Liz Green - O, Devotion! (2011)
Artist: Liz Green
Title: O, Devotion!
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Love da records
Genre: Vocal Jazz, North-Western Retro-Folk
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log)
Total Time: 41:35
Total Size: 231 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: O, Devotion!
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Love da records
Genre: Vocal Jazz, North-Western Retro-Folk
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log)
Total Time: 41:35
Total Size: 231 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. hey joe 04:36
02. midnight blues 03:35
03. displacement song 04:03
04. luis 03:30
05. bad medicine 03:40
06. french singer 04:33
07. rag & bone 02:50
08. the quiet 05:49
09. ostrich song 03:20
10. gallows 05:39
2011 album from the Manchester-based Folk singer. Recorded at London's Toe Rag Studios with producer Liam Watson, the album is a much grander affair than her early works, complete with brass band and kitchen sink. New versions of 'Bad Medicine' and 'French Singer' are notable inclusions, as is Liz's Primo Levi-inspired single 'Displacement Song'. Liz Green released her debut single 'Bad Medicine' in 2007. During the same year, she won Glastonbury Festival's Emerging Talent competition to earn the honor of opening the festival's Pyramid Stage on the Saturday. Play it Again Sam. 2011.
A deliciously dark and serpentine journey -- Daily Mirror, 2011
A sensational debut (Album of the Week) -- The Times, 2011
Green effortlessly blends crackled Karen Dalton vocals, smoky 1930s jazz, brass, French chanteusery and kitchen sink lyrics. The resultant noise is a delicate and understated triumph. Wonderful. -- Guardian, 2011
It's careful arrangements, coupled with Green's unusual but deliberate vocal style and ear for a story, comprise a lasting testament to her talent -- BBC online, 2011
A deliciously dark and serpentine journey -- Daily Mirror, 2011
A sensational debut (Album of the Week) -- The Times, 2011
Green effortlessly blends crackled Karen Dalton vocals, smoky 1930s jazz, brass, French chanteusery and kitchen sink lyrics. The resultant noise is a delicate and understated triumph. Wonderful. -- Guardian, 2011
It's careful arrangements, coupled with Green's unusual but deliberate vocal style and ear for a story, comprise a lasting testament to her talent -- BBC online, 2011