Come Shine - Do Do That Voodoo (2002) Lossless
Artist: Come Shine
Title: Do Do That Voodoo
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Curling Legs
Genre: Jazz / Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log)
Total Time: 50:39
Total Size: 275 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Do Do That Voodoo
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Curling Legs
Genre: Jazz / Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log)
Total Time: 50:39
Total Size: 275 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01.Saga Of Harrison Crabfeathers
02.My Favourite Things
03.Memories Of You
04.You'll Have To Swing It
05.You've Changed
06.Somewhere Over The Rainbow
07.Nature Boy
08.April In Paris
09.Love For Sale
10.You Do Something To Me
Sondre Meisfjord - bass
Live Maria Roggen - vocal
Hеkon Mjеset Johansen - drum
Erlend Skomsvoll - piano
Come Shine is a Norwegian jazz band, established 2001 in Trondheim.
In an unprecedented fashion, Come Shine burst into the national sales charts with their second album “Do that voodoo”. Rave, nearly hysterical reviews followed in the wake of the album’s release, solidifying “Do that voodoo’s” and Come Shine’s positions as jazz release and band of the year. “Do that voodoo’s” focus is on standards – tunes such as My favourite things, Nature Boy and Somewhere over the rainbow that have seen countless interpretations and performances over the years. What sets Come Shine’s renditions apart from the vast majority of standard interpretations is the ensemble’s ability to make the listener feel that the tunes have never heard before. The quartet’s confident, skilled, visionary and aesthetic playing provides a platform from which the tunes grow into new entities – freed from the constraints of past performances and interpretations.
In an unprecedented fashion, Come Shine burst into the national sales charts with their second album “Do that voodoo”. Rave, nearly hysterical reviews followed in the wake of the album’s release, solidifying “Do that voodoo’s” and Come Shine’s positions as jazz release and band of the year. “Do that voodoo’s” focus is on standards – tunes such as My favourite things, Nature Boy and Somewhere over the rainbow that have seen countless interpretations and performances over the years. What sets Come Shine’s renditions apart from the vast majority of standard interpretations is the ensemble’s ability to make the listener feel that the tunes have never heard before. The quartet’s confident, skilled, visionary and aesthetic playing provides a platform from which the tunes grow into new entities – freed from the constraints of past performances and interpretations.