Joy Of It – Duke Egbert

Joy Of It
Earthlight Records, 2002
Reviewed by Duke Egbert
Published on Dec 3, 2002

When this arrived in my mailbox, I had almost dismissed it as
yet another independent release that wasn’t worth a lot of my time
— then I noticed Indigo Girls’ drummer Jerry Marotta played on it
and produced part of it. I shrugged, reconsidered, and popped it
into the stereo. I’m glad I did.

Jenny Bird is pretty damn talented, folks.
Joy Of It is a bright, clear, celebratory piece of
folk-rock, definitely worth a second — or even a third look.
Bird’s voice is flexible, clear, and uncomplicated — she’s not an
artiste, she’s a singer, and a good one at that. The production and
engineering on the CD is just as uncomplicated, letting the music
take center stage; there are spots where I swore I was listening to
an acoustic live performance (especially on “Fearless”). The
backing musicians are good; supporting the music without upstaging
it.

The real flower, though, are the songs. Jenny Bird is a
singer/songwriter, a throwback to the days when lyrics, music, and
guitar went hand-in-hand — and my gods, but the lady writes pretty
songs. “Greenwater”, “Dirt”, “Awakening” (with a very cool and
unexpected sitar descant woven through it), the bittersweet “Moving
Adrienne”, “Best Kiss” — each song is bright and passionate, warm
like newly-minted gold, sweet like honey. It’s all about the songs,
and the songs are brilliant. Bird infuses them with such a sense of
light and warmth that they cannot help but pull you in.

Joy Of It may be the best independent release I’ve heard
this year. It comes with the highest recommendation.

Rating: A

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