Search - Susan Clynes :: Life Is

Life Is
Susan Clynes
Life Is
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Life Is... marks the international debut of Belgian singer/pianist Susan Clynes, on Moonjune Records. This release was compiled from three live concerts done at two different locations, each one with a unique band configur...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Susan Clynes
Title: Life Is
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Moonjune Records
Release Date: 2/18/2014
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 692287906122

Synopsis

Product Description
Life Is... marks the international debut of Belgian singer/pianist Susan Clynes, on Moonjune Records. This release was compiled from three live concerts done at two different locations, each one with a unique band configuration. The Archiduc, an historic Art Deco bar in Brussels dating back to 1937, served as the backdrop for two of these performances. The first was done in trio format with Nico Chkifi on drums and Pierre Mottet on bass. The second was a more intimate solo performance at the Library of The Cultural Center of Bree. The third and final performance saw the return to the Archiduc, this time as a duet with Simon Lenski on cello. Each band configuration provided its own framework and pallet of tonal colors for these diverse sound portraits. A Good Man and Ileana's Song make playful use of the drum kit and bass. These clever songs lie somewhere between Slapp Happy-era Dagmar Krause, Elaine Di Falco's work with Thinking Plague, Annette Peacock, and early period Kristin Hersh in her band, Throwing Muses. The chiefly instrumental piece, Les Larmes, a composition about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, is brimming with emotional expression, making excellent use of the cello as a universal human voice. The distilled and emotive songs for voice with piano accompaniment bring to mind such undervalued luminaries as Laura Nyro and Essra Mohawk. Susan's piano work runs the gamut from such radio-friendly performers as Tori Amos and Fiona Apple, briefly dipping into Tony Banks-like arpeggiations and cascades, and arriving at the jazz-inflected polytonality of French composer, Darius Milhaud.