Sunday, September 17, 2023

Patricia Barber - Higher

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:21
Size: 127,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:45)  1. Muse
(5:43)  2. Surrender
(3:49)  3. Pallid Angel
(4:29)  4. The Opera Song
(3:30)  5. High Summer Season
(5:25)  6. The Albatross
(4:25)  7. Voyager
(3:11)  8. Higher
(5:23)  9. Early Autumn
(6:09) 10. In Your Own Sweet Way
(2:41) 11. Secret Love
(4:46) 12. The Opera Song with Katherine Werbiansky

Patricia Barber is more than the sum of her talents. As a composer, she peels back the craft of song to expose its barest textures, cultivating each like a tree that, while holding its own shape above ground, makes apparent the roots below it. As a singer, she understands not only that we perform our voices but also that our voices perform us. Whether crooning through the Great American Songbook, as on Nightclub (Blue Note, 2000), or rowing through intensely original waters, as on the Ovid-inspired Mythologies (Blue Note, 2006), she shapes words and meanings as one and the same. As a lyricist, she inhales the ingredients of life and exhales the perfume of lessons learned. As far as back "Too Rich for My Blood" on Café Blue (Premonition Records, 1994), her attention to detail has revealed a continuity between the intimate and the grandiose.

And as a pianist (her 2010 concert with Kenny Werner, documented on a 2011 release by Floyd Records, being a quintessential example), she never ornaments for mere effect but draws out shades from the sentiments already flowing inside her. Encountering Barber at this point in her career is like getting to the redemption chapter of a long and fascinating autobiography, and in every line one can feel her retrospective nature in spades. "You can tell what I care about," she says of listening to this album in a phone interview. "In some ways, this is all I care about. In Smash (Concord, 2013) you could tell my heart was broken, but you could also hear those art songs starting to come through. This one is a much happier affair, as it should be in this political climate." Although Higher chronicles an extroverted leap of intuition, it's as much a courageous dive inward, plumbing deeper-than-ever emotional reserves by blending whimsy and seriousness into an organic whole. Its centerpiece is "Angels, Birds, and I...," an eight-part art song cycle that polishes multiple facets of a modern soul trying to maintain her nonstick coating in an abrasive world.

"I feel very much that this album is a manifestation of my hard-won harmonic evolution," Barber says. The result of six years' labor, these sonic dioramas sound at once out of time and utterly relevant: "Art song is its own world. Even though you have these improvisational envelopes, it's distinct from jazz. The harmonies are much vaster and difficult to put into words. One moment it all sounds new to us, and another it sounds familiar. This album is my own particular way of mixing those two things."

"Muse" provides a gloriously subtle introduction to that very dichotomy. Here our narrative guide struggles to marry inspiration with realization as she imagines a stage where another sings in her place. Through images of dressing and undressing, of love both real and imaginary, Barber's unflinching vocals thread every needle as if poised to make one last defining stitch. Storytelling doesn't even begin to describe the fullness at play as she delineates for us a path on which few other feet have made impressions. It's a thread that continues to run through "Surrender" and "Pallid Angel," both of which wrap sacred shades around secular bodies in pursuit of mutual trust. Like stones sinking into love after a wholehearted skip, they leave only ephemeral marks of their passage on the surface yet linger as nostalgic memories to be recaptured in moments of creative fancy.

All the more fitting then that the content of these songs should revolve around its perennial themes: "Angels, Birds, and I..." is an homage to music and singers. It's about love for music, and love as music. As the protagonist I take on godly role, looking down on my singer and wishing I could do what she does." In this regard, "The Opera Song" glistens. This multilingual tale of allusions takes musical terms as reflections of one whose heart longs to belt out an aria for all to hear, but whose commitment to the status quo threatens to overtake that spark of individuality. Nowhere has Barber's deft balance of the Apollonian and the Dionysian been so present. "High Summer Season" parlays further climatic shifts into view. Accompanied only by guitar, Barber embodies every fluttering wing as if it were hers alone. Even more so in "The Albatross Song." What at first appears to be the monologue of a wife seeking fulfillment in a more familiar, less distant lover turns into a playful commentary on modern ennui. Said fulfillment blossoms in "Voyager," a somewhat surreal evocation of singing as a springboard for extraterrestrial journeying. As in the closing title song, it ends above the clouds, riding thermals of personal histories, closer to the edges of dreams. Through it all, bassist Patrick Mulcahy, drummer Jon Deitemyer, guitarist Neal Alger and saxophonist Jim Gailloreto document every emotional turn of phrase with nothing short of archival assurance.

