Ana Popovic
Comfort to the Soul
Play Comfort to the Soul
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AMG Review of Comfort to the Soul
Alex Henderson
All Music GuideThese days, purists are becoming increasingly difficult to find in the lues world -- at least if you define a lues purist as someone who believes that anything he/she performs must adhere to a 12-bar structure. So many of the bluesmen who were hailed as promising newcomers in the '80s or '90s -- Robert Cray, Michael Hill, the late Stevie Ray Vaughan, among others -- were heavily influenced by soul, ock, or both. Ask a lot of younger lues artists who their influences are, and they just might mention Jimi Hendrix, Otis Redding, Led Zeppelin, or Aretha Franklin along with Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, and John Lee Hooker. One of the more promising lues-friendly artists of the 2000s, Ana Popovic is far from a lues purist -- truth be told, her second album Comfort to the Soul has as much to do with ock, soul, funk, and jazz as it does with the lues. Of course, many non-purists would argue that the lues are really about a feeling more than 12 bars -- and anyone who shares that perspective will agree that the Yugoslavian performer brings a wealth of lues feeling to the table whether she is rocking out on "Fool Proof," making some soul moves on the title track, or showing her jazzy side on the instrumental "Navajo Mood" and an inspired remake of Steely Dan's "Night by Night." The fact that Popovic includes a Steely Dan cover and Howlin' Wolf's "Sittin' on Top of the World" on the same album is quite revealing -- it underscores the fact that even though the lues obviously mean a lot to her, she sees no reason to deprive herself of the pleasures that other musical idioms offer. Popovic showed considerable promise on her debut album Hush!, and there are no signs of a sophomore slump on this excellent follow-up.



