#MusicReview: Martin’s In The Blink of A Life brings something new to the table.

Growing up, I was drawn to the song “Crazy” by Patsy Cline. I didn’t know why then (now I’m aware that her vocals on that piece were raw, honest, and carried you on an emotional journey despite the track being less than two minutes in length), my dad and I would just bond over how much that song spoke to us.


In much the same way, April Martin’s music speaks in a similar way: her vocals carry you on an emotional journey of where her heart has been, and her music reminds all who listen to it of greats like Loretta Lynn, Rosanne Cash, and Gillian Welch.


Click the image below to hear In The Blink of Life in it’s entirety.


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April Martin started her professional life as a Ph.D. in clinical

psychology and maintains a successful practice in New York City. Though

she made up songs in her head from as far back as she can remember, she

didn’t begin writing them down until later in life.


Her first album, Pennies in a Jar, was released in 2010, and garnered

more than 10,000 fans worldwide on Internet radio. This album, In the

Blink of a Life, takes her exploration of the human heart – which is

done with tenderness, humor, and passion, to greater depths of

reflection and maturity.


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On her work on this album and as a musician as a whole, April explains:


“When I was a child in the 1950’s you could

get a song sheet for 5 cents at the corner candy store with the lyrics

to tunes on the Hit Parade. My dad, whose natural tenor voice was always

bursting into song,  would give me a nickel each week when the new ones

came out. Together we learned songs like “Secret Love”,  “How Much Is

That Doggie in the Window?”, and “Oh My Pa-Pa.” These were some of the

happiest moments of my childhood.


Those songs were my constant companions. I overheard my first grade

teacher complaining, “If that child doesn’t stop humming I will go

crazy.” I hummed the tunes and memorized the words, which spoke life’s

truths to my little heart. I knew for a fact that love is a many

splendored thing, that Davey Crockett was king of the wild frontier, and

that when you load sixteen tons all you get is another day older and

deeper in debt. My musical tastes may have broadened, but to this day

I’m drawn to the simplicity of a song that makes me laugh or cry or

wonder about something that rings deeply true.


Songwriting came to me half a lifetime later, after spending decades

immersed in the human condition as a psychologist and a parent of three

children. To my surprise I found myself humming tunes I’d never heard

before and giving voice to things that welled up in me.


With every song I write I’m grateful to the people who trust me with

their vulnerabilities and joys, to my children who made me understand

love as never before, and to my dad who brought those wonderful songs

into my young world.”[image error]


Song By Song review:


One Breath: This song speaks volumes about something we all forget and we need a major reminder of in today’s world. We only have now. We must take life one breath at a time. Favorite line “It’s all about now, the why, and the how. It’s all about love.”


Heart Break Doesn’t Come: My favorite song off the album solely because of it’s musicality about all hell breaking lose but the speaker saying blatantly “heart break doesn’t come from loving me.” The guitar breakdown adds a nice musicality to the track.


My Rock and My Rain: This song boasts lyrics that are practically songwriter perfection. A perfect to dedicate to your upcoming valentine.


While I’m Waiting: This song could have stayed an instrumental for it’s suspenseful musicality through the use of a rain-stick and various other percussion instruments.


Looking Back: Perfect song to play at someone’s memorial, it’s a perfect combination of soft music, lyrics that are tears of memory, and soft vocals.


Everday I Love You More: A beautiful love song with nice percussive musicality


Would You Let Me In: The flute adds a great musicality to this song about falling in love with someone who is grieving.


Sara’s Lullaby: Taking on the sound of Spanish folk music, this is a both a pleasure to listen to and a little bit of a style change for the artist.


All I’ve Got: Vocally, Martin reminds me of Karen Carpenter a little bit on this track folky love song.


One Part Truth, The Party’s In Full Swing, Life is Good, and Praise The Morning all boast of Martin’s country style as a singer-songwriter, both lyrically and musically.


In The Blink of A Life


April Martin


Rating: Four out of five cookies


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Published on January 16, 2017 16:08
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