Mandy Barnett

Mel O'Drama

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She's hitting all the right notes for me recently (quite literally). That voice is like rich, strong, bittersweet coffee. From the velvety smooth base notes through its throaty, confident mid-range to sweeping highs. There's never a sense of her shifting gears. Everything flows and feel connected. Each song she sings is held gently and treated with respect and love.

The Opry describes Mandy thus:
An uncompromising singer whose style is rooted in the classic country of Patsy Cline, Jim Reeves, Webb Pierce, and Brenda Lee, Mandy Barnett’s keen interpretive sense enables her to delve into a song, study the intricacies of its emotional content, and render a powerful performance through her full-bodied voice. Her torchy delivery on her contemporary yet retro-sounding country and pop-tinged material harkens back to the likes of all-time great female singers and timeless sounds.

Mandy has starred as Patsy Cline in the musical production Always…Patsy Cline at Ryman Auditorium in Nashville on and off since 1994 – most recently in Summer 2011. Mandy tours regularly in concert, nationally and internationally, and is a frequent guest on the Grand Ole Opry.

She has released critically applauded albums, including her self-titled debut, I’ve Got a Right to Cry produced by Owen Bradley, the Christmas album Winter Wonderland, Sweet Dreams, and I Can’t Stop Loving You: The Songs Of Don Gibson. Mandy has also been featured on movie soundtracks.

Reviewers have heralded Mandy’s talents as “one of the most beautiful ‘classic country’ female voices of all time. She has total control of her voice and sings effortlessly. Barnett is a true master of her craft.”

I belatedly discovered Mandy back in July 2017, when one of her performances of Crazy came to my attention during one of our Standards rounds. Even with the less than stellar video quality and the occasionally rowdy crowd, her talent shone through:



Within a couple of weeks, her first two albums were being heavily played, as well as her tracks from the Traveller soundtrack. And I added her Christmas album which is one of my favourite seasonal albums. In time all her other albums were added to my collection, completed just last week by the elusive I Can't Stop Loving You: The Songs Of Don Gibson.

Last month was the twenty-fifth anniversary of her debut album, and there have been some long windows where she hasn't recorded, so it's definitely a case of quality over quantity. This made the recent announcement of her upcoming eighth studio album - Every Star Above - a lovely surprise. Especially with it coming less than seven months after A Nashville Songbook, which is one of her best. Needless to say, I've pre-ordered.

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Mel O'Drama

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A few from her latest album that I can't get enough of at the moment:







She reminds me so much of Karen Carpenter in the intro to Hey Won't You Play. Which is a very good thing.
 

Mel O'Drama

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She’s really incredible! That voice is one of the finest I’ve ever heard.

It's beautiful, isn't it? Have you got any favourite Mandy tracks?

The arrangements are wonderful as well. Mandy seems to attract the best and most experienced artists who want to work with her. Many of the people playing instruments on her tracks have worked with greats like Pasty Cline, Elvis Presley and Brenda Lee. They obviously know quality when they hear it.

Although her Don Gibson covers album came a decade after he died, he was also someone who loved her voice. He and his wife went to one of Mandy's shows in 2001 and they became friends. I think he'd have approved of her beautiful covers of his songs.

 

DallasFanForever

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@Mel O'Drama I think my favorite tracks of hers would be The End Of The World, at least for her more recent songs. I’m also a big fan of Now That’s Alright With Me, but that one was much earlier. I think she recorded that way back in the mid 90s when she was very young. It could’ve been her first album but I’m not sure on that one.
 

Mel O'Drama

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I think my favorite tracks of hers would be The End Of The World, at least for her more recent songs.

Oh yes. That one's lovely. It's my most-played track from A Nashville Songbook because she released it as a single around nine months before the album, and I listened to it a lot in that time.

I'm so impressed with that whole album. The song choices. The vocals. The arrangements. It's all flawless. I have a feeling the new album will have a similar "feel", so I'm counting the days until it's released. Only six weeks or so to wait now!!


I’m also a big fan of Now That’s Alright With Me, but that one was much earlier. I think she recorded that way back in the mid 90s when she was very young. It could’ve been her first album but I’m not sure on that one.

Yes. Twenty five years ago, can you believe? She'd only have been twenty when she recorded that one, but you wouldn't know that to hear it because her voice was so rich even then.

I love the Sixties vibe of that song. It sounds so much like a Roy Orbison track I can practically hear him singing it.
 

Mel O'Drama

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Back on the old site, I attempted an album-by-album, track-by-track journey through Shirley Bassey's discography, which ended up fizzling out. Even so, I thought I'd occasionally do the same here with Mandy's albums. Starting with the first track of the first album:






Mandy Barnett
(1996)



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Track 1:
Planet Of Love








When I took the plunge and ordered Mandy’s debut album off the back of watching a few YouTube performances, I listened to it from start to finish (something I shamefully do less and less in recent years, as my music library has become one of shuffling and playlists).

