Sarah VAUGHAN - Live in '58 & '64
Holland/Sweden
Jazz
Sarah Vaughan arguably was the most phenomenal singer of her century. Musicians loved her. Most were in awe of her. All respected what they almost unanimously agreed was her innate musicality. “She was born with a gift,” insisted towering blues and ballad singer Joe Williams.
“She sings like a horn,” John Birks “Dizzy” Gillespie praised. “She can sing notes that other people can’t even hear.”
Unlike many of her contemporary divas, she was reared the only child in a stable, religious, strict and loving home in Newark, New Jersey. Her father, Asbury “Jake” Vaughan disapproved of show business. Her mother, who sang with Sarah in the Mt. Zion Baptist Church Choir, was more understanding. Sarah absorbed essential musical grounding through piano and organ lessons from the ages of seven to fifteen. At twelve, she became one of Mt. Zion’s regular organists.
The Swedish television program on this DVD was filmed following a month-long engagement at Cité Varieté in downtown Stockholm, according to the Swedish newspaper Estrad and Göran Wallén, now a concert impresario in that city.
Johnnie Garry, Sarah’s road manager since they met during her 1946 gig at Barney Josephson’s fabled Café Society Downtown, was coordinating the European itinerary. Johnnie delighted in everything about his job. Sarah not only depended upon his efficiency, she relied on his judgment so completely that she accepted his edict that her stage wardrobe must be exclusively white. “She had her choice of what she would wear,” he said, “but we convinced her about white.” This facilitated his creating dramatic visual effects as she sang.
“In those days, it wasn’t computer lighting,” he relates. “You had levels you could hold if she wanted to slow down. You could never know what Sarah was going to do—except you couldn’t write cues...If she sang something up-tempo, we’d brighten it up a little bit. On ‘Mean To Me,’ for example, we’d focus around her with some little medium red and blue and a little straw. We’d use the same pink spotlight on her face but we could fade out on her face if that was the mood. Her white wardrobe allowed us to project a pink face with a blue gown if that expressed what she was singing. Sarah had to trust you. She didn’t like people who couldn’t think for themselves.
For this DVD release, Quincy took time from his third globe-circling in three-and-a-half months to call from Dubai, where he was working for the Quincy Jones Listen Up Foundation. His organization is concerned with urgent world health issues and connects underprivileged youth with technology, education, culture and music internationally.
“This DVD is so important. Today’s kids must be exposed to their cultural heritage, and Sarah...we go w-a-a-a-a-a-y back...I must have met her when I had my big band in New York in 1953 or ’54...They were our idols—Miles, Dizzy, Bird, Sarah.”
Back in the States, within three months, Sarah recorded another of her many collaborations with the Count Basie band.
About that date, Benny Powell reminisces, “Sarah was a wonderful person, so easy to be around. I loved doing dates with her. She made everything so comfortable. That’s why her performances then are still so good now. She set up an atmosphere of just pure joy and a kind of freedom so when you got to Sarah Vaughan’s record dates, she was so very well prepared, we never did many takes. Her artistry inspired everybody to be as good as they could possibly be.”
On the first of the three television programs in this collection, this broadcast on Swedish TV, thirty-four-year-old Sarah Vaughan is in her ingénue mode, somewhat shyly but bravely announcing what she will sing. Sweetly demure in a non-Garry-approved dress, she offers a new reading of “Sometimes I’m Happy”, the Leo Robin-Clifford Grey-Vincent Youmans song she first recorded on October 25, 1955. Certain numbers appealed to her so strongly, suggesting tantalizing new paths, that she not only kept them in her live repertoire, but she also called them repeatedly at recording sessions—this one on six occasions.
“Lover Man”, as she explains, holds perennial significance, transporting her to her debut with Parker and Gillespie. Co-composer Roger “Ram” Ramirez (with Jimmy Davis and Jimmy Sherman), upon hearing that first recording of his tune, has been quoted that Diz and Bird “needed a creative singer like Sass to make them sound appealing.” Here, she is very much the leader, subtly supported with just essential chords by Bright and Davis, and Morgan’s delicate brushwork.
“September in the Rain” is relatively new to her repertoire but obviously energizing to the trio. Davis’s grin is as expressive as his pizzicato. Her At Mr. Kelly’s plug is for the live album she made with Davis less than a year earlier at the Chicago club. The Al Dubin-Harry Warren standard apparently did not meet her criteria for permanence. She recorded it only once.
