Youn Sun Nah – Same Girl (2010)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 47:11 minutes | 891 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © ACT Music
With her new album Same Girl Youn Sun Nah is still on a musical voyage, exploring and experimenting with different musical styles and genres. Again the song material is very diverse, but she is still the same girl the audience has come to know and love, surprising the listener with songs that have been interpreted in highly individual and distinctive ways, and which break free from the usual stylistic constraints. I didn t want to be confined to a particular repertoire but reflect all possible moments of my life, she explains. That s why I think the album is atmospherically much more diverse than Voyage and, in certain respects, it has more depth and reflects even more aspects of my personality.
If one were to listen only to “My Favorite Things,” the Richard Rodgers-Oscar Hammerstein Great American Songbook standard that opens Same Girl, one might deduce that Korea’s Youn Sun Nah is just another cabaret singer with a pretty voice. The kalimba with which she is accompanying herself as she sings — the sole instrument heard — lends a sense of purity to the tune, and although the vocalist avoids the usual routes taken with the song, there’s no real reason to get excited. Yet. Then things get interesting, fast. As she works her way through material from sources as diverse as Randy Newman, Sergio Mendes, and Metallica — yes, Metallica; she does a mean “Enter Sandman” — in addition to two original compositions and a Korean standard, Nah establishes that, in fact, she is incontestably an original, a jazz singer of great range, complexity, emotion, and ideas. Precision timing and sharp diction mark Nah’s approach as she traverses the lyrics, but it’s not only her technical prowess that makes Same Girl (her second release as a leader on the ACT label, after having spent a decade with a French band) such a delight. For one thing, she is constantly full of surprises. On the Mendes tune, “Song of No Regrets,” Nah could have followed the rule book and sung the number as a samba. Instead, she turns it into a near a cappella minimalist dirge, Lars Danielsson’s cello bringing to the rendition an unexpected eeriness and majesty. Terry Cox’s “Moondog” is something else altogether, all jutting angles and piercing barbs, Ulf Wakenius’ guitar and Xavier Desandre-Navarre’s drums seemingly flailing willy-nilly behind Nah’s warbles, yet somehow making perfect sense in the context of the arrangement, even when Nah breaks the solemnity with a jarring kazoo solo, of all things. For a real taste of her ability to knock a listener out cold, though, Wakenius’ “Breakfast in Baghdad” is the place to go: to call Nah a scat singer is like calling John Coltrane a guy who fooled around a bit with the sax. Nah is a wildwoman let loose, treating each syllable as a new adventure in acrobatics, the musicians flying free and fancifully behind her captivating, seriously stunning ravings. Youn Sun Nah doesn’t simply interpret; any good jazz signer can do that. She gets to the root of a melody and a lyric, deconstructs it wholly, and then presents it in a way it’s never before been heard. Not many around who can do that anymore. ~ Jeff Tamarkin
Tracklist:
1 My Favorite Things
2 My Name Is Carnival
3 Breakfast in Baghdad
4 Uncertain Weather
5 Song of No Regrets
6 Kangwondo Arirang
7 Enter Sandman
8 Same Girl
9 Moondog
10 Pancake
11 La Chanson D’hélène
Personnel:
Youn Sun Nah \ vocals, kalimba, music box, kazoo
Ulf Wakenius \ guitars
Lars Danielsson \ acoustic bass, cello
Xavier Desandre-Navarre \ percussion
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