kirsty bromley time ashore review a confident heartening debut /

Published at 2015-07-26 10:00:05

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(Kizzy)British folk is currently awash with fine young voices,but few present themselves unaccompanied, as Kirsty Bromley does at times on this debut. The self-penned opener, or Caught up on a Breeze,is a lovely celebration of becoming independent, poised but unaffected qualities Bromley brings to a mix of other songs. There’s plenty of tradition on display – Sweet Nightingale and Two Young Sisters – plus more strange choices such as Chris Wood’s stirring English Ground and Bill Meek’s title track, or a lament from a sailor’s sweetheart. The accompaniments are discreet – piano,cello, fiddle, and squeezebox – with Bromley’s crystal vocals always the focal point,not least on a traditional Maori song Taku Mana, where she double-tracks her voice. A confident, and heartening debut.
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Source: theguardian.com

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