<< FLAC Sally Spring - Mockingbird
Sally Spring - Mockingbird
Category Sound
FormatFLAC
SourceCD
BitrateLossless
GenreFolk
TypeAlbum
Date 1 decade, 10 months
Size 283.57 MB
 
Website http://www.sallyspring.com/
 
Sender supersmart (eVwYag)
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Post Description

Artist: Sally Spring
Release: Mockingbird
Released: 2006
Label: Sniffinpup Records
Catalog#: CD-SNP-0001
Format: FLAC / Lossless / Log (100%) / Cue
Country: USA
Style: folk

01 Take Me To The Water
02 Hickory Wind
03 Going To California
04 I Can't Understand Why
05 Here Come The Memories
06 Old Man As He Walks Out The Door
07 Floyd Johnson
08 Blue, Blue Heaven
09 Ain't No Ash Will Burn
10 Pretty Peggie-O
11 Red-Winged Blackbird
12 Hickory Wind (Acoustic)


Sally Spring is a singer and songwriter who has been bouncing along the edges of the music scene in California and the South since the early '70s, but while she's earned a loyal following among her fellow musicians, she's preferred to release her recordings on her own, which has helped keep her work from reaching a larger audience. (The fact that Spring has only one hand and plays guitar using a special open tuning has perhaps led some to dismiss her as a novelty act without listening to her work.) Mockingbird is the first Sally Spring record to receive proper nation-wide distribution, and as a result it presents a "new" talent who has a lifetime of experience to draw upon, and there's an intelligence and maturity in this album that's satisfying and compelling. Spring's rich, slightly smoky voice (which suggests the clarity of Sandy Denny mixed with the sweet earthiness of Carole King or early Marianne Faithfull) is a surprisingly malleable instrument, and she interprets the ancient folk standard "Pretty Peggie-O" with the same plainspoken skill as Gram Parsons' "Hickory Wind." Spring's own songs confirm she's as gifted a writer as she is a performer, and her knack for capturing the fine details of seemingly ordinary lives is winning; plenty of folks have written "stop and smell the roses" songs, but few seem as fresh and well thought out as "Red Winged Blackbird" and "Going to California." "Floyd Johnson" and "Here Come the Memories" are beautifully rendered thumbnail sketches set to music. Spring is ably assisted by producers Ted Lyons and Chris Stamey, and a fine cast of musicians including Gene Parsons, Marshall Crenshaw, Tift Merritt, and Caitlin Cary, but ultimately Spring earns the focus on Mockingbird by virtue of her own wonderful voice, and if this is a belated introduction to a larger audience, the quality of this effort suggests the wait has been worthwhile.

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