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Brown Sugar
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Brown Sugar
Current price: $16.99
Barnes and Noble
Brown Sugar
Current price: $16.99
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Born in Brooklyn, raised in Switzerland, resident of Toronto, and recording in Memphis, singer
Shakura S'Aida
turns in her second solo album,
Brown Sugar
, for the German
Ruf Records
label. On her first CD,
UMI
's
Blueprint
, she sang blues cover songs from the 1940s and '50s, but here she and her guitarist,
Donna Grantis
, have penned nine of the 11 songs themselves. They have done so in some familiar blues styles, starting with the opening trio of 12-bar blues tunes,
"Mr. Right,"
"Walk Out That Door,"
and
"Gonna Tell My Baby,"
then going on to less hardcore variations such as the blues-rock found on
"(Did It)" Break Your Heart"
and the bluesy piano ballad
"Angel on High."
"Missing the Good and the Bad"
starts like a jump blues number before switching gears -- and tempi -- halfway through to take on the cadence of
Muddy Waters
'
"I'm a Man."
Throughout,
Grantis
plays stinging lead guitar in support of
S'Aida
, who sings powerfully. The vocalist is also a musical theater performer whose stage efforts include a one-woman show devoted to
Nina Simone
, and she sings in a similarly edgy contralto. She can be said to be a blues singer in the sense that someone like
Simone
is, too, which is to say that she is more sophisticated, and less sweaty, than most singers in the style. For her, the blues is a performance, not a lifestyle, and on this album she is playing the part of a blues mama, not being one. That allows her to have some fun with the form, however, as she does notably on the closing track,
"Outskirts of Memphis,"
which finds her tramping around the city's tourist spots in search of a ne'er-do-well companion who owes her money. ~ William Ruhlmann
Shakura S'Aida
turns in her second solo album,
Brown Sugar
, for the German
Ruf Records
label. On her first CD,
UMI
's
Blueprint
, she sang blues cover songs from the 1940s and '50s, but here she and her guitarist,
Donna Grantis
, have penned nine of the 11 songs themselves. They have done so in some familiar blues styles, starting with the opening trio of 12-bar blues tunes,
"Mr. Right,"
"Walk Out That Door,"
and
"Gonna Tell My Baby,"
then going on to less hardcore variations such as the blues-rock found on
"(Did It)" Break Your Heart"
and the bluesy piano ballad
"Angel on High."
"Missing the Good and the Bad"
starts like a jump blues number before switching gears -- and tempi -- halfway through to take on the cadence of
Muddy Waters
'
"I'm a Man."
Throughout,
Grantis
plays stinging lead guitar in support of
S'Aida
, who sings powerfully. The vocalist is also a musical theater performer whose stage efforts include a one-woman show devoted to
Nina Simone
, and she sings in a similarly edgy contralto. She can be said to be a blues singer in the sense that someone like
Simone
is, too, which is to say that she is more sophisticated, and less sweaty, than most singers in the style. For her, the blues is a performance, not a lifestyle, and on this album she is playing the part of a blues mama, not being one. That allows her to have some fun with the form, however, as she does notably on the closing track,
"Outskirts of Memphis,"
which finds her tramping around the city's tourist spots in search of a ne'er-do-well companion who owes her money. ~ William Ruhlmann