RAMBLES.NET - Internet - 11/24/2001
(available on-line at http://www.rambles.net/forsyth_urhere01.html)
by Lynn McLachlan
Gina Forsyth is a gifted songwriter with a passionate and honest voice. Her
first CD, You Are Here, has already received considerable folk radio airplay
and I hope and predict she'll continue to find a wide audience.
Her songs are simple, strong, insightful and original. She's a master
songwriter, with a great ear for melody and an enviable way with words.
Forsyth's songs, and her ability to perform them, are so strong they would
have stood up just fine with just her singing and accompanying herself on
guitar. However on You Are Here, Forsyth is supported by an impressive array
of musicians -- 19 of them, which is a huge number for a debut album by a
young folksinger.
The album was co-produced by Forsyth and Andrew Calhoun, and was recorded in
Chicago and New Orleans, where Forsyth has lived since 1983. It consists of
12 of Forsyth's original songs, plus Mike West's "Don't Move Back (With Your
Mother)," a traditional Cajun fiddle tune and a rural church hymn. Forsyth's
style has been described as a blend of traditional Southern roots music with
a contemporary lyrical style.
An accomplished musician, Forsyth studied classical and jazz violin and has
toured with Cajun acts Mamou and Bruce Daigrepont. Although the Cajun
influence is present here, and Forsyth is a wonderful traditional player with
a voice that suits the traditional songs, for me the contemporary material
was the freshest and most enjoyable element of the album. In particular, the
first two songs, "You Are Here" and "Everywhere I Am," are excellent. With
catchy melodies and smart, economically-written lyrics, these radio-length
crowd-pleasers are sure to turn many ears in Forsyth's direction. "Everywhere
I Am" is beautifully arranged with a mix of folkie and pop elements (lots of
mandolin and Hammond B-3) which suit Forsyth's talents perfectly. Frankly, I
could listen to this one song over and over for days.
Thus hooked, you're likely to stay with the rest of the album, even though it
wanders a bit from the contemporary to the traditional and back again. Like
many multi-talented musicians, Forsyth is still in the process of deciding
what her own specialty is ... but that's fine. It's all good. Forsyth's voice
is confident and expressive throughout and she sings with a kind of barefaced
passion that is just plain lovable. The playing, both by Forsyth and her
friends, is wonderful and appropriate and the record is beautifully recorded.
My only criticism, which is minor, is that perhaps there are too many songs
here. I mean, 16! That's really a lot. And the inclusion of "Somewhere Off
the Foot of This Mountain" (a stunner of a song) twice, in both solo and
accompanied forms, isn't really necessary. Because Forsyth's vocal and guitar
work dominate both versions, I think they'd sound essentially the same to the
casual listener. (For the record, my favourite is the solo one.) On one hand,
so many songs (like so many support musicians) seems to testify to Forsyth's
enormous talent. It also answers the question she starts out with in her
liner notes "Where ya been"? (Writing a helluva lot of songs, I guess.) It
would have been challenging no doubt to cull this collection, but it might
have been a good idea. Then again, I tend to think Forsyth can do whatever
she wants, and she should. I'll be listening.
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