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    Anjani - Blue Alert (2006)

    Posted By: pshvetik
    Anjani - Blue Alert (2006)


    Artist: Anjani
    Album: Blue Alert
    Release Date: May 19, 2006
    Genre: Jazz Vocal Pop
    Quality / Bitrate: MP3 / 320 kbit/s
    Website: http://www.anjani-music.com/bio.html


    "Anjani has always been known as a great singer, a musician's singer," says Leonard Cohen, the musical/literary legend who co-wrote and produced Anjani's Blue Alert. "She's known for this impeccable sense of tone and the ability to stack vocals one on top of the other, but this voice that she was showing here was a completely different voice that had moved somehow from the throat to the heart."

    Anjani - Blue Alert (2006)


    "I never knew we were making a record," Anjani confesses. "I just thought I'd make a demo for Leonard to put his vocals on." But Blue Alert was patiently waiting in the ether for their inspired collaboration. It began with some handwritten lines [there's perfume burning in the air/bits of beauty everywhere] which Anjani happened to notice on Cohen's desk. This was the first draft of "Blue Alert," which Cohen intended to record himself. Surprising herself, Anjani asked, "Can I have a crack at this?" He replied, "You can have it for a minute or two, and then you have to return it." Anjani made a quick dash to the studio to set down a track for Cohen's new poem, and she presented it to him wrapped in a disarming caveat. "Leonard," she said, "I don't know if you'll like a jazz approach…but check this out." Hearing Anjani's soulful and evocative interpretation of "Blue Alert," Cohen knew that something unusual had happened. "She was singing from a place that few singers ever get to sing from," he recalls, "so that encouraged me to let her rummage through a notebook for lyrics that interested her." For Anjani, being given access to the works and the collaborative energies of a literary master opened a floodgate of creativity. She felt herself especially drawn to "As the Mist Leaves No Scar," a poem in Stranger Music, Leonard's 1993 collection of poems and lyrics, which she transformed into "The Mist," conjuring a haunting archetypal score for the song. "I don't know where she found that melody or that approach," Cohen wondered, "but it is as though I'd never heard that lyric before or, more precisely, it is where I'd always heard it somewhere but had never been able to locate." An album was taking shape, but Anjani needed more material. With Cohen's permission she ransacked boxes of his journals, unpublished works and unfinished drafts, sometimes seizing on a mere two or three lines or a verse that appealed to her. The song, "Thanks For The Dance," for instance, began as a single found line, which Anjani and Leonard fashioned into a new complete work. "That's how it moved from one song to another [with] Anjani finding scraps of lyrics and pressing me to finish them," Cohen explains. One of those high points is "Innermost Door," which Cohen describes as "...something irreversible, but something inevitable. 'Saying goodbye/at the innermost door,' I suppose that has a certain finality, but a certain appropriateness too. I don't know what it means," Cohen confesses. "[but] Anjani brings the lyric to life." When it came time to record Blue Alert, Anjani and Leonard opted to work at the studio of Ed Sanders, who recorded the album on a vintage Telefunken analog tape recorder spinning a two-inch seatbelt of tape. The warm, rich sound they achieved captures the whispered subtleties of Anjani's vocal cadences and the intimate qualities of her music. Anjani states, "I love the sound of analog recording. I'm an old-fashioned girl and I like to see the tape go round and round."

    Anjani - Blue Alert (2006)


    That "old-fashioned girl" was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, and trained in guitar, piano and voice before attending Berklee College of Music. Later moving to Manhattan, Anjani played the jazz club circuit, drawing inspiration from pianists ranging from populist Vince Guaraldi to jazz mystic Bill Evans. Anjani was introduced to Leonard Cohen in 1984, by producer John Lissauer (who plays baritone sax on the title track, and clarinet and keyboards on "Thanks For The Dance"). Her haunting background vocals are heard on Cohen's original recording of his signature opus, "Hallelujah." Later that year, Anjani joined Cohen's Various Positions World Tour as a keyboardist/vocalist, and she sang on subsequent Leonard Cohen albums including I'm Your Man (1988), The Future (1992), and Dear Heather (2004). In 2000, Anjani released a self-titled independent CD, blending jazz, folk and Hawaiian influences, including a duet with famed Hawaiian musician Henry Kapono. She followed her debut a year later with The Sacred Names, an inspirational meditation on the Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek names of God. "She seems to be able to channel some kind of spirit of place," Leonard Cohen says of his colleague. "Generally, people want to be generous, but they go over the top or they give too much. But to be able to be generous in this manner of real generosity, which is not to overwhelm, but to merely satisfy and nourish: that is something very rare. She has this capacity -- melody after melody -- to hit the mark. Not go beyond it and not fall short...just perfect."

    сolumbiarecords.com
    BlueAlertMusic.com


    Anjani - Blue Alert (2006)


    Reviews from WebSite:

    Anjani "has an exquisite voice. But here she drops her soprano down a notch and sounds like Cohen reincarnated as woman. With her hypnotic vocals harnessed to his lyrics, Blue Alert's torch songs put her in a league with Diana Krall and Norah Jones. And though Cohen doesn't sing a note on the album, his voice permeates it like smoke." Written and arranged by Anjani and Leonard Cohen and produced by Cohen, Blue Alert melds haunting melodies with exquisite lyrical imagery leading us gently along the erotic landscape with stories of desire and despair. Anjani, as she is singularly known, has a dark, rich, Cabernet-flavored voice that's just perfect for the worldly-wise material - from the been-everywhere, done-everything 'No One After You' to the bittersweet kiss-off 'Thanks for the Dance.' Laced with the occasional country tone, too, this set holds obvious appeal for fans of Norah Jones, who're now looking to move up to the finer stuff. [Blue Alert] begins with a soft yet pronounced exhale and a piano chord by Thomas, and she sings, 'There's perfume burning in the air/Bits of beauty everywhere/Shrapnel flying/Soldier hit the dirt/She comes so close you feel her then/She tells you no/And no again/Your lip is cut/On the edge of her pleated skirt/Blue alert'... This is torch singing on an entirely new level. Her piano playing is carved in Bill Evans harmonics, and the melodic invention that comes simultaneously from George Shearing, Ahmad Jamal, and even Vince Guaraldi... The beautifully spare instrumentation on this album is a wonder... Thomas' voice is an instrument in itself. It goes beyond the words and the melodies that carry it to the fore; it's a voice from the belly, not so much deep as full and in its disciplined way a primal spirit voice... Above all it is a truly honest voice that articulates the heart's sometimes rough, often confounding, and always cryptic language, with elegance and a grace that only reveals the terrible and beautiful truth of itself in the emptiness of waking at three a.m. alone. Highly recommended. Anjani's brand of sultry jazz will likely be compared to that of Diana Krall. The Hawaiian-born singer's voice has something of the dark smokiness of the Canadian's. The title track sounds a lot like one of Miss Krall's torch songs, with its slinky piano up front accompanying a deep, yet almost ethereal voice.

    TrackList:
    01. Blue Alert
    02. Innermost Door
    03. The Golden Gate
    04. Half The Perfect World
    05. Nightingale
    06. No One After You
    07. Never Got To Love You
    08. The Mist
    09. Crazy To Love You
    10. Thanks For The Dance

    URL's:

    Anjani - 2006 - Blue Alert - 57.22 MB
    Anjani - 2006 - Blue Alert - 39.14 MB

    pass: pshvetik