Album Review: Eva Cassidy’s “Walkin’ After Midnight” — More Evidence of a Wonder
By Michael Ullman
It’s the variety of sounds in Eva Cassidy’s repertoire, reinforced by her ability to use them with the utmost tact and control, that impresses this listener.
Eva Cassidy, Walkin’ After Midnight (Blix Street Records)
John Lennon recorded his famous song “Imagine” in 1971 in the midst of the Vietnam War. His recording became instantly and deservedly famous worldwide. Yet when this masterpiece pops into my head, it is the version by the late Eva Cassidy that I hear. At times, she is my favorite singer. I sometimes wonder that she is not everybody’s favorite. Yet I, too, forgot her, for in 1996, soon after her initial albums, she passed away at the age of 33. Few people outside of her native Washington, DC, heard her live. Luckily, others remembered. Before her passing, in 1992, Cassidy released a series of duets with Chuck Brown as The Other Side. Subsequently she scraped up the money to finance her own recording, Live at Blues Alley, released in 1996. She didn’t like it. Not that the listeners could hear it, but Cassidy had a cold the night the gig was recorded. Nonetheless, the recording proved invaluable because that same year Cassidy died of melanoma.
Cassidy’s discography is therefore largely posthumous. Her reputation is based on a series of such releases and compilations along with a couple of amateur videos in which she shines. So I welcome this new collection of previously unreleased live tracks, Walkin’ After Midnight, which I am listening to as a download. It contains her version of “Songbird” (originally recorded by Fleetwood Mac) that I heard on the radio and found entrancing. Her singing on “Songbird” and the arrangement is perfectly relaxed, her voice clear, controlled and subtle. And varied. She enters “Songbird” abruptly with “For you … there’ll be no crying.” She then ascends into her head register, and that adds a grain to her voice: it’s like a fog descending on the song. Her vibrato can be a sensuous wave or what Louis Armstrong used to call “tight like that.” She whispers and shouts and it all sounds inevitable, unmannered.
“Songbird” and the other tunes I will talk about can be found on The Best of Eva Cassidy. To this listener, the more sentimental the original the more miraculous her performance. She makes “Over the Rainbow” a believably wistful story. Again, she stretches out some syllables or words, pauses, and might bring in a barely audible reedy whisper or a sudden near shout. She adds a bit of a croak in the bridge. “That’s where you’ll find me,” she sings musingly. Someday “I’ll wake up with the clouds behind me,” she sings optimistically. She shouts the next phrases before launching into headvoice. She can be self assertive and tender almost in the same breath, and it all sounds right as rain. Then there’s “Danny Boy,” which she performs with acoustic guitar. When she sings forthrightly about being deceased when her lover returns, and then in her sweetest, gentlest voice asks to be told that she is loved, this listener is completely convinced. Her repertoire is varied.… she sings the folk song “Wade in the Water “as well as Lennon’s “Imagine” and the jazz standard “Autumn Leaves.” She even manages to sound a little bitter on Bill Withers’s “Ain’t No Sunshine.” She improvises and twists her lines in a bluesy fashion — yet the song’s message is always her priority.
Featuring Keith Grimes on guitar, Chris Biondo on bass, and Bruno Nasta on violin, Walkin’ After Midnight is an unrehearsed set that was recorded on the second of November, 1995. The venue was the Maryland Inn in Annapolis. Seemingly delighted in the skips of the melody, Cassidy bounces through “Honeysuckle Rose,” and tries to sound fierce on “Next Time You See Me,” once a hit for bluesman James Cotton. The title cut will be well known to country fans because it was a hit for Patsy Cline. New to her discography is her upbeat version of “Down Home Blues.” She seems to relish kicking off her shoes, waiting for her drink, and reveling in the blues. Cassidy laughs joyously during Nasta’s violin solo. She also sings “Route 66” — I guess she watched TV. Singing Gershwin’s oft-recorded “Summertime,” Cassidy manages to sound both languorous and assertive. It’s the variety of sounds in her repertoire, reinforced by her ability to use them with the utmost tact and control, that impresses this listener. She never loses track of the story, whether singing a lullaby or claiming to have “that fever.” I think she’s a wonder.
For over 30 years, Michael Ullman has written a bimonthly jazz column for Fanfare Magazine, for which he also reviews classical music. He has emeritus status at Tufts University, where for 45 years he taught in the English and Music Departments, specializing in modernist writers and nonfiction writing in English, and jazz and blues history in music. He studied classical clarinet. The author or co-author of two books on jazz, he has written on jazz and classical music for the Atlantic Monthly, New Republic, High Fidelity, Stereophile, Boston Phoenix, Boston Globe, and other venues. He plays piano badly.
Tagged: " Blix Street Records, "Walkin’ After Midnight, Bruno Nasta, Chris Biondo, Eva Cassidy
We first heard Eva Cassidy’s angelic voice several years ago from a burner CD that was given to us from a friend. Every since then we have sought out CDs that have captured her unique vocal interpretations of classic jazz standards, spirituals, and blues. Giving us and future generations the gift of music at a quality incomparable.
Great piece, Michael. I’ll never forget the first time I heard Eva’s voice. It was twenty years ago. I didn’t know who she was or that she had passed, and I’m glad about that, because it means her tragic story played no role in my initial reaction. My wife had been to Starbucks, heard Fields of Gold over the speakers, and bought the compilation CD on the spot. She brought it home and put it in the stereo. Various artists like George Winston and Yanni, doing cool, laidback stuff. And then, a cover — a frikkin COVER! — of Fields of Gold came on. In the intro, the singer goes into those delicate and gorgeous “hooooohs,” and by the time she finished the first verse, I had tears in both eyes. I was stunned and a little uncomfortable. WTF? Who IS this woman with these magical powers? I’ve played with dozens of singers onstage and in the studio, and NONE of them ever affected me this way! Then, like so many others, I went to the computer and discovered Eva was gone … and felt absolutely gutted. That’s an odd reaction to have about a total stranger, but I’ve learned that I’m far from alone. IMO, she is easily the greatest singer of all time. Who else has recorded authentically in every genre — folk, country, pop, rock, blues, jazz — except hip hop? No one! Who else has ever sung with so many textures and colors? It’s bonkers with Eva. Sometimes she’ll change the shape of her instrument to achieve a slightly different tonal shade. That she wasn’t snapped up by the very first record co exec will always blow my mind. She had the full palette, from delicate whispers to powerful belting, and was able to vary the emotional intensity like no one I have ever heard. She is Roberta Flack one minute, killing us softly with her song, and Aretha the next, raising the roof. Eva wasn’t a technically impressive guitarist, but her self-accompaniment on Over the Rainbow, Autumn Leaves, Kathy’s Song, Imagine, I Wandered by a Brookside, and so many others is almost as good as her vocals. It comes off like a sort of Call & Response, or a duet, even, and it’s as beautiful as it is rare. If Eva had signed with a label, no doubt they would have pushed her to record original tunes. But in this counterfactual world, I hope they would also have let her continue doing covers, because of her singular ability to re-interpret and make familiar songs sound brand new. We Eva-heads are seriously in Chris Biondo’s debt. There are many people in the Eva chain of success, but he is the primary link. Without Chris, the world would never have heard Eva. Ugh.
Always good to hear another interpretation of “Down Home Blues” – it was part of the regular rotation in Papa John Creach’s sets when he had drummer / vocalist Maurice Miller playing with him. Cassidy’s version is a knockout all its own. Her command of blues, country, jazz and folk here reminds of Tracy Nelson’s post-Mother Earth work.