Layla Kaylif - Lovers Don’t Meet (2020)
BAND/ARTIST: Layla Kaylif
- Title: Lovers Don’t Meet
- Year Of Release: 2020
- Label: Canopus Records
- Genre: Country Folk
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 22:46
- Total Size: 144 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Lovers Don't Meet (3:40)
02. 99 (3:48)
03. Mario (2:31)
04. As I Am (2:54)
05. Let Me Count the Ways (Theme Song from "the Letter Writer") (3:26)
06. One Man Loved Me (2:46)
07. Don't You Know Me yet? (3:40)
01. Lovers Don't Meet (3:40)
02. 99 (3:48)
03. Mario (2:31)
04. As I Am (2:54)
05. Let Me Count the Ways (Theme Song from "the Letter Writer") (3:26)
06. One Man Loved Me (2:46)
07. Don't You Know Me yet? (3:40)
Layla Kaylif is a new kid on the block, in the Americana realm at least. With releases dating back to 1999’s ‘Shakespeare in Love‘, a pop success in the Middle East and South East Asia, the British Emirati’s career has ranged from songwriter and recording artist to film scriptwriter and director for the 2018 movie release ‘The Letter Writer‘, in which she also had a leading role.
Interviewed during the making of the film she was asked about her continuing musical ambitions: “I want to do a folk/country record with Sufi-esque themes. So imagine Rumi lyrics in a country song. Does that sound appealing? I haven’t quite reached a point where I can say that I’ve fulfilled my musical vision. That still hasn’t happened. Maybe it won’t happen, I don’t know. But it’s still the main driver and not something I’m going to give up easily.”
The album which has emerged from this vision is ‘Lovers Don’t Meet’, a short seven-track record. Recorded in Nashville, and produced by Jason Hall (David Nail and the Well Ravens; Little Big Town) it features an experienced line up of Reed Pittman and Matt Iceman (David Nail), Cornelius Perry (Francesca Battistellli) and Ben Owens on guitar.
It’s an interesting blend of genres, with the Nashville roots evident in tasteful arrangements with instrumentation including steel guitar, banjo and mandolin, but with equally prominent pop and folk stylings. Vocally there are hints of Judy Collins and Joni Mitchell, or sometimes even Sandy Shaw, in the 60’s vibe evident in songs such as ‘As I Am’, where she sings “Broken as I am can you really love me /Hopeless as I am can you really love me/Can you really love me /Love me as I am”, reflecting a lyrical leaning to relationships and their travails, with a conversational tone.
The concept of songs as ‘three minute movies’ is an oft-held Nashville tenet, and in the same interview Khalif said “It’s like Joni Mitchell said, that when you’re a singer/songwriter you’re the director, you’re the writer and you’re the actor. Because it’s yourself.” Short and sweet, and with catchy choruses, her songs draw the listener in, with effective use of visual imagery, as in ‘Don’t You Know Me Yet’, where she sings “You’re looking in your crystal ball/wondering where it all went wrong/you’re laying out your tarot cards/and staring at the woman with the two of swords”.
Interviewed during the making of the film she was asked about her continuing musical ambitions: “I want to do a folk/country record with Sufi-esque themes. So imagine Rumi lyrics in a country song. Does that sound appealing? I haven’t quite reached a point where I can say that I’ve fulfilled my musical vision. That still hasn’t happened. Maybe it won’t happen, I don’t know. But it’s still the main driver and not something I’m going to give up easily.”
The album which has emerged from this vision is ‘Lovers Don’t Meet’, a short seven-track record. Recorded in Nashville, and produced by Jason Hall (David Nail and the Well Ravens; Little Big Town) it features an experienced line up of Reed Pittman and Matt Iceman (David Nail), Cornelius Perry (Francesca Battistellli) and Ben Owens on guitar.
It’s an interesting blend of genres, with the Nashville roots evident in tasteful arrangements with instrumentation including steel guitar, banjo and mandolin, but with equally prominent pop and folk stylings. Vocally there are hints of Judy Collins and Joni Mitchell, or sometimes even Sandy Shaw, in the 60’s vibe evident in songs such as ‘As I Am’, where she sings “Broken as I am can you really love me /Hopeless as I am can you really love me/Can you really love me /Love me as I am”, reflecting a lyrical leaning to relationships and their travails, with a conversational tone.
The concept of songs as ‘three minute movies’ is an oft-held Nashville tenet, and in the same interview Khalif said “It’s like Joni Mitchell said, that when you’re a singer/songwriter you’re the director, you’re the writer and you’re the actor. Because it’s yourself.” Short and sweet, and with catchy choruses, her songs draw the listener in, with effective use of visual imagery, as in ‘Don’t You Know Me Yet’, where she sings “You’re looking in your crystal ball/wondering where it all went wrong/you’re laying out your tarot cards/and staring at the woman with the two of swords”.
Year 2020 | Country | Folk | FLAC / APE
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