"These musicians have been working with me for a long time," says Barber. "I was lucky in not needing to travel far to find the best people for this project. Because they're basically playing chamber music, they had to approach it differently. They were vital to its development." Vital, too, is Barber's pianism as it winds through a smattering of standards to round out the album. Her rendition of Dave Brubeck's "In Your Own Sweet Way" is a highlight, and stands firm alongside a savvily arranged "Secret Love." The encore, as it were, comes to us by way of lyric soprano Katherine Werbiansky, whose take on "The Opera Song" gives us another side of the story. By the end of all this, we have encountered songs that change both within their own skins and between them, each a life in miniature waiting to nourish itself on the food of our attention. ~ Tyran Grillo https://www.allaboutjazz.com/higher-patricia-barber-artistshare-review-by-tyran-grillo.php

Personnel: Patricia Barber: piano, voice; Patrick Mulcahy: bass; Jon Deitemyer: drums; Neal Alger: acoustic guitar; Jim Gailloreto: tenor saxophone; Katherine Werbiansky: lyric soprano.

Higher

Cæcilie Norby - Earthenya

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:33
Size: 104,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:12) 1. Soul Sister
(3:53) 2. Downhill
(4:04) 3. Same Old Smile
(4:02) 4. Don't Be Mean
(4:01) 5. Earthenya Song
(4:04) 6. Stealing Your Shine
(4:56) 7. Summer of '70
(3:55) 8. Skeletons
(3:59) 9. Walk a Little Taller
(3:44) 10. Life Happens When You Sleep
(4:40) 11. Hazy Afternoon

EARTHENYA is Cæcilie Norby's 14th solo release and the first in 17 years, where all music and lyrics are written exclusively by herself. Her formidable abilities as a storyteller unfold anew in the songs, where relatable subjects are conveyed with an elevated insight, experience and empathy. As a "one off", Cæcilie releases the album EARTHENYA on her own newly established label LOUD LADY MUSIC, as she with this particular release wanted to explore the more pop and soulful sides of herself.

On the album, Cæcilie takes us through 11 strong moods, where music and poetry depics scenes from her life. A kind of autobiographical fiction in each song. One from her early childhood in the seventies about the missing friend with the mysterious tormented eyes. Another from a lifelong friendship where explanations are redundant. Then there is a close-up of a vibrant reunion with a former lover- reminiscing the impossible love that never died. Another is about letting go of a dysfunctional relationship, accepting its demise and enjoying their final destructive ride downhill. Earthenya (the album's title track) is an ode to the earth/mother nature. A realization that even though it should be obvious that the earth means the world to us, we can't stop ourselves from destroying it. Not unlike how we at times forget to appreciate and nurture our closest relationships, while there is still time.

The core and overall theme of the songs on the album seem to revolve around hard earned experiences that brings a person to a status quo, where one starts acting consistent to avoid repetitive anguish. Where you say what you think and accept the irrevocable state of things - and act on it. Really to clear the path and cherish living life to its fullest. No more b.......

About creating the album Earthenya, Cæcilie Norby states:

"When I took part in the Danish TV show 'Toppen af Poppen' (2019), a strong chemistry immediately arose amongst the musicians and myself. Subsequently I put together a dream band consisting of the pianist and guitarist from the show and some other fierce players on bass and drums. The four of us went on tour for several months and had a ball. The tour sparked a desire to record an album with these musicians exploring the more soul and pop orientated sides of my musicality. In the studio we all experienced a light and free sensation in how we could express ourselves musically. The music came first, and within the music, stories that were on my mind and in my heart revealed themselves. The lyrics are personal descriptions - stories and insights into my own experiences, or someone close to me. There are songs about love (even the one you can't save), about friendship, about loss, and about how important it is to hit the brakes when things have gone off the rails.
"https://imusic.co/music/5706876684959/caecilie-norby-2022-earthenya-cd

