Cool Kids Belong Together
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15. El Desierto - Lhasa de Sela (La Llorona, 1998)

Ms. de Sela passed away last year at the age of 37 from breast cancer. I didn’t find out about it until recently, because I haven’t heard anything from her in long while and didn’t think to check if she was kicking around still. Artists would release albums and go on hiatus all the time, and the sheer volume of music I’ve heard over the years means that I don’t assume death whenever I don’t hear from somebody for some time. It’s sad that I didn’t hear about it in the news at the time though, because she was one true international artist of note that should be present on every music lover’s playlist. She could sing in English, French, and Spanish, with a soulful voice that packed power, nuances, and a deep well of emotions. This was such a great loss - everyone dies, but it was just a tad too soon in her case. She had a lot more music in her, but we’ll never know now.

{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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Macorina - Chavela Vargas (YSI/Amazon)

From Wiki:

Isabel Vargas Lizano (born April 17, 1919) is a Mexican (Costa Rican born) singer. She is especially known for her rendition of rancheras genre - a folkloric musical genre widely popular in Mexico - but she is also recognized for her contribution to other popular Latin American song genres. She has been an influential interpreter in the Americas and Europe, muse to figures such as Pedro Almodóvar, hailed for her haunting performances, and called “la voz áspera de la ternura”, the rough voice of tenderness.

I LOVE me some haunting Spanish-language songs, ever since my discovery of it through Lhasa de Sala some years ago. It speaks to my histrionic side? Listening to this song (off her 2004 album, At Carnegie Hall) is like listening to a tribal elder unfold some tragic love story by the fireside. And I want nothing more than to be told of a tragic love story by a haunted soul like her.