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Mary Coughlan - - Red Blues -2002-

For those interested in exploring more of Mary Coughlan's music, here are some recommended tracks and albums:

For listeners and fans of vocal jazz, Mary Coughlan's "Red Blues" offers a rich and rewarding listening experience. It showcases not only her technical skill as a singer but also her deep emotional engagement with the music she performs. For those interested in exploring the boundaries of jazz and vocal performance, Coughlan's work serves as a compelling example of innovation and artistic expression. Mary Coughlan - Red Blues -2002-

The album is notable for its exploration of mature themes. Throughout the tracks, Coughlan explores: For those interested in exploring more of Mary

The album was recorded in an extraordinarily swift and organic fashion: in just four days during October 2001 in Bremen, Germany. Its very origins were spontaneous. Coughlan and her band were in the German city to perform at the Women in (E)motion Festival. With the musicians already assembled and free, the decision was made to capture an album live in the studio "ad hoc". The resulting sessions, taking place at COS-MIC Studio, possessed a sense of immediacy and camaraderie that is palpable throughout the record. The title Red Blues itself is a playful and self-referential nod, with the title being "a reference to her hair color," according to Muziekweb. The album fittingly finds her moving toward a more blues-oriented sound, a shift her "warm, very recognizable voice" handled "effortlessly". The album is notable for its exploration of mature themes

Red Blues solidified Coughlan’s reputation as Ireland’s premier jazz-blues chanteuse. Critics praised the album for its ; unlike many jazz vocalists who focus on technical perfection, Coughlan focuses on emotional truth . It remains a favorite for fans who appreciate: Storytelling: Every song feels like a short play.

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