
Blue Light 'Til Dawn Vinyl Record
Cassandra Wilson started out as a jazz singer, doing gigs with several innovative bands (including Brooklynâs experimental M-Base collective) and at the same time recording typical jazz-singer let-me-entertain-you stuffâ"Night and Day" and âBlue Skiesâ and shooby dooby dooby. Eventually the Mississippi-born New Yorkâbased vocalist, who reigned among the elite jazz singers of the 1980s, became restless, and began to look beyond torch songs for inspiration.
So she looked outside of jazz for inspiration. In interviews, sheâs recalled how she began seeking new challenges for her voice, a mighty instrument blessed with husky overtones and an alluringly smoky woodish hue. She began to integrate gospel and blues and pop songs into her performances, eventually assimilating them into music that blurs genre distinctions entirely. Blue Light âtil Dawn is the first album to capture that shift. It features wondrously spare, molasses-slow versions of Robert Johnson (âCome On in My Kitchen,â âHellhound on My Trailâ), Philly soul (Thom Bell and Linda Creedâs âChildren of the Night,â), pop (Van Morrisonâs âTupelo Honeyâ), and torch song (âYou Donât Know What Love Isâ).
Working with a small group of inventive New York jazzers, emphasizing hand drums and percussion over trap set, Wilson cultivates the opposite of dazzleâhers is an inviting, shadow-filled sound that calls from a lonesome bayou. Atmosphere dictates everything that happens on these tracks, and helps knit together pieces from disparate ends of popular music. It also guides Wilsonâs vocals: Her sullen âHellhoundâ wanders far from typical blues woe, yet winds up an apt, weary summation of it all the same.
Blue Light became an adult contemporary hit, and set Wilson on the course sheâs pursued since. The records are all engrossing and shaped by extremely sensitive musicianship, but Blue Light has something moreâthe renegade energy of one who, having taken a flying leap, is just discovering a new mode of expression.
Courtesy 1000 recordings before you die
[[Release Description]]Cassandra Wilson started out as a jazz singer, doing gigs with several innovative bands (including Brooklynâs experimental M-Base collective) and at the same time recording typical jazz-singer let-me-entertain-you stuffâ"Night and Day" and âBlue Skiesâ and shooby dooby dooby. Eventually the Mississippi-born New Yorkâbased vocalist, who reigned among the elite jazz singers of the 1980s, became restless, and began to look beyond torch songs for inspiration.
So she looked outside of jazz for inspiration. In interviews, sheâs recalled how she began seeking new challenges for her voice, a mighty instrument blessed with husky overtones and an alluringly smoky woodish hue. She began to integrate gospel and blues and pop songs into her performances, eventually assimilating them into music that blurs genre distinctions entirely. Blue Light âtil Dawn is the first album to capture that shift. It features wondrously spare, molasses-slow versions of Robert Johnson (âCome On in My Kitchen,â âHellhound on My Trailâ), Philly soul (Thom Bell and Linda Creedâs âChildren of the Night,â), pop (Van Morrisonâs âTupelo Honeyâ), and torch song (âYou Donât Know What Love Isâ).
Working with a small group of inventive New York jazzers, emphasizing hand drums and percussion over trap set, Wilson cultivates the opposite of dazzleâhers is an inviting, shadow-filled sound that calls from a lonesome bayou. Atmosphere dictates everything that happens on these tracks, and helps knit together pieces from disparate ends of popular music. It also guides Wilsonâs vocals: Her sullen âHellhoundâ wanders far from typical blues woe, yet winds up an apt, weary summation of it all the same.
Blue Light became an adult contemporary hit, and set Wilson on the course sheâs pursued since. The records are all engrossing and shaped by extremely sensitive musicianship, but Blue Light has something moreâthe renegade energy of one who, having taken a flying leap, is just discovering a new mode of expression.