“Misty” is serendipitously Sarah’s. “Erroll Garner caught me getting on the plane,” Quincy Jones relates. “Johnny Burke had just written lyrics to Erroll’s ‘Misty,’ and Erroll said, ‘Stick this in your pocket because I like the lyric—Look at me, I’m as happy as a kitten up a tree…’ and I just stuck it in my pocket and showed it to Sarah when I got to Paris, and we just did it. She loved it immediately. We both did. That was 1958, and we had the first record on ‘Misty’. On the same date, Vaughan And Violins, Sarah sang my ‘The Midnight Sun Will Never Set’. I had written that with Henri Salvador for the Harry Arnold band in Sweden and [alto saxophonist] Arne Domnérus. Sarah heard it at their Stockholm concert and asked me to get a lyric for her so Dorcas Cochran and I wrote words especially for Sass. We made ‘Misty’ again with her trio for Sassy Swings The Tivoli at Copenhagen in 1963. ‘I Feel Pretty’, ‘Lover Man’, ‘Sometimes I’m Happy’, ‘Tenderly’, ‘Honeysuckle Rose’ and ‘Bill Bailey, Won’t You Please Come Home’ are on that record, too, so it’s great that I can see her sing them all again on her Jazz Icons DVD.” Here, Sarah thanks her audience in Swedish for their applause as she approaches “Misty”.
By Patricia Willard.
**
Live In Sweden 1958
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocal)
Richard Davis- (Bass)
Ronnell Bright- (Piano)
Art Morgan- (Drums)
Sometimes I’m Happy
Lover Man
September In The Rain
Mean To Me
Tenderly
If This Isn’t Love
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Live In Holland 1958
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocal)
Richard Davis- (Bass)
Ronnell Bright- (Piano)
Art Morgan- (Drums)
Over The Rainbow
They All Laughed
Lover Man
Cherokee
Sometimes I’m Happy
*
Live In Sewden 1964
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocal)
Buster Williams- (Bass)
Kirk Stuart- (Piano)
George Hughes- (Drums)
I Feel Pretty
The More I See You
Baubles, Bangles And Beads
I Got Rhythm
Misty
Honeysuckle Rose
Maria
Bill Bailey, Won’t You Please Come Home
**
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Showing posts with label Sarah VAUGHAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah VAUGHAN. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Sarah VAUGHAN - It's a Man's World 1967
Sarah VAUGHAN - It's a Man's World 1967
Jazz
Sarah Vaughan is heard in a series of ballads that are often heard in a jazz setting, but the somewhat heavy-handed arrangements by Hal Mooney, Bob James (long before smooth jazz existed as a genre), and Bob Freedman lean more toward easy listening, with frequently stiff rhythm accompaniment and often overbearing strings. The singer's lovely voice, which is in great form, is full of the adventurous spirit, as is the sole improviser on the date, stretching the boundaries of ten strong compositions, including oldies like "Danny Boy" and "I'm Just Wild About Harry," to pop songs of the day such as the huge hit "Alfie." There are also several gems by songwriters who were still active at the time, including Alec Wilder's "Trouble Is a Man," as well as a trio of timeless standards by Harold Arlen. The sound on this 24-bit limited-edition CD reissue, which is available only until May 2005, is impeccable, with a perfect mix between the singer and the orchestra, so anyone who enjoys Sarah Vaughan's vocals should pick up this CD.
By Ken Dryden, AMG.
**
Freddie Hubbard- Trumpet
Joe Newman- Trumpet
Charlie Shavers- Trumpet
Clark Terry- Trumpet
J. J. Johnson- Trombone
Kai Winding- Trombone
Benny Golson- Reeds
Phil Woods- Reeds
Hal Mooney Arranger (2, 4, 7-8, 10)
Bob Freedman Arranger (1, 5-6, 9)
Bob James Piano, Arranger (3)
**
01. Alfie (Burt Bacharach/Hal David) 3:33
02. Man That Got Away (Harold Arlen, Ira Gershwin) 4:28
03. Trouble Is a Man (Alec Wilder) 3:43
04. Happines Is Just a Thing Called Joe (Harold Arlen/E.Y. "Yip" Harburg) 3:50
05. For Every Man There's a Woman (Harold Arlen, Leo Robin) 3:23
06. I Got a Man Crazy for Me (Neil Moret, Richard Whiting) 3:31
07. My Man (Mon Homme) (Jacques Charles, Channing Pollack, Albert Willemetz, Maurice Yvain) 3:52
08. I'm Just Wild About Harry (Eubie Blake, Noble Sissle) 2:39
09. Jim (Caesar Petrillo, Edward Ross, Nelson Shawn) 3:42
10. Danny Boy (Frederic E. Weatherly) 4:35
**
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Jazz
Sarah Vaughan is heard in a series of ballads that are often heard in a jazz setting, but the somewhat heavy-handed arrangements by Hal Mooney, Bob James (long before smooth jazz existed as a genre), and Bob Freedman lean more toward easy listening, with frequently stiff rhythm accompaniment and often overbearing strings. The singer's lovely voice, which is in great form, is full of the adventurous spirit, as is the sole improviser on the date, stretching the boundaries of ten strong compositions, including oldies like "Danny Boy" and "I'm Just Wild About Harry," to pop songs of the day such as the huge hit "Alfie." There are also several gems by songwriters who were still active at the time, including Alec Wilder's "Trouble Is a Man," as well as a trio of timeless standards by Harold Arlen. The sound on this 24-bit limited-edition CD reissue, which is available only until May 2005, is impeccable, with a perfect mix between the singer and the orchestra, so anyone who enjoys Sarah Vaughan's vocals should pick up this CD.
