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Sheena Easton - No Strings
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Sheena Easton - No Strings

Facts

Artist(s)Sheena Easton
StudioMca
Release DateAugust 3, 1993
UPC Code008811084929
 

Tracks

  1. Someone To Watch Over Me
  2. I'm In The Mood For Love/Moody's Mood 'For Love'
  3. The Nearness Of You
  4. How Deep Is The Ocean
  5. If You Go Away (Ne Me Quitte Pas)
  6. Body And Soul
  7. Little Girl Blue/When Sunny Gets Blue
  8. The One I Love Belongs To Somebody Else
  9. The Man That Got Away
  10. I Will Say Goodbye
  11. Never Will I Marry

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User Reviews

Average user review: 4.5 (15 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteNo Strings Quote
If U like 2 experience something different, U should check out this CD.

No Strings

Goddess Anjanee :) February 11, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteEaston's "No Strings" Provides a Gorgeous SoundQuote
THIS IS THE ALBUM that proves Sheena Easton deserves a spot among jazz music vocalists. But, one does not need to appreciate jazz to understand it. This is bona-fide, opera-quality shimmering, but it is veiled in discreet, romantic attitude and by her contemporary pop reputation. I had liked a couple of her 80's tunes, but I had no idea she was capable of sounding this adult-like. She completely blows out of the way other pop artists who try converting over to classic-jazz improvisational singing without even the remotest consideration for them. Considering her pop career won't be necessary, unless one looks for support.

She is a true bird of song here, and pulls off even some of the harder tricks of female singers who have sung embedded in the acoustic jazz medium for all of their careers, subtly accentuating the nuances of classic jazz very well. I wish everyone who reads this article of mine would pay the money and listen to this CD because the world would be a sincerer place. She has a gorgeous voice which I had not really noticed until I heard my dad playing the CD. Listening to this, I might think of Julie London, and I like Julie's old recordings. But, new recording technologies tend to emphasize voice flaws much more than old recordings that might cover problems. Easton might actually have a better voice than Julie. Yet, the surprising thing is HOW ACCESSIBLE this disc is--meaning even AVERAGE EARS, young and old, can immediately grasp, appreciate, and comment at how WELL she sings. I listen to all forms of music including jazz like Gershwin and Ellington; I have an opera- and symphony-experienced youth. Check out track five. She's got THE NOTES.

She hits the romantic, husky lows and the grand highs perfectly. Her trills are simply to die for, or to cry for, and she nails them all! Yet she does this with such class and respect to jazz as to beg a highness to the art. She never, ever once seems insincere. She does the tunes in character like the fingers on an acclaimed concert pianist--going between the subtle, low and romantic to the stressing magnitudes in exactly the right moments of change. How strong her artistry is, and what a great sound. To like the CD, one does not need to like jazz, but only to know what good singing sounds like.

The accusation that Easton sounds like a teen is utterly ridiculous! Now, people who appreciate Jazz have different tastes, just like anywhere else. It is possible in a vast knowledge of jazz music to dismiss other music arriving at the destination of such passionate embodiment when it does so directly with eloquence instead of bulk. Whether one believes Easton sounds like a teen would be a person's opinionated description of Easton's sound, but saying so does not mean she is bad. The person who wrote this sounds more influenced by his high personal convictions about what Jazz is supposed to be, according to HIS standard rather than based on her range of vocalization. Perhaps he should test-listen the CD again. This is not Sinatra in front of a large orchestra; it is a woman in front of a small one without strings--hence the name--and her loud-power rivals the brass instruments. Blame the mixing of the recording if you want, but Easton has got the pipes pop artists only dream of having. Heck, give me a teenager who can sing this music with such directness to passion, and I'll take it! Her vocals are a lot more developed and much deeper than their face value. Here, Easton has range enough to shatter a champagne glass.

The voice of Linda Rodstadt, whose personality I embrace dearly, is simply not as good as Easton's upon direct comparisons. Diana Krall is probably Jazz's largest-selling name today, but Krall uses illusion to cover her voice flaws and incapacities. I like Krall, but she's not a great jazz artist. Natalie Cole may be the daughter of Nat King Cole, but I include her in my convictions about pop artists who turn to jazz: Natalie picks GREAT songs to sing, but her vocal LACKS DISCRETION. The difference between Natalie and Easton is like the difference between a trombone and a French horn! Jazz may appreciate the former, but greatness comes from the latter. Easton gives you pearls. December 20, 2006

rating: 5 QuoteSUPERBQuote
Sheena sings quality material at last in her own sophisticated style. Pity the c.d. isn't more widely known by fans of this musical genre - as mainstream pop fans may be disappointed. March 10, 2006

rating: 5 Quoteexcellent album. tres bonne qualite d enregistrementQuote
Beaucoup d emotion et rafinement pour cette artiste qui nous a habitue a de la musique pop. February 13, 2005

rating: 2 QuoteHigh school girl sings the bluesQuote
That's the impression I got when I first listened to this album. Sheena is a good enough pop singer, but this classic jazz/cabaret material is completely out of her reach, emotionally and vocally. Her attempts at emoting (as in "The Man That Got Away") come across as whiny, the equivalent of a teenage girl complaining about a bad prom date or her most recent adolescent heartache. This is not the effect this material should have on the listener, believe me. This album will be of interest to fans of the singer, but those looking for the real thing should stick to veteran, time-proven vocalists with the emotional chops to put this material across properly. July 30, 2004

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