Fiona Ross - Thoughts, Conversations and to Do Lists (2023)

  • 02 May, 10:17
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Artist:
Title: Thoughts, Conversations and to Do Lists
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Fiona Ross
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:58:16
Total Size: 134 mb | 331 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Fiona Ross - When Will You Leave My Mind
02. Fiona Ross - I Want to Know More
03. Fiona Ross - The Small Things
04. Fiona Ross - When You Walked in the Room
05. Fiona Ross - A Single Source of Truth
06. Fiona Ross - Push Me Around in a Pushchair
07. Fiona Ross - Looking at My to Do List
08. Fiona Ross - The Best Version of Me
09. Fiona Ross - The Trumpet Man
10. Fiona Ross - Look What You’ve Become
11. Fiona Ross - Always There for Me
12. Fiona Ross - Positive Things
13. Fiona Ross - The Don’t Stop Just Breathe Ragtime
14. Fiona Ross - #thursdaythoughts

Fiona Ross (vocals & piano); Gibbi Bettini (guitar); Derek Daley (bass); Marley Drummond (drums); Loren Hignell (saxophones & flute); Dave Boa (trumpets); Ashaine White (backing vocals); Warren Woodcraft (percussion)
Guest appearance on ‘Push Me Around in a Pushchair’ – Nancy Richardson

Over the course of a stunning series of albums that began with Twist of Blue in 2016 through to last years all acoustic set, 7 Songs in 7 Days, Fiona Ross has always been determined to follow her own path. Her influences are many and varied but can often be difficult to discern as she sweeps you away, inviting you into her own musical universe.

One of the attributes of the music is that Ross has built a core band that are now intuitively able to interpret and perform her songs with precision and passion. This new album takes the music a stage further and following the acoustic recording brings the full band back together in the studio to perform some new songs with some exciting and fresh arrangements.

There is a different vibe and feel to the music that moves on from Red Flags and High Heels released in 2021, and this is largely down to Ross’s desire to expand her brass writing for the band, yet still somehow paradoxically comes across in a more relaxed mood that permeates throughout.

This newfound confidence in the expanded arrangements is immediately heard in the rhythmically compelling opening song ‘When Will You Leave My Mind’ that features an excellent guitar solo from Gibbi Bettini and the punchy horn arrangements on ‘I Want to Know’ in contrast with Loren Hignell’s flute solo.

Hignall’s alto saxophone accompanying Ross’s vocal on ‘The Small Things’ has a lovely touch on this gentle reflection on the small things in life that we really should appreciate. The saxophonist also takes delightful solo on ‘The Best Version of Me’ in an outing that captures lyricism and a powerful tone.

Ross’s sense of fun is to the fore on the wonderful ‘The Don’t Stop Just Breathe Ragtime’ that switches from pre-jazz ragtime to the contemporary in a heartbeat, while ‘Thursday’s Thoughts’, recorded on a Thursday of course, that has been developed form the piece titled ‘Tuesday’s Thoughts’ on 7 Songs in 7 Days moving the composition from Ross’s fiendishly complicated piano introduction to a rock infused piece for piano and rhythm section and a tantalisingly brief solo from guitarist Bettini before a return to the solo piano composition that began the tune.

The sheer infectious exuberance of the rhythmic drive of ‘When You Walked In The Room’ is a feel treat and again draws the listener to the sound of the brass arrangement, and a wonderfully concise and expressive solo from trumpeter Dave Boa.

Boa’s place in Ross’s music cannot be overestimated as he has been a regular collaborator and co-conspirator for many years, and the vocalist dedicates ‘The Trumpet Man’ to her friend and fellow musician. Depicting a time in the trumpeter’s life when juggling the life of a professional musician with spending time with and providing for his family made him doubt his vocation.

Boa plays beautifully on this song and Ross sings with great feeling, able to express the insecurity, uncertainty and vulnerability that Boa must have felt.

The album is littered with such stories, feelings and emotions that we can all connect with, and it is this empathy for others, and her ability to communicate these feelings while lifting the spirits of all around her that make Fiona Ross’s music such a joy.