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17 Reviews
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
NO STRINGS required, just one voice !,
By Jefferson (brigmv1234@aol.com) (Ventnor, NJ - USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
As a LONG-TIME Sheena Easton fan, I am so thankful that she finally realized that her voice needs to be showcased. This c.d. is nothing at all like "The Lover In Me" or "Doin' What Comes Naturally," with no evidence of "The Artist formally known as Who Cares's" influence on her style (Thank God). She has a golden voice and this is my favorite music to play when enjoying a candle-lit dinner. I really think you'll agree.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sheena's Best,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
Far and Away, "No Strings" is my favorite work by Sheena Easton (particularly due to the fact I am an avid Jazz fan). Her vocals on this album are phenomenal. If only she had stuck with this genre of music, she might still be popular today. Because of the low price of this album, it truly is a great buy. Pick it up today!
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A revelation,
By A Customer
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
Wait a minute, isn't Sheena Easton the saucy Scottish pop singer who sings those sexy, melodic and, at times, goofy pop songs? So, what's she doing singing songs by the likes of the Gershwins and Irving Berlin?It's a natural reaction that too many people had when this record was released almost six years ago. And it's also an unfair reaction, especially considering the considerable depth and passion she puts into these performances. OK, she's not Ella Fitzgerald, but then no one is. Sheena Easton is Sheena Easton and she shows enough confidence in herself here to really make the record a delight. She is especially effective on the passionate "If You Go Away (Ne Me Quitte Pas)" and the swinging "The One I Love Belongs To Somebody Else." "The Nearness Of You" emphasizes the clarity of Easton's voice and "I Will Say Goodbye" shows off her deep range. And while her fused Pop/Jazz stylings may not be enough to please the most fierce Jazz fans, it's a nice insight into the wonders that Sheena Easton's voice has to offer.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Sheena shines like never before,
By A Customer
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
Throughout her career, Easton has somehow managed to explore a wide spectrum of musical genres without ever once earning the earnest respect of critics. This collection of standards, while by no means perfect, would easily have changed that if anyone had heard it. On the eleven tracks, from the ubiquitous "Someone To Watch Over Me" (has anyone not recorded this song?) to the more swinging and refreshingly pessimistic "Never Will I Marry," Easton displays a tremendous control over her voice that is rarely seen in pop artists today (Mariah and Celine don't know the meaning of subtlty). Easton has the confidence and poise to let the material shine, and it only serves to make her sound like a superstar. If she decides to go further down this path in the future, there is no doubt she will earn the praise that so easily comes to less deserving voices. "No Strings" is an highly engaging record with which many will rediscover this talent.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Easton's "No Strings" Provides a Gorgeous Sound,
By
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
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.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good stuff - Recommended,
By
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
As other reviewers have pointed out, this is different from any other Sheena Easton album - highly listenable and credible, it deserves a listen. Pick it up, even if you're not crazy about her interpretation of these standards, my guess is that you'll never regret buying this album. Like me, you'll probably bring it out every so often for a series of listenings. I wonder if I'll ever get to buy this on SACD...
