Lili Anel - I Can See Bliss from Here (2013)
Artist: Lili Anel
Title: I Can See Bliss from Here
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Wall-I
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:53:35
Total Size: 285 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: I Can See Bliss from Here
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Wall-I
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:53:35
Total Size: 285 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Climb the Wall
02. Something to Do
03. Blindsided
04. Living for Today
05. The Best Part of Me (Song for Joey)
06. Go Home
07. Losing My Faith
08. Got Me Thinking
09. Out of Control
10. This Love Is Over
11. Blindsided #2
12. Today
With I Can See Bliss From Here, singer-songwriter Lili Anel presents a set of personal songs that deeply touch the listener's ear, mind and soul, and bring to mind the confessional yet universal genius of such songwriters as Tracy Chapman, Phoebe Snow and Roberta Flack—they really are that well-written. "These are the songs I want to put out to the world at this time," she says simply. "It's what I wrote. They reflect where I am right now."
I Can See Bliss From Here reflects all the hustle and bustle of Anel's own life: As her bio explains, she's "a New York-born Cuban-African American" who has lived the past decade in Philadelphia, where she befriended pianist Dale Melton, who co-produced Bliss, her sixth release. "We have much in common," Anel explains. "A love of the music by The Band, among others, and a shared ideology of community in music." (Lili and Dale are both identical twins, too.)
"Something to Do" tells the story of how she grew up in Harlem ("I was born and raised in the barrio on 110th Street," she begins) atop a chugging Latin rhythm spiced with horns. Anel then recalls her mother, who worked to support her family six days out of seven and died in her early 50s, and shares a wonderfully self-effacing (not self-pitying) verse about her shaved head and the autoimmune disease Alopecia Areata, which causes hair loss): "I shaved my head bald today. You see, most of my hair had fallen out anyway. And when people laugh at me, I just smile because I believe they're just scared it could be them instead of me."
A song to her son, "The Best Part of Me (Song for Joey)" swims in deceptively deep, shifting musical and emotional currents ("On the day that you were born, my heart melted")—a beautiful idea, beautifully played and sung.
But Bliss also lifts Anel's vision to more broad horizons. Her moaning vocal and Tom Hampton's groaning guitar scrape out the raw and ragged, tough as nails "Go Home," a contemporary blues that begins with the story of how she was "written up at work" because she "laughed too loud" but ends with her calling on the heavens to take her home for good. Liner notes by New York Music Hall of Fame Director Robbie Woliver call this "the album's biggest revelation, (is) an infectious field-holler-styled blues lament that takes modern-day work drudgery to another level."
Because this entire set is about carrying on in the face of circumstances that suggest you'd be better off packing it in, "Losing My Faith" might have been this set's title track. Its chorus is this set's most beautiful melody, and frees Anel's voice to float and soar like a songbird. It's a tribute to her creativity and spirit that Lili Anel Can See Bliss From Here.