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Belly of the Sun

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Belly of the Sun
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 26, 2002
RecordedClarksdale, MS
StudioClarksdale Train Depot, Boxcar, Allairre Studios South[1]
GenreJazz
Length60:09
LabelBlue Note
ProducerCassandra Wilson
Cassandra Wilson chronology
Traveling Miles
(1999)
Belly of the Sun
(2002)
Glamoured
(2003)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
All About Jazzfavorable[2]
AllMusic[3]
The Buffalo News[4]
laut.de[5]
Now[6]
The Penguin Guide to Jazz[7]
Rolling Stone[8]
Tom HullB+[9]

Belly of the Sun is a studio album by American jazz singer Cassandra Wilson. It was released on the Blue Note label in 2002.[3]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
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  • Road So Clear CASSANDRA WILSON
  • Shawn James - Belly of the Beast (LIVE at Sun Studio)
  • Xavier Rudd - Follow The Sun [official music video]

Transcription

Background

The title of the CD comes from a line in "Only a Dream in Rio" that Wilson had translated to Yoruba "... just to hear what it sounded like and it was explained [to Wilson] that in the Yoruba translation you would say 'in the belly of the sun.'"[10]

India.Arie is a guest vocalist on "Just Another Parade".

Recording was done in the Clarksdale, Mississippi, train station.[10] Additional recording was done at Allairre Studios South, New York, NY.

Reception

J. D. Coniside of The Rolling Stone wrote: "With a voice as rich and caramel-y as Sarah Vaughan's, and a delivery as intimately conversational as Joni Mitchell's, Cassandra Wilson is the perfect jazz singer for people who don't particularly like jazz singing... Still, Belly of the Sun feels uncomfortably empty at points".[8] David R. Adler of AllMusic stated: "Cassandra Wilson continues to move down a highly eclectic path on Belly of the Sun, the somewhat belated follow-up to Traveling Miles. While displaying a jazz singer's mastery of melodic nuance and improvisatory phrasing, Wilson draws on a variety of non-jazz idioms -- roots music, rock, Delta blues, country, soul -- to create a kind of earthy, intelligent pop with obvious crossover appeal".[3]

Marshall Bowden of PopMatters commented: " If, despite all that, all you can worry about is whether Belly of the Sun is a "real" jazz album or not, it's your problem, not Cassandra's. The table has been set and the meal is a sumptuous one. Whether you partake or not is your gain or loss."[11]

Track listing

  1. "The Weight" (Robbie Robertson) – 6:05
  2. "Justice" (Cassandra Wilson) – 5:27
  3. "Darkness on the Delta" (Jay Livingston, Al J. Neiburg, Marty Symes) – 3:47
  4. "Waters of March" (Antônio Carlos Jobim) – 4:26
  5. "You Gotta Move" (Mississippi Fred McDowell) – 2:44
  6. "Only a Dream in Rio" (James Taylor) – 4:32
  7. "Just Another Parade" (Wilson) – 6:05
  8. "Wichita Lineman" (Jimmy Webb) – 5:48
  9. "Shelter from the Storm" (Bob Dylan) – 5:17
  10. "Drunk as Cooter Brown" (Wilson) – 4:58
  11. "Show Me a Love" (Jesse Robinson, Wilson) – 3:49
  12. "Road So Clear" (Rhonda Richmond) – 5:22
  13. "Hot Tamales" (Robert Johnson) – 1:43
  14. "Corcovado" (Antônio Carlos Jobim) (For Japan only)

There was a promotional version of this album distributed before the album was released that contained two extra tracks that were not included on the final release. The promotional copy has "Rock Me Baby" (B. B. King) After "Shelter from the Storm" and before "Cooter Brown", and "Little Lion" (Caetano Veloso) after "Cooter Brown" and before "Show Me a Love". The promotional version was a regular pressed and silk-screened disc (not a CD-R) and came in a cardboard sleeve and had no album artwork.

Personnel

Guest artists

Chart positions

Year Chart Position
2002 Billboard Top Jazz Albums 2
Billboard Heatseekers 4
Billboard The Billboard 200 155
Billboard Top Internet Albums 156

References

  1. ^ "Cassandra Wilson – Belly Of The Sun". Discogs. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  2. ^ "Cassandra Wilson: Belly Of The Sun". All About Jazz. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
  3. ^ a b c "Belly of the Sun - Cassandra Wilson - Credits - AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
  4. ^ Jeff, Simon (19 April 2002). "Discs". The Buffalo News. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  5. ^ Kopp, Kai. "13 sonnengetränkte Songs aus dem Mississippi-Delta" (in German). laut.de. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
  6. ^ Perlich, Tim (21 March 2002). "Cassandra Wilson". NOW Magazine. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
  7. ^ Cook, Richard. The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings : Cook, Richard : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming. p. 1387. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  8. ^ a b Considine, J.D. "Cassandra Wilson: Belly Of The Sun". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on October 1, 2007.
  9. ^ "Tom Hull: Grade List: Cassandra Wilson". Tom Hull. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  10. ^ a b Hamilton, Rhonda. All About Jazz. Cassandra Wilson. January 31, 2004. Retrieved December 2009.
  11. ^ Bowden, Marshall (18 April 2002). "Cassandra Wilson: Belly of the Sun". PopMatters. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
This page was last edited on 19 August 2021, at 01:33
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