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- EsperanzaI had so much fun listening to this disc! I've had it in heavy rotation since June and each time I listen, I hear some nuance that I missed the previous time. Esperanza's voice is very pleasant and she doesn't oversell or overtax her vocals which works perfectly with her songs. I loved the instrumental tracks equally as much as those with vocals because it's a new experience for me listening to music with this instrument at the forefront. (It was also something to see such a slight female handling such a large unexpected instrument on the Letterman show so that piqued my interest in her music.) The standout tracks I keep pressing repeat on are: PONTA DE AREIA, FALL IN, I ADORE YOU, SAMBA EM PRELUDIO, ESPERA, PRECIOUS, MELA & IF THAT'S TRUE. Rating: - good but too repetitiveEsperanza sings as a Brazilian singer, she has swing, very talented but sometime her sound is too repetitive. After 6 musics you feel like you have already listened. Perhaps if you can buy songs one by one you make better business. Rating: - esperanza CD The CD was received very timely and in excellent condition! Brand new. I would definitely recommend this seller. Rating: - great cdVery well record, great voice, and very good brasilians songs. Who like jazz and boss nova will like this cd. Rating: - The #1 album in a more perfect worldBassist-singer Esperanza Spalding's self-titled CD starts like a warm breeze. "Ponta de Areia", like many of the songs, has a playful spirit. The music (on all songs) is both accessible and musical. I didn't figure out the chords to any of the songs or anything, but they combine pop accessibility with jazz depth. Esperanza sings both in Portuguese and wordlessly on this tune. "I Know You Know" is the first of the English songs about relationships. Her lyric-writing isn't as deep as the music, but has some good lyrical phrases. "I Know You Know" has a deeper funk feel. "Fall In" is a duet with pianist Leo Genovese. "I Adore You" starts with Esperanza and backup singers singing wordlessly, and this turns into a group improvisation, including scatting with the bass and some unfettered piano throughout. It, along with "Body And Soul," forms the heart of the CD. "Cuerpo y Alma (Body & Soul)" sounds nothing like the other versions I've heard. Part of it is the Portuguese, the other part is that the music fits with the rest of the CD. "She Got To You" has my favorite lyrics, where Esperanza laments the loss of a boyfriend to a different girl, but the breeziness of the song makes it seem like she wasn't too upset about it. "Mela" has Ambrose Akinmusire guesting on trumpet. "Love In Time" is a more traditional-sounding jazz ballad, though the bass solo isn't typical. Spalding's bass is very good, she plays with a melodic virtuosity. "Espera" is back to the style of the CD, though at slower tempo. "If That's True" is another instrumental, and it has the core bass-piano-drums augmented by Akinmusire and Donald Harrison on sax. It's a fiery swinger, and like most of the songs, was written by Spalding. "Samba Em Preludio" is another duet, this time with Nino Josele on guitar. If popular tastes in music were more musical (think about Bach vs. the Foo Fighters, or Ellington vs. Young Jeezy), this CD would be playing from every every radio in America. Since it's catchy and fun, you might think it's lightweight or a sell-out, but it's too musical to let those sorts of accusations stick. Why do I give it four stars and not five? I think a more mature-sounding CD would be a classic, especially if the instrumental parts were more Binney-esque or Mingus-ian. She has the talent, it's just a matter of time.
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