11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Freedom with "No Strings"...,
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
Like most pop singers, at the start of their careers, Sheena Easton's choice of music probably had a lot of input from whoever was managing her career. Her first three albums usually featured upbeat, sometimes silly pop songs, mixed with some rather thoughtful and emotional ballads. Though she had success, with this approach, it was a probably a bit difficult to establish an identity, and solidify a fan base, singing such diverse material. Did fans of "Machinery", "Morning Train" and "Modern Girl" also appreciate "Wind Beneath My Wings", "When He Shines", "In The Winter" and "I Wouldn't Beg For Water"? It appears that though she did try to record the type of music that was most dear to her, there came a time, beginning with "Best Kept Secret" (1983), and certainly by "A Private Heaven" (1984), that Sheena's music's focused on attaining commercial success. These albums were among the most popular in her career, and through the remainder of the 80's and early 90's, Easton struggled in her attempt to maintain commercial success, and firmly establish an identity. Her 1991 recording "What Comes Naturally", an fine album of dance tunes, failed to return her to the pop mainstream, and probably left Sheena wondering what direction her music should take. The release in 1993 of "No Strings", was a complete change in direction. It was a return to her roots, the music that inspired her, and made her want to become a singer. Probably Sheena's most personal recording, the title "No Strings", may be a reference to having the freedom to perform the type of music she wanted to, without having someone else in control, "pulling the strings". The album is certainly a complete departure from anything she had done before, or since. Coming from the 80's pop queen, the collection of traditional jazz and blues standards, performed with a backing band, takes a while to get used to. However if you remove your mental reservations, and give the music a fair chance, you may be pleasantly surprised. In performing these classics, Ms. Easton's voice is given a chance to really stretch out, and embrace the material. Soon, you may forget that this is the same singer, who did songs like "Strut" and "For Your Eyes Only". The tone is not sunny and bright, staying more on the neutral or bluesy side. Sheena sounds most upbeat on the songs "The One I Love Belongs to Somebody Else" and "How Deep Is the Ocean". She appears to be genuinely having fun with her singing. On other songs though, the singer is more serious, determined to "dig down" and put as much "emotional content" into the music as possible. She is perhaps most successful with a beautiful version of "If You Go Away", complete with verses in French. "The Nearness of You" and "Body and Soul", are not far behind. The medley piece "Little Girl Blue/When Sunny Gets Blue" nicely blends two tunes, with "Sunny" being especially enchanting. Another medley, "I'm In the Mood for Love/Moody's Mood 'For Love'" is a free flowing, playful number on which Sheena takes free vocal liberty. An ultra cool version of "Never Will I Marry", winds up this fine collection in an upbeat fashion. If Sheena's roots are in this kind of music, perhaps it now becomes clear why there were so many ballads, and slow songs on those early recordings. You may have criticisms of her interpretation of these standards, but her voice is more than up to the material, and credit should be given to the artist, for having the courage to take a new musical direction. That this very personal project did not meet with great success, is probably a major disappointment to her. This collection is clearly not for every Sheena Easton fan, but if you care to see her softer, more contemplative side, and glimpse her roots, by all means consider "No Strings". It is a "fast" 46 minute play.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A New Jazz Voice,
By
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
Sheena Easton was a young singer who had one major hit and a couple of minor hits. The voice seemed decent but no legs beyond the one or two songs. Then came this sleeper of an album, which shows just how truely talented this lady is. I acquired the album on cassette and recently replaced it on CD, not having listened to it in a very long time. It blew me away, with its mix of jazz and pop. Ms Easton has a spectacular voice, and she shows that she knows how to use it well. Highlights include I'm in the Mood for Love/Moody's Mood, Body and Soul (with the original verse--some singers use a different verse that was written much later and tacked on), a very jazzy How Deep is the Ocean (only Ella ever made a jazz version of this song without going completely off the tracks), If you Go Away and a completely reimagined The Man That Got Away (I'm not sure that it is completely sucessful, but it is definately reimagined).
My only question is.................Where the heck is the follow up album?
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A WONDERFUL SLEEPER CD - BOUND FOR FAME,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
I HAVE NEVER HEARD HER MUSIC BEFORE. THIS ALBUM IS SO SENSUAL. PEOPLE WHO HEAR IT CANNOT BELIEVE IT IS SHEENA EASTON. IT IS ONE OF MY FAVORITES AND WITH SUCH WONDERFUL SONG CHOICES HOW COULD IT BE ANYTHING BUT A WINNER.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Music Set That Delivers,
By A Customer
This review is from: No Strings (Audio CD)
Not since the '60's, when a girl named Barbra Streisand sang these songs, has there been a promising vocalist to sing these songs again. And I mean sing. Highlights on this CD are,"If You Go Away", which sounds as if it were Easton's song to begin with. It is sung with such emotion and yet so much fire..it is hard to picture anybody else singing it. Another is "I Will Say Goodbye", which sounds as if it were a Streisand record to begin with. As is"Someone To Watch Over Me", it is easy to see that Streisand was a major influence in her career.Start to finish, this CD will no doubt be a collector's item in the future.
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No Strings by Sheena Easton (Audio CD - 1993)
Used & New from: $0.37
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