Fusion 45 on Rebecca Anderson and My Brightest Diamond

I love to meet spirited people. I love to hear good music. When both those things happen at the same time, I’ve scored the “jackpot prize,” as my kids would say.

Back in June, I wrote about my good friend from Ypsilanti, Michigan, Rebecca Anderson. She’s one remarkably talented singer and songwriter. She’s also a really nice person who takes a nice picture, as you see above.

I learned today that she has a couple of new songs on her MySpace Music Page. I highly recommend you give her a listen (and then tell all your friends). There are a few things that strike me about her music:

  1. She writes beautiful melodies that stretch beyond the standard intervals you hear in most pop music. Her melodies often surprise me: they’re angular without being overwrought, her vocal style accomplished without being over the top. When she sings a minor 6th, it serves a purpose rather than serving her ego. She creates enough tension that I sometimes feel like I’m looking over the edge of a cliff, worried that I might fall but knowing she’s not going to let go of me.
  2. Both of her new songs, Change Me and Gravity, are piano/vocal pieces that feature some deep, poignant harmonies. On Change Me, in particular, I hear her classical training melding with a late 60′s pop sensibility. Beneath her complex melodies, I hear lush harmonies that remind me of Prelude‘s cover of After The Gold Rush and some of those pop songs by Wilson Phillips. (I hope she’s not insulted by that: Wilson Phillips, saccharine though might have been, definitely knew how to sing together).

When you’re done being knocked out by Rebecca’s self-proclaimed mix of Christian/Japanese/Classical/Soul music, come back and look at this video for Inside A Boy by Rebecca’s friend, Shara Worden (a.k.a., My Brightest Diamond).

It starts mellow but kicks into a cool polyrhythmic groove around 1:00 and a great guitar riff shortly thereafter.


My Brightest Diamond – Inside a Boy

Though quite different, Shara’s and Rebecca’s music share the same fluid spiritual and textural elements. They both conjur images of well-grounded women, kneeling before a quiet pond, reaching deep below the surface to find something in the water beyond their reflection. Sometimes it’s peace, sometimes it’s pain but it will always surprise you.

Comments

One Response to “Fusion 45 on Rebecca Anderson and My Brightest Diamond”
  1. Bruce says:

    Hi there: You’re right, Rebecca Anderson is great. But I’ve searched every download service I can think of, and I can’t find any of her work. Any hints? Thanks, Bruce

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