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Zara McFarlane - If You Knew Her (2014) [Hi-Res]

Zara McFarlane - If You Knew Her (2014) [Hi-Res]

BAND/ARTIST: Zara McFarlane

  • Title: If You Knew Her
  • Year Of Release: 2014
  • Label: Brownswood Recordings
  • Genre: Vocal Jazz, Soul
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24/44,1
  • Total Time: 00:54:05
  • Total Size: 540 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Zara McFarlane - Open Heart (4:43)
02. Zara McFarlane - Her Eyes (3:34)
03. Zara McFarlane - Move (5:58)
04. Zara McFarlane - You'll Get Me in Trouble (3:37)
05. Zara McFarlane - Police & Thieves (6:56)
06. Zara McFarlane - Spinning Wheel (1:20)
07. Zara McFarlane - Plain Gold Ring (4:26)
08. Zara McFarlane/Leron Thomas - Angie La La (feat. Leron Thomas) (7:38)
09. Zara McFarlane - The Games We Played (4:00)
10. Zara McFarlane - Woman in the Olive Groves (5:12)
11. Zara McFarlane - Love (6:48)

The title doesn't refer strictly to its maker. MOBO-nominated jazz producer, songwriter, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist Zara McFarlane: "This album is dedicated to all the strong, beautiful women who have touched my life with their strength, courage, empathy, humour, wisdom & love." Those women seem to have had the greatest effect on McFarlane originals like the burning ballad "Woman in the Olive Groves" and the particularly gorgeous "Her Eyes," in which McFarlane's breezy melodies resemble those of '70s Stevie Wonder. Some of the arrangements are stripped to bare essentials. Those happen to occur during the album's most emotionally vulnerable moments. "Open Heart" begins the album in arresting style with hypnotic hang drums, a low double-bass thrum, and McFarlane's wounded, wise vocals. On "You'll Get Me in Trouble," McFarlane accompanies herself on barely strummed acoustic guitar: "It's too late, my heart's already seen your smile." While the eight originals could form a rich 35-minute album, the three non-originals here stun, too. There's a bewitching "Plain Gold Ring" closer to restrained Nina Simone than showy Kimbra, a version of Junior Murvin's "Police & Thieves" that makes like a missing ice-and-fire cut off Dee Dee Bridgewater's Afro Blue, and top standout "Angie La La" (aka "Ay Ay Ay Ay"), barely recognizable. The last of the trio, originally written and produced by reggae giant Duke Reid for Nora Dean, is converted into a dancing and feverish duet -- anchored by Gavin Barras' double bass and enlivened by Rachel Gladwin's harp -- with an excellent pairing in trumpeter and vocalist Leron Thomas. As with Until Tomorrow, McFarlane produced the whole thing -- an understated yet dazzling second album that is more imaginative than the impressive first.




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