Selah Sue – Reason (2015)

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Selah Sue – Reason (2015)

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1-1	Alone	3:26
1-2	I Won't Go For More	4:20
1-3	Reason	3:19
1-4	Together	3:21
1-5	Alive	3:41
1-6	The Light	3:46
1-7	Fear Nothing	3:25
1-8	Daddy	4:26
1-9	Sadness	4:01
1-10	Feel	3:39
1-11	Right Were I Want You	3:32
1-12	Always Home	4:18
1-13	Falling Out	3:50
	Bonus Tracks	
2-1	Gotta Make It Last	3:13
2-2	Stand Back	4:11
2-3	Direction	4:01
2-4	Alone (Acoustic Version)	3:41

Alto Saxophone, Bass Clarinet, Flute, Tenor Saxophone – Tracy Wannomae
Autoharp [Arpeggiator], Bass [Moog], Organ, Strings – Pieterjan Seaux
Baritone Saxophone – Sam Robles
Bass – Erik Rademakers
Bass, Drums, Guitar, Keyboards, Strings – Matt Schwartz
Bass, Guitar – Itai Shapira
Drum Programming, Guitar [Additional], Synthesizer – Ludwig Goransson
Drums, Percussion – Jake Najor, Salva
Drums, Percussion, Keyboards, Synthesizer – Robin Hannibal
Drums – Jordi Geuens
Electric Bass – Erik Rademakers
Electric Guitar – Itai Shapira, Yannick Werther
Flugelhorn, Trumpet – Todd Simon
Guitar – Selah Sue
Piano, Keyboards – Joachim Saerens
Synthesizer [Additional] – Joachim Saerens
Vocdals - Selah Sue

 

Selah Sue’s an artist you probably haven’t heard much of in this side of the world. More known in her native Belgium, you might’ve heard her collaboration with Cee Lo Green. Her eponymous full-length debut, released in 2011, showcases her gooey, husky voice as it tiptoes between soul and reggae. Reason, the follow-up, swings firmly towards the soul side, with less of the cliché and more of the cool urban sensibility. “Alone” is powered by a groovy guitar lick; “Together”, her collaboration with Childish Gambino, is a pretty tasty clash. Reason showcases Selah’s vocals without swerving too much stylistically. I would say it’s a good pop album, but it relies too much on fluff: the 50-minute album could easily be shorn of, say, fifteen minutes of filler. As much as I’d love to wrap myself around what I once described as an “aural marshmallow”, the second half of the album starts repeating itself and you feel frustrated. Pop albums, you see, they’re all about going straight to the point. Reason did, but then stuck around far too long. --- Niko Batallones, earthingsblog.wordpress.com

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