By Ken Dryden, AMG.
**
Freddie Hubbard- Trumpet
Joe Newman- Trumpet
Charlie Shavers- Trumpet
Clark Terry- Trumpet
J. J. Johnson- Trombone
Kai Winding- Trombone
Benny Golson- Reeds
Phil Woods- Reeds
Hal Mooney Arranger (2, 4, 7-8, 10)
Bob Freedman Arranger (1, 5-6, 9)
Bob James Piano, Arranger (3)
**
01. Alfie (Burt Bacharach/Hal David) 3:33
02. Man That Got Away (Harold Arlen, Ira Gershwin) 4:28
03. Trouble Is a Man (Alec Wilder) 3:43
04. Happines Is Just a Thing Called Joe (Harold Arlen/E.Y. "Yip" Harburg) 3:50
05. For Every Man There's a Woman (Harold Arlen, Leo Robin) 3:23
06. I Got a Man Crazy for Me (Neil Moret, Richard Whiting) 3:31
07. My Man (Mon Homme) (Jacques Charles, Channing Pollack, Albert Willemetz, Maurice Yvain) 3:52
08. I'm Just Wild About Harry (Eubie Blake, Noble Sissle) 2:39
09. Jim (Caesar Petrillo, Edward Ross, Nelson Shawn) 3:42
10. Danny Boy (Frederic E. Weatherly) 4:35
**
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Friday, December 18, 2009
Sarah VAUGHAN - Young Sassy 2001
Sarah VAUGHAN - Young Sassy 2001
4 CD's Box Set
Jazz
From the start of her career, Sarah Vaughan had a wondrous voice. She never declined and her voice remained a miracle throughout her career. She learned about bop phrasing during 1943-1944 when she was with the orchestras of Earl Hines and Billy Eckstine (singing alongside Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker) and, although she would perform many pop tunes throughout her life, she always phrased like a jazz singer and was never shy to change notes and improvise. This magnificent four-CD set has Sassy's first 94 recordings, everything she recorded during 1944-1950. Vaughan is heard on two songs with the Eckstine Orchestra (one of which was taken from a broadcast), on the December 31, 1944, Leonard Feather-organized session that found her performing "Interlude" (a vocal version of "A Night in Tunisia") and "East of the Sun," and four songs with Bird and Diz, and she makes appearances with clarinetist Tony Scott, violinist Stuff Smith, the John Kirby Sextet, Georgie Auld's big band, and trombonist Dicky Wells & His Big Seven. In 1946, Vaughan signed with the Musicraft label and all of her performances for that company are here, including "If You Could See Me Now," "Everything I Have Is Yours," "Don't Worry 'Bout Me," "September Song," "Tenderly," "The Lord's Prayer," "I Feel So Smoochie," "It's Magic," and "Gentleman Friend." In 1949, Vaughan started recording for Columbia, and she is heard on some commercial dates plus such tunes as "Black Coffee," "Tonight I Shall Sleep," "I Cried for You," and "Perdido" in addition to four vocal duets with Billy Eckstine. Best of all are the eight numbers that she recorded during May 18-19, 1950, with an octet including trumpeter Miles Davis, trombonist Bennie Green, clarinetist Tony Scott, and tenor saxophonist Budd Johnson. All four horn players take perfect eight-bar solos on "Ain't Misbehavin'," and other gems from this project include "It Might as Well Be Spring," "Mean to Me," and "Nice Work if You Can Get It." Sarah Vaughan's box for the Proper label (which includes a very good 44-page booklet) makes for a superb (and surprisingly inexpensive) purchase and allows one to have a large slice of Sassy's recording career.
By Scott Yanow. AMG.
**
Unlike Ella or Billie, Sarah seems to have emerged fully-fledged. Ella took years to develop from a lightweight girl singer into a mature jazz artist, and even Billie, who had loads of style early on, kept getting more incisive as an interpreter as the years went on. And right at this moment when Sarah was recording these harmonically advanced sides with the likes of Dizzy and Bird (and Billy Kyle and George Auld), Billie was at a sort of nadir, recording a lot of R&B dreck. Sarah Vaughan at the tender age of 21 had all the elements of her mature style in place, her feeling of time and modern jazz phrasing, and her voice was beautifully flexible, her interpretations highly emotional and moving. She was like one of those preternaturally talented rock stars who say everything they need to say creatively before age 25, but then just soldier on. While I can't say Sarah got worse as she got older, she never got better than she was right here at the beginning. This is astonishingly accomplished, essential music.
By Matthew Watters.
