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Deena Chappell: CD reviews

Very few artists have the ability to successfully create in multiple musical styles, like Deena Chappell. While each song tells a different compelling story, is matched with a resonant musical style, and could be appreciated on its own, taking in the album as a whole heightens the experience of each song, builds a complex portrait of the artists who uses mythical motifs as an honest complement to her own story
Amanda Lacson - itunes
Laurie Anderson meets Frank Zappa!! An artfully, sophisticated frolic that lifted
my spirits up high, high, high!!!!!!! This body of work/play is truly ABFAB!
Katie Bowen, Songwriter - .com
A genre hopping "magical mystery tour" de force through the psyche encompassing swing, bluegrass, rock, soul, and folk; truly a circus unto itself, strangely familiar and yet unlike anything you've ever heard
CD Baby
This album is an amazing collection of stories that are delivered through a whirlwind of emotions and various styles of music that pull you in and hold you there to experience and enjoy the ride.
It is an exciting album that you can't put down, you find yourself on a journey with each track. I have never heard anything like it until now.
It is truly as unique as the artist, this is just a sample of who Deena is as a songwriter, a musician and a singer.
Truly one of the best albums I have ever heard and I can't wait for more!
Phoebe Nelson - Fan base (Nov 15, 2009)
Voices Of The Archetypes is a smart, eclectic blast of psychedelic folk music. You could call it a concept album, the concept being the quirky subconscious of charismatic singer/songwriter Deena Chappell Smith. It's loaded with stories told in clever poetry and a wonderful palette of sounds. With all its bounciness and humor you might think you're listening to music written for children. I could see a child being mesmerized by Smith's lovable songs but this is definitely a full-fledged, grown-up endeavor. It's sort of like adult music for the kid in all of us. Hey, it worked for The Beatles.

Deena Chappell Smith excels in all the folk styles she burns through. There's bluegrass (complete with an excellent guitar pickin' solo), swing jazz, light gospel, pop, and rock, all interlaced with unclassifiable nuttiness. The nuttiness is apparent from the very first song “Corporate” in which Chappell Smith plainly tells her boss “Sorry, I can't work for you no more. You and I both know that it means nothing,” while a twisted river of chimes flows in the background. It's the end of her deadening corporate life and the beginning of her adventure as a jester songstress. It's also sharp comedy as Smith lampoons her former employer and the corporate life she's leaving. Smith and producer Eric Geoffrey Belcher drive their point home with a few comical sound samples of real life. The song begins with the sounds of a stressful office and closes with Smith leaving the office for good, complete with the clip-clop of her high heels as she runs for her life. This segues into the revving of the “Big Green Bus,” a full-on psychedelic bluegrass jam.

The same humor and creativity continues through the remaining seven tracks, along with top-notch songwriting and assorted surprises. “Song For A Child” stands out as a wistful ballad but it doesn't break the flow. Smith kicks it up a notch with the hard-rocking tune “Shadow Thing.” It's got distorted guitars and mature themes, giving us a glimpse of Smith's darker side. The album ends on a lyrical high note with “Pandora,” Chappell Smith's frenetic tribute to Alice In Wonderland. In Smith's trip through the looking glass, Alice is the confident explorer Pandora who leads the way through Wonderland's fantastic maze. Luckily, Deena Chappell Smith does the same thing for us with her imaginative recording.


Nathaniel Rolnick – MuzikReviews.com Staff
April 4, 2010