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Judy Kuhn - Serious Playground: The Songs Of Laura Nyro (2007)

Judy Kuhn - Serious Playground: The Songs Of Laura Nyro (2007)

BAND/ARTIST: Judy Kuhn

  • Title: Serious Playground: The Songs Of Laura Nyro
  • Year Of Release: 2007
  • Label: Ghostlight Records
  • Genre: Vocal Jazz, Pop
  • Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
  • Total Time: 00:51:27
  • Total Size: 275 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

01. Blackpatch
02. Sweet Blindness
03. Stoney End
04. To a Child
05. California Shoeshine Boys
06. Stoned Soul Picnic
07. Lonely Woman
08. Been on a Train
09. Mother's Spiritual
10. Luckie
11. Capt. St. Lucifer
12. Upstairs by a Chinese Lamp
13. Buy and Sell
14. Save the Country

As a singer and songwriter, Laura Nyro was the equal of Carole King and Joni Mitchell. Yet, while we discovered King and Mitchell’s compositions from their own albums, most of us learned Nyro’s songs through hit covers from the likes of the 5th Dimension, Barbra Streisand and Three Dog Night. So, though most of Nyro’s albums are available on CD, her work (or, at least, a small slice of it) survives largely as fodder for Golden Oldies stations. Fortunately, venerable music theater performer Judy Kuhn has opted to dig deeper, mixing the familiar with the comparatively obscure to salute the remarkable depth and breadth of the Nyro songbook.

Interestingly, Kuhn sounds akin to the Tapestry-era King as she examines the many facets of a richly versatile writer who was equally skilled at exploring the giddiness of communal tipsiness (“Sweet Blindness”) and the darkness of fatal drug abuse (“Been On a Train”), the joy of motherhood (“To a Child,” “Mother’s Spiritual”) and the temptation of demons (“Captain Saint Lucifer”), the cacophonous underbelly of her native New York (“Buy and Sell”) and the social unrest of her generation (“Save the Country”). Listening to Nyro filtered through Kuhn, it’s hard not to be reminded of composer Jonathan Larson’s Rent. And the parallel seems apt, party because of Kuhn’s innate theatricality, but more because Nyro and Larson, though separated by several decades, embraced many of the same themes—New York as a creative melting pot, sexual freedom, the incomparable value of friendship, the lights at the end of dark tunnels, internal and external quests for peace, love and understanding—in their passionately-woven songs. And both died far too young.

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  • pyxlax
  •  wrote in 23:39
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Much Obliged!!