This site too slow? Try a mirror  --  Subscribe to the Guide  --  Find artist:
the Ectophiles' Guide: * Guide Home* What's new* * Alphabetical* Genre* Commentator* Location* Random artist* Search* Contact the editors* Credits

Wendy Wall


Country of origin:

U.S.

Type of music generally:

Contemporary folk/pop

Status:

Most recent release, The Road to Paradise (2009)

See also:

Wendy Wall's site

Wendy Wall's CD Baby page

Comparisons:

Julia Fordham or a more mainstream pop/contemporary folk Happy Rhodes

Covers/own material:

Own, often cowritten

General comments:

Very, very ectopian. Her voice reminds me of no one as much as Happy Rhodes. (lissener@wwa.com)

I was playing this album on my radio show way before I had ever heard of Happy Rhodes, so that particular comparison didn't occur to me (though now that I think about it, it is an apt one), but I liked her voice a lot, and I played her quite a bit. Great stuff. (meth@smoe.org)

I picked this up cheaply after hearing these comparisons of her voice to Happy Rhodes'. Yes, there are similarities to Happy's low voice, and I kind of like her music—a little too mainstream for me mostly. (Neile)

Recommended first album:

Either

Recordings:


Wendy Wall

Release info:

1989—SBK Records/Capitol—CDP-92807

Availability:

Out of print, though wide on release

Ecto priority:

Recommended for fans of folk/pop

Group members:

Wendy Wall—vocals, keyboard, percussion, harmony vocals
Baker Lee—acoustic and electric guitar
Nick Pellegrino—electric and acoustic bass, twelve-string acoustic guitar
Dug Rock—drums
Urban Sanchez—congas, bongos, talking drum, coqui, shaker, tambourine, woodblock, cowbell, chimes
Heather Mullen—harmony vocals

Guest artists:

Shane Mitchell Hue—harmonica, organ
Larry Campbell—guitars, pedal steel, mandolin, fiddle, banjo
Jeff Smith—soprano sax
Arthur Rosen—keyboard strings, keyboards
Rob Fraboni—tambourine

Produced by:

Rob Fraboni

Comments:

Her voice reminds me of no one as much as Happy Rhodes. Her songs are, for the most part, a little more conventional—there are a few weak ones on this album—but when she's on, there are chills. (lissener@wwa.com)

I pulled out Wendy Wall's debut, and was pleasantly surprised to discover that I still like her older album quite a lot. It doesn't sound dated at all. It also occurred to me that she sounds uncannily like Julia Fordham. I'm not sure why I never thought that before. (meth@smoe.org)


Two Birds

Release info:

2000

Availability:

See Wendy Wall's site

Ecto priority:

Recommended

Comments:

Since it's an independent release it sounds less produced than her debut, and it falls very firmly into the contemporary singer/songwriter category, where her first one was more in the Julia Fordham vein. It's quite good. Her voice has changed a little bit over time: it's not as rich as before, but it's no less lovely to listen to. (meth@smoe.org)

Why the ads?


Artists commented on by
lissener @ wwa.com

41 - 50 of 50 entries

<<  6-O  P-Z

Click the bullet for speed (drop the menu) or the name for convenience (keep the menu)


>
Poe

>
Kate Price

>
Rasputina

>
Happy Rhodes

>
Jane Siberry

>
Alison Statton and Spike

>
Värttinä

>
Wendy Wall

>
Victoria Williams

>
Zap Mama

<<  6-O  P-Z


Other Commentators...
the Ectophiles' Guide: * Guide Home* What's new* * Alphabetical* Genre* Commentator* Location* Random artist* Search* Contact the editors* Credits

DISCLAIMER: Comments and reviews in the Ectophiles' Guide are excerpted from the ecto mailing list or volunteered by members of the list. They are the opinions of music enthusiasts, not professional music critics.

Entry last updated 2011-04-28 01:20:56.
Please request permission if you wish to
reproduce any of the comments in the
Ectophiles' Guide in any context.

The Ectophiles' Guide to Good Music is copyright © 1996-2004 by the editors.
Individual comments are copyright © by their authors.
Web site design and programming copyright © 1998-2004 usrbin design + programming.
All rights reserved.