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Eva Cassidy

Somewhere

  • AMG Review of Somewhere

    Amg
    Thom Jurek
    All Music Guide

    Somewhere marks the eight posthumous recording by Eva Cassidy -- none of her offerings were issued during her lifetime -- and puts her in the company of Tupac Shakur for a post-life discography. This is a true odds and sods collection of material that includes two co-writes and the usual slew of covers. The late Cassidy's covers run the gamut from Dolly Parton's "Coat of Many Colors," and Don Covay's "Chain of Fools," to Don Hecht's "Walkin' After Midnight," and Fred Rose's "Blue Eyes Cryin' in the Rain." Some of what's here has been doctored significantly -- the aforementioned Covay tune has horn and backing vocal charts added in 2006 and 2007, respectively, and another horn chart on a cover of Don Robey's "Ain't Doin' Too Bad," in 2006. The vocal tracks aren't much more than recorded demos, and the vocals, while of decent quality, aren't spectacular; when the other tracks are added, it feels like there is something very wrong at work here. Truth be told, it feels like ambulance chasing. Other selections fare better, such as the live version of J. Leslie McFarland's "It Won't Be Long," or the stripped down voice and guitar "Walkin' After Midnight," which is likewise live and wonderfully done. The same can be said of the live stripped to voice and guitar numbers like the Rose tune, George Gershwin's standard "Summertime," and Cassidy's co-write (with Rob Gordon) of "Early One Morning," a fingerpicked and slide guitar blues studio take recorded in 1987. There are three arrangements of traditional tunes here as well including "A Bold Young Farmer," the haunting tragic English ballad made all the more poignant since it was recorded in the year of Cassidy's death. The set concludes with the title cut, another original co-written by Cassidy and her producer and collaborator Chris Biondo. This is a recording that was never completed during her lifetime but finished in preparation for this release; this feels like the most "finished" thing here. Biondo's original reluctance to complete this track is understood due to its depth. Other former Cassidy bandmates Lenny Williams and Raice McLeod made this possible and it is easily the best thing here. Biondo's empathy for this track is particularly sensitive; if any of Cassidy's own music could be considered cinematic and universal in its appeal, it's this one. Employing her own backing vocals as a chorus make it truly powerful. All in all, this is the spottiest entry in her catalog, but there are some fine moments nonetheless.

Halloween Truckin'
26 days ago

You outlasted the club scene, and the lights are going out, time for you to do the same. Eva Cassidy rises onto the Blues Alley stage once again, with a Patsy Cline cover. (Who says Halloween spirits mean you harm or look "Rock Star dead"?)

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Eva Cassidy: No longer only a "cover girl"
about 1 year ago
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I was at Borders Books & Music today, looking for Cecilio & Kapono's "Lifetime Party: 30 Years of Friends Volume 2." I found it, browsed a bit more, then went to the new arrivals section. I saw this large poster of Eva Cassidy and thought: "How nice, another anthology?" Then it dawned on me that this was something new. New Eva Cassidy material? Hasn't that well been pumped dry by now? No. To to...

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Welcome back to Blues Alley...
about 1 year ago
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This is a picture of Aretha Franklin, of whom Eva Cassidy often cited both as an influence and performance target. Here's a previously unreleased "Live at Blues Alley" performance augmented by the voices of Leonie and Amba Tremaine, plus a horn arrangement for a "whole nine yards" result. (Singing Eva Cassidy's arrangement of "Over The Rainbow" in a 2001, Amba won first prize on "This Is My Mom...

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More colors for the legend
about 1 year ago
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Just how different is this Eva Cassidy release? It's familiar and new, a bit of the Blues, Traditional, Rock, and Country. Here's the opening track to the CD, faithful to Dolly Parton's original, but every bit Eva Cassidy.

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An Eva Cassidy foot tapper!?
about 1 year ago
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Here's a 1994 live studio recording...that you can tap your foot/dance to! Will wonders never cease? As the liner notes say, this is another side of Eva Cassidy. (And Gracenote has this CD tagged as "Easy Listening"!?)

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Summertime- By: Eva Cassidy
over 2 years ago

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