**
Sarah VAUGHAN:
Young Sassy: I'll Wait And Pray
01. I'll Wait and Pray [02:57]
02. Signing Off [02:40]
03. Interlude [02:32]
04. No Smokes Blues [02:28]
05. East of the Sun (And West of the Moon) [02:52]
06. Don't Blame Me [03:00]
07. Lover Man [03:22]
08. What More Can a Woman Do? [03:03]
09. I'd Rather Have a Memory Than a Dream [02:43]
10. Mean to Me [02:41]
11. All Too Soon [02:53]
12. Time and Again [03:17]
13. I'm Scared [02:35]
14. You Go to My Head [03:03]
15. I Could Make You Love Me [02:47]
16. It Might As Well Be Spring [03:00]
17. We're Through [02:40]
18. A Hundred Years from Today [02:57]
19. If You Could See Me Now [02:50]
20. I Could Make You Love Me [03:03]
21. You're Not the Kind [02:59]
22. My Kinda Love [02:38]
23. You're Blase [02:59]
24. I've Got a Crush on You [02:58]
*
Young Sassy: Tenderly
01. I'm Through With Love [02:53]
02. Everything I Have Is Yours [02:52]
03. Body And Soul [02:56]
04. Penthouse Serenade (When We're Alone) [03:12]
05. Don't Worry 'Bout Me [2:58]
06. Time After Time [3:06]
07. September Song [03:04]
08. I Cover the Waterfront [02:55]
09. I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You [02:44]
10. Tenderly [03:03]
11. Don't Blame Me [03:12]
12. The Lord's Prayer [02:54]
13. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child [02:48]
14. I Can't Get Started [02:30]
15. Trouble Is a Man [02:35]
16. Love Me or Leave Me [02:57]
17. I'll Wait and Pray [03:01]
18. I Get a Kick Out of You [02:52]
19. The Man I Love [02:46]
20. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down (And Write Myself a Letter) [02:24]
21. The One I Love (Belongs To Somebody Else) [03:11]
22. Button Up Your Overcoat [02:28]
23. I Feel So Smoochie [02:38]
*
Young Sassy: It's Magic
01. Blue Grass [02:50]
02. It's You or No One [03:12]
03. It's Magic [03:10]
04. What a Diff'rence a Day Makes [02:48]
05. Gentleman Friend [02:35]
06. Once in a While [03:07]
07. How Am I to Know? [02:52]
08. Nature Boy [02:55]
09. I'm Glad There is You [03:04]
10. Bianca [03:10]
11. As You Desire Me [02:36]
12. Black Coffee [03:18]
13. While You Are Gone [03:10]
14. Tonight I Shall Sleep (With a Smile on My Face) [03:25]
15. That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day) [03:32]
16. Give Me a Song with a Beautiful Melody [02:43]
17. Make Believe (You Are Glad When You're Sorry) [02:43]
18. You Taught Me to Love Again [03:18]
19. Just Friends [03:02]
20. Lonely Girl [02:21]
21. You Say You Care [02:51]
22. Fool's Paradise [02:54]
23. I Cried for You [02:26]
*
Young Sassy: You're Mine You
01. You're Mine, You [03:13]
02. I'm Crazy to Love You [03:01]
03. Summertime [03:17]
04. The Nearness of You [03:21]
05. Ev'ry Day [02:59]
06. I Love You [02:41]
07. Dedicated to You [02:45]
08. You're All I Need [03:05]
09. Our Very Own [03:15]
10. Don't Be Afraid [02:57]
11. Ain't Misbehavin' [03:01]
12. Goodnight My Love [03:29]
13. Can't Get Out of This Mood [02:51]
14. It Might As Well Be Spring [03:13]
15. Mean to Me [02:54]
16. Come Rain or Come Shine [03:25]
17. Nice Work If You Can Get It [02:37]
18. East of the Sun (And West of the Moon) [03:08]
19. I Love the Guy [02:35]
20. Thinking of You [03:05]
21. Perdido [02:32]
22. Whippa-Whippa-Woo [03:09]
23. I'll Know [03:19]
24. De Gas Pipe She's Leakin' Joe [02:44]
**
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4 CD's Box Set
Jazz
From the start of her career, Sarah Vaughan had a wondrous voice. She never declined and her voice remained a miracle throughout her career. She learned about bop phrasing during 1943-1944 when she was with the orchestras of Earl Hines and Billy Eckstine (singing alongside Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker) and, although she would perform many pop tunes throughout her life, she always phrased like a jazz singer and was never shy to change notes and improvise. This magnificent four-CD set has Sassy's first 94 recordings, everything she recorded during 1944-1950. Vaughan is heard on two songs with the Eckstine Orchestra (one of which was taken from a broadcast), on the December 31, 1944, Leonard Feather-organized session that found her performing "Interlude" (a vocal version of "A Night in Tunisia") and "East of the Sun," and four songs with Bird and Diz, and she makes appearances with clarinetist Tony Scott, violinist Stuff Smith, the John Kirby Sextet, Georgie Auld's big band, and trombonist Dicky Wells & His Big Seven. In 1946, Vaughan signed with the Musicraft label and all of her performances for that company are here, including "If You Could See Me Now," "Everything I Have Is Yours," "Don't Worry 'Bout Me," "September Song," "Tenderly," "The Lord's Prayer," "I Feel So Smoochie," "It's Magic," and "Gentleman Friend." In 1949, Vaughan started recording for Columbia, and she is heard on some commercial dates plus such tunes as "Black Coffee," "Tonight I Shall Sleep," "I Cried for You," and "Perdido" in addition to four vocal duets with Billy Eckstine. Best of all are the eight numbers that she recorded during May 18-19, 1950, with an octet including trumpeter Miles Davis, trombonist Bennie Green, clarinetist Tony Scott, and tenor saxophonist Budd Johnson. All four horn players take perfect eight-bar solos on "Ain't Misbehavin'," and other gems from this project include "It Might as Well Be Spring," "Mean to Me," and "Nice Work if You Can Get It." Sarah Vaughan's box for the Proper label (which includes a very good 44-page booklet) makes for a superb (and surprisingly inexpensive) purchase and allows one to have a large slice of Sassy's recording career.
