Vesper Sky
Stewart Henderson, Yvonne Lyon and Carol
Henderson
Self-released-www.yvonnelyonmusic.com
For
those who lament the dumbing down of some media evidenced by TV shows such as
what passes for love island, we don’t have any talent and the questionable
factor (no capitals deserved), this album is a glorious antidote of songs,
poems, songs with spoken word and poems with music.
Singer/songwriter
Yvonne Lyon, who has played with Beth Nielsen and supported Eddi Reader, opens
with two strong songs including the title track Vesper Sky which has the
cadences of the best that Simon and Garfunkel ever produced.
Carol
Henderson who has a background in theatre, film and BBC Radio 4 drama, opens
her account with a reading of How Clatter the World against an ambient beat
Brian Eno would certainly approve of.
Stewart
Henderson, who writes much of the material follows next
with the poem Eyes Down, a lament and appeal to the wired generation to “look
up and consider this has been entrusted to you so that you do not look down”.
Breakages
read by Carol is about forced intrusions into our lives and our own wrecking
ball yet offers hope where emotion can find an outlet in word and song.
Humour
is introduced at precisely the middle of the recording with Stewart and the
jaunty Perfect Fit about not fitting in, expresses gratitude for finding a fit
with his partner.
Somewhere
in The Library cleverly reveals the nation’s most loved books in rhyme. Yvonne
Lyon returns in song with December Coast of Galloway where soft vocals effortlessly
blend with piano, flugelhorn and trumpet.
Half a dozen of the twenty tracks threaten to bring tears with the tales
of real life laid bare, but the delivery and the humour and the songs, evenly
balances the scales.
Poetry
doesn’t have to be painful. It doesn’t
have to be learned by heart for analysis only for examinations. To quote the last song of the album it’s to
Enjoy Not Endure. It’s first use was to
remember and convey human history and the brain searches and finds the meaning
not only through the sounds of the words but also through the silences.
All
You Need Is Love, The Beatles proclaimed. What the World Needs Now Is Love, Hal
David recommended, but I’d also advance that words and music especially of the
calibre of Vesper Sky, are equally as
essential to the human psyche.
NE