Madeleine Peyroux - Secular Hymns (2016) [HDtracks]
Artist: Madeleine Peyroux
Title: Secular Hymns
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Impulse! A Division of Universal Music
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks): 24/96
Total Time: 00:33:38
Total Size: 707 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Secular Hymns
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Impulse! A Division of Universal Music
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks): 24/96
Total Time: 00:33:38
Total Size: 707 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01 - Got You On My Mind (4:30)
02 - Tango Till They’re Sore (3:24)
03 - The Highway Kind (2:47)
04 - Everything I Do Gonh Be Funky (From Now On) (3:16)
05 - If The Sea Was Whiskey (3:07)
06 - Hard Times Come Again No More (4:17)
07 - Hello Babe (3:11)
08 - More Time (3:23)
09 - Shout Sister Shout (2:42)
10 - Trampin (3:01)
Madeleine Peyroux, vocals, guitar
Jon Herington, guitar
Barak Mori, bass
Madeleine Peyroux doesn't simply interpret songs, she possesses them...and vice versa.
Madeleine Peyroux is either an old soul or was "born with it" (depending on one's theory about the flashpoint of artistry); that became apparent in 1996, with the release of her debut album, Dreamland, a remarkably knowing work in which the then-22-year-old singer brought commensurate insightfulness to material associated with Billie Holiday, Bessie Smith, and Patsy Cline. Her decision to cover Edith Piaf's "La Vie en Rose" reflected the decade that the Georgia-born Peyroux had spent living in Paris, from ages 13 to 22. In the ten years since then, she has brought a wealth of life experience to her natural affinities, first manifested on the long-in-coming sophomore album Careless Love and brought to fruition on Peyroux's new album Half the Perfect World.
Half the Perfect World, once again impeccably produced by Larry Klein, serves as both complement and counterpoint to its predecessor, 2004's Careless Love, which drew raves across the board and sold more than a million copies worldwide. "This record is different from Careless Love in the sense that there's a unison of joy on it," Peyroux says of the new album. "It's pushing certain boundaries for me."
Whereas much of her earlier work drew on writers and singers from the first half of the twentieth century, the bulk of Half the Perfect World focuses on artists and writers from the lifetime of the 32-year-old artist, including Leonard Cohen, Tom Waits, Fred Neil and Joni Mitchell. Peyroux's knack for choosing the perfect song is again key to the album's emotional impact, but her continued growth as a songwriter is equally important, and the new album's four original tunes more than hold their own, raising the groove quotient in the process. Peyroux, Larry Klein and Steely Dan's Walter Becker collaborated to write the album's opening track, the wonderfully catchy "I'm All Right." The album's other original songs reunite the writing team of Peyroux, Jesse Harris and Larry Klein (who penned the single "Don't Wait Too Long" on Careless Love). Rounding out the new album are Peyroux's interpretations of standards from Johnny Mercer, Charlie Chaplin and Serge Gainsbourg.
"These love songs all come from an extremely personal place," says Peyroux of the new album, "and therefore allowed me a most intimate reading." Indeed, Peyroux's vocals bring such insight into both covers and originals on Half the Perfect World that a theme emerges - many of the album's songs explore romantic relationships from a distinctly female perspective.
Along with revealing her artistic growth, the new album also reflects Peyroux's increased confidence, resulting in part from the synergy she'd achieved on Careless Love with Larry Klein and the core players - guitarist Dean Parks, bassist David Piltch and drummer Jay Bellerose. They're joined on Half the Perfect World by keyboardist Sam Yahel, drummer Scott Amedola and a stellar cast of supporting musicians which includes saxophonist Gary Foster, pedal steel player Greg Leisz, Till Bronner on trumpet and Larry Goldings on celeste. "This record has me taking more leaps in every song, partly because these are different kinds of songs than the songs I've previously covered," Peyroux says. "Working with a team that I've already worked with, and knowing how amazing they are.... The depth of collaboration and self-expression among all of us is what defines the essence of this album."
Madeleine Peyroux is either an old soul or was "born with it" (depending on one's theory about the flashpoint of artistry); that became apparent in 1996, with the release of her debut album, Dreamland, a remarkably knowing work in which the then-22-year-old singer brought commensurate insightfulness to material associated with Billie Holiday, Bessie Smith, and Patsy Cline. Her decision to cover Edith Piaf's "La Vie en Rose" reflected the decade that the Georgia-born Peyroux had spent living in Paris, from ages 13 to 22. In the ten years since then, she has brought a wealth of life experience to her natural affinities, first manifested on the long-in-coming sophomore album Careless Love and brought to fruition on Peyroux's new album Half the Perfect World.
Half the Perfect World, once again impeccably produced by Larry Klein, serves as both complement and counterpoint to its predecessor, 2004's Careless Love, which drew raves across the board and sold more than a million copies worldwide. "This record is different from Careless Love in the sense that there's a unison of joy on it," Peyroux says of the new album. "It's pushing certain boundaries for me."
Whereas much of her earlier work drew on writers and singers from the first half of the twentieth century, the bulk of Half the Perfect World focuses on artists and writers from the lifetime of the 32-year-old artist, including Leonard Cohen, Tom Waits, Fred Neil and Joni Mitchell. Peyroux's knack for choosing the perfect song is again key to the album's emotional impact, but her continued growth as a songwriter is equally important, and the new album's four original tunes more than hold their own, raising the groove quotient in the process. Peyroux, Larry Klein and Steely Dan's Walter Becker collaborated to write the album's opening track, the wonderfully catchy "I'm All Right." The album's other original songs reunite the writing team of Peyroux, Jesse Harris and Larry Klein (who penned the single "Don't Wait Too Long" on Careless Love). Rounding out the new album are Peyroux's interpretations of standards from Johnny Mercer, Charlie Chaplin and Serge Gainsbourg.
"These love songs all come from an extremely personal place," says Peyroux of the new album, "and therefore allowed me a most intimate reading." Indeed, Peyroux's vocals bring such insight into both covers and originals on Half the Perfect World that a theme emerges - many of the album's songs explore romantic relationships from a distinctly female perspective.
Along with revealing her artistic growth, the new album also reflects Peyroux's increased confidence, resulting in part from the synergy she'd achieved on Careless Love with Larry Klein and the core players - guitarist Dean Parks, bassist David Piltch and drummer Jay Bellerose. They're joined on Half the Perfect World by keyboardist Sam Yahel, drummer Scott Amedola and a stellar cast of supporting musicians which includes saxophonist Gary Foster, pedal steel player Greg Leisz, Till Bronner on trumpet and Larry Goldings on celeste. "This record has me taking more leaps in every song, partly because these are different kinds of songs than the songs I've previously covered," Peyroux says. "Working with a team that I've already worked with, and knowing how amazing they are.... The depth of collaboration and self-expression among all of us is what defines the essence of this album."