Barb Jungr - Every Grain of Sand (2002)
Artist: Barb Jungr
Title: Every Grain of Sand
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Linn Records
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) +Booklet
Total Time: 01:03:19
Total Size: 334 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Every Grain of Sand
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Linn Records
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) +Booklet
Total Time: 01:03:19
Total Size: 334 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. I'll Be Your Baby Tonight
02. If Not for You
03. Things Have Changed (Arr. James Tomalin)
04. Ring Them Bells
05. Not Dark Yet (Arr. James Tomalin)
06. Don't Think Twice, It's All Right
07. Is Your Love in Vain (Arr. James Tomalin)
08. It's All over Now, Baby Blue
09. I Want You
10. Sugar Baby
11. Born in Time (Arr. James Tomalin)
12. What Good Am I?
13. Tangled Up in Blue
14. Forever Young (Arr. James Tomalin)
15. Every Grain of Sand (Arr. James Tomalin)
Every Grain of Sand is a breathtaking revelation on several fronts. First, Barb Jungr treats Bob Dylan as one of the great tunesmiths of the American popular tradition. Not merely as rock & roll's preeminent songwriter, the direction from which virtually all others have approached his canon, but as a sophisticated composer the equal of the Gershwins, Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, or Cole Porter. Jungr dramatically re-reads that canon and she fearlessly reshapes it in the process. To cite the most radical instances, she turns "Things Have Changed" into an Eastern European jig and "Tangled up in Blue" into a jaunty, jazzy western, while "Born in Time" is a marvel full of Baroque voicings. One may quibble - and Dylan fanatics, known to be provincial on occasion, certainly will, perhaps vociferously - with an arrangement here or a lyrical interpretation or subtle shading there without - and here is the magic of the album - in the least invalidating the singer's choices. Indeed, part of the sublime beauty of Every Grain of Sand is that it inspires, even challenges, one to make personal revisions and reinterpretations. Ultimately, Jungr is one of the few artists who has managed to not only come out on the other side of this songbook unscathed, but to actually come out having enhanced its gravity, significance, and unvarnished beauty as well as her own. She is not merely singing, but telling stories. She opens up a window of vulnerability and sensuality that had previously sat stoic beneath the surface of these songs and suffuses them with such a delicate, gauzy luminosity that they seem to glow from the inside out. Her singing is soulful and emotionally naked, and the performances are so expressive that you take something new away with each listen. The treasures ("I'll Be Your Baby Tonight," "Ring Them Bells," "Not Dark Yet," "Is Your Love in Vain?," and "What Good Am I?") tucked away here are endlessly rewarding. If you think you've heard Bob Dylan - or Barb Jungr - before Every Grain of Sand, you are, simply put, mistaken.