By Scott Yanow. AMG.
**
Unlike Ella or Billie, Sarah seems to have emerged fully-fledged. Ella took years to develop from a lightweight girl singer into a mature jazz artist, and even Billie, who had loads of style early on, kept getting more incisive as an interpreter as the years went on. And right at this moment when Sarah was recording these harmonically advanced sides with the likes of Dizzy and Bird (and Billy Kyle and George Auld), Billie was at a sort of nadir, recording a lot of R&B dreck. Sarah Vaughan at the tender age of 21 had all the elements of her mature style in place, her feeling of time and modern jazz phrasing, and her voice was beautifully flexible, her interpretations highly emotional and moving. She was like one of those preternaturally talented rock stars who say everything they need to say creatively before age 25, but then just soldier on. While I can't say Sarah got worse as she got older, she never got better than she was right here at the beginning. This is astonishingly accomplished, essential music.
By Matthew Watters.
**
Sarah VAUGHAN:
Young Sassy: I'll Wait And Pray
01. I'll Wait and Pray [02:57]
02. Signing Off [02:40]
03. Interlude [02:32]
04. No Smokes Blues [02:28]
05. East of the Sun (And West of the Moon) [02:52]
06. Don't Blame Me [03:00]
07. Lover Man [03:22]
08. What More Can a Woman Do? [03:03]
09. I'd Rather Have a Memory Than a Dream [02:43]
10. Mean to Me [02:41]
11. All Too Soon [02:53]
12. Time and Again [03:17]
13. I'm Scared [02:35]
14. You Go to My Head [03:03]
15. I Could Make You Love Me [02:47]
16. It Might As Well Be Spring [03:00]
17. We're Through [02:40]
18. A Hundred Years from Today [02:57]
19. If You Could See Me Now [02:50]
20. I Could Make You Love Me [03:03]
21. You're Not the Kind [02:59]
22. My Kinda Love [02:38]
23. You're Blase [02:59]
24. I've Got a Crush on You [02:58]
*
Young Sassy: Tenderly
01. I'm Through With Love [02:53]
02. Everything I Have Is Yours [02:52]
03. Body And Soul [02:56]
04. Penthouse Serenade (When We're Alone) [03:12]
05. Don't Worry 'Bout Me [2:58]
06. Time After Time [3:06]
07. September Song [03:04]
08. I Cover the Waterfront [02:55]
09. I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You [02:44]
10. Tenderly [03:03]
11. Don't Blame Me [03:12]
12. The Lord's Prayer [02:54]
13. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child [02:48]
14. I Can't Get Started [02:30]
15. Trouble Is a Man [02:35]
16. Love Me or Leave Me [02:57]
17. I'll Wait and Pray [03:01]
18. I Get a Kick Out of You [02:52]
19. The Man I Love [02:46]
20. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down (And Write Myself a Letter) [02:24]
21. The One I Love (Belongs To Somebody Else) [03:11]
22. Button Up Your Overcoat [02:28]
23. I Feel So Smoochie [02:38]
*
Young Sassy: It's Magic
01. Blue Grass [02:50]
02. It's You or No One [03:12]
03. It's Magic [03:10]
04. What a Diff'rence a Day Makes [02:48]
05. Gentleman Friend [02:35]
06. Once in a While [03:07]
07. How Am I to Know? [02:52]
08. Nature Boy [02:55]
09. I'm Glad There is You [03:04]
10. Bianca [03:10]
11. As You Desire Me [02:36]
12. Black Coffee [03:18]
13. While You Are Gone [03:10]
14. Tonight I Shall Sleep (With a Smile on My Face) [03:25]
15. That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day) [03:32]
16. Give Me a Song with a Beautiful Melody [02:43]
17. Make Believe (You Are Glad When You're Sorry) [02:43]
18. You Taught Me to Love Again [03:18]
19. Just Friends [03:02]
20. Lonely Girl [02:21]
21. You Say You Care [02:51]
22. Fool's Paradise [02:54]
23. I Cried for You [02:26]
*
Young Sassy: You're Mine You
01. You're Mine, You [03:13]
02. I'm Crazy to Love You [03:01]
03. Summertime [03:17]
04. The Nearness of You [03:21]
05. Ev'ry Day [02:59]
06. I Love You [02:41]
07. Dedicated to You [02:45]
08. You're All I Need [03:05]
09. Our Very Own [03:15]
10. Don't Be Afraid [02:57]
11. Ain't Misbehavin' [03:01]
12. Goodnight My Love [03:29]
13. Can't Get Out of This Mood [02:51]
14. It Might As Well Be Spring [03:13]
15. Mean to Me [02:54]
16. Come Rain or Come Shine [03:25]
17. Nice Work If You Can Get It [02:37]
18. East of the Sun (And West of the Moon) [03:08]
19. I Love the Guy [02:35]
20. Thinking of You [03:05]
21. Perdido [02:32]
22. Whippa-Whippa-Woo [03:09]
23. I'll Know [03:19]
24. De Gas Pipe She's Leakin' Joe [02:44]
**
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Thursday, December 17, 2009
