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Cassandra Wilson: Belly of the Sun
Cassandra Wilson
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Cassandra Wilson continues to move down a highly eclectic path on
Belly of the Sun, the somewhat belated follow-up to Traveling
Miles. While displaying a jazz singer's mastery of melodic nuance and
improvisatory phrasing, Wilson draws on a variety of non-jazz idioms
-- roots music, rock, Delta blues, country, soul -- to create a kind
of earthy, intelligent pop with obvious crossover appeal. Her core
band includes guitarists Marvin Sewell and Kevin Breit, who blend
marvelously, Sewell mostly on mellow acoustic and Breit adding
atmospheric touches on electric, 12-string, and slide guitars, as well
as mandolin, banjo, and even bouzouki. Bassist Mark Peterson and
percussionists Jeffrey Haynes and Cyro Baptista provide a superbly
sensitive rhythmic foundation. But because Wilson returned to her home
state of Mississippi to record most of this album, she made sure to
book some time with local musicians. Thus guitarist Jesse Robinson
guests on (and co-writes) the funky "Show Me a Love," and the
octogenarian pianist "Boogaloo" Ames plays an unpolished yet utterly
heartfelt duet with Wilson on the classic "Darkness on the Delta."
Other guests include drummer Xavyon Jamison, trumpeter Olu Dara,
pianist and vocalist Rhonda Richmond (who penned the slowly swaying
"Road So Clear"), guitarist Richard Johnston, backup vocalists Patrice
Monell, Jewell Bass, Henry Rhodes, and Vasti Jackson, and the children
of New York's Middle School 44. Wilson delves into vintage blues with
Mississippi Fred McDowell's "You Gotta Move" and a brief yet dynamic
rendition of Robert Johnson's "Hot Tamales." But the best tracks are
the rock/pop covers: The Band's "The Weight," Bob Dylan's "Shelter
From the Storm," James Taylor's "Only a Dream in Rio," Jobim's "Waters
of March," and Jimmy Webb's "Wichita Lineman" (a 1968 hit for Glen
Campbell). Wilson and band are in peak interpretive form on these
ethereal reinventions. While her own lyrics may not rise to the level
of a Robbie Robertson or a Bob Dylan, her versatility and focus come
through clearly on the originals "Justice," "Just a Parade" (a
collaboration with neo-soul rookie India.Arie), and the
Caribbean-tinged "Cooter Brown."
-- David R. Adler, All Music Guide
Tracks
- The Weight
- Justice
- Darkness On The Delta
- Waters Of March
- You Gotta Move
- Rio/Only A Dream
- Just Another Parade
- Wichita Lineman
- Shelter From The Storm
- Rock Me Baby
- Cooter Brown
- Little Lion
- Show Me A Love
- Road So Clear
- Hot Tamales
Cassandra Wilson - Belly of the Sun - 2002 - Blue Note 35072
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