Kandace Springs - Indigo, the long awaited sequel to Soul Eyes


Oh well, the title of this OP is misleading as Indigo would not be considered a sequel.  This is Springs carving out a style to set herself apart.  Let's face it there is a rich stable of young female songstresses.  Krall, Jones, Souza, Mardot and numerous others are well known to many.

I first learned of Kandace thanks to an Audiogoner.  Thanks again!  I've had her first offering, "Soul Eyes" on CD for months and I don't think I've yet to place it in the CD rack.  I just keep wanting to listen to it.  Soul Eyes has a "sound" not unlike most of the aforementioned ladies.  Indigo is stylistically more diverse.  In that sense it is interesting for its production values.  The engineering of each song has its own sound.  Some cuts have a healthy and effective use of reverb where others are more matter of fact and dry.  

Instincts are one quality that most successful people follow to positive outcomes.  "Soul Eyes" is great for the bluesy jazz album that it is with very tastefully written melodies and mature lyrics.  "Indigo" is a collection of songs of very different musical styles and they all seem to work.  Good instincts!  The song "Love Sucks" starts off with an instrumental sound like the famous dance scene from "Pulp Fiction" with Travolta and Thurman dancing at Jack Rabbit Slims.  Fun stuff.  Kandace has musical flex. Roberta Flacks iconic "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" is performed as straight as an arrow.  No pretense.  She just sings it beautifully not trying to recreate it, but rather to honor it.

 I'm gonna keep loving "Soul Eyes" but "Indigo" is sticking around and will be in residence on my turntable for a while as I continue to appreciate it fully.

Lest I forget, both albums on Blue Note are lovingly recorded.  "Soul Eyes" is a bit thicker sounding instrumentally whereas "Indigo" is more open and sparser.  Again, both work.  Enjoy!
hifiman5
@mental  I hope you enjoy her as much as I do.  Kandace and Melody's works have yet to find their way to my music shelves.  I listen to them too often!
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@mental   So happy you are enjoying Melody.  I have everyone of her albums and like each one.  "Worrisome Heart", her debut release is the straightest bluesy jazz of the bunch.  After the sophomore "My One and Only Thrill" her releases get a little more experimental as she creates an album-like identity to each one.  All fine albums!

If you are looking for another interesting lady vocalist, you might want to give Karen Souza a try.  She has a real sultry approach to her vocals.  I would recommend "The Complete Collection".  It is a three CD release.  The first disc is all covers of famous songs.  Nobody is out of bounds on that disc.  She takes on Strawberry Fields, Billie Jean, Tainted Love etc.  She is very different.  I really enjoy listening to her when I'm in the mood for something different.  Think of it this way...she has unique approaches to songs much in the same way as Patricia Barber.

If you are not into her yet I'd give her a shot first.  You might start with "Cafe Blue" the "unmastered" version on SACD if you do SACD.  (This is one of the best discs I have for sonics - First frickin' rate!). If not the CD of Cafe Blue should be great.
 
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