Time: 37:02
Size: 84.8 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1958/2010
Art: Front
[2:49] 1. It's Bad For Me
[2:32] 2. How Can You Forget
[2:41] 3. From Now On
[3:25] 4. Some Fine Day
[2:13] 5. I'm Checkin' Out, Goombye
[2:55] 6. I Got What It Takes
[1:19] 7. For No Rhyme Or Reason
[2:29] 8. Ebony Rhapsody
[2:09] 9. Ace In The Hole
[2:52] 10. Lydia
[2:09] 11. Don't Let It Get You Down
[2:51] 12. Montevideo
[3:08] 13. Rocks In My Bed
[3:24] 14. Wake Up, Chillun, Wake Up
After three albums of piano trio music with only the occasional added instrument, Bobby Short was given a somewhat expanded budget for Sing Me a Swing Song by Atlantic Records. The label paid for a six- or seven-piece horn section, along with a four-piece rhythm section, for two-thirds of the tracks. That still wasn't a big band by swing era standards, but it made the album the most musically varied of Short's career so far. Phil Moore's arrangements didn't make extensive use of the extra musicians, restricting them mainly to background color, but the fuller sound allowed Short to step back a bit as a vocalist. On earlier recordings, he often sounded like he was still in a club trying to bellow over noisy diners, but here he often sang more smoothly. The selection of material also added to the set's diversity. There was the usual complement of Cole Porter titles, but also the bluesy Duke Ellington songs "I'm Checking Out, Goombye" and "Rocks in My Bed," and the Marx Brothers novelty "Lydia." As usual, Short sold the lyrics unabashedly, but instead of competing with the horns, he worked with them well, especially on Porter's "For No Reason or Rhyme," which really made use of them for expressive purposes. It was enough to make you wonder what Short might accomplish with strings. ~William Ruhlmann
Sing Me A Swing Song
No comments:
Post a Comment
ALWAYS include your name/nick/aka/anything!