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  The Graham Weekly Album Review #1330 by George Graham
(relativesight.com 1987-2 As broadcast on WVIA-FM 7/9/2003)

Listen to this review in Real Audio Format (click on CD cover)

Ever since the 1960s, there have been periodic attempts to combine rock and classical music. Most often the efforts have tended to focus on and perhaps highlight the differences between them, emphasizing the novelty of the mixture, from the Beatles' use of a string quartet, to the art rockers of the 1970s, to more current efforts, such as Corky Seigel's Chamber Blues. The outcome is mixtures in which the two ingredients have remained disparate. This week we have a group for whom classical instruments and the contemporary singer-songwriter style are seamlessly integrated. They are a Philadelphia duo called Relative Sight, and their new second CD is called More Than One Life.
The two members of Relative Sight are Janet Taggart and Heidi Palalay. They met when both were studying classical music at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, where they were roommates. And their choice of instruments would certainly have seemed to put them on a path toward a career in classical Music. Ms. Taggart plays the cello, and Ms. Palalay the oboe and English horn. In addition, Ms. Taggart also plays guitar, and Ms. Palalay the piano. But instead of forming a chamber music ensemble, the duo began writing folk-style songs and adding some impressive two-part vocal harmonies.
The result is an enchanting sound which moves easily between the classical influence of the cello and oboe and the lyrically thoughtful songs. Some of them quite are articulate and in the folk tradition, address social issues, including spousal abuse and reproductive rights. It's very pretty music that can carry a strong statement.
Over the last couple of years, Relative Sight has been attracting attention winning a finalist position in the 2001 Lilith Fair talent contest for the New York area, and garnering critical praise for their debut CD called General Housekeeping Tips, including from other artists such as the late Dave Carter.
On the new CD, the Relative Sight duo is joined on many tracks by additional players, including bassists Mike Fittipaldi and Doug Robinson, and percussionists Rob Tucker and Bill King, with the sound ranging from ethereal to intimate to rocky. Ms. Taggart is particularly versatile in the use of the cello, creating often unconventional arrangements.
Leading off is one of the more lyrically intriguing pieces, Lydia, by Ms. Taggart, whose words could be interpreted as being about a girl, an unwanted child, kept imprisoned in a house. The composer's cello dominates the sound. It's a striking piece.
Change Your Mind, also by Taggart, features a slightly more conventional sound, featuring the whole band, including Ms. Palalay's English horn. The lyrics of the fairly lengthy piece are rather self-explanatory, and no less articulate.
Ms. Taggart is heard on multiply overdubbed cellos on her composition Crumtown, a song about growing up in a seemingly uninteresting small town, but later being drawn back to it.
Ms. Palalay's composition Break the Cycle takes up the subject of abuse and battered women. The upbeat musical setting is deceptive, though the song is ultimately optimistic, as the protagonist moves to end the cycle of abuse.
Ms. Taggart set to music a poem by W.S. Merwyn. the song is called Native Trees, and it features Ms. Taggart on the piano in its appealing arrangement.
Another of the more fascinating pieces on the CD is Oliver Orange, also by Ms. Taggart, a kind of musical parable about ethnic diversity. An unexpected addition is the trombone played by one Dave Davies.
Perhaps the album's most provocative lyrics come on the song Dark Ages, ironically perhaps its most musically beautiful track. The song raises the specter of what would happen if the Supreme Court's landmark Roe vs. Wade decision were to be overturned, and there were a return to back-alley abortions.
The CD ends with two cover songs. One the old Roberta Flack hit Killing Me Softly, is about the only disappointment on the CD, since Relative Sight adds little to the song, when their distinctive instrumentation could have been more used more creatively. The other cover is a Leonard Cohen piece, Dance Me to the End of Love which is given an introspective treatment light-years from the sound of Cohen.
More Than One Life the new second CD by the Philadelphia-area duo Relative Sight is one of those rare recordings that really integrates classical instrumentation into a more contemporary context, in this case, the folk-influenced singer-songwriter genre. The cello and oboe are an essential part of their sound, and not just a style-mixing novelty. And regardless of their instrumentation, Janet Taggart and Heidi Palalay are outstanding singer-songwriters, creating interesting, and sometimes incisive lyrics for their distinctive sound. It's a very enjoyable album that can be appreciated on different levels, both musically and lyrically. And in both respects the duo are first rate, with the level of musicianship especially impressive.
Our grade for sound quality is an A. The mix by co-producer Will Russell, captures well the distinctive quality of the music, and adds just the right reverberant atmospheres. And the dynamic range of the recording is decent, which is increasingly a rarity these days.
One of the things that attracts me to musicians like Béla Fleck is that if you take away the unconventional instrumentation, you still have worthwhile and engaging compositions that would sound interesting if played by a regular rock band. The same can be said of Relative Sight. Though their classically-oriented instrumentation sets them apart, they have created worthwhile original music that could easily be played by others on more familiar pop-music instrumentation, without losing much. Relative Sight have created a definite sonic gem.
Performing Songwriter Magazine
TOP 12 DIY Record Reviews
by Clay Steakley
June 2003


