Gil Asakawa's Nikkei View | mara measor
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mara-measor-72dpi Mara Measor's eponymous debut album is a late summer treat, a collection of songs colored by a diverse palette that span roots in folk, jazz and alt-rock, with a splash of arty chamber pop thrown in. Her stylistic range merges into a studied sound that's both memorable and intellectually satisfying. (Kudos to album producer Jamie Lawrence for his light touch and diverse approach to framing Measor's music.) Her bio compares her to a mashup of Jason Mraz and Regina Spektor, but Measor's artistic scope also reminds me of a Jane Siberry, an idiosyncratic Canadian singer-songwriter who's less known because she's marched to a different drum all her career. Measor's music has a broad appeal so I hope that she won't have to work the margins of the mainstream and can break through to a wider audience. mara-cover"Mara" deserves to be heard. It opens with insistent acoustic strumming that punctuates the desperation of "Desperate for You," and the track introduces Measor's supple, sultry voice, which can soar from a whisper to a full-throated roar, matched by an arrangement that builds when it needs to and then returns to a plaintive piano and Measor's solo strumming to let the listener back down. The tracks that follow showcase her sensibility with mostly downbeat ballads and mellow swing and her wordsmithing -- the only cover on the album is Coldplay's "The Scientist."