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Waterloo Sunset
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Waterloo Sunset
Current price: $22.99
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Barnes and Noble
Waterloo Sunset
Current price: $22.99
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With her previous three albums,
Barb Jungr
had already proved herself one of Britain's most engrossing
cabaret
singers and one of the most adroit song interpreters in modern
vocal pop
, and
Waterloo Sunset
does nothing to alter or diminish that assessment. It does feel like a small step backward in terms of content after the all-
Bob Dylan
program of
Every Grain of Sand
, but it is certainly not a step down in quality and intelligence of performance. In fact, it is a return to the interpretive eclecticism of
Bare
, with its dramatic overhauls of
pop
tunes (in effect, similar to her contemporary
Cassandra Wilson
, if not in style) by
the Everly Brothers
,
Leon Russell
Richard Thompson
(a masterful, almost
art song
"The Great Valerio"
), among others, intermingled with a few of
Jungr
's own delightful originals. It might even be thought of as a dressed-up version of that album, nowhere more evident than in the
Ray Davies
-penned title tune. The stripped-down take from
is damaged, lonely, movingly reflective; the reimagined version of
"Waterloo Sunset"
is wistful, sure, but also bluesy, impregnable, rounding the corner toward sanguinity. That this
Brit Invasion
song sounds perfectly fluent and fluid coming after the
Tin Pan Alley
jazz
chestnut
"Laugh Clowns Laugh"
says much about the caliber of the writing, of course, but also about how
is able to locate and explore the je ne sais quoi of a composition, what is both ageless and new, unknown, what connects even as it perplexes. The album sustains this inquisitive mood, plowing into emotions that lurk beneath facades, like the enigmatic clowns and jesters that dance through the lyrics, and finally bubbling over on the marvelous concluding rehabilitation of
Steve Miller
's
"The Joker,"
in which a crass come-on is transformed into an effusive flirtation. It's something to behold.
had not quite gotten
Mr. Zimmerman
out of her blood either, so fans of
have a couple more
Dylan
treats in store with versions of the classic
"Like a Rolling Stone"
and the more recent
Love and Theft
track
"High Water (For Charley Patton)."
Calum Malcolm
again produces beautifully, employing a carnival of colors and textures; the entirely new backing band is crackerjack throughout, breezing through
music hall
cocktail
bossa nova
Western swing
with the equal panache. ~ Stanton Swihart
Barb Jungr
had already proved herself one of Britain's most engrossing
cabaret
singers and one of the most adroit song interpreters in modern
vocal pop
, and
Waterloo Sunset
does nothing to alter or diminish that assessment. It does feel like a small step backward in terms of content after the all-
Bob Dylan
program of
Every Grain of Sand
, but it is certainly not a step down in quality and intelligence of performance. In fact, it is a return to the interpretive eclecticism of
Bare
, with its dramatic overhauls of
pop
tunes (in effect, similar to her contemporary
Cassandra Wilson
, if not in style) by
the Everly Brothers
,
Leon Russell
Richard Thompson
(a masterful, almost
art song
"The Great Valerio"
), among others, intermingled with a few of
Jungr
's own delightful originals. It might even be thought of as a dressed-up version of that album, nowhere more evident than in the
Ray Davies
-penned title tune. The stripped-down take from
is damaged, lonely, movingly reflective; the reimagined version of
"Waterloo Sunset"
is wistful, sure, but also bluesy, impregnable, rounding the corner toward sanguinity. That this
Brit Invasion
song sounds perfectly fluent and fluid coming after the
Tin Pan Alley
jazz
chestnut
"Laugh Clowns Laugh"
says much about the caliber of the writing, of course, but also about how
is able to locate and explore the je ne sais quoi of a composition, what is both ageless and new, unknown, what connects even as it perplexes. The album sustains this inquisitive mood, plowing into emotions that lurk beneath facades, like the enigmatic clowns and jesters that dance through the lyrics, and finally bubbling over on the marvelous concluding rehabilitation of
Steve Miller
's
"The Joker,"
in which a crass come-on is transformed into an effusive flirtation. It's something to behold.
had not quite gotten
Mr. Zimmerman
out of her blood either, so fans of
have a couple more
Dylan
treats in store with versions of the classic
"Like a Rolling Stone"
and the more recent
Love and Theft
track
"High Water (For Charley Patton)."
Calum Malcolm
again produces beautifully, employing a carnival of colors and textures; the entirely new backing band is crackerjack throughout, breezing through
music hall
cocktail
bossa nova
Western swing
with the equal panache. ~ Stanton Swihart