Dayna Kurtz – Postcards From Downtown

$15.99

Out of stock

SKU: 783707433325 Category: Tag:

Description

Release Date:  2001

Label:  Kismet Records

 

Track List

1. Fred Astaire 3:52
2. Love Gets In The Way 3:46
3. Somebody Leave A Light On 4:24
4. Postcards From Downtown 5:05
5. Miss Liberty 4:38
6. Last Good Taste 4:07
7. Monroe 4:19
8. Paterson 6:43
9. Just Like Jack 3:36
10. Satisfied 2:50

 

Personnel

  • Dayna Kurtz – vocals, guitar
  • Eszter Balint – violin
  • Renee Cologne – vocals
  • Randy Crafton – drums, percussion
  • Rob Curto – accordion
  • Ralph Farris – viola
  • Richie Havens – vocals
  • Dorothy Lawson – cello
  • Todd Reynolds – violin
  • Mary L. Rowell – violin
  • Pete Vitalone – keyboards

 

Notes

Clearly, downtown is where the heart of Dayna Kurtz beats. With a throaty delivery that ranges from tuneless recitation to Annie Lennox-like declamation, Kurtz sings her heartbreak epics over an intriguing combination of empathetic rhythm section and string quartet, with accordion, violin, and other bohemian touches added for spice. It’s easy to imagine her on a stool in a cigarette-swirled spotlight, eyes closed, whispering “you’re scared to fly, and I’m scared to land” as bluesy piano and full-bodied acoustic bass cast noir shadows over “Last Good Taste.” References to stage diving on “‘Miss Liberty” nod toward contemporary elements, but Kurtz’s language more often evokes a timeless cabaret ambience, its fatalistic nostalgia underscored by primarily non-electric instrumentation, melodramatic dynamics, and frequent use of a sensuous waltz or 6/8 meter. When her mentor, Richie Havens, makes a guest appearance on “Somebody Leave the Light On,” his sandpapery timbre works as an orchestral element within an unusually turbulent changor; even as he chants “Sh*t, this town is nowhere,” the familiarity of his voice provides a beacon for the listener, like a soulful sax sounding within a wash of atonality. Yet this album is entirely Kurtz’s; while possibly too arty to curry widespread success, Postcards From Downtown is more than enough evidence of a major talent at work.

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