Mostrando postagens com marcador Lizz Wright. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Lizz Wright. Mostrar todas as postagens

1.9.17

LIZZ WRIGTH – Fellowship (2010) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

On her fourth album, Lizz Wright returns to her gospel roots after writing her own material on 2008's The Orchard. Typically, however, this is hardly a traditional collection of faith-based songs. Wright does include a medley of old spirituals including "Up Above My Head," and she closes the proceedings with "Amazing Grace." But her idea of gospel is highly eclectic, also encompassing the Gladys Knight & the Pips hit "I've Got to Use My Imagination" and Jimi Hendrix's "In from the Storm," neither of which seem particularly religious, as well as Eric Clapton's "Presence of the Lord." Wright also draws material from a clutch of black female contemporaries and influences including Me'Shell Ndegéocello, Bernice Johnson Reagon, Joan Wasser, and Angélique Kidjo as she ranges from neo-soul to African-styled folk-rock music. The disparate sources are united by Wright's distinctive and powerful alto voice, which anchors the music and provides a stylistic through-line, no matter what the nominal genre. This is an unusually somber type of gospel, as Wright favors moodiness over fervor in her statements of faith. That is especially true at the end, when she presents "Amazing Grace" in an ambient, funereal mood. Listeners should expect to be moved by these performances, but not to be cheered. William Ruhlmann
Tracklist :
1. Fellowship
2. (I've Got to Use My) Imagination
3. I Remember, I Believe
4. God Specializes
5. Gospel Medley
6. Sweeping Through the City
7. All the Seeds
8. Presence of the Lord
9. In from the Storm
10. Feed the Light
11. Oya
12. Amazing Grace

RAN BLAKE — Epistrophy (1992) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Ran Blake's re-interpretations of 12 Thelonious Monk songs and four standards that Monk enjoyed playing are quite different than everyon...