Cool Kids Belong Together
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06. In the dark - Nina Simone (Nina Simone sings the blues, 1967)

This woman was a tour de force package - she composed and arranged music, played the piano like nobody’s business, and sang raw, intensely erotic jazz with such ease and class. I love her bluesy voice with every electron in my body and wouldn’t mind having a little Simone any time of the day - from cheerful self-affirming, booblies-checking in the morning …

… to wistful yearning in the afternoon …

… to stormy evening …

… and the band (her majesty) picks up …

… and we get a little bold …

… to that time when all you can do is wait …

… and then, it was gone.

:heart:

{My 50 ALL-TIME FAVOURITE FEMALE VOCALISTS list continues (tagged Female Vocalists)! The criteria are simple: they are female of the species, I love their voice, and they have attempted to sing in English at one point in their career. The present list is focused mostly on the quality/uniqueness of their tone (voice box), and their ability to emote the hell out of the songs.}

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08. Mad about the boy - Dinah Washington

Dinah Washington was technically flawless, got sass for miles, and could emote the hell out of any song she recorded. It may come as no surprise that her version of many jazz/blues numbers have often been the more popular one. She’s one of a handful of artists I’d immediately take to upon first listen. I remember going through my first Jazz collection, The Mercury Songbook, and noting how much ‘tude this woman had. She made “I get a kick out of you” stuck to my head for days and days (even though I don’t think “flying with some guy in the sky” is “nothing to do” - still, I feel compelled to go along with whatever she sings about because she sounds like she means BUSINESS). But Dinah’s more than her queen sized attitude; she could also do intimate conversing. So assured is her vocal ability that she could sing on a track without music accompanying it and it would not feel wrong. Witness one of the greatest jazz recordings by the prolific Ms. Blues:

And that’s how you do a number!

{My 50 ALL-TIME FAVOURITE FEMALE VOCALISTS list continues (tagged Female Vocalists)! The criteria are simple: they are female of the species, I love their voice, and they have attempted to sing in English at one point in their career. The present list is focused mostly on the quality/uniqueness of their tone (voice box), and their ability to emote the hell out of the songs.}

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19. Whatever Lola wants - Sarah Vaughan

Sarah’s breathy, smokey voice is so effortlessly cool and distinctive, it stands out even amongst the remarkable jazz legends music has been graced with. If Sarah wanted me, I’d surrender everything. Down to my last boy shorts.

{My 50 ALL-TIME FAVOURITE FEMALE VOCALISTS list continues (tagged Female Vocalists)! The criteria are simple: they are female of the species, I love their voice, and they have attempted to sing in English at one point in their career. The present list is focused mostly on the quality/uniqueness of their tone (voice box), and their ability to emote the hell out of the songs.}

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Johnny Guitar - Peggy Lee

I cried.

:`(

p.s. this video is haunting, but also creepy as hell?

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Settle down - Kimbra (Vows, 2011)

Introducing: the next IT thing, or, the ITTEST thing that comes out of New Zealand since the hobbits.

Bonus: Good Intent

P.S. P.J. Harvey, did your parents ever tell you about a long lost younger sibling? :heart: