CD Zone: The latest Music, Ablums, Singles, Box Sets, Vinyls and Casettes

Pop MusicRock MusicIndie MusicDance MusicR&B MusicHip Hop and Rap MusicHard Rock and Metal MusicSoundtracks

 

 

 

 

 

Duffy Rockerferry CD

Categories
Music
Kate Nash Music
Gwen Stefani Music
Mika Music
Related Categories
• Folk Bestsellers
• CD Album
Amy MacDonald Music

Kitty Jay

Kitty Jay
Artist: Seth Lakeman
Label: I Scream
Category: Music


New (5) Used (5) from £5.74

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 18 reviews
Sales Rank: 61757

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

EAN: 5060081320034
ASIN: B00022M5FE

Release Date: August 1, 2005

Tracks:

  • John Lomas
  • The Bold Knight
  • Fight For Favour
  • Kitty Jay
  • Farewell My Love
  • Blood Upon Copper
  • Henry Clark
  • The Storm
  • Cape Clear
  • The Ballad Of Josie
  • The Streamers

Similar Items:

  • Freedom Fields
  • Poor Man's Heaven
  • The Punch Bowl
  • That's Proper Folk
  • The Imagined Village

Customer Reviews:   Read 13 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars "Poor Kitty Jay, such a beauty thrown away ..."   July 2, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is a grudging four-star review (rounded up from three-and-a-half). I had come across Lakeman before in his local band Equation. I heard he had come up with a solo album based on local legends and my curiosity was aroused. This review addresses superficially the songs individually before looking at the album as a whole.

"John Lomax" is surprisingly good; making the chorus softer and quieter than the verses is very effective. "The Bold Knight" displays Lakeman's skilful handling of the violin. "Fight for Favour" is too sparse, whilst the title track displays marvellous energy in its violin cross-rhythms. The opening to "Farewell My Love" is a cringing parody of folk music. There is good drumwork in "Blood Upon Copper", but the song ends too soon. "Henry Clark" sounds like a preliminary to something bigger. "The Storm" is a missed opportunity too: where IS the sound of the storm? "Cape Clear", the longest track at 4'20'', combines an ominously sustained church organ with some fine violin-playing including some double-stopping. "The Ballad of Josie" is distinctive through its female backing vocals. The final song, "The Streamers", ends the album unmemorably.

With his poor enunciation, Lakeman's singing is just about bearable. The album is almost completely acoustic throughout its 37 minutes and eleven tracks. This was, presumably, the intention, but it has left the sound poor and sparse, giving it the feel of a demo-tape. It is an album of incredibly missed opportunities. For example, the ending of the opening track just suddenly fades out, whereas it calls for a build-up to a denouement.

But the more I played the CD, the more it grew upon me. Lakeman has good latent songwriting skills, although his lyrics border on the naïve in places. The songs need to be developed. They cry out for a more complex, deeper production, a more polished style. And so, for me, the album lives up to the poor life of Kitty Jay, "such a beauty thrown away".





5 out of 5 stars Kitty Jay   February 17, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

My son bought me this album for mother's day last year and it still gets played regularly. I went to see Seth live last autumn and he was absolutely fantastic. This lively folk singer has a fantastic original style of singing and is such a talented violinist and musician. I really cant wait for his next tour. Seth's foot-tapping music is addictive and highly recommended!


4 out of 5 stars Dartmoor Delight   December 10, 2006
 35 out of 35 found this review helpful

This album represents the best of modern folk. It clearly has traditional influences and sensibility, but nevertheless has an edginess to it which gives it a modern feel.

The songs are inspired by the writer's home in Dartmoor and this allows for great variety ranging from old fashioned murder ballads to tales of the moors and the excitement (and the dread) of setting out to sea.

The outstanding track is the title number Kitty Jay, a sad tale of betrayal driven by a fantastic string riff.

Well worth exploring if you fancy dipping your toe in the waters of modern folk.



5 out of 5 stars Spot on.   November 4, 2006
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

A quick encapsulation? Seth Lakeman is English folk's Jeff Buckley.

The compositions on this disk balance the tense, brooding atmospherics of Dartmoor with impossibly attractive hooks and performances.

The quality is in the balance. The persistent drive of John Lomas sits directly next to the addictive Bold Knight. The range of the eleven songs is ambitious by anyone's standards.

The album stamps its greatness with the frighteningly raw Kitty Jay, the sound of contemporary English folk embracing its own heritage in a way that, say, Kate Rusby does not. It's not pretty, it's naked, raw and nervous; it's compelling, uncomfortable listening and carries a breathtaking emotional weight. Haunting, does not begin to describe the feeling.

The album rolls along with very different tones portraying the moods of the moors. It's incredibly affecting but never ever contrived, never inauthentic.

Pertinent to the achievement is the stripped down sound, leaving sounds with impurities and a real feeling of spontaneity. The real sound on display, though, is Lakeman's voice. Simultaneously familiar and idiosyncratic, each listening reveals new layers, new sensitivities. As I say, the only comparable feeling is that of listening to Jeff Buckley's "Grace" for the first time. Spine-tingling.

It's been a long while since I have felt so electrified by a new artist. Seth Lakeman has assembled one of those much-abused labels in its truest sense: "instant classic".



5 out of 5 stars Mesmeric   August 5, 2006
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

Not being a new folkie, an old folkie, or much of a folkie at all it took the Mercury Prize nomination to wake me up to the talent that is Seth Lakeman.
Was lucky enough to have him play a gig in a local pub in the week he was nominated, and was amazed by both his voice and fiddle playing as he ran through most of the Kitty Jay album in a tiny but packed venue.
Naturally I rushed to get this album and happily it sounds just as good. (Why does anyone spend more than three hundred quid on recording a album when you can achieve this quality in your kitchen?)
Whenever I hear Seth being interviewed he comes over as down to earth, good humoured and in love with the music, not the attention.. which gives me another reason to admire him.
What with Seth, Teignmouth's Muse, and the Superimposers, is Devon making a case for being the new home of quality music??


 

All products listed on the CD Zone website are processed by Amazon.co.uk so you can enjoy a secure payment transaction. When you've finished shopping, click the 'checkout' button and you'll be redirected to Amazon.co.uk to complete the transaction. Please click here to contact Amazon.

Cheap Music from CD Zone

 

Entertainment Shop | Games And Consoles | Gadgets And Toys | Bargain Book Store | Man Utd Shop | Beatles Shop | Oasis Shop | CD Shop | Ricky Gervais Shop
Save Index | Discount Codes and Vouchers | Cashback World | Mobile Phone Price Checker | Latest Mobile Offers | Best Broadband Providers | Price Comparison