simply essential for any music collection....
author: Kate Eaton
This is a work of art, chalk full of great lyrics and incredible arrangements based on solid, creative and interesting song writing. I love this CD! One can never tire of this collection of songs written by Marcy. It is as varied as it is rich. Get a copy now and sit back and enjoy-
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witty, rich lyrics, & beautifully crafted- Even better to crank up & sing to!
author: A. Ogarek
There is a great variety of music packed into this CD- some beautiful ballads, some rockin'fun songs and some great folksy/foot-stompin/fiddle playin'/dancing tunes. Marcy's multi-faceted musical talent, clever lyricism, and magical, siren voice make this cd one of my favorites. The musicianship is outstanding.A few favorites: London Bridge, This Road, Road to Westcliffe
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A Blessing
author: Michael Benidt
Living in Colorado, I've been fortunate enough to hear Marcy in concert several times. This CD gives the listener a great feeling of what the concerts are like -- everything from raucus, rockin' songs to ballads of strength and mercy. Not a By no means just a Colorado artist, but we're lucky to be able to say we heard her first. She writes them, feels them, and delivers them. Think you'll agree.
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Marcy has imprinted this album with her soul
author: Kelly Mitchell
Marcy Baruch's first album, "Hathaway Smiles" as it begins with the song "Better Now" lures me into Marcy's lyrical intellect and true warmth. I feel the "gentle darkness" she sings of and I relate to her description of "relishing memories" and the sweetness of "time alone." I appreciate her innate ability to articulate, to truly communicate her thoughts vividly in images that I find poetic and purely beautiful. When I first heard her perform live, about 3 years ago, I was completely drawn to the ironically familiar words she was singing in what felt like my innermost passions and quiet thoughts being drawn from within me and it felt like she was singing them back to me in her honest way, with such conviction.
"Every Time" and "The Tide" (popular tracks from "Hathaway Smiles") were two of my early favorites. Marcy's original music grew on me like an old friend. It felt instantly familiar and jut got better and sweeter over time. I found myself thinking about her music fondly and singing her lyrics, her music, to myself over and over throughout the days. It was like thinking of an old friend and what that relationship meant in my life, how it enriched my life.
I knew there was real thought and intent behind the arrangements, harmonies and lyrics in her music. Her lyrics were, and continue to be, like nothing I ever heard, along with a musical style that held it's own that continues to be authentic. Marcy's music possessed this fundamental strength and character that I needed to hear, wanted to hear more.
After the first coffee house gig I looked forward to each and every one following. I became one of her biggest and truest fans. I eagerly absorbed the catharsis and the incredible feelings her music stirred in me.
I feel so strongly about her latest album, "Clearly". Marcy has imprinted this album with her soul and has really tapped into some powerful, powerful emotions. She speaks truths' of the human condition in arrangements that are striking, thought provoking and simply present.
"Clearly" also features some talented musicians (Joe Green, cello; Scott Surine, bass guitars, harmony vocals; Dave Shapiro, electric and pedal steel guitars, harmony vocals and more; Chris Filley, piano, harmony vocals; and Todd Moore, drums and percussion) known as "The Umbrella Band." I have spent a great deal of time with Marcy and these gentleman over the past 3 years and think very highly of their contributions to this album and to the Denver community.
"London Bridge" from "Clearly" has been a long time favorite Marcy Baruch song of mine. I love Marcy's songs for the intimate, often painful worlds they are. I live in the song for the cherished minutes and moments she cradles me and holds me there.
"This Road", also on "Clearly", is such an immediate song. Now that I have experienced the "Every Time" season of my life I am really in a place where "Funny how I'm so smart except for when it comes to you." and "Better yet don't keep in touch." really speak to me. "This Road" is so much fun to follow and gawd it feels great! It kicks ass!
On a morea personal note, I fell in love a year ago. Deeply. Then I heard "Wait For Me" from "Clearly" for the first time at Marcy's CD release concert in October of 2001. This intoxicating song hits you where it hurts most. I heard and felt her voice that night calling to the deepest heartache I could ever imagine enduring. The truth of my own experience of love for a man really brought this song home for me. It was sheer poetic agony taking in the images Marcy's voice created that night - of the loss, the death of this beloved person - this beautiful, beautiful thing becoming misery's unwilling sponge. I felt the hopelessness. The ache. The song has such well-crafted musical timing - there is just enough "pregnant pause" between tender pleas and yearning that my heart breaks every time I listen. Marcy has crafted a deeply moving and tender piece we can all relate to on some real and personal level with "Wait For Me".
Marcy's remarkable ability to write the beauty she sees in life alongside writing the unjust, the raw and the "brash" is one of her most notable strengths. I think that is why her music has such an accessible quality to it. I don't mean accessible in the empty, commercial sense, but in the rich, rare and simple human way she speaks the truth.
Marcy is a truth speaker. Marcy has eyes to see. Marcy believes in music with her entire being and writes it with such integrity, grit and such striking lyrics that I know - anyone listening knows - she really wants us to open our eyes and to feel deeply and purposely, with purpose. She is the kind of singer/songwriter I savor. Marcy has a gift and we are the fortunate ones..she's sharing it with us - openly.
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