Vonda Shepard - It's Good Eve Audio CD
A fair review of the Vonda Shepard "It's Good Eve" Audio CD. Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all
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Band: Vonda Shepard
Title: It's Good Eve
Rating: 
Release Date: 2009-01-06
Media: Audio CD
Tracks: 1: Maryland 2: Lucky Life 3: Grain of Sand 4: Wildest Times of the World 5: Like a Hemisphere 6: Naivet� 7: Long Term Boyfriend 8: Every Now and Then 9: Mischief and Control 10: Hotel Room View 11: This Steady Train 12: Serious Richard
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vondaful, vondafulbefore ally and after ally vonda speaks the truth in her music. . it's good vonda. . . . . . don't cry ilene. . . . can't we try?. . . . a new marilyn. . . .
u know who!.
We can feel Vonda Shepard's talent all over the album!
Her Voice= Wonderful
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Her Music= Wonderful
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Her melodies= Wonderful
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Her lyrics= Wonderful
= Wonderful album! There is nothing more to say! Enjoy the CD as much as I do! :).
Stunning, Classic, ...Timeless
I must admit that I discovered Vonda Shepard after seeing and falling in love with the Fox TV show, "Ally McBeal". These are only a few words to describe the true greatness of this CD. I was sort of skeptical about whether or not I'd enjoy this CD since I knew this wasn't going to be the Vonda we all knew who sang cover songs like "Hooked On A Feeling" or "Tell Him". However once I bought this album, I couldn't take it out of my CD player. I identified with all of the songs even though I was only 13. Each song either drew back a memory, brought back a certain emotion, or just plain brought me to tears. When she sings the line "I'll never be what my daddy wanted me to be or I'll never see what my mama's dreams were, but I will sing" and "I wanna fly down the highway to my home away from home" on the song "Maryland", I felt my heart fall to the floor. She is brave, honest, and beautiful on this phenominal record. I'd say she should be in the same ballpark as Joni Mitchell or Jackson Browne since they all have one thing in common. . . pure emotional honesty. In this day and age of Britney Spears and N'Sync, truly great, classic music is hard to come by. No matter what age you are, you will be abosolutely enamored of this collection of songs. It's gotten me through a lot of tough times so do yourself a favor. . . buy this CD now. Trust me! You won't regret it and if you do regret, you don't have much of a life, soul, or a heart.
One of the rare honest recording to be found lately
Vonda Shepard does not re-invent music, but offers a collection of mid-tempo ballads that will please the amateurs of the piano/voice formula and people tired with computerized, manufactured radio hits. I am not playing this record non-stop, but I really enjoy it while driving, reading or sharing a cup of tea with friends on a girls night in. I play this record next to Tori Amos "Little Earthquake". Vonda is not as tortured as Tori can be, her lyrics are plain romantic, but they share emotional vocals and musical arrangements ("Serious Richard", "Grain of Sand"). She might as well sound as an empowered Suzanne Vega ("Naiveté", "Mischief & Control") who would have dropped guitar for piano.
Ally Mc Beal version of "Searching my soul" was my introduction to Vonda. I found "It's good Eve" on the shelve next to "For Once in my life" and bought it out of curiosity because I thought it was her latest recording. My copy is in fact a 2001 re-issue of this 1996 album. I was not desappointed: I found here the great voice I appreciated in Ally and the general sound of the album was exactly what I was expecting.
What I found out is that Vonda is not just a great performer, she has a soul. This might not be the most inventive record in the industry, but it is for sure written, recorded, performed and sung with heart and honesty. It's not just another record, it's a part of Vonda's world you're listening to. In today's music bizz, this is already rare enough to be noticed.
"Maryland", "This steady train" and "Serious Richard" grabbed my attention the first time I played the album. It has potential to grow on you.
