Hayley Westenra - Pure
Facts
| Artist(s) | Hayley Westenra |
| Studio | Decca |
| Release Date | April 6, 2004 |
| UPC Code | 028947518020 |
| Buy this item | $14.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 18 17:44 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About Hayley Westenra - Pure
Comparisons with Charlotte Church are inevitable, yet 16-year-old New Zealand singer Hayley Westenra has her own distinctive sound. She has impeccably clear diction coupled with a gorgeous voice with a very wide range: her high notes in the Kate Bush hit "Wuthering Heights" are especially striking, and like Bush she is also a dancer, having performed with the Royal New Zealand Ballet. If there's a problem, it's that Pure doesn't have a focus to match Westenra's talent, the tracks spanning everything from "Amazing Grace" to a Maori lullaby ("Hine e Hine") to hybrid pieces adapted from Ravel ("Never Say Goodbye") and Vivaldi's Four Seasons ("River of Dreams"). Ultimately what this set does demonstrate is that whatever direction Westenra finally settles on, she has the ability to go to the very top. For now she is a young artist finding her way, and for many listeners the result is Pure magic. --Gary S Dalkin Amazon.com
Tracks
- Pokarekare Ana - Hayley Westenra, Traditional
- Never Say Goodbye - Hayley Westenra, Ravel, Maurice
- Who Painted the Moon Black? - Hayley Westenra, Nel, Sonia Aletta (
- River of Dreams - Hayley Westenra, Vivaldi, Antonio
- Beat of Your Heart - Hayley Westenra, Martin, George
- Amazing Grace - Hayley Westenra, Traditional
- Benedictus - Hayley Westenra,
- Hine E Hine - Hayley Westenra, Pai, Princess Te Ra
- Across the Universe of Time - Hayley Westenra, Class, Sarah
- Dark Waltz - Hayley Westenra, Morasca, Umberto
- In Trutina - Hayley Westenra,
- Heaven - Hayley Westenra, Hardiman, Ronan
- Wuthering Heights - Hayley Westenra, Bush, Kate
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| Odyssey | Celtic Treasure | Hayley Westenra - Live From New Zealand | Celtic Woman - A New Journey: Live at Slane Castle, Ireland | A New Journey |
User Reviews
Average user review:| music |
| Promising young artist |
I would have given this 5 stars, except for the execrable "Wuthering Heights" track, which she starts by emitting a note that could only be described as shrieky. I literally jumped the first time I heard it, and it's still unpleasant. Didn't anybody listen to that track before the CD was released? It sounds like a siren (a police siren, I mean), and I don't mean to be nasty because I think she's good, but it sounded as if she was struggling to hit that note, and there was no need for it. She could have taken it down a half-tone and the effect would not have been alarming, the way it is now.
She should also work a bit on her enunciation. For the longest time, when I listened to "Across a Universe of Time" I kept hearing "tell me your vision OF SUNNY DELITE" (instead if "a story begun") She isn't helped in that department by overwrought arrangements. Whoever's arranging the music should work with her fragile voice.
But I'm looking forward to her development as an artist. Just stop screaming, Hayley! August 22, 2008
| An Amazing Operettic Singer! |
I agree that a few of her songs are just a liiiitle too generic, but she definately makes up for it in 90% of her songs, which is more than most artists can say. She only gets better as the years go on, and it is definately worth getting her later CDs as well.
Enjoy!!! April 3, 2007
| A wonderful debut |
There are 13 tracks in the US version, with a mix of familiar ("Amazing Grace"), classical ("In Trutina" from Orff's Carmina Burana), and other pieces. Of special note are two Maori songs (Pokarekare Ana and Hine e Hine) whose simple melodies showcase Hayley's admirable lyricism.
This isn't a perfect album. Hayley's taste at this point in her career seems to favor flowing melodies, medium tempos, and sustained lines that show off her voice wonderfully, and the sentiments often are not particularly deep. (She seems to be a very mature teenager, but she is still very young, and the song choices reflect that). As a result, there's a certain sameness to many of the songs that can leave one craving a little more variety. (This is solved on her second album, Odyssey.) An exception to the sameness is "Heaven," an upbeat calypso-inspired ditty about untimely death(!)
And then there's the last track, "Wuthering Heights." Hayley's been quoted as saying this is one of her favorite songs. It contradicts everything else I've said in this review. She shrieks, she swoops, she screeches, she's often unintelligible (thank goodness for the lyrics in the CD insert!). This is Hayley-tries-rock-music and Hayley-goes-wild. It was probably fun to sing. Maybe she needed to get it out of her system. To me, it's just strange.
But there are 12 other tracks that make this remarkable CD well worth having.
March 15, 2007
| A Breath of Fresh Air |
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