Concert Review: Diana Gordon Is The Friend You Open Up To At Pianos

You learn strength when you lose someone because gaining that person taught you how to love. Relationships are vital to our spirit, not just because they teach us how to give, but they also teach us how to receive. Diana Gordon flips “typical love songs,” by adding her own growth and acceptance that someone can enter your life and choose to stay awhile because YOU ARE WORTH STAYING FOR!

I’ll admit it; sometimes, I am already thinking of the end of something before it begins, and that includes relationships. Having seen Diana Gordon a few years ago, I was excited to see her growth and her openness. Through her relationships with lovers, her family, and her dad, Diana is an open book because she, technically, does not have the option to be closed. Her art lives and breathes through the openness of her heart. Though that opens her up to pain, it also opens her to an unbelievable amount of wisdom and fruitfulness, which she sprinkles through tracks like, “Moment to Myself,“ “Too Young”and “Wolverine.”
Diana Gordon – Kool Aid

What I love about Diana’s performance style is that she see the stage like a breathing space. It is like her meditation room, which gives her concerts an odd, “yoga” ambiance, but it is your spirit that is stretching into a namaste. She truly respects the stage as a door for art, which thus transforms her into an artist. From “Kool Aid” to “Thank You,” Diana’s voice is the equivalent to doves soaring from a cage: absolutely ethereal. It is as if her body is, literally, holding celestial sentiments and messages that she can only release with “her key:” the stage. Add on that she is such a kind, sweet person, and she becomes to the audience, especially women, “the friend you open up to.”
Diana Gordon – Woman

We all have many acquaintances but only a few friends we can be sincere about our fears and depressions. We trust those friends enough to know they will not weaponize our hurt, and use it against us. Somehow, Diana Gordon radiates this “type of friend” through her performance, and turns herself into the singer you hear when you are trying to get through “something.” While most artists hope their art helps people, Diana Gordon knows it does. For More Information On Diana Gordon Click Here.