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Related Reviews
Yorkshire Post
Simply wonderful.
more >>
Music Web International
Her vocals sound as natural as breathing.
more >>
Burnley Express
Scottish jazz legend Carol Kidd is back in musical dreamland.
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Scotland on Sunday
4 Stars
Scottish jazz singer Carol Kidd makes a triumphant comeback with this gorgeous album.
more >>
Sunday Herald
4 Stars
World-class.
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Sunday Post
CD of the Week. This selection of songs old and new is a joy.
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The Herald
5 Stars
Kidd has made her finest album.
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Record Collector
4 Stars
She's on form on "Dreamsville".
more >>
The Vortex Website
Manages to combine unsentimental intimacy with considerable musical intelligence
more >>
The Scotsman
4 Stars
The singer is in excellent voice throughout
more >>
Jazzwise
The singer's golden timbre and legato phrasing serving interpretations that sweep you up in their tender embrace.
more >>

Carol Kidd - Dreamsville - BBC Website


20 October 2008
BBC Website
Michael Quinn

 

Carol Kidd's first album in eight years also marks the 25th anniversary of her relationship with the Glasgow-based Linn Records. And what a partnership it has been - Kidd a faultless vocalist of impeccable stylistic credentials, and Linn a beacon of artist and audiophile quality for independent British labels.

A tellingly bittersweet and plangent affair, "Dreamsville" is a long overdue return to the fray after the death of her partner in 2003 and subsequent trauma-induced loss of voice. Although now into her 60s, Kidd's voice remains full of character and colour, an emotionally alert and expressive instrument she puts to perfectly-phrased, beautifully-pitched use with a crafted, lightly-worn elegance that continues to astound as it delights.

Two songs are new and self-penned (with guitarist Nigel Clark): There Goes My Heart is a soft, lilting leave-taking, and Do You Believe a hymning lullaby to love and second chances. A heartfelt cover of Harold Arlen's Happiness Is A Thing Called Joe is offered as a tribute to the late Humphrey Lyttelton and benefits from Paul Harrison's softly measured piano accompaniment.

Indeed the four-piece band assembled here - Mario Caribe on double bass and Alyn Cosker on drums ably partnering Clark and Harrison - prove to be a crack outfit who seize a fabulous opportunity in Cole Porter's adrenalin-fuelled It's Alright With Me to show off their virtuosic wares. Illustrating a more sensitive side, Stars Fell on Alabama glints and sparkles with a hushed loveliness that makes much of Kidd's eloquent ability to hold and extend a note.

Familiar standards How Deep is the Ocean?, A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square and Can't We Be Friends? are set down with consummate and engaging ease while Kidd's signature song, When I Dream, newly arranged by Nigel Clark and producer Graeme Duffin, brings things to a glowing, finely delivered conclusion.

 




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