Sarah VAUGHAN - At Mister Kelly's (Live) 1957
Sarah VAUGHAN - At Mister Kelly's (Live) 1957
Jazz
I was fairly late in getting into jazz, somewhere around my sophomore year in college. I came to vocal jazz even later, probably 4 or 5 years later. My first love in this area was Betty Carter, followed closely by Billie Holiday. Sarah Vaughan I found a tough nut to crack having only heard some over-orchestrated albums that I found fairly dull. This album, however, is an entirely different story. An intimate setting with a superb trio backing her, she delivers a powerful, yet subtle performance that rivals anyone. I think the thing that I find most attractive about this set, something that was missing from my other experiences with her music, is a really great sense of pitch and a masterful playing with intonation. She does a nifty job at coming just under a pitch and either scooping up at the last second or adding vibrato at just the right moment, adding a very cool tension. This album was a revelation and I look forward to finding Sarah's other gems.
**
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocals);
Jimmy Jones- (Piano);
Richard Davis- (Bass);
Roy Haynes- (Drums).
**
A1. September in the Rain 2:45
A2. Willow Weep for Me 4:58
A3. Just One of Those Things 3:10
A4. Be Anything (But Darling Be Mine) 4:30
B1. Thou Swell 2:45
B2. Stairway to the Stars 4:40
B3. Honeysuckle Rose 3:58
B4. Just a Gigolo 3:58
B5. How High the Moon 2:45
**
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Jazz
I was fairly late in getting into jazz, somewhere around my sophomore year in college. I came to vocal jazz even later, probably 4 or 5 years later. My first love in this area was Betty Carter, followed closely by Billie Holiday. Sarah Vaughan I found a tough nut to crack having only heard some over-orchestrated albums that I found fairly dull. This album, however, is an entirely different story. An intimate setting with a superb trio backing her, she delivers a powerful, yet subtle performance that rivals anyone. I think the thing that I find most attractive about this set, something that was missing from my other experiences with her music, is a really great sense of pitch and a masterful playing with intonation. She does a nifty job at coming just under a pitch and either scooping up at the last second or adding vibrato at just the right moment, adding a very cool tension. This album was a revelation and I look forward to finding Sarah's other gems.
**
Sarah Vaughan- (Vocals);
Jimmy Jones- (Piano);
Richard Davis- (Bass);
Roy Haynes- (Drums).
**
A1. September in the Rain 2:45
A2. Willow Weep for Me 4:58
A3. Just One of Those Things 3:10
A4. Be Anything (But Darling Be Mine) 4:30
B1. Thou Swell 2:45
B2. Stairway to the Stars 4:40
B3. Honeysuckle Rose 3:58
B4. Just a Gigolo 3:58
B5. How High the Moon 2:45
**
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Friday, December 11, 2009
Sarah VAUGHAN - After hours at the London House (Live) 1958
Sarah VAUGHAN - After hours at the London House (Live) 1958
2005 Edd.
Jazz
It's best not to assume you have this recording, even if you do. Vaughan recorded two albums entitled After Hours—one a 1961 Roulette session with bass and guitar accompaniment, the other this recently reissued 1958 Mercury recording featuring the legendary singer with her regular trio, joined by four guest musicians from the Count Basie band. Although not as well known, this latter recording is the better bet, if only because of the presence of Thad Jones and Frank Wess, along with a tight rhythm section anchored by Richard Davis and Roy Haynes.
Not that the Divine One needs extra help. Far too much has been made of her sumptuous tones and "incredible range," and to a great extent the gifted vocalist may have encouraged such a single-minded focus with the pyrotechnical, even coloratura displays characterizing her later performances. But it's on her recordings between 1954 and 1967 that Vaughan communicates most effectively.
Her sound is suggestive of a Charlie Parker or Clifford Brown, with the addition of a poetic text that she can deliver as intimately as a Billie Holiday. Although After Hours at the London House doesn't rank with either Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown (Verve, 1954) or At Mr. Kelly's (EmArcy, 1957), it belongs in the same select company with her other admired recording sessions.
