UPC: 4029758450024
Format: CD
Release Date: Jan 01, 2000
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![Birds [Ulftone] cover art](http://www.moviemars.com/cdn/shop/files/6febdae6355449b8c6617550b8f1d490_2583acbf-7396-4f81-8801-5528db2a8e6b.jpg?v=1777960240&width=1445)
Personnel includes: Jenifer (vocals, acoustic guitar, piano, marimbas).
Recorded in Nashville, Tennesee in April & June 2000.
Jenifer Jackson, a New York City-based singer/songwriter, is the daughter of legendary jazz radio DJ Julian Jackson and her vocal style owes a lot to the school of jazz vocals exemplified by Astrud Gilberto, Blossom Dearie, and Chet Baker. Clear, vibrato-free, and with a spun-glass delicacy, her voice gives the lightest songs on the album, like the early-Joni Mitchell-style "The First Day of Winter," a shivery beauty. Musically, however, Birds has only a few jazzy elements -- a Milt Jacksonish vibes solo here, a bossa nova beat there -- in its mostly folk-rock-based, largely acoustic songs. "Trouble Fire," with its expressive harmony vocals by Josh Rouse, and the pure country "What You Said" are more indicative: droning Hammond organ, slippery pedal steel, shimmering overdubbed acoustic guitars, and brushed drums dominate these 12 songs. Producer Brad Jones gives the album a hazy, miasmic quality -- especially on the near-psychedelic "Mercury the Sun and Moon" -- which adds an ethereal edge to even the earthiest and most plain-spoken songs. The results suggest what Hazeldine would have sounded like if they'd brought their moody, dark pop instincts to the foreground of their songs, or perhaps an alt-country Michael Penn. Dreamily sensual and surprisingly substantial, Birds is an unexpected, genre-mixing surprise. ~ Stewart Mason
Recorded in Nashville, Tennesee in April & June 2000.
Jenifer Jackson, a New York City-based singer/songwriter, is the daughter of legendary jazz radio DJ Julian Jackson and her vocal style owes a lot to the school of jazz vocals exemplified by Astrud Gilberto, Blossom Dearie, and Chet Baker. Clear, vibrato-free, and with a spun-glass delicacy, her voice gives the lightest songs on the album, like the early-Joni Mitchell-style "The First Day of Winter," a shivery beauty. Musically, however, Birds has only a few jazzy elements -- a Milt Jacksonish vibes solo here, a bossa nova beat there -- in its mostly folk-rock-based, largely acoustic songs. "Trouble Fire," with its expressive harmony vocals by Josh Rouse, and the pure country "What You Said" are more indicative: droning Hammond organ, slippery pedal steel, shimmering overdubbed acoustic guitars, and brushed drums dominate these 12 songs. Producer Brad Jones gives the album a hazy, miasmic quality -- especially on the near-psychedelic "Mercury the Sun and Moon" -- which adds an ethereal edge to even the earthiest and most plain-spoken songs. The results suggest what Hazeldine would have sounded like if they'd brought their moody, dark pop instincts to the foreground of their songs, or perhaps an alt-country Michael Penn. Dreamily sensual and surprisingly substantial, Birds is an unexpected, genre-mixing surprise. ~ Stewart Mason
Tracks:
1 - Fade
2 - Mercury, The Sun and Moon
3 - Endless Green
4 - First Day of Winter
5 - After the Fall
6 - War Is Done
7 - Survival
8 - Trouble Fire
9 - Naturally Blond
10 - What You Said
11 - My Impossible Love
12 - Lullaby
13 - Mercurio, Il Solee Luna
2 - Mercury, The Sun and Moon
3 - Endless Green
4 - First Day of Winter
5 - After the Fall
6 - War Is Done
7 - Survival
8 - Trouble Fire
9 - Naturally Blond
10 - What You Said
11 - My Impossible Love
12 - Lullaby
13 - Mercurio, Il Solee Luna