Courtesy 1000 recordings before you die
âą Format: 180 gram LPx2 gatefold sleeve
âą Re-mastering by: Ron McMaster at Capitol Studios
âą Recorded at Sear Sound Studios
- Availability : Pre-Order
- Genre: JAZZ
- Format Detail: 2LP Black
- Handling Note: **Please allow an additional 5 business days for this item's shipment.**
- Format: Vinyl
- Internal ID: JIT
Original: $77.99
-70%$77.99
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Description
Cassandra Wilson started out as a jazz singer, doing gigs with several innovative bands (including Brooklynâs experimental M-Base collective) and at the same time recording typical jazz-singer let-me-entertain-you stuffâ"Night and Day" and âBlue Skiesâ and shooby dooby dooby. Eventually the Mississippi-born New Yorkâbased vocalist, who reigned among the elite jazz singers of the 1980s, became restless, and began to look beyond torch songs for inspiration.
So she looked outside of jazz for inspiration. In interviews, sheâs recalled how she began seeking new challenges for her voice, a mighty instrument blessed with husky overtones and an alluringly smoky woodish hue. She began to integrate gospel and blues and pop songs into her performances, eventually assimilating them into music that blurs genre distinctions entirely. Blue Light âtil Dawn is the first album to capture that shift. It features wondrously spare, molasses-slow versions of Robert Johnson (âCome On in My Kitchen,â âHellhound on My Trailâ), Philly soul (Thom Bell and Linda Creedâs âChildren of the Night,â), pop (Van Morrisonâs âTupelo Honeyâ), and torch song (âYou Donât Know What Love Isâ).
Working with a small group of inventive New York jazzers, emphasizing hand drums and percussion over trap set, Wilson cultivates the opposite of dazzleâhers is an inviting, shadow-filled sound that calls from a lonesome bayou. Atmosphere dictates everything that happens on these tracks, and helps knit together pieces from disparate ends of popular music. It also guides Wilsonâs vocals: Her sullen âHellhoundâ wanders far from typical blues woe, yet winds up an apt, weary summation of it all the same.
Blue Light became an adult contemporary hit, and set Wilson on the course sheâs pursued since. The records are all engrossing and shaped by extremely sensitive musicianship, but Blue Light has something moreâthe renegade energy of one who, having taken a flying leap, is just discovering a new mode of expression.
Courtesy 1000 recordings before you die
[[Release Description]]Cassandra Wilson started out as a jazz singer, doing gigs with several innovative bands (including Brooklynâs experimental M-Base collective) and at the same time recording typical jazz-singer let-me-entertain-you stuffâ"Night and Day" and âBlue Skiesâ and shooby dooby dooby. Eventually the Mississippi-born New Yorkâbased vocalist, who reigned among the elite jazz singers of the 1980s, became restless, and began to look beyond torch songs for inspiration.
So she looked outside of jazz for inspiration. In interviews, sheâs recalled how she began seeking new challenges for her voice, a mighty instrument blessed with husky overtones and an alluringly smoky woodish hue. She began to integrate gospel and blues and pop songs into her performances, eventually assimilating them into music that blurs genre distinctions entirely. Blue Light âtil Dawn is the first album to capture that shift. It features wondrously spare, molasses-slow versions of Robert Johnson (âCome On in My Kitchen,â âHellhound on My Trailâ), Philly soul (Thom Bell and Linda Creedâs âChildren of the Night,â), pop (Van Morrisonâs âTupelo Honeyâ), and torch song (âYou Donât Know What Love Isâ).
Working with a small group of inventive New York jazzers, emphasizing hand drums and percussion over trap set, Wilson cultivates the opposite of dazzleâhers is an inviting, shadow-filled sound that calls from a lonesome bayou. Atmosphere dictates everything that happens on these tracks, and helps knit together pieces from disparate ends of popular music. It also guides Wilsonâs vocals: Her sullen âHellhoundâ wanders far from typical blues woe, yet winds up an apt, weary summation of it all the same.
Blue Light became an adult contemporary hit, and set Wilson on the course sheâs pursued since. The records are all engrossing and shaped by extremely sensitive musicianship, but Blue Light has something moreâthe renegade energy of one who, having taken a flying leap, is just discovering a new mode of expression.
Courtesy 1000 recordings before you die
âą Format: 180 gram LPx2 gatefold sleeve
âą Re-mastering by: Ron McMaster at Capitol Studios
âą Recorded at Sear Sound Studios
- Availability : Pre-Order
- Genre: JAZZ
- Format Detail: 2LP Black
- Handling Note: **Please allow an additional 5 business days for this item's shipment.**
- Format: Vinyl
- Internal ID: JIT














