Another exquisite, at times astonishing, album from Miss Jungr. Unlike
Bob Dylan, whose songbook the singer had so expressively reimagined on
Every Grain of Sand, Elvis Presley was never himself a composer,
depending instead entirely on professional publishers for his material,
much of it originally chosen for its commercial prospects; however, even
at its worst -- the soundtracks to the crap cookie-cutter movies the
King made in the '60s usually come to mind here -- his recorded output
had a certain consistency to it. On reflection that is primarily
because, even at their qualitative best, his songs were as much about
the sensual, muscular, bel canto performances and tied to the superstar
singer's outsize, magnetic personality as they were about the merits of
the tunes themselves. In other words, you are listening to Elvis sing
those songs more than you are listening to the songs he is singing. In a
way, that makes Jungr's Love Me Tender all the more remarkable: you do
not hear the King at all here except in faint echoes and traces, like
barely remembered fairy tales you were told as a child as you were
drifting off to sleep. This isn't an exercise in dress-up, as it very
easily might have been. Instead you are treated to a phenomenally
responsive singer finding her way into and breathing the oxygen of
forgotten stories, while, in the process, refitting them to say
something real and useful, something personal about your world and about
the one long past. In a sense, you are hearing these songs -- many of
them now considered classics (pop/rock standards, if such things exist)
-- for the first time. Worlds of passion and pain, discovery and
dislocation exist in these songs. They are so entirely reinvented by
Jungr, her brilliant arrangers Adrian York and Jonathan Cooper, and
producer Calum Malcolm that the prevailing mood of the album is
transformed into a mosaic, a complex map of one woman's fully lived
life, from the dizzy, tender love letters of expectation to the lonesome
heartbreak hotels that litter the highways of life, and all the
attendant reveries, roadblocks, and realizations along the way, until
she arrives at the gospel of her -- your -- existence, an exultant take
on one of Presley's own favorite Baptist hymns, Thomas A. Dorsey's
"Peace in the Valley." Jungr may have been "Looking for Elvis," as she
sings in the album's sole self-written original, but she found herself.
And in that discovery, there is a certain gesture of sublime benevolence
toward the listener. Love Me Tender is an autobiography of shared
memory, but more than that it is a primer to how people refashion that
memory to ascertain and navigate their own trajectories. by Stanton Swihart
Tracklist :
1 Love Letters 3:13
Victor Young
2 Heartbreak Hotel 4:04
Mae Boren Axton / Tommy Durden / Elvis Presley
3 Long Black Limousine 4:23
Bobby George / Vern Stovall
4 Wooden Heart 3:04
Bert Kaempfert / Traditional / Kay Twomey / Ben Weisman / Fred Wise
5 Are You Lonesome Tonight? 8:03
Lou Handman / Roy Turk
6 Kentucky Rain 4:49
Dick Heard / Eddie Rabbitt
7 In the Ghetto 3:39
Mac Davis
8 Love Me Tender 5:28
Vera Matson / Elvis Presley
9 Always on My Mind 5:05
Johnny Christopher / Mark James / Wayne Carson
10 I Shall Be Released 5:32
Bob Dylan
11 Tomorrow Is a Long Time 6:00
Bob Dylan
12 Looking for Elvis 3:44
Barb Jungr / Adrian York
13 Peace in the Valley 2:56
Rev. Thomas A. Dorsey
Credits :
Acoustic Bass – Mario Castronari (faixas: 6, 12)
Cello – Thangam Debbonaire (faixas: 10)
Harp – William Jackson (faixas: 2)
Keyboards – Adrian York (faixas: 1, 2, 4 to 8, 12)
Keyboards, Clarinet – Jonathan Cooper (faixas: 3, 4, 9, 11)
Viola – Rebecca Brown (faixas: 10 to 12)
Violin – Dominika Rosiek (faixas: 10), Miriam Teppich (faixas: 10)
Vocals – Barb Jungr
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
BARB JUNGR - Love Me Tender (2005) SACD / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
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