Monday, January 26, 2015

Chuck Brown & The Second Chapter Band - Timeless

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:57
Size: 118.9 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues
Year: 2009
Art: Front

[4:31] 1. Nature Boy
[4:41] 2. Never Make Your Move Too Soon
[4:55] 3. I Only Have Eyes For You
[5:50] 4. Wild Is The Wind
[5:02] 5. Autumn Leaves
[3:52] 6. Love Won't Let Me Wait
[3:46] 7. Blue Skies
[3:41] 8. A Foggy Day
[2:49] 9. Tenderly
[3:51] 10. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
[4:36] 11. Hey There
[4:18] 12. Caravan

Chuck Brown will always be the godfather of go-go, but six years ago he made longtime fans aware of another aspect of his musical range with "The Other Side," a collection of pop, jazz and blues standards done as duets with Eva Cassidy. The two established a wonderfully warm rapport in the tradition of Ray Charles and Betty Carter. The project was clearly a liberating one for Brown and a chance for him to shine the spotlight on the immensely gifted but unrecorded Cassidy.

"Timeless," the new album by Chuck Brown and the Second Chapter Band (Raw Venture/Liason), is dedicated to Cassidy, who died two years ago after the sudden onset of cancer. Brown has credited Cassidy with giving him the courage to sing and record this type of material in the first place, and, perhaps in honor of Cassidy's spirit, the album is generally upbeat. Even its romantic plaints tend to the bittersweet, from the sage counsel of Richard Adler and Jerry Ross's "Hey There" (from "The Pajama Game") to the smooth surrender of the Al Dubin/Harry Warren chestnut "I Only Have Eyes for You."

Brown clearly has a genuine affection for, and an easygoing approach to, well-worn standards like "Autumn Leaves," "Blue Skies," "A Foggy Day" and "Tenderly." His smooth vocals recall the cool bravado of Billy Eckstine and Joe Williams, and there's the bluesy elegance of Charles Brown and Ray Charles. Brown, who provides some seamless fills on guitar, also benefits from the empathetic support of the Second Chapter Band, notably pianist Lenny Williams and bassist Chris Biondo, who co-produced the album. There are a few top-notch guests as well: Keter Betts, whose walking bass lines enliven "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To" and "Nature Boy," and Ron Holloway, whose saxophone burnishes the smoky comeuppance blues "Never Make Your Move Too Soon" and the yearning "Wild Is the Wind."

Brown is silky on the seductive "Love Won't Let Me Wait," virile on "Autumn Leaves" and jubilant on a sinewy reading of the Ellington/Tizol standard "Caravan." If the material occasionally strays to lounge fare, Brown's voice and engaging personality convey both the burdens of experience and the release of expectations in a consistently ingratiating manner.

Timeless

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