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Brave enough / Lindsey Stirling.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: LSM9.2 | Lindsey Stomp MusicPublisher: [Place of publication not identified] : Lindsey Stomp Music, [2016]Copyright date: ℗2016, ©2016Description: 1 audio disc ; 4 3/4 inContent type:
  • performed music
Media type:
  • audio
Carrier type:
  • audio disc
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Lost girls -- Brave enough (featuring Christina Perri) -- The arena -- The Phoenix -- Where do we go (featuring Carah Faye) -- Those days (featuring Dan + Shay) -- Prism -- Hold my heart (featuring ZZ Ward) -- Mirage (featuring Raja Kumari) -- Don't let this feeling fade (featuring Rivers Cuomo & Lecrae) -- First light -- Love's just a feeling (featuring Rooty) -- Something wild (featuring Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness) -- Gavi's song.
Lindsey Stirling, violin, vocals ; with featured performers.Review: Blending electronic music with a diverse number of musical genres that include pop, country, rap, alternative and rock, the album displays Stirling's impressive ability to push her own musical boundaries while continuing to embrace her own unique signature sound.
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Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Northport Library CD POP/ROCK Stirling, Lindsey Available 33111008670396
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Lindsey Stirling's third album, Brave Enough, is where her crossover sound falls nicely into place. Her first two efforts -- thrilling collisions of violin acrobatics and electronic embellishment -- were novel, but there was something missing to that new age dubstep. On Brave Enough, Stirling taps into a deep well of pain -- inspired by her own emotional maturity and the death of her best friend and keyboardist, Jason Gaviati, in November 2015 -- and the result is an organic interplay between her instrument and digital beats that focuses more on pleasant rhythms than dubstep muscle. Each song is a step through the processing of pain, an emotional roller coaster that finds Stirling on a journey to face the darkness and find a way to carry on. The ethereal "Lost Girls" cleanses Stirling's confusion with a Celtic raver. From there, a handful of guests assist in conveying Stirling's thoughts. Christina Perri adds her effective sentimentality to the title track, mirroring Stirling's soul with lines like "There's some things I should have said/I was too afraid/It was just so hard to let you know/Now it's all too late." From there, Stirling enters "The Arena" to get dirty with her demons, before rising from the ashes on the explosive "The Phoenix," which is what one might imagine if Nero hired a classical violinist. Shiny Toy Guns/Versant vocalist Carah Faye conveys Stirling's faith and trust in God on "Where Do We Go," while country duo Dan + Shay step out of their boots for a shimmering dose of nostalgia on "Those Days." Blues-rocker ZZ Ward adds gritty soul to the empowering "Hold My Heart" and Andrew McMahon carries the torch even further with the adventurous "Something Wild." Weezer's Rivers Cuomo and Christian rapper Lecrae appear on "Don't Let This Feeling Fade," but their star power never overshadows Stirling. On an album without a skippable track, the standouts are big moments like the tropical-trap jam "Prism" and the propulsive glory of the unique "Mirage" with Indian-American femcee Raja Kumari. Over 13 tracks of rousing violin stompers, Stirling continuously proves that she can party just as well as she can stir the soul. However, on the closing number, Stirling releases a wallop of sentiment. "Gavi's Song" is somber and mournful, a sweeping piano-violin gem that she began writing with the late Gaviati, later finishing it on her own. It's a quietly devastating heartbreaker that manages to lift the spirit with a tiny sparkle of hope. It ends with a faint recording of a demo session with Gavi, his voice the final sound on the album. It's a fitting tribute on an album infused with his spirit. That heart is central to what makes Brave Enough so successful: it's not just about cool crossover sounds anymore, it's about hitting that emotional target. Stirling and company pull it off quite nicely and Brave Enough ends up being one of her most listenable, enjoyable, and emotionally satisfying efforts. ~ Neil Z. Yeung

Title from disc label.

All songs cowritten by Lindsey Sterling.

Lindsey Stirling, violin, vocals ; with featured performers.

Compact disc.

Program notes and full credits on container insert.

Lost girls -- Brave enough (featuring Christina Perri) -- The arena -- The Phoenix -- Where do we go (featuring Carah Faye) -- Those days (featuring Dan + Shay) -- Prism -- Hold my heart (featuring ZZ Ward) -- Mirage (featuring Raja Kumari) -- Don't let this feeling fade (featuring Rivers Cuomo & Lecrae) -- First light -- Love's just a feeling (featuring Rooty) -- Something wild (featuring Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness) -- Gavi's song.

Blending electronic music with a diverse number of musical genres that include pop, country, rap, alternative and rock, the album displays Stirling's impressive ability to push her own musical boundaries while continuing to embrace her own unique signature sound.

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