Pop songstress comes into her own
Evidence of their error is found in the fact that "Searchin My Soul," from her "Radical Light" album, became a huge hit and the "Ally" theme song, while "Baby Don't You Break My Heart Slow," originally from her self-titled debut, was another smash when it was re-recorded as a duet with the Indigo Girls' Emily Sailers for the second volume of the "Ally McBeal" soundtrack. Years before "Ally McBeal" and mainstream success came calling, Vonda Shepard was releasing solid pop material that her label, Reprise Records, was in no hurry to promote. Reprise execs must be kicking themselves by now.
But if this isn't enough to convince you that Vonda Shepard is more than the McBeal mouthpiece that belts out classic pop tunes for the benefit of Ally's plotlines, look no further than the understated masterpiece that is 1996's "It's Good, Eve. " Recorded and released right before production on "Ally" was underway, this record is largely responsible for Vonda getting the television gig, and it's no wonder in the least. Leaving behind the slicker stabs at commercial success that she attempted on Reprise, Vonda produced some of the most lovely and organic acoustic pop you've heard since the heyday of Carole King, Carly Simon, and Joni Mitchell.
Vonda starts off with two compositions that draw the listener in slowly but surely with both haunting melody and personal, confessional lyrics. . . when Vonda sings "never worry about what I did wrong/and that I'll never be what my daddy wanted me to be/and I'll never see what my mama's dreams were" on "Maryland," it's evident that finding her own path hasn't been easy for Shepard, but the artistic payoff apparently made the struggle worthwhile. This notion is driven home on "A Lucky Life," a stunning piece that celebrates living for your art. Things picks up a bit on "Grain of Sand," which boasts a brush-kit rhythm section that moves like a gently-insistent locomotion. The song's juxtaposition of acoustic guitar pop and a Middle-Eastern inspired vocal riff laid over a sitar lick make for an immediately striking effect that is easily the album's best moment.
Elsewhere on the record Shepard makes an argument for the old theory of less being more: on "Like a Hemisphere" the drums don't come in until after the second chorus, and the simple arrangement of piano, guitar, and multiple vocals from Vonda have the fullness and elegance of a symphony. And of course mature and insightful lyrics like "why can't we see in outselves/all the beauty we see in everybody else?" make it all the more obvious that Vonda is a significant talent. Other strong ballads are "Long Term Boyfriend" and "Every Now and Then," confessional relationship pieces that manage to skirt the realm of Joni Mitchell without borrowing from any particular item in the legend's cache.
This isn't to say that Vonda's work is without drive and energy, however: "Naivete" is a forceful uptempo rocker that makes a strong case for your own personal reality being better than the one everyone makes you think you should inhabit, while the bridge in "This Steady Train" takes a quaint pop ballad and turns it on its ear with a 6/8 time signature change and a psychedelic guitar lick. The only moment less than stellar is "Mischief & Control," an exploration of the multiple personalities and identities within everyone. The lyrical concept is good enough, but the Middle-Eastern vocal riff from "Grain of Sand" is duplicated here and the songs are even in the same key, so "Mischief" comes off as a carbon-copy afterthought. Easygoing, 70's-reminiscent pop like "The Wildest Times of the World" more than pick up the slack, however.
Throughout the record Vonda's vocals are another noteworthy achievement, as if the maturity in the writing coaxed her to uncover new nuances and layers to her voice that her earlier work didn't inspire. Throw in the fact that she impressively produced the album with Michael Landau and you have every shred of evidence you will ever need to prove that Shepard is one of the most important artists of our times, never without a striking musical platform for her mature lyrical thoughts. Sure, after years of toiling away unappreciated, she more than deserves her recent television success, and it does one good to hear her on the radio and see her sell out venues across the country. But one listen to "It's Good, Eve" will show you that while, for a lot of people, "Ally McBeal" is where Vonda Shepard begins, it is just as certainly not where she ends.
You can see a complete list of all Vonda Shepard discography, or go back to the Vonda Shepard tabs. There is also a good guide on how to read guitar tabs here.