Over and Over (Erin Bode album)
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Over and Over | |||||
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Studio album by Erin Bode | |||||
Released | January 31, 2006 | ||||
Recorded | May 19 — May 21, 2005 | ||||
Genre | jazz | ||||
Label | Max Jazz | ||||
Producer | Katsuhiko Naito | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
Erin Bode chronology | |||||
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Over and Over is the second studio album released by jazz vocalist Erin Bode. It was recorded over three days in mid-May of 2005 and released on January 31, 2006 by the label Max Jazz. This album, more than her first, sees Bode being likened to fellow jazz vocalist Norah Jones.[1][2][3][4]
This is the first album that contains songs almost exclusively penned by Bode and her collaborator, pianist Adam Maness. The two exceptions are Paul Simon's "Graceland" and Simple Red's "Holding Back the Years".
Contents |
[edit] Track listing
- "Holiday" (Maness) — 4:35
- "Over and Over" (Bode, Maness) — 4:24
- "Graceland Simon 4:58
- "June" (Bode, Maness) — 4:13
- "Feet Off the Ground" (Bode, Maness) — 3:17
- "Long, Long Time" (Bode, Maness) — 5:39
- "Send Me Up a Sign" (Bode, Maness) — 2:40
- "St. Louis Song" (Bode, Maness) — 4:05
- "Perfect World" (Bode, Maness) — 4:35
- "Something More" (Bode, Maness) — 3:57
- "Holding Back the Years" (Hucknall) — 4:08
- "With the Radio On" (Bode, Maness) — 2:52
- "Alone Together" (Dietz, Schwartz) — 6:31
- "Home Again" (Bode, Maness) — 2:23
[edit] Personnel
Band:
- Adam Maness — vocals, piano
- Erin Bode — vocals, liner notes
- Syd Rodway — bass
- Chris Higginbottom — drums
Guest performers:
- Seamus Blake — saxophone (tenor)
- Dave Eggar — cello
- Josh Mease — guitar (acoustic), vocals (bckgr)
Production:
- Pressley Jacobs — art Direction, design
- Dena Katz, Jimmy Katz — photography
- Katsuhiko Naito — engineer, mastering, mixing
- Max Ross — assistant engineer
[edit] Reception
Reviews of the album, mainly grounded in the jazz community, have been positive. George Graham, founder of WVIA 88.9 and jazz expert, calls the album "a more rewarding recording that not only highlights a charming voice, but also gives us worthwhile new songs, and creative, but understated arrangements."[2] Allaboutjazz.com (AAJ) calls Bode "a sorceress of female jazz vocals" with "superior songwriting talent."[4] All Music Guide (AMG) gave the album four out of five stars, calling it a "quiet, but engrossing album."[1]
Particular interest focused on the groups' cover of Simon's "Graceland". Jim Newsom of PortFolio Weekly called it "a rich reinvention"[3] and AMG reviewer Stewart Mason described the song as being "transformed from the South African country ramble into something closer to Joni Mitchell's late-'70s fusion period".[1] AAJ reviewer C. Michael Bailey also paralleled the tune with Mitchell and called it "an offbeat, off-time jazz ballad"[4] Graham said that Bode's "Graceland" was "a creative and rather jazzy arrangement ... [a] distinctive new spin."[2]
[edit] Charts
Album - Billboard
Year | Chart | Position |
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2006 | Top Jazz Albums | 17 |