Leave Your Sleep Natalie Merchant

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CD - Two-Disc Set

Average Customer Rating:

( 34 customer ratings )

  • Release Date: 04/13/2010
  • 2 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 27,357
  • Label: Nonesuch
  • UPC: 075597980394
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CD$15.38

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

Overview -

Leave Your Sleep

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Throughout her career, Natalie Merchant has thrived on exceeding her own expectations -- no matter where her Muses led or her critics forbade her to go. Her last album, 2003's The House Carpenter's Daughter, rooted in American and British Isles folk traditions, was a stepping stone toward Leave Your Sleep. Where the former's songs were made of originals and covers, the latter marries them in sung poetry and original music from various traditions.

Co-produced by Merchant and Andres Levin, the double-disc Leave Your Sleep contains 26 new songs recorded live in the studio. She used the poems, anonymous nursery rhymes, and lullabies of 19th and 20th century British and American writers as source material and set them to original music. Among the authors included are Ogden Nash, e.e. cummings, Robert Louis Stevenson, Christina Rossetti, Edward Lear, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Mervyn Peake, Eleanor Farjeon, Nathalia Crane, and Robert Graves. Poetry is but one part of the story, however. Merchant composed music from across the genre spectrum: New Orleans swing on "'Bleezer's Ice Cream'" (Jack Prelutsky) and Crane's "'The Janitor's Boy'" are performed by Merchant fronting the Wynton Marsalis Orchestra; the Yiddish folk music of "'Dancing Bear'" (Albert Bigelow Paine) pairs her with the Klezmatics; Peake's "'It Makes a Change'" is performed by Medeski, Martin & Wood with a horn section; "'If No One Ever Marries Me'" (Laurence Alan-Tameda) is Appalachian backporch music with hammered dulcimer, banjo, upright bass, and guitar. "'The Blind Men and the Elephant'" (John Godfrey Saxe) is cabaret jazz played by Hazmat Modine with the Fairfield Four and the Ditty Bops on backing vocals. Stevenson's "'Land of Nod'" is a gorgeous orchestral piece with a Celtic flavor. Speaking of Celtic, Rosetti's "'Crying, My Little One" is performed by Lunasa backing Merchant. Through it all, of course, is that voice, Merchant's throaty trademark. It expresses itself emotionally, honestly, and precisely, without resorting to dramatic tropes to get meaning across. The album closes first with Hopkins' contemplative, melancholy "'Spring and Fall: To a Young Child,'" with a symphony orchestrated by Merchant and Sean O'Loughlin, and finally with Lydia Huntley Sigourney's haunting "'Indian Names'" by a string quartet accompanied by Joseph Fire Crow on Native American flutes, drums, rattles, and narrative, with chanting by Jennifer Kreisberg. It sends the set off much where it begins, illustrating poetry's ability to provide its own musical instruction, comfort, poignancy, and sense of wonder to the experience of everyday living. Merchant succeeds in spades; the extensive research and discipline pay off handsomely. Leave Your Sleep is easily her most ambitious work, yet because of that welcoming voice, it provides familiarity enough to gather listeners inside this world of sound. Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

Recently purchased and very highly recommend.by ManningtonPhil

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July 10, 2011: Heard an interview on Public Radio and was impressed. I had forgotten that Natalie Merchant sang with the 10,000 Maniacs. Purchase the double CD package and have been playing it every day. Even read and played some of the pieces to 3 of my young grandchildren. My wife also loves this. Anyone who loves poetry should buy this. Anyone who loves music should buy this. Anyone who loves children should buy this for them and then read other similar pieces to them. Did I say my wife loved this - we don't always agree on music but we do on this. Marvelous is too mild a word. Even the darkerside of some of these pieces seem gorgeous in this presentation. Very well done. Mannington Phil

Leave Her CD...by KennyC2000

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October 01, 2010: Natalie may have been better off remaining asleep. She has a wonderful voice, but this new material does not have nearly the commercial appeal of her past material. It is the type of music one might share with his or her children around the house, with few of the songs having the potential of becoming family favories. Natalie was obviously inspired to write these songs, but I think the audience appeal will be limited. She is a very talented artist, however, and I admire her ambitions to go with what she believes in. I hope I'm wrong in my predictions for this CD and certainly wish Natalie success and happiness in her personal and professional life!


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