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Sentimentally Yours

Sentimentally Yours in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $18.99
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There is an exact blend of
country
and
pop
that went into the classic albums by this enchanting
songstress. Anyone capable of reproducing this formula would be followed everywhere by
artists and
stars. Unfortunately, what actually happened in the era of this music's first wave of popularity was that everyone cooked up an individual recipe. And many of these productions had as much good taste as spaghetti sauce does after someone stirs in the burned bits from the bottom of the pan. Producer
Owen Bradley
's approach to
Patsy Cline
does have its moments of bad taste as well, and even the biggest fans of these albums will have moments when they will wish the male vocal chorus had gotten caught in traffic somewhere in the pretzel of Nashville's freeway system. Air and forget these complaints, because what is here is a rare type of
music that maintains its identity without marching forward with the usual troops of pedal steel and twangy guitars. The combo sound that is created has an incredibly light swing -- the drummer is often using brushes -- and there is an effortless sense of propulsion through rhythm arrangements both catchy and intelligent. What she and the musicians do with the numbers by
Hank Williams
is nothing short of a revelation, while the
ballads
such as
"Lonely Street"
are done with a moody flair that has never quite been matched. ~ Eugene Chadbourne
country
and
pop
that went into the classic albums by this enchanting
songstress. Anyone capable of reproducing this formula would be followed everywhere by
artists and
stars. Unfortunately, what actually happened in the era of this music's first wave of popularity was that everyone cooked up an individual recipe. And many of these productions had as much good taste as spaghetti sauce does after someone stirs in the burned bits from the bottom of the pan. Producer
Owen Bradley
's approach to
Patsy Cline
does have its moments of bad taste as well, and even the biggest fans of these albums will have moments when they will wish the male vocal chorus had gotten caught in traffic somewhere in the pretzel of Nashville's freeway system. Air and forget these complaints, because what is here is a rare type of
music that maintains its identity without marching forward with the usual troops of pedal steel and twangy guitars. The combo sound that is created has an incredibly light swing -- the drummer is often using brushes -- and there is an effortless sense of propulsion through rhythm arrangements both catchy and intelligent. What she and the musicians do with the numbers by
Hank Williams
is nothing short of a revelation, while the
ballads
such as
"Lonely Street"
are done with a moody flair that has never quite been matched. ~ Eugene Chadbourne