Showing posts with label Queen Esther. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queen Esther. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Queen Esther - Talkin' Fishbowl Blues / The Other Side

Album: Talkin' Fishbowl Blues
Size: 104,8 MB
Time: 44:54
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Blues Rock, Americana
Art: Front

01. Promise Me (3:41)
02. Shine (3:17)
03. Talkin' Fishbowl Blues (3:29)
04. Taster's Choice (4:08)
05. Love (3:56)
06. So Real (4:24)
07. New York City (3:25)
08. Leave Me Alone (4:10)
09. Get It Right This Time (4:00)
10. The Way Of The World (4:01)
11. Help Me (3:19)
12. Stand By Your Man (2:57)

Maybe you've heard Queen Esther singing the blues with James Blood Ulmer or Elliott Sharp. Maybe you saw her singing jazz in the theater production of Harlem Song. Either way, her proper debut album Talkin' Fishbowl Blues will take you by surprise. This record ROCKS! In her bio, she described her sound as "If Keith fired Mick and decided to let Tina Turner front the band with Gram Parsons riding shotgun," and that's actually right on the mark. There's a decidedly Stonesy swagger to many of these tunes with just a touch of twang, and Queen Esther shows herself to be just as versatile a vocalist as Tina, covering not only the lead vocals but nearly all the background vocals as well. She's got a great voice (four octave range), and maybe it's her theater background, but all her vocals (even the backing vox) are filled with passion and brimming with personality. She even adopts something close to Mick's country honk for the title cut. Queen Esther writes about what she knows: mostly being a young woman transplanted to New York City and relationships, but she's a keen observer and turns some great phrases throughout. The band is rock & roll basics: guitars, bass and drums -- and more guitars, and they play with just the right mixture of being together but playing loose. Jack Sprat's production is crisp but not glossy, and there's a freshness to the performances that implies they didn't play these songs to death hoping for the "perfect" take. There are guitars all over the place, including some tasty lap steel on "Taster's Choice," nice wet sounding tremolo guitar on "Get It Right This Time" and patented Keith Richards' riffs on "Talkin' Fishbowl Blues." "New York City" is built on an irresistibly funky groove, with sassy backup vocals and twangy slide guitars all over the top while Queen Esther just belts it out. But just when you think you might have Queen Esther's "Black Americana" sound figured out, she offers up the a cappella, gospel-flavored "Help Me," where she sings at least four parts, harmonizing with herself. Then she turns around and gives a straight reading of "Stand By Your Man"(!), even supplying her own cornball country choir for the backing vocals to close out the album. You'll have to set your preconceptions aside for this one. Queen Esther is active in the theater and performance art worlds, sings the blues, sings jazz with the JC Hopkins Biggish Band, and now has offered up a great rock & roll album. Is there anything this woman can't do? ~Review by Sean Westergaard

Talkin' Fishbowl Blues

Album: The Other Side
Size: 120,3 MB
Time: 51:57
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Blues Rock, Americana
Art: Front

01. Sunnyland (2:50)
02. I've Come Undone Again (5:05)
03. Jet Airliner (5:01)
04. Oh, Sun (4:01)
05. Sadness Everlasting (4:41)
06. Somebody Else's Baby (4:32)
07. Will You Or Won't You (2:54)
08. My Big Iron Skillet (2:06)
09. The Other Side (3:56)
10. Love Is A Wrecking Ball (2:58)
11. I Feel Like Going Home (4:46)
12. I've Come Undone Again (Otra Vez) (3:58)
13. Jet Airliner (The Black Americana Version) (5:02)

"Not really a blues album but aptly tagged as "Black Americana", Manhattan-via-Austin super side-woman Queen Esther melds roots, pop and R&B in a way Lucinda Williams, Melissa Etheridge and Sheryl Crow never could on their best days." Amplifier

Produced by Queen Esther, "The Other Side" is her latest release – a sprawling sonic wonderland that walks with a soulful twang, full of feeling and drenched in the blues. Ultimately, this is an aural testimony to the music that raised her and continues to inform her deeply held conviction that music shouldn’t be divisive.

"You'll have to set your preconceptions aside for this one. Queen Esther is active in the theater and performance art worlds, sings the blues, sings jazz with the JC Hopkins Biggish Band and now has offered up a great rock & roll album. Is there anything this woman can't do?" - AllMusic

Album personnel: Marvin Sewell, electric guitar (Cassandra Wilson), Bruce Edwards, acoustic guitar (Sun Ra Arkestra); Jon Diaz, acoustic and electric guitar; Ronny Drayton, electric guitar (Nona Hendryx); Ralph White, electric guitar and background vocals; Charles Burnham, violin (James “Blood” Ulmer’s Odyssey); Bob Hoffnar, pedal steel guitar (Wayne “The Train” Hancock); Raphael McGregor, lap steel guitar; Jon Loyd, piano and background vocals; Naisha Walton, bass; and G. Earl Grice, drums.

A 2008 Grand Prize winner of the Jazzmobile Vocal Competition and a 2013 Regional Finalist in the Mountain Stage NewSong Contest, Queen Esther has performed with guitar icon James “Blood” Ulmer internationally in various blues, rock and jazz configurations, including Blues Experience Raw, The Black Rock Experience and most recently, his seminal harmelodic collective Odyssey. She is a featured vocalist on his much lauded album No Escape From The Blues (included in Rolling Stone's 50 Best Albums of 2003) and lends her vocals and songwriting talents to The 52nd Street Blues Project's album Blues & Grass.
(More in info included)

The Other Side