"The hushed and utterly beautiful music of Relative Sight is immediately intoxicating and winning. Consisting of guitarist Heidi Palalay and cellist Janet Taggart, both of whom share vocal duties, the duo plays some of the sweetest, most hypnotic music you’ll hear. Whether it’s just the two of them quietly making their way through contemplative tunes like “Dark Ages” or if there’s a full band hammering through driving numbers like “Break the Cycle,” Taggart and Palalay bring sophistication and grace to the music. Other than their outstanding originals, particularly Taggart’s “Crumtown” and Palalay’s “Tell Me Rosa,” there are some well-chosen covers—the most notable one being a perfectly intimate take on Leonard Cohen’s “Dance Me to the End of Love.”

Check out the Performing Songwriter Magazine Website

To download complete mp3 tracks of "Crumtown" and "Tell Me Rosa", click here.

 

RELATIVE SIGHT
CLEARLY A FRESH TALENT

Music Commentary
Andy Stevens
Press & Sun Bulletin
Binghamton, NY
February 17, 2000

Relative Sight, General Housekeeping Tips (Tadpole)

Pop music is almost always strengthened by the use of classical instruments. I’m a sucker for a piano-based pop or rock song, and there is something about a cello that just adds an air of wonder to a song. So close your eyes and imagine a cello, a folk guitar, an occasional piano and two sweet female voices all working in gentle harmony with one another.

Or better yet, skip the imagination part and just hop out to pick up a copy of this debut release.

Janet Taggart and Heidi Palalay -- collectively Relative Sight -- have delicately woven 11 folky pop tunes, with influences ranging from blues to classical to new age and moods ranging from silly to bittersweet, from wrenchingly sad to jubilant.

Relative Sight has just the right formula for a perfect evening album. As singers, both women are wonderful and strong; their voices compatible but different enough to lend texture to the tunes. Palalay’s guitar work is gentle and assured and dances through the tunes’ melodies where Taggart’s cello work lays a robust atmospheric substructure.

As songwriters, Taggart and Palalay are good with a hook, and their lyrics matter-of-factly address universal themes. As producers, the two know the value of a gentle hand and a clear sound.

I once heard a story about a grade school teacher whose students' artworks were better than other teachers’ because she knew when to take the drawings away from the children. This same approach to understatement is true of Relative Sight: in creating songs for this debut, they knew when to stop in the studio.

Vocally, neither strains or oversings, but relies on her voice’s inherent sweetness and melody to catch the ear. Taggart and Palalay have lovely voices that work perfectly together as they weave their harmonies. Lyrically, the tunes are poetic but not enigmatic, smart but not pretentious, sentimental but not maudlin.

Musically, they opt for gentler sounds, harmonies that are at once bright and comfortable but unpredictable, instrumentations that are folky and familiar while still fresh and captivating.

These are all accomplishments that most artists never achieve on a debut album. Debut is so often synonymous with self-indulgence; in Relative Sight’s case, it’s synonymous with self-restraint, and is a sharp, stunning debut for it.

Favorite tracks for me are Don’t Be Sad; the Palalay-penned Noel’s Song, one of the saddest, simplest, most captivating eulogies I’ve yet heard (just listen to that piano...); and the spritely title track, a perfect pick-me-up album-ender.

Grade: A


Music Review
Stu Fox
Ithaca Times
Ithaca, NY
June 20, 2000

Janet Taggart and Heidi Palalay enrolled at Baltimore's Peabody Conservatory of Music to study classical music performance, but the freshman roommates soon discovered they had a common interest in pop and folk music.

They ended up spending much of their time singing and playing pop tunes in their dorm room, and eventually formed an acoustic duo called Relative Sight.

The duo, which features Taggart on lead vocals, cello, piano and guitar, and Palalay on guitar, oboe, piano and harmony vocals, recorded their first CD, General Housekeeping Tips, at Electric Wilburland earlier this year. The musicians blending of pop melodies with classical instruments creates an appealing atmospheric effect, and the sparse instrumentation during "Don't Be Sad" and "As I See It" provides an elegant backdrop for Taggart's enchanting vocals.

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