Why this particular recording has fallen into critical disfavor and subsequent neglect is something of a mystery. Vaughan forgets the lyrics to (ironically) "Thanks for the Memories" and good-naturedly puts herself down, throwing in apologies. But with the exception of this last tune, the assured performer approaches a level of artistry few other singers would dare dream of. With the third song, "I'll String Along with You," she's in her special zone, and her irrepressible delight comes through at the end of the tune, when she practically giggles in satisfaction over her own performance.
The spell doesn't let up for the next three numbers—and the flubs on the finale practically come as a necessary relief, dispelling a relationship between artist and listener that's simply too close not to end. On this night the sublime singer can criticize herself for a few mental lapses because she can "afford" to, not because she's providing some overly literal reviewer with a write-up of the performance.
After 1967 Vaughan's voice would darken, taking on greater weight and maturity, acquiring a wider vibrato, and extending its range at both ends—but not without a pronounced falsetto break and forced upper register that turns off some listeners. Still, all fans of jazz singing should check out her mind-boggling scat performance on "Autumn Leaves" (Crazy and Mixed Up, Pablo, 1982). Vaughan was at her best when extemporaneously recomposing standards into fresh melodies that she made her own. As After Hours at the London House demonstrates, her transformation of a familiar song can readily become the listener's new standard as well.
By Samuel Chell.
**
Richard Davis- Bass
Roy Haynes- Drums
Sarah Vaughan- Vocals
Frank Wess- Tenor Sax
Thad Jones- Trumpet
Henry Coker- Trombone
Wendell Culley- Trumpet
Ronnell Bright- Piano
**
01. Like Someone In Iove 3:04
02. Detour Ahead 5:13
03. Three Little Words 3:40
04. I'll Sstring Along With You 5:10
05. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home to 3:55
06. Speak Low 4:45
07. All Of You 4:05
08. Thanks For The Memory 6:45
**
NoPassWord
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2005 Edd.
Jazz
It's best not to assume you have this recording, even if you do. Vaughan recorded two albums entitled After Hours—one a 1961 Roulette session with bass and guitar accompaniment, the other this recently reissued 1958 Mercury recording featuring the legendary singer with her regular trio, joined by four guest musicians from the Count Basie band. Although not as well known, this latter recording is the better bet, if only because of the presence of Thad Jones and Frank Wess, along with a tight rhythm section anchored by Richard Davis and Roy Haynes.
Not that the Divine One needs extra help. Far too much has been made of her sumptuous tones and "incredible range," and to a great extent the gifted vocalist may have encouraged such a single-minded focus with the pyrotechnical, even coloratura displays characterizing her later performances. But it's on her recordings between 1954 and 1967 that Vaughan communicates most effectively.
Her sound is suggestive of a Charlie Parker or Clifford Brown, with the addition of a poetic text that she can deliver as intimately as a Billie Holiday. Although After Hours at the London House doesn't rank with either Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown (Verve, 1954) or At Mr. Kelly's (EmArcy, 1957), it belongs in the same select company with her other admired recording sessions.
Why this particular recording has fallen into critical disfavor and subsequent neglect is something of a mystery. Vaughan forgets the lyrics to (ironically) "Thanks for the Memories" and good-naturedly puts herself down, throwing in apologies. But with the exception of this last tune, the assured performer approaches a level of artistry few other singers would dare dream of. With the third song, "I'll String Along with You," she's in her special zone, and her irrepressible delight comes through at the end of the tune, when she practically giggles in satisfaction over her own performance.
The spell doesn't let up for the next three numbers—and the flubs on the finale practically come as a necessary relief, dispelling a relationship between artist and listener that's simply too close not to end. On this night the sublime singer can criticize herself for a few mental lapses because she can "afford" to, not because she's providing some overly literal reviewer with a write-up of the performance.
After 1967 Vaughan's voice would darken, taking on greater weight and maturity, acquiring a wider vibrato, and extending its range at both ends—but not without a pronounced falsetto break and forced upper register that turns off some listeners. Still, all fans of jazz singing should check out her mind-boggling scat performance on "Autumn Leaves" (Crazy and Mixed Up, Pablo, 1982). Vaughan was at her best when extemporaneously recomposing standards into fresh melodies that she made her own. As After Hours at the London House demonstrates, her transformation of a familiar song can readily become the listener's new standard as well.
By Samuel Chell.
**
Richard Davis- Bass
Roy Haynes- Drums
Sarah Vaughan- Vocals
Frank Wess- Tenor Sax
Thad Jones- Trumpet
Henry Coker- Trombone
Wendell Culley- Trumpet
Ronnell Bright- Piano
**
01. Like Someone In Iove 3:04
02. Detour Ahead 5:13
03. Three Little Words 3:40
04. I'll Sstring Along With You 5:10
05. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home to 3:55
06. Speak Low 4:45
07. All Of You 4:05
08. Thanks For The Memory 6:45
**
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Friday, October 2, 2009
Sarah VAUGHAN - The Jazz Sides 1995
Sarah VAUGHAN - The Jazz Sides 1995
Label: Verve
Jazz Masters 42
Original Recording: 1963
Jazz
The live performance on The Jazz Sides took place in Copenhagen, and it is a treasure. Vaughan gives "Misty"' the beauty treatment with her trio although she throws in a few new turns so that it doesn't get maudlin. But her pianist, Kirk Stuart, is inspired to sing a chorus (great voice, by the way) and then together they go for broke, hamming it up with moans and sighs. Wish I'd been there.
