Search - Liquorice :: Listening Cap

Listening Cap
Liquorice
Listening Cap
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

Tsunami's Jenny Toomey has one of the most expressive voices you are ever likely to wrap an ear around. She has the wistful grace of a chanteuse and the raw power to push a song through it's artistic comfort zone into some...  more »

     
   

CD Details

All Artists: Liquorice
Title: Listening Cap
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 1
Label: Warner Bros / Wea
Release Date: 7/11/1995
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Styles: Indie & Lo-Fi, Progressive, Progressive Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 093624590224

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Tsunami's Jenny Toomey has one of the most expressive voices you are ever likely to wrap an ear around. She has the wistful grace of a chanteuse and the raw power to push a song through it's artistic comfort zone into someplace heartbreakingly genuine. Liquorice is a side project for Toomey--she also records with Mark Robinson of Unrest under the name Grenadine--and one that is well-suited to her gifts. Dan Littleton and Trey Many contribute instrumental and vocal support, yet Listening Cap sounds largely like Toomey's solo album. The songs are spare and uncomplicated with the spotlight trained unflinchingly on her vocal styling. As such, this record works in a big way. The name of this outfit offers a clue to its content. The songs drip with sweet, sad remembrances of bygone summer days, refracted through an older, slightly more cynical perspective. "Keeping the Weekend Free" simmers with "should-have's" and "might-have-been's" as Toomey effortlessly unites the pain of a particular time and her more detached amusement now as she recounts the hours wasted on a long-distance relationship--"You're seven digits away/why raise a fist, when you can't lift a finger." On "Jill of All Trades," Toomey moves into a very different arena with a Tori Amos/VH-1 adult contemporary piano ballad, that comes across plaintive and real rather than melodramatic. She even sounds sassy and confident on the B-52s-like, new wave throwaway "Blew It," as her vocal gusto supplies needed ballast to a lightweight tune. Liquorice gives Jenny Toomey a chance to try on some wildly different costumes, and she looks stunning in all of them. --John Chandler
 

CD Reviews

This one really got away
David M. Robbins | Washington, DC | 09/11/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This is one of those "horribly underrated" albums people gripe about--this one wholly deservedly. Jenny Toomey's voice on THIS disc (not so much with her other projects: Grenadine, Tsunami, etc.) is amazingly beautiful. Her lyrics are incredibly witty and catchy, and the music is very melodic and crisply recorded. It should have been album of the year, but hardly anybody heard it."