Time After Time

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Eva Cassidy
Time After Time

[ Blix Street Records / CD ]

Release Date: Friday 26 May 2000

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More beautiful songs from the late Eva, a golden voice

Singer Eva Cassidy didn't live long enough to share her gift with the world, says Marcus Dunk

Back in 1996, a little known Washington DC singer died after being diagnosed with melanoma. She was 33 years old. Although for her it was the tragic end of a very brief life, for the rest of the world it was only the beginning of getting to know the music and astounding vocal ability of Eva Cassidy.

Quietly and without much fanfare, over the past few years, Eva has become one of the biggest-selling recording artists in the UK, outselling even major label names. Her posthumous albums have sold upwards of 100,000. All this from someone who during her life could never get more than cursory interest from record companies.

"Eva deserves to stand in the company of the greats," says drummer Raice McLeod. "They had the capacity, as did Eva, of landing on a note - one note - and hitting it so true and holding it so perfectly, that it makes the hair stand up on the back of your neck."

"Eva has got that emotional reach that is undeniable," agrees friend and producer Chris Biondo.

Born in 1963 in Maryland, Eva early on showed an aptitude for art and music, and by the age of 10 was playing guitar and demonstrating a natural ability to perform complex vocal harmonies. It was the pure quality of her voice, however, that set her apart. Its emotive edge and wide range made it at home in any musical genre, whether that was jazz, folk, rock or pop, and it wasn't long before Eva was singing in numerous school bands. It was through one of these bands that she met producer Chris Biondo, who recognised her talent, and began to record her.

Shy, humble and reserved, Eva was initially terrified of the idea of performing in front of other people, preferring the company of her small group of friends and her job as a nursery plant propagator.

"Eva was never one to be in the foreground," says her mother Barbara, "she was kind of shy as a person. She had this wonderful talent and I believe she didn't realise until the end what a talent she really possessed."

Gradually gaining confidence, Eva began performing in Washington DC and soon acquired a devoted following, although record deals proved elusive.

"Her problem in a sense was that she was too good a singer," says Terry Wogan, who on his Radio 2 show was one of the first to champion Cassidy in this country. "I mean, she could sing anything - folk, jazz, ballads, rock - and in some ways she fell into the gaps between these forms. She never specialised in anything, and I suppose these days unless you do that, it's very hard to get beyond a certain cult status.

"But her voice! She's such a brilliant interpreter of a song. Her version of Somewhere Over The Rainbow - I never thought I'd say it - but it's superior to Judy Garland's. She's got a range and a tone to it that is entirely distinctive. She has the ability to take a song to all sorts of new places."

This is made clear on the new album, with one of the highlights being a version of the much-covered Bill Withers' classic "Ain't No Sunshine", which manages to bring such originality to the material that listening to it is like hearing the song for the first time.

Tragically, it wasn't long after Eva made one of her few albums, a live recording of a two-night performance at Georgetown's famed Blues Alley club, that she was diagnosed with the cancer that would rapidly kill her. Her last performance was at a tribute concert for her attended by hundreds, where with customary humility and good humour, she sang a heart-rending version of "What A Wonderful World".

"I think that what she does comes from a really deep spiritual place, and that's what I think people connected with," says guitarist Keith Grimes "Her motivating factor was music. She wasn't worried about commercial considerations. She didn't dilute what she did and she didn't waste her energy on doing anything that wasn't of the highest quality that she was capable of."

Tracks:

Kathy's Song
Ain't No Sunshine
The Letter
At Last
Time After Time
Penny To My Name
I Wandered By A Brookside
I Wish I Was A Single Girl Again
East Street Dream
Aniversary Song
Woodstock
Way Beyond The Blue