The Hamilton Spectator

Kat Edmonson truly sings like an ‘Old Fashioned Gal’

- PABLO GORONDI

Kat Edmonson’s “Old Fashioned Gal” sounds like an alternate soundtrack to an Audrey Hepburn film, 11 self-penned songs of gentle romance and vulnerabil­ity in a decades-old style sparkling with modern sensibilit­ies.

And then there’s her voice. Part bashful debutante, part starry-eyed fiancée, part worldwise seductress, it possesses a singular expressive­ness that puts her at the curious intersecti­on of Karen Dalton, Blossom Dearie and Eartha Kitt.

Coming off a successful album with producer Mitchell Froom — “The Big Picture” from 2014 — Edmonson takes charge here with songs she wrote in the winter of 2016 while battling a bad cold and watching 1930s movies.

She then framed her tunes like the screenplay of a musical and they became her fourth disc.

Edmonson’s compositio­ns are top notch, filtering the Great American Songbook through a very feminine perspectiv­e influenced by more recent singersong­writers like Carole King or Joni Mitchell.

Highlights include the title track, in which she offers traditiona­l alternativ­es to pop-up ads, dating sites and other entrapment­s of contempora­ry relations.

“Please Consider Me” is more self-promotion but with Parisian locations, while “Goodbye Bruce” is a minimalist but deeply felt farewell to her mentor, “such a lovely guy.”

“Canoe” recounts how a couple’s date on a lake affects its insect population.

“What freedom it would bring/ If I could sing,” she declares on “A Voice,” lyrically musing about her personal and artistic qualms.

With her voice front and centre whether accompanie­d by an orchestra or just a piano, Edmonson’s doubts seem quelled by the strength and confidence of her performanc­es, each a highlyenjo­yable chapter of self-healing.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? "Old Fashioned Gal" by Kat Edmonson. (Spinnerett­e Records)
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS "Old Fashioned Gal" by Kat Edmonson. (Spinnerett­e Records)

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