A Heartfelt Rendition of Billie Holiday's 'Lady In Satin' No images? Click here FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE M. WARD RELEASES NEW ALBUM ‘THINK OF SPRING’ TODAY A HEARTFELT RENDITION OF BILLIE HOLIDAY’S ‘LADY IN SATIN’ Photo Credit: Holly Andres Today M. Ward has released ‘Think of Spring’, his new album of Billie Holiday covers; listen to it HERE. Called ‘spare and haunting’ by Portland Monthly and “raw and nostalgic, personal and unpolished, romantic and real,” by the Portland Tribune, the album features classic songs “You’ve Changed” – originally written in the ‘40s by Carl Fischer - and “All The Way”, famously sung by both Holiday and Frank Sinatra. Additionally, “For All We Know” is a wistful yet beautiful track, saying: “we come and go like a ripple on a stream / tomorrow may never come for all we know.” Ward achieved the intimate sound of this record by filtering the original songs and strings through a single acoustic guitar, using various alternate tunings and a minimal amount of textures and studio manipulation. Most of the songs were recorded on an analog Tascam four track. The title Think of Spring comes from a poem written in 1924 by Jane Brown-Thompson that eventually became "I Get Along Without You Very Well" in 1938 - the first song on the record. Proceeds from Think of Spring will benefit Inner-City Arts & DonorsChoose via PLUS1 for Black Lives Fund. M. WARD http://www.mwardmusic.com/
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