Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:03
Size: 135.2 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2007
Art: Front
[5:11] 1. Blue Monk
[5:16] 2. Throw It Away
[4:44] 3. And It's Supposed To Be Love
[5:25] 4. Should've Been
[3:37] 5. The World Is Falling Down
[4:53] 6. Bird Alone
[6:29] 7. Down Here Below
[3:50] 8. The Music Is The Magic
[4:35] 9. Learning How To Listen
[6:26] 10. The Merry Dancer
[4:37] 11. Love Has Gone Away
[3:54] 12. Being Me
Accordion – Gil Goldstein; Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar, Resonator Guitar [National], Steel Guitar, Mandolin – Larry Campbell; Bass – Scott Colley; Cello – Dave Eggar; Drums – Shawn Pelton; Performer, Lyrics By – Abbey Lincoln. Recorded on September 25-27 and November 17, 2006 at Avatar Studios, New York City.
Vocalist Abbey Lincoln's voice is the sound of the earth yearning for your soul. She is lust turned to wisdom. She is diva turned to soothsayer. In her mid-seventies at the time of this recording, Lincoln is the embodiment of a life lived as a performer and lover and now a storyteller through song. Abbey Sings Abbey finds the songstress revisiting a number of her own compositions from past albums. And while she remains a pre-eminent jazz singer, here she has surrounded herself with an eclectic and organic small group that imbues these tracks with a soft country-blues meets klezmer sound that rubs elegantly against Lincoln's burnished vocals. This is a beautifully raw and intimate album full of lament and the faint perfume of romance. As she sings on "Should've Been," "It's the sound of sorry/Looking yonder with regret. Sorry 'cause of what you got/And what you didn't get." These are enigmatic torch songs and playful blues, dark elegies and poignant ballads all featuring Lincoln's own devastatingly precise lyrics and melodies that hint at not just death and regret, but also a lingering passion for life. ~Matt Collar
Vocalist Abbey Lincoln's voice is the sound of the earth yearning for your soul. She is lust turned to wisdom. She is diva turned to soothsayer. In her mid-seventies at the time of this recording, Lincoln is the embodiment of a life lived as a performer and lover and now a storyteller through song. Abbey Sings Abbey finds the songstress revisiting a number of her own compositions from past albums. And while she remains a pre-eminent jazz singer, here she has surrounded herself with an eclectic and organic small group that imbues these tracks with a soft country-blues meets klezmer sound that rubs elegantly against Lincoln's burnished vocals. This is a beautifully raw and intimate album full of lament and the faint perfume of romance. As she sings on "Should've Been," "It's the sound of sorry/Looking yonder with regret. Sorry 'cause of what you got/And what you didn't get." These are enigmatic torch songs and playful blues, dark elegies and poignant ballads all featuring Lincoln's own devastatingly precise lyrics and melodies that hint at not just death and regret, but also a lingering passion for life. ~Matt Collar
Abbey Sings Abbey