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Hope

Foy Vance

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Album Review

Foy Vance's debut album has been a long time coming. Having spent the better part of the 1990s fronting a variety of soul and funk bands in his native Northern Ireland, he closed out the decade a transformed artist. His new style was steeped as heavily in traditional and modern folk as it was soul, gospel, and blues, and despite gaining significant acclaim as a live performer, it's taken the guts of seven years to produce a full-length release. That product, entitled Hope, is as optimistic and mood-lifting as its title suggests, as tracks like the standout "Shed a Little Light" and "^Hope, Peace & Love" testify; each evokes sleek Southern gospel as Vance bounces his smoky baritone off sweet female harmonies. Lead single "Be with Me" is an ambitious heavy blues that boasts a riotous Otis Redding-like vocal performance, while on the more reflective side, a curious mesh of influences involving Marvin Gaye and Bonnie "Prince" Billy gives rise to the beautifully understated pop number "If You Could Only See Yourself Like I See You." The lyrics are a little more complex; while the overarching theme is ultimately a vindication of hope, it's by no means a one-dimensional examination. Album highlight "Indiscriminate Act of Kindness" is Vance's greatest vocal; with the aid of little more than an acoustic guitar, he resurrects Jeff Buckley and Nina Simone at their visceral, unself-conscious best. Equally, the lyric is his bluntest by some margin, examining the less attractive side of charity with strong allusions to the Nativity story. A hotel concierge and a homeless drug addict form the updated, but no less sympathetic, cast. Hope's main pitfall is its length. It clocks in over 70 minutes, and while it only occasionally dips in quality, it's enough to render it a slightly disjointed listen.

Customer Reviews

absolutely whopper

the single critisism i can make is that it doesnt quite show how amazing this artist actually is live, probably the best album il hear this year

Unmissable

This is quite simply one of the best albums you will hear this year. The guy has such raw talent and it's captured beautifully in this album. I would include my highlights, but there are simply too many. My absolute favourite has to be First of July - it's absolutely captivating. By the way if you think this album is good, go see him live - you will fall in love. Top guy, top album. 5 stars.

Miss this at your own peril!

Grab this album and get tickets to go and see him live. A talent like this only comes once in a lifetime

Biography

Born: 1974 in Bangor, County Down, Ireland

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '00s

Though he spent most of his formative years in the grim surroundings of 1980s Belfast, singer/songwriter Foy Vance's musical vision is the product of an entirely different sort of nervous tension — the cross-racial friction, harmony, and disharmony that gave rise to jazz, blues, and soul in the American South, where Vance, the son of a traveling church minister, spent the pivotal first five years of his life. Drawn particularly to the spiritual aspect of those music forms, Vance took his cues...
Full bio
Hope, Foy Vance
View In iTunes
  • £7.99
  • Genres: Rock, Music, Pop
  • Released: 02 July 2007

Customer Ratings

Contemporaries

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