Kundenmeinungen
Ein annähernd perfektes Debütalbum , 14. Oktober 2008
Geboren in Peru und aufgewachsen ist die brunette-lockige Britin in England einem Elternhaus, das ihren abwechlungsreichen Musikgeschmack prägte. Denn ihre Musik ist im allerbesten Sinn eine altmodische Mischung, die sowohl Einflüsse des Blues, Jazz, Soul, Country und Gospel verarbeitet.Nach dem erstklassigen Opener mit dem Traditional Blues "Nobody`s Fault But Mine" kommt mit "So Sublime" ein schwungvoller Song, der als zweite Single aus diesem Album auch schon im Radio zu hören ist. Mit der netten Coverversion von Dylans "I Shall Be Released" im Reggae-Style und dem countryesken "When The Rain Cames" kann Beth Rowley punkten. Und am Ende kommen mit "Almost Persuaded" sowie "Beautiful Tomorrow"noch zwei vom Blues/Gospel beeinflußte Songs, die das Album perfekt abrunden. Wobei angemerkt sein muss, dass 5 der 11 Tracks Coverversionen sind, dies aber dem geneigten Hörer bis auf Dylan (s.o.) nicht weiter auffallen wird.Ein annähernd perfektes Debütalbum von Beth Rowley, die live auch Klassiker wie "I`d Rather Go Blind" (Etta James) eindrücklich interpretiert.
Brilliant music with many influences, 20. Mai 2008
Though born in Peru, Beth Rowley is of British stock and has lived in Britain since her parents returned home when she was two. Beth grew up listening to many different styles of music thanks to her parents' eclectic musical tastes and this is reflected in her music. As a singer-songwriter, Beth has co-written five of the songs here, often with the help of Ben Castle. Ben (son of Roy Castle) is a jazz saxophonist who has worked with Jamie Cullum. The other six songs are covers but Beth has chosen them well. I'd be very surprised if you've heard more than about four of them by other artists at the very most.The set opens with a traditional song (Nobody's fault but mine). Beth's bluesy voice is perfectly matched to this bluesy song that sets a high standard for the rest of the album, which maintains that high standard throughout.The next two tracks (Sweet hours, So sublime) are among the original songs, with the latter being the second single from the album, released just a week before the album itself. The release of the first single (Oh my life, which is track 7 here) preceded the album by a full three months but failed to chart.The fourth track (I shall be released) might be the most familiar song that Beth covered for this album, it being one of Bob Dylan's classic songs. Beth opted to give it an upbeat reggae treatment that may be slightly at odds with the lyrics but nevertheless works well.The next three tracks feature two more brilliant original songs (Only one cloud, Oh my life) sandwiching a cover of When the rains came, written and originally recorded by British blues singer Jim Crawford. I confess that I've never heard of him before but if all his songs are this good, one wonders why he isn't better known.The next two tracks, both covers, are what attracted my attention when I first saw the album and looked at the track listing in my local store. I am familiar with a Willie Nelson song titled Angel flying too close to the ground. I really didn't believe that somebody could come up with a different song with that title. Seeing another familiar country song title (Almost persuaded) as the following title reinforced this belief. I did some research and confirmed that these songs were indeed covers of the songs that I was familiar with and after listening to some of the other songs (but not these two) on MySpace, I knew that I had to buy this album.Beth chose to bring in guest vocalist Duke Special on Angel flying too close to the ground. It's a long way removed from Willie Nelson's original version, but if the great man hears it, I think he would approve. Almost persuaded (originally recorded by David Houston, who has long since faded into obscurity) has generated a variety of covers including very distinctive versions by Etta James and Hank Williams Junior. Both of those covers are very different from the original and from each other. Tammy Wynette is among those singers who recorded faithful covers of the song. Beth has stamped her own identity on the song so her version is different again from the others I've heard.Next comes the last of the five excellent original songs here, You never even called me tonight. The final track (Beautiful tomorrow), like the opening track, is a traditional song, but this one is a gospel song that Beth may have learned from Mahalia Jackson's version.Musically, this is hard to classify but it has elements of pop, jazz, blues and soul in it. Despite including two covers of country songs, I don't detect any country influences in the actual music. Not that I mind, because this is a truly brilliant debut album by a singer who will hopefully be around for a long time.
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