What are you listening to tonight ?

Gotcha! ...Her recordings use some reverb for her vocals. ...Long long time ago Bob (me) said no no to stuff like that. ...Because it is not natural, and certainly not her real voice captured naturally. ...Too bad.

I do understand the peaceful melodies, and the pleasant vocals, but 'naturalnessless'.

I'm all about natural myself; except for prefabricated electric music with effects, like synthesizers and all that sort of jazz. ...More for the fun of the thrill, not for the pure emotional arrow ripping straight to the soul's heart.
Big +1

No greater instrument than a raw, natural voice singing it's heart out, right Bob?
 
Timi Yuro = "Hurt"-The Greatest Hits

413XEQDTDXL.jpg
 
ZZ Ward.....""til The Casket Drops" I tried to link a photo, but I can't figure it out !

zz-ward_jpg_630x630_q85.jpg


Posted by your friendliest audio forum Admin! :)

HELPING THE...

little-people.jpg


(inside joke....)
 
DylanCvrwLogo.jpg


Great CD. My favorite song on the four CD set is "Simple Twist of Fate". I heard her do this live and it was chilling.

The four CD set is cheap as heck for the quality of songs you get. FWIW.
 
I have 2 CDs of covers of Cohen, but nothing by Cohen himself. Gotta give it a try...
 
Secret Garden - Songs from a Secret Garden

Secret Garden - Songs from a Secret Garden

Secret Garden is Norwegian composer Rolf Loveland (piano, keyboards) and Irish violinist Fionnula Sherry. The album, however, offers much more than this duo; it is awash in orchestral strings (real ones), a choir (real one), and as many percussionists, harps, fiddles, keyboards, and whistles as are needed. Songs from a Secret Garden, a chart-topper in Europe, is unabashedly romantic, absolutely gorgeous. "Sigma," featuring boy soprano Rhonan Sugrue and the Irish National Choir, is very pensive, like dried flowers left, an expected return disappointed. The lyrics begin, "I search for the sign that will set my soul free." Although Celtic music fans will find many moments of bittersweet nostalgia between the violin, pipes, and pennywhistles, the album's closest musical relation might just be the intimate works of Maurice Ravel, particularly his "Pavanne for a Dead Princess." Romantic themes of true depth, played full out. Secret Garden is not afraid of tenderness nor beauty.

MI0000098932.jpg


 
Back
Top