Baggage Holiday
Aled Thomas Trio
© Copyright-Aled Thomas Trio
(5060139950800)
Record Label: Itchy Knee Records
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A follow up to the critically acclaimed first album.
Featuring “The Post Office Song” that made headlines in February 2009 and was used by a local political party in a campaign against long queues!
Also featuring “Every Street” and “I Won`t Let Them” – Finalists in the 2009 UK songwriting competition
Review of Baggage Holiday by American magazine JazzReview
Featured Artist: Aled Thomas Trio
CD Title: Baggage Holiday
Year: 2010
Record Label: Itchy Knee Records
Style: Jazz Vocals
Musicians: Aled Thomas (piano and vocals), Jasper Morrissey (drums), and Dave Jenkins (electric fretless bass and double bass)
Review: Aled Thomas sounds like he could use a hug. Lucky for us that means he has written some good songs.
His trio opens the CD with the title track, a clever number about checking in your emotional baggage at the airport and sending it away for a week. Thomas holds out hope that his troubles will get lost for good. “If there’s one place they’re likely to lose your baggage, it’s Heathrow Terminal Five,” sings the British pianist and vocalist.
Thomas is a good antidote to those young jazz singers who strike a pose that’s too smooth and too slick. While they may be hip, Thomas revels in being every man. He’s put upon, weary, and funny. If he traded in his piano bench for a sit-com, he would play the acerbic office mate.
If he had to be compared to another songwriter, Randy Newman might be a good choice. Both are adept at capturing the spirit of a particular moment in time.
On “The Post Office Song,” Thomas sings about a post office worker coming to visit him at home. Thomas naturally makes him wait in line before informing him that he has to fill out a form and then rejoin the queue. He then goes to lunch, leaving the post office worker to wait for him. It’s a revenge song that could easily fall flat, but Thomas delivers the lines with just the right touch of humor.
Thomas has writing credits on 11 of the dozen songs on the CD. The exception is a spirited cover of Irving Berlin’s “Blue Skies.” It’s a nice response to the troubles he sings about in the other numbers.
Tracks: Baggage Holiday, Every Street, Not Here Tonight, Background Music, Function Band, Nagging Blues, Your Name Upon It, Wake Me Up, Archway Snooker Club, I Won't Let Them, Blue Skies, and The Post Office Song
Artist's Website: http://www.aledthomastrio.com
Reviewed by: Donna Kimura
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