What. This duo have each been compared to an impressive array of musical geniuses including Janice Joplin and Tom Waits (vocally) as well as Jimi Hendrix (instrumentally)  a comparison Antonio wears with pride. Django Reinhardt also comes to mind. In truth, Sarah Jane and Antonio are great artists in their own right. Channelling their energies together, they share audiences in Italy, Britain, and all over the world. Together they increase their spheres of appreciation, giving loyal fans the chance to experience favourites afresh, as well as attracting new audiences with the strength and artistry of their unique partnership. Compared to what is the result of a fruitful and varied songwriting collaboration. It covers a number of traumatic social issues and many songs of emotional intensity which reflect the urgent concern both artists feel for the tragedy of refugees. One song in particular deals with the boat people a drama most keenly felt in Italy and by Italians with Sarah Jane and Antonio acting as tribunes of conscience. This sense of witness describes many of Sarah Jane's most passionately felt songs from the recent past, and in new material Antonio adds his own awareness and artistic response. Alongside the songs of conscience, Compared to What includes some wry comedy, also love songs and some memorable covers, notably Stevie Wonder and Bob Dylan. Sarah Jane's and Antonio's set touches heights of great musical beauty both in Antonio's unique virtuoso guitar playing and Sarah Jane's legendary voice, now more subtle and persuasive than ever, with range and power undiminished. The whole is a triumph of collaboration between two of the most individual and richly talented musicians on the world stage. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Compared-Sarah-Morris-Antonio-Forcione/dp/B01LVUV1ZN

Personnel:  Antonio Forcione Guitar;  Sarah Jane Morris Voice

Compared To What

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Sarah Jane Morris - Love And Pain

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:48
Size: 117,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:33)  1. Love And Pain
(4:10)  2. I Get High
(3:52)  3. Cowboy Junkies
(3:56)  4. Innocence
(3:35)  5. Nothing Comes From Nothing
(4:55)  6. Arms Of An Angel
(3:38)  7. Mad Woman Blues
(3:59)  8. 'It's Jesus I Love'
(3:42)  9. Blind Old Friends
(3:12) 10. Once In Every While
(5:18) 11. A Horse Named Janis Joplin
(5:50) 12. Fields Of Wheat

To underpin her classic blue-eyed soul voice with electronic swoops and programmed drums is a very clever entrance into Sarah Jane Morris' Love and Pain. The swirling organ and sparse bass do their jobs as well to further bolster the acoustic guitar-driven opening track, "Mad Woman Blues." It serves as the signature, cornerstone piece setting the tone and kicking off a terrifically intriguing series of 12 tunes. These juxtaposed instrumental choices and themes weave in and out of the sonic landscape, making room for other just as titillating production elements such as world-tinged percussion grooves, guitars on the brink of distortion, way-hip sampled bits and beats, processed vocal parts, and more. Morris' smoky voice is the common thread holding it all together. 

Her performances dance from sultry to sassy in the blink of an eye (or the change of a track, as the case may be). From moment to moment, you might think of Garbage, Moby, Alison Moyet, or Primitive Radio Gods, or even reach as far as Erykah Badu. But while those works might seem similar, Love and Pain is something else altogether, and it's pretty darn cool. ~ Kelly McCartney  http://www.allmusic.com/album/love-and-pain-mw0000039761

Personnel: Sarah Jane Morris (vocals); Calum MacColl, Martyn Barker (various instruments, programming); Mornington Lockett (saxophone); Simon Edwards (bass).

Friday, September 19, 2014

Sarah Jane Morris - Bloody Rain

Size: 165,8 MB
Time: 71:12
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop/Soul/R&B Vocals
Art: Front

01. Feel The Love (4:05)
02. For A Friend (3:46)
03. No Beyonce (4:36)
04. I Shall Be Released (6:30)
05. David Kato (5:53)
06. Comfort They Have None (5:00)
07. Bloody Rain (4:04)
08. Wild Flowers (4:47)
09. Kora (0:32)
10. Across The Desert To Love (4:05)
11. Deeper Well (6:15)
12. Coal Train (8:18)
13. Get Them Out (4:28)
14. On My Way To You (3:53)
15. Men Just Wanna Have Fun (4:52)

Sarah-Jane Morris is the British soul, jazz and r&b singer who topped the UK pop charts for a month in 1986 (with The Communards' disco version of 'Don't Leave Me This Way') and then eloquently and joyously side-stepped the mainstream ever after.

Morris's magnificent soul voice and emotional power would have brought multiple Grammy awards and celebrity status to most singers with her charisma and drive. But for over 25 years of a unique career, Morris has steered by her own star, not the music industry's, and that independence has brought her a devoted audience, inspired by her belief in the power of song to change hearts and minds.

That belief inspired Bloody Rain, the ambitious new collection of love-songs, tributes, warnings and protests that she regards as the best album of her life.

Devoted to the people of Africa, and the music of that continent that has inspired so many artists for so long, Bloody Rain brings together a stunningly diverse group of performers. Among a raft of guests are the Zimbabwe-born singer Eska, Senegal's Seckou Keita on kora, UK-Caribbean saxophonist Courtney Pine, the Soweto Gospel Choir, American/Israeli jazz trumpeter Avishai Cohen, former James Brown arranger Pee Wee Ellis - and of course the soulmates from Morris's touring band, including Sting sideman Dominic Miller, and guitarist Tony Remy, co-writer of many of the new songs.

Typically, Sarah-Jane Morris doesn't flinch from some raw subjects in telling this story, and while she hopes that many of these haunting songs 'will lift your spirits', she accepts that 'some will make you weep.' Blossoming as a lyricist in recent years, the singer and her co-writers have taken on subjects from tyrannical political power ('Bloody Rain'), to honour killings ('No Beyonce'), child-soldiers ('No Comfort For Them'), and homophobia ('David Kato').

But these forthright songs, ignited by irresistable grooves, superb playing, and Morris's startling shifts from the soulfully rhetorical to the intimate, are about hope, not resignation. Bloody Rain is also, crucially, about love - in which respect, though the examples are Sarah-Jane Morris's own, the music speaks to everyone. Her husband Mark and her 80 year-old mother Joy are the inspirations for the glowing Afrobeat opener 'Feel The Love', 'For A Friend' is a tender yet upbeat tribute to special companions, 'Wild Flowers' a grateful celebration of her eccentric, accidentally-liberating upbringing, and the closing 'On My Way To You' is as delicate and tender as anything this expressive singer has recorded in her long career.

Bloody Rain