Earthenya

Corinne Bailey Rae - Black Rainbows

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:38
Size: 103,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:26) 1. A Spell, A Prayer
(1:57) 2. Black Rainbows
(2:46) 3. Erasure
(3:38) 4. Earthlings
(5:42) 5. Red Horse
(1:49) 6. New York Transit Queen
(3:45) 7. He Will Follow You With His Eyes
(8:29) 8. Put It Down
(5:50) 9. Peach Velvet Sky
(5:12) 10. Before The Throne Of The Invisible God

Her curiosity piqued by a photo of Theaster Gates taken in his workspace, Corinne Bailey Rae met the artist and activist the next time she played Chicago, where he welcomed her to the Stony Island Arts Bank, a gallery, archive, library, and community center. Bailey Rae felt profoundly affected inside the South Side monument to Black culture, and returned for an artist residency at the invitation of founder Gates. She wrote songs informed by her surroundings and experience everything from works of art to pages of Ebony and Jet to a dance party soundtracked by the preserved record collection of house pioneer Frankie Knuckles.

Approaching the material as a side project had a liberating effect that allowed her to create without thinking about how the results would be received. Although Black Rainbows is a uniquely conceptual work and sticks all the way out from Corinne Bailey Rae, The Sea, and The Heart Speaks in Whispers, it's at least as personal as any of the singer's first three albums. Contrary to her reputation for making pillowy adult contemporary R&B, Bailey Rae started in a punk band that was hard enough to be courted by Roadrunner Records. Black Rainbows taps into that spirit more than once. "New York Transit Queen" is a thrashing celebration inspired by a mid-'50s image of future fashion legend Audrey Smaltz.

"Erasure," seething and thunderous, was written in response to examining graphically anti-Black postcards. On these songs, Bailey Rae's buzzing guitar is as much a lead as her full-tilt vocals. Other moments the bristly, knocking, and wailing "Black Rainbows," the unfurling incantation "Before the Throne of the Invisible God" sound unselfconsciously sculpted, teeming with unbound imagination. The solitary piano ballad, "Peach Velvet Sky," is also a progression; written from the confined and anguished perspective of abolitionist and author Harriet Jacobs, it features Bailey's most powerful lyrics and vocal performance.

The house diversions are suitably carefree, delightfully weird, and just as meaningful. A futuristic paradise is imagined in "Earthlings" through a slow, off-center groove slathered in guitar and concluded by birdsong. In the eight-minute "Put It Down," Bailey Rae achieves hard-fought release, distressed over turbulent strings and synthesizers, then seemingly indestructible as her voice slides atop a stout four-four rhythm. "I put it down I feel so free" could be the album's subtitle. By Andy Kellman
https://www.allmusic.com/album/black-rainbows-mw0004027026

Black Rainbows

Jazzdor Series - Baldwin En Transit

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2023
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 55:26
Size: 53,2 MB
Art: Front

(8:24) 1. Part 1
(3:26) 2. Part 2
(3:28) 3. Part 3
(2:36) 4. Unisson 5
(4:42) 5. Part 4
(1:38) 6. Unisson 1
(3:35) 7. Part 5
(1:07) 8. Unisson 3
(4:39) 9. Part 6
(3:22) 10. Part 7
(5:11) 11. Part 8
(6:16) 12. Part 9
(5:11) 13. Artist statement
(1:47) 14. Rester étranger

“I am a foreigner, I left my mother earth. I look for myself in the face of the other."

In a breath of words and notes exchanged, almost whispered at times, the protagonists of Baldwin in Transit spread their wings to hover above and dig into the territories explored by James Baldwin in his time. It's a love story. In two years of work since its creation in 2021, the project has continued to evolve through meetings and transfers until the moment when everyone decided it was time to record because the interplay between the poets and musicians were mature, the word circulated freely almost without constraint except that of building together.

The counterpoint that emerges as you listen interweaves the threads stretched by each, as if led by expert needles which cross and crisscross and finally the work appears in its entirety, in its singular beauty. It’s a story of fluidity and articulation. You don’t know what it’s like to be black and a man? In a relationship of otherness, there is a sort of reciprocal commitment, a responsibility of one towards the other. This project says... Translate By Google

Personnel: Jamika Ajalon voice, texts / vocals, lyrics Mike Ladd voice, texts / vocals, lyrics Tamara Walcott voice, texts / vocals, lyrics Marc Ducret guitars / guitars Sylvaine Hélary flutes / flutes Stéphane Payen alto saxophone, composition / alto saxophone, composition Dominique Pifarély violin / violin

Baldwin En Transit