Ship of Safety
Sue Young
© Copyright-Sue Young
(885767918450)
Record Label: Motherlotus Records
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1. Ship of Safety |
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This original song was recorded as a vocal and bass duet with legendary bass player Roscoe Beck during the "Legend of the Quetzal" sessions in 2006. Sue's clear, pure voice and Roscoe's eloquent and meditative accompaniment carry the listener to a place of peace and transcendence.
Sue grew up in a big, music-loving family. Her mother played the piano, her father played baritone ukelele and tenor guitar, all five children played an instrument, and everyone sang. Sue started on ukelele at age 8, moved to guitar at 11, and has been singing and playing ever since. Music heard in her home while growing up included the Beatles, Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones, Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell, Bonnie Raitt, Stevie Wonder, Jimi Hendrix, Stan Getz, Bach, and Rogers and Hammerstein.
The Youngs moved around, but mainly lived out west- in Seattle, Washington, Salt Lake City, Utah and in Albuquerque, New Mexico. In 1977-78, Sue spent a year in Quito, Ecuador studying at University of New Mexico's Centro Andino. It was a magical time full of adventure and learning. She traveled around South America and fell passionately in love with Latin American music and culture. She began performing in clubs around this time and continued after returning to the States. She worked as a solo and in a duo in Albuquerque and Santa Fe. She also sang with a trio that did folk music of North and South America, and with Govinda, a jazz-rock fusion band, where her vocal style was once compared to "Appalachian scat".
In 1985, she moved to Austin, Texas, lured by the vibrant music community and beautiful living environment. Burned out on playing bars full-time, she began a series of part-time jobs and soon wound up teaching Spanish to young children, which she continues to do today. She's become a storyteller and has been on the Texas Commission for the Arts Touring Artist Roster since 1993. She has taken her bilingual show "Cantos y Cuentos-Songs and Stories of Latin America" to schools, museums, libraries, festivals and theatres around Texas and New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Colorado.
The Austin years have seen Sue grow and mature as an artist and a writer. The Albuquerque Journal has called her "one of the most versatile, heartfelt singer/songwriters around." She's opened shows for such luminaries as Lyle Lovett, Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Jesse Winchester and Kenny Rankin. Much of Sue's music has a mystical flavor. She sings in a church in Austin and has performed at churches throughout Texas and beyond. Her 1997 release "From the Mother-Songs of the Sacred Feminine" is an exploration and celebration of the feminine in various spiritual traditions, from Hebrew to Christian to Native American to Hindu. The Austin Chronicle describes "From the Mother" as "lush and loving...executed with care and genius...an angelic voice." Sue's most recent full length recording is the award-winning 2007 release for children and families "The Legend Of The Quetzal".
Sue lives in Austin with her beloved cat Cisco.
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A new spiritual for today
author: Lissie Connelly
Like the classics "Deep River," and "All my Trials," Sue Young's new spiritual, "Ship of Safety," seems written for depth and longevity. Sue's pure vocals, backed up only by Roscoe Beck's slow, meditative acoustic bass line, carry the listener down, down, down into the heart of peace.
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Sweet....
author: Spider Johnson
Counterpointing her dulcet voice with bassist Roscoe Beck's spare riffs, Sue Young delivers a powerful elegiac rendering of an uplifting contemporary hymn with "Ship Of Safety," slow and soothing.
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Breaking through to new ground
author: Dick Walker
Stark, powerful, hauntingly beautiful, near-Gregorian, music stripped to its core. Power wrapped seamlessly in beauty: pure art.
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