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Fourth Person

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Download links and information about Fourth Person by Sarah Sharp. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Rock, Pop genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 40:35 minutes.

Artist: Sarah Sharp
Release date: 2004
Genre: Rock, Pop
Tracks: 12
Duration: 40:35
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Time Capsule 4:43
2. Run 3:00
3. Coffee Shop Song 3:59
4. It's Too Late 3:43
5. Encounter 3:29
6. Buzz Factor 2:53
7. Too Close 2:56
8. Can't We Just Love? (prelude) 0:22
9. Can't We Just Love? 3:08
10. Surrender 4:47
11. Finally 3:31
12. Be Still 4:04

Details

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Austin-based singer/songwriter Sarah Sharp has a distinctive voice, an agreeably sharp-edged vocal instrument that adds an element of spin even to songs that in other hands might seem a bit sickly-sweet. Easy points of vocal comparison include T-Bone Burnett, Amy Rigby and the underrated San Francisco-based folk-rock songwriter Sonya Hunter, all of whom have a similar nasal twang. Musically, however, Sharp owes more to Burnett's ex-wife Sam Phillips or even ironic New York jazz-pop chanteuse Nellie McKay: elements of cool jazz, Tin Pan Alley pop, and Magnetic Fields-like indie rock permeate songs like the bossa nova-tinged "Blame It on the Night" and the pretty but tightly wound "Coffee Shop Song." As a songwriter, Sharp is a bit too unformed to sound truly distinctive, but she does sound like more than the sum of her influences, and the best songs on Fourth Person, like the driving, keyboard-led folk-rock of "Can't We Just Love," suggest that this promising artist has the potential to create something genuinely great.