**
Sarah Vaughan had talent that is matched by few in jazz history. This CD features arrangements that take full advantage of that talent. In addition, Sarah Vaughan possesed a quality in her voice that makes it, although not the musicians behind that voice, sound as if these recordings could have been done last year. She was truly one of the great female singers in not only jazz, but in American History.
**
Sarah Vaughan (vocals); Frank Wess (alto & tenor saxophones); Marshall Royal (alto saxophone); Frank Foster, Billy Mitchell, Frank Wess (tenor saxophone); Charlie Fowlkes (baritone saxophone); Thad Jones, Wendell Culley, Joe Newman, Snooky Young, Freddie Hubbard, Charlie Shavers, Clark Terry (trumpet); Henry Coker, Al Grey, Benny Powell, J.J. Johnson, Kai Winding (trombone); Benny Golson, Phil Woods (woodwinds); Kirk Stuart, Jimmy Jones, Ronnell Bright, John Malachi, Bob James (piano); Freddie Green (guitar); Charles Williams, Richard Davis, Joe Benjamin (bass); George Hughes, Roy Haynes, Sonny Payne (drums). Compilation producer: Michael Lang. Recorded in Copenhagen, Denmark; New York, New York; Chicago, Illinois between 1954 and 1967. Includes liner notes by Robert Baird. Modern jazz, with its emphasis on the cool, can often warp a song beyond recognition. As the performer experiments and tinkers with tunes, this sometimes means a substitution of technical brilliance for simplicity.
**
01. I Cried For You 2:17
02. I Feel Pretty 2:24
03. Words Can't Describe 4:30
04. Pennies From Heaven 3:03
05. It's Got To Be Love 2:25
06. Dancing In The Dark 3:43
07. Doodlin' 4:32
08. Prelude To A Kiss 2:44
09. Polka Dots And Moonbeams 2:31
10. The More I See You 5:15
11. I Left My Heart In San Francisco 4:07
12. Like Someone In Love 3:03
13. Body And Soul 3:10
14. Over The Rainbow 5:13
15. Misty 5:59
16. Tenderly 2:29
**
NoPassword
*
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Label: Verve
Jazz Masters 42
Original Recording: 1963
Jazz
The live performance on The Jazz Sides took place in Copenhagen, and it is a treasure. Vaughan gives "Misty"' the beauty treatment with her trio although she throws in a few new turns so that it doesn't get maudlin. But her pianist, Kirk Stuart, is inspired to sing a chorus (great voice, by the way) and then together they go for broke, hamming it up with moans and sighs. Wish I'd been there.
**
Sarah Vaughan had talent that is matched by few in jazz history. This CD features arrangements that take full advantage of that talent. In addition, Sarah Vaughan possesed a quality in her voice that makes it, although not the musicians behind that voice, sound as if these recordings could have been done last year. She was truly one of the great female singers in not only jazz, but in American History.
**
Sarah Vaughan (vocals); Frank Wess (alto & tenor saxophones); Marshall Royal (alto saxophone); Frank Foster, Billy Mitchell, Frank Wess (tenor saxophone); Charlie Fowlkes (baritone saxophone); Thad Jones, Wendell Culley, Joe Newman, Snooky Young, Freddie Hubbard, Charlie Shavers, Clark Terry (trumpet); Henry Coker, Al Grey, Benny Powell, J.J. Johnson, Kai Winding (trombone); Benny Golson, Phil Woods (woodwinds); Kirk Stuart, Jimmy Jones, Ronnell Bright, John Malachi, Bob James (piano); Freddie Green (guitar); Charles Williams, Richard Davis, Joe Benjamin (bass); George Hughes, Roy Haynes, Sonny Payne (drums). Compilation producer: Michael Lang. Recorded in Copenhagen, Denmark; New York, New York; Chicago, Illinois between 1954 and 1967. Includes liner notes by Robert Baird. Modern jazz, with its emphasis on the cool, can often warp a song beyond recognition. As the performer experiments and tinkers with tunes, this sometimes means a substitution of technical brilliance for simplicity.
**
01. I Cried For You 2:17
02. I Feel Pretty 2:24
03. Words Can't Describe 4:30
04. Pennies From Heaven 3:03
05. It's Got To Be Love 2:25
06. Dancing In The Dark 3:43
07. Doodlin' 4:32
08. Prelude To A Kiss 2:44
09. Polka Dots And Moonbeams 2:31
10. The More I See You 5:15
11. I Left My Heart In San Francisco 4:07
12. Like Someone In Love 3:03
13. Body And Soul 3:10
14. Over The Rainbow 5:13
15. Misty 5:59
16. Tenderly 2:29
**
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