Liverpool Sound
and Vision
Reviews from a small country
Sheila K. Cameron, Past
Loves. Album Review.
Liverpool Sound
and Vision Rating * * * *
Love is a very
strange beast, we think back with fondness at those that have taken us for
granted, we adore the rose tinted glasses we wear when we think of those that
have let us down and we despair at the thought of those that we have left in
search perhaps of a greener field or those that left because they could not
bear us; modern love is all the rage but Past Loves are the ghosts
that spur us on and define our actions in the present.
Past Loves are important, it matters not how long they were in vogue, how much time
was spent, they all add to the story of the individual and in some cases can
make that person sparkle with energy and triumph, knowing deep in their heart
they have done something at least once that made that old lover smile. It is a
sentiment carried with great passion by Sheila K. Cameron in her album Past Loves.
In what is
described as a one off performance, Ms. Cameron takes on songs that she has
sang with great affection over the years and now, with a timbre in her voice
and a resonating smile at her disposal, she takes the memory of love down a
path, one that shines a light through the canopy of trees, past the bird song
and asks it to rest a while with the image of a corn stalk spritely hanging in
the corner of a meadow and the love daring to be kissed.
The tracks also
have the edge of bending the appreciation of the words, the use of gender
within them, the sense of the woman speaking perhaps not to a lover but to her
sex, the call of women all over the world who have been let down by a single
person and still for some reason carry a torch that shines brightly in the fog
and darkness for them. Like a lighthouse hugging the dangerous rocks of a
Cornish cove and coast line, it suggests that the skipper of the previous
relationship can still see the call of safety, but woe betide taking advantage
for the rocks can also, like a woman scorned, kill with a single look.
In tracks such
as Golden Slumbers,
Oh The Summertime Is Coming, Every Night When The Sun Goes In, But Black Is The
Colour and Drink To Me Only, Ms. Cameron takes on the world, she gives her love in the spirit of
the song and sends it into the world knowing, that like a giving and sensual
lover, it will always be remembered fondly and with passion.
Ian D. Hall
The link to the review is http://www.liverpoolsoundandvision.co.uk/2017/04/12/sheila-