Cover La Boca

Album info

Album-Release:
2015

HRA-Release:
16.09.2015

Label: Jazz Village

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Vocal

Artist: Alejandra Ribera

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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Formats & Prices

FormatPriceIn CartBuy
FLAC 44.1 $ 13.20
  • 1La boca03:52
  • 2Goodnight Persephone04:24
  • 3No me sigas02:57
  • 4Bad Again04:31
  • 5I Want05:14
  • 6Cien lunas03:17
  • 7Mars04:26
  • 8Relojes02:18
  • 9St. Augustine04:34
  • 10Un cygne la nuit06:12
  • 11500 Miles05:12
  • 12Satellite05:55
  • Total Runtime52:52

Info for La Boca

If ever there were an artist who must absolutely be experienced live... Her trilingual album, La boca, unveils a cocktail of musical influences including folk-Latin, jazz, cabaret and pop, delivered in a sublime voice with a rare intensity pitched somewhere between Lhasa, Tom Waits and Édith Piaf. Add in a passionate, inspiring stage presence and devastating charisma, and we all fall under the spell elegantly tattooed on her right wrist: escuchame, “listen to me”. With pleasure…

„That much-abused phrase 'eagerly anticipated album' is actually valid in terms of La boca, the new (and second) album from enchanting chanteuse Alejandra Ribera. She has already earned a following in France, and that deserves to be duplicated here with this tour de force. Singing in English, French and Spanish, she straddles numerous genres, and her poetic passion and powerfully pure vocals will hold you captive. Noted producer Jean Massicotte (Lhasa, Patrick Watson) balances all the aural elements adroitly. She plays Maison de la Culture in Montreal on Feb. 13, and subsequent dates include the Royal Theatre in Toronto on April 11. Serious stardom beckons.“ (Kerry Doole, New Canadian Music)


Alejandra Ribera
is an artist with international roots — born in Toronto to an Argentinian waiter and a Scottish actress, raised in the heart of the city’s gay village — and a style that seems to remind her listeners of Edith Piaf, Lhasa, Tom Waits, and Joan Armatrading.

She spent her teenage years listening to the music and the passion of such varied artists as Odetta, Mercedes Sosa and Jimmy Scott, and her evenings sneaking into seedy gay piano bars and cabarets. These artists — and dozens more — shaped the multi-dimensional, multi-genre repertoire that is Alejandra’s hallmark today, and is at the same time her greatest weakness and her greatest strength.

Ribera’s disarming humour — on and off stage — contrasts with her frequently dark material, and an unconventional life that’s been full of adventures and misadventures.

For every listener who can’t come to grips with an artist whose music would be at home at a jazz club, a world music gathering or a folk festival, there are dozens fascinated by her no-holds-barred approach to songs that cross genres and borders with almost frightening ease.

For Alejandra, on stage, it’s a carefully constructed balancing act, and she very rarely falls. For the audience, it’s a roller coaster ride that may take them from Latin folk tunes to cabaret songs in French or Spanish to the unexpected jazzy moodiness to her own alternative pop songs. Her four-piece band skillfully matches the quality of her voice, the aching ballads of love found and lost again, as well as the international flight-of-fancy excursions and the unexpected pop approach of some of her own songs.

Alejandra Ribera is a musical force of nature. And she is on the verge of far wider acceptance. A new CD is expected in late Spring and new songs fill the notebook she carries everywhere she goes. Her performances are full of life and confidence.

Booklet for La Boca

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