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| Eleanor McEvoy | Primary Artist, Guitar, Violin, Vocals, Background Vocals |
| Liam Bradley | Percussion, Drums, Vocals |
| Eoghan O'Neill | Bass |
| Brian Connor | Piano, Keyboards |
| Brian Greene | Web Design |
| Eleanor McEvoy | Producer |
| Ian Cooper | Mastering |
| Ruadhri Cushnan | Engineer |
| Mick O'Gorman | Concept |
| Brian Connor | Producer |
| Rod Callan | Logistics |
| Leendert van Zanten | Mastering |
Editorial Reviews
All Music Guide - Evan Cater
Yola was Eleanor McEvoy's follow-up to the lavishly produced pop record Snapshots, but the two records could hardly be farther apart in instrumentation. Recorded semi-live, set entirely in sparse piano-guitar-and-drum arrangements, and conceptually centered around McEvoy's partnership with classically trained pianist Brian Connor, Yola seems to find its guiding principle in its final song, which celebrates "something so wonderful, something so pure." The purity of the arrangements is indeed wonderful. McEvoy sings "Seasoned Love" in a piano-only performance that sounds like a number from a Stephen Sondheim musical, and goes a step sparser on "Isn't It a Little Late?," which ...