Leah
Capelle - Joshua
The
second EP release from Chicago headquartered singer/songwriter Leah Capelle,
Joshua, is a luminous gem-sized marvel. This three song outing finds Capelle
further refining the qualities distinguishing her first release and often
evolving in deeper, emotionally resonate ways. The top flight production job on
the album presents these songs in the best possible sonic light and does an
excellent job placing Capelle’s compelling voice against these musical
landscapes. While many three song EP’s might feel or seem a little slight in
terms of what they offer their intended audience, Joshua never lacks for
emotional and musical heft. Capelle doesn’t restrict herself to a narrow range
of musical textures; instead, this brief release manages to touch on an impressive
variety of sounds without ever sounding like it is losing its way somehow.
Capelle, however, remains at the center of it all and her voice defines every
performance with its combination of technical savvy and emotional depth.
Both
of those aforementioned attributes are on display with the EP’s first song.
Capelle’s title song is a glorious stew of insightful lyrical observation,
stunning details, and an investment of feeling few contemporary singers can
hope to match. She is a breathlessly fine interpreter of her own writing, but
she’s equally a magnificent singer who gets the most she can from a musical
arrangement. She entwines her vocal with what the players offer up and their
lockstep chemistry makes this a memorable listening experience. She keeps things
gracefully brief as a songwriter, but it’s so skillfully handled that these
relatively brief compositions don’t feel restricted in any way by their length.
Instead, it’s a testament to her talents that she’s been able to condense such
complex experiences on deceptively limited canvases. The EP’s second track “Out
Now” has a much more deliberate sounding musical arrangement but hangs together
quite well. The lyrics and tenderness of Capelle’s vocal certainly suggest a
much more overtly personal air than the first track, which has a subject
outside of the songwriter, but even the suggestion of this rather than the
reality shows an artistry few performers possess and even fewer still
capitalize on so effectively. Her deft ability as a singer to alternate between
intimacy and open-hearted inspiration is put to its best use on this track as
well. Much like the opener, “Out Now” doesn’t run on too long, but it manages
to suggest and present much more in its allotted time than what you might
presuppose as a listener.
Joshua
concludes with the rockier strains of “Who I Am”. This is a heel stomping rock
and roll number with some country-like elements thrown in for good measure, but
nothing is ever handled cheaply here. This is handled, instead, with the same
immeasurable sincerity and passion defining the preceding songs and feels
consciously, but never clumsily, fashioned as a closing number. There’s no
question, as well, that these songs are built for the stage and probably no
single track embodies that better than the final song. Joshua is a stunning
success for this singer/songwriter and shows evidence there’s no appreciable
end to the promise she shows.
9
out of 10 stars
Montey
Zike
thanks for this great review! Ann Silberman, Little Cabin Entertainment and Leah Capelle :)
ReplyDelete