Support our efforts, sign up to a full membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Pop / Rock 09/08/2022

Sean Della Croce Shares An Ode To "Rebecca Henry" In Her New Music Video

Hot Songs Around The World

I Like The Way You Kiss Me
Artemas
112 entries in 25 charts
We Can't Be Friends (Wait For Your Love)
Ariana Grande
138 entries in 24 charts
Lovin On Me
Jack Harlow
348 entries in 23 charts
Beautiful Things
Benson Boone
309 entries in 26 charts
Stick Season
Noah Kahan
398 entries in 20 charts
Petit Genie
Jungeli, Imen Es & Alonzo
183 entries in 5 charts
Texas Hold 'Em
Beyonce
223 entries in 22 charts
Lose Control
Teddy Swims
452 entries in 25 charts
End Of Beginning
DJO
178 entries in 22 charts
Until I Found You
Stephen Sanchez
227 entries in 16 charts
Anti-Hero
Taylor Swift
626 entries in 23 charts
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Sean Della Croce begins her video for "Rebecca Henry" in a beautiful blur. She's present and radiant — we can see the tilt of her head and the movement of her hands, and the balance and poise in her posture, but she isn't yet in focus. What's more, the name of the title character is superimposed in white knockout letters over her face. Rebecca Henry dominates the foreground; Della Croce is in the background, gathering herself against a green wall.

But once she begins to sing, everything changes. The image becomes crisp, and deep empathy, longing, and concern are apparent on the folk-pop singer-songwriter's face. In gentle but trenchant lines, laid carefully before the listener like flagstones on a forest path, Sean Della Croce gives us a portrait of Rebecca Henry. The intensity of her performance and the acuteness of her observation makes her affection palpable. This is indeed a chronicle of budding love, but it's also a song about the pleasures and dangers of being seen — the thrill of apprehension in detail and color and the pain that comes when the object of your desire can't return your recognition.

That's a lot to fit into a three-minute folk song. But Sean Della Croce is a specialist in succinct, descriptive language. She knows how to make every verse a deep repository of meaning: sometimes through crystal-clarity and sometimes through artful ambiguity. Champions of nuanced songwriting have noticed, and Della Croce's compositions have been praised by critics at American Songwriter, Ear to the Ground, Audiostraddle, and other media outlets. She's also earned the respect of her Nashville peers, including the legendary Vince Gill, who called her performances "compelling"; Hall of Famer Gretchen Peters, who deemed her album Illuminations "unmissable", and the great storyteller Janis Ian, her forerunner, who dubbed her "one of the best young singer-songwriters I've heard."

There's something hushed and solitary about Brett Price and Connor Carroll's beautiful clip for "Rebecca Henry," but Sean Della Croce isn't alone in it. There's another woman here, too: a photographer with an antique camera. She's here to capture Sean Della Croce's image, but her attention to her subject feels somewhat less than total. She's a bit distant, maybe a bit flirty, a bit of a mystery, a riddle on the verge of coalescing into something deeper and more meaningful. If Della Croce does manage to know her photographer better, and if her photographer returns the favor, how will that alter the relationship? We can't know. But we're given some delicious hints.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S4)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.1426449 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0075640678405762 secs