By the time I reached the end of this first track I knew without doubt that it had been a good investment.

Beginning with an alluringly smoky jazz club mellow vibe. Mandy’s vocal is supported only by minimal instrumentation. There’s a plucked bass in the low range, and a slightly more urgent tippy-tappy sound at the top end.

Mandy’s voice is crystal clear and gentle, evoking the likes of Patsy Cline or Karen Carpenter. Even here her trademarks are included. There’s a sexy yodel or two which add a countrypolitan touch. I’m not often a fan of yodelling. Quite the opposite. Listening to almost any Leona Lewis track, for example, makes me evil because of her tremulous and liberal yelps and whines. But there’s something I can find quite attractive about country yodelling when used judiciously. And Mandy certainly ticks that box. Whatever she does, it always feels appropriate and in harmony with the track. It’s never distracting or showy.

Similarly, her elongating vowels, subtly sliding up or down with each one, adds something really special that enhances the track. It sounds disparaging to say it feels lazy and soporific, but it does: in the best possible way. It brings a dream-like quality that’s perfectly in harmony with the fantasy analogy of the lyrics:
I’ve found a new planet that only I can see. Just came back to get you, let’s leave this misery….

It’s at this point, twenty five seconds in, that the first progression happens. As Mandy stretches that final vowel sound of “misery” to breaking point, there’s a gentle strum and more instrumentation gently saunters in and Mandy’s voice subtly rises in power to match it.

Another twenty seconds or so and the same thing happens following another elongated vowel. A proper beat kicks in and way up in the background there’s a chorus of angelic voices oooh-ing away.

By the time the second chorus comes in we’re almost at full power. But because we’ve gently built up speed as we’ve gone along it’s never jarring. We’re on a pleasant little journey and, rather than suddenly flying down a slip-road onto a motorway, we’ve taken the country route.

This build up is used to great effect just after the two minute mark where much of the instrumentation drops out and starts building again. This time we go a little quicker until we reach the power note around three minutes. But even after this, the song plays with expectations by letting the chorus of voices sing us off as the song fades gently away into space.

The arrangement isn’t far away at all from Jim Lauderdale’s original version, but the impact is quite different. Jim’s vocal sounds more urgent and full-on from the beginning.


Compared with Mandy's Patsyesque rendition, he’s almost shouting those opening lyrics. When he says he “just came back to get you”, it sounds more like a drill sergeant’s order than a lover’s enticing invitation. Despite its slower pacing, Jim's version doesn't have the dreamy mellow indulgence that Mandy brought to it. Though it has to be said his version is pretty damned good. And he did write it!

As opening tracks to debut albums go, this is pretty perfect and showcases many of Mandy’s strengths as a performer. It's faithful to its source, while being a valid piece of art in its own right.
 

DallasFanForever

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You know, that’s the first time I’ve listened to both versions back to back and I have to say I prefer Mandy’s hands down. I love the jazz club vibe she gives the song, as you put it Mel. It’s like her voice was meant to sing that song.
 

Mel O'Drama

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This afternoon I've received an email from Amazon telling me a package is on its way. At first I thought it was spam because I haven't ordered anything this week. But I've now realised it can only be...

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I can't wait. First a new Tina Arena song. Now this. It's a great week in music for me.
 

Mel O'Drama

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Four years on and Every Star Above has been one of the loves of my summer and this trend seems set to continue into autumn. Sammy Nestico's velvety smooth arrangements suit Mandy's voice perfectly and is a very fitting legacy as his final contribution to music (he died some months before its release).

I've just rewatched the EPK which is really a making of video, and it's still lovely and quite moving, all things considered.



The tracks which resonate with me most are tracks with with I was either entirely unfamiliar (But Beautiful; Glad To Be Unhappy; I'm A Fool To Want You), or wasn't particularly fond of in other artists' recordings (You've Changed).

I must confess I'm not familiar with Billie Holliday's Lady In Satin album (nor much of Billie's work in general), but I feel I probably should check it out at some point for the full context. I'm also curious about the reason for omitting I'll Be Around and Violets For Your Furs from the Mandy album (I'm guessing it's as simple as running time). Really, though, Every Star Above is a gorgeous album in its own right, and I'm sure has won and will continue to win Mandy a wider fanbase.

And call me greedy, but I find myself regularly checking to see if there's a new Mandy album on the horizon. Well, it has been almost four and a half years, and it's not possible not have too much of a good thing.
 

Mel O'Drama

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Also, in the time since I last posted on this thread, Mandy has become an official Opry member. My only question is... why did it take three decades?

 
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