Friday, March 29, 2024

Dee Daniels - State of the Art

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:32
Size: 136,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:37) 1. Almost Like Being in Love
(5:13) 2. Cherokee
(5:50) 3. I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone
(5:23) 4. He Was Too Good to Me
(4:03) 5. I've Got You Under My Skin
(4:32) 6. Night and Day
(3:21) 7. I Let a Song Go out of My Heart
(6:21) 8. Willow Weep for Me
(4:42) 9. Why Did I Choose You
(4:34) 10. Summer Wind
(7:19) 11. Loverman
(4:31) 12. How High the Moon

Dee Daniels should need no introduction. Unfortunately, she too often does. In a music climate clouded by jazz-singing sound-alikes, a vocalist brave enough to let her affinity for hard bop remain undiluted by easy-listening production values; a vocalist who wields her instrument brashly like a player, exploring extended techniques comparable to the most intrepid trumpeters’ and saxophonists’; such a vocalist is bound to appeal foremost to the hard-core jazz aficionado. But given the heights and depths of feeling that Ms. Daniels accesses through her phenomenal vocal range, and the insistent sense of swing that she and her band transmit, her appeal should be obvious to any pair of ears.

Like Jeri Brown and Ranee Lee, two other singers with unashamed virtuoso leanings, Dee Daniels is an American who relocated long-term to Canada. In her case, this move came on the heels of a five-year musical pilgrimage to Holland and Belgium, where she built upon her gospel, r&b and rock roots to hone a career in straightahead jazz. For over two decades afterwards, she based that career in Vancouver, BC, releasing seven albums and a DVD. Just three years ago, to be closer to the action, Daniels moved south of the border to the Big Apple.

There in 2013 she recorded State of the Art, the Criss Cross Jazz label’s first-ever vocalist-led date after some 360 releases. That number symbolizes the completion of a full circle, for Dee Daniels apparently became aware of Criss Cross while living in Amsterdam in 1982, when the Dutch label’s catalogue consisted of a single album. The Criss Cross Jazz release schedule is modest, at this point encompassing about a dozen new albums yearly, but chances are that Daniels will reappear on the label before long: it has a proven track record of loyalty to its musicians, many of whom appear as both leaders and sidemen on numerous releases across the Criss Cross catalogue.

In common with labels like HighNote, Capri, Sharp Nine, Posi-Tone and Cellar Live, Criss Cross stands as a stronghold of straightahead jazz, a haven for players who prize the values of bebop and hard bop. For the first couple of years, label founder and producer Gerry Teekens employed the services of recording engineer Rudy Van Gelder in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. Since then the majority of albums have been engineered by another former optometrist of Dutch descent, Max Bolleman, who would accompany Teekens yearly from Holland to record Criss Cross artists in NYC. Latterly, sound engineering duties have devolved on other shoulders—in this case, on Max Ross’s. Ross also mastered the recording, which was mixed by Michael Marciano.

Recording quality is impeccably clear and full, keeping Ms. Daniels’ voice front and centre but giving her instrumentalists enough presence to confirm that they worked with her dynamically as a band, not passively as backup. On the earlier sessions with which I’m most familiar, Love Story (1999) and Feels SO Good! (2002), the singer is cited as co-producer. The sound on the first disc, recorded in Vancouver, is gorgeous: warm and transparent, enshrining a sense of intimacy among the players. The next album, recorded in New York, sounds comparatively rough, with a strident edge and tinny piano. The new Teekens production does not sound so delicately suspended beyond time and place as the Vancouver session; State of the Art conveys a more clinical atmosphere in which detail is sharply preserved with a brightness suiting the down-to-business hurly-burly of her new hometown.

The opening track asserts this sense of immediacy when Daniels explodes out of the starting gate: the pent-up energy that propels “Almost Like Being in Love” makes it sound almost like she and the band began the tune in medias res. This is one of two up-tempo standards briskly dispatched on State of the Art; the other ten tracks reside on the slow side. Daniels flaunts her chops early in the tune, scatting atop the buoyant accompaniment of pianist Cyrus Chestnut. The scatting gives way to an economical tenor solo by Eric Alexander, who cut his first album as a leader for Criss Cross in 1992 and has been contributing prolifically to the label as a sideman ever since. On the other fast number, “I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart,” Alexander’s sax trades quips with Alvester Garnett’s kit until the drummer breaks out in a solo display of varied rhythmic resource.

A major revelation on the new album is “Cherokee,” which Dee Daniels delivers more slowly than pretty much anyone. The tune has been recorded only occasionally by vocalists, including one of Dee’s major influences, Sarah Vaughan. Usually it serves as a showpiece for instrumentalists bent on exercising maximum technique at breakneck speed. Tribal tom-toms and dark piano notes open the piece with an air of exoticism befitting the fanciful lyrics. Like other female singers who’ve tackled the tune, Daniels addresses her words to a “sweet Indian warrior,” as opposed to the “sweet Indian maiden” originally specified. As always, on “Cherokee” her low notes are beautifully formed, ruminatively casting an autumnal spell with the help of Garnett’s brushwork and delicate cymbal washes, not to mention a piano solo where Chestnut calmly loiters along the keys.

The other notably languid display here is Daniels’ astonishing take on the warhorse “Willow Weep for Me.” Hers has already earned a place alongside my favourite renditions: Billy Bang (violin); Stanley Turrentine (tenor sax); and Tin Hat Trio (vocals by Willie Nelson). Abetted by Chestnut’s sparse accompaniment, Daniels’ soulfully haunted delivery brings the broken-hearted narrator to life, finding sympathetic desolation in the willow tree’s elaborate weeping. Her artful elongation of syllables and final imploring repetitions of “weep” infuse Ann Ronell’s audacious word-assemblage with keen feeling. In the sax solo, Alexander’s glistening tone supplies objective commentary, an entirely different sound from Houston Person’s on Love Story and Feels SO Good!, where the elder tenorist’s warm soulfulness closely complements Daniels’ dusky timbre.

In “Lover Man,” performed just as slowly as “Willow Weep for Me” and at even greater length, Daniels again hauntingly animates a lovelorn soul. She takes a ruminative approach, phrasing deliberately and ominously to impart an unexpected complexity: this lonely woman wants love but equally dreads its implications. Hear how Daniels drops her voice to draw out the word “strange” at 2:58, underlining this ambivalence. A quietly hair-raising moment. And listen to the final iteration of “Hugging and a-kissing/Oh, [look] what I’ve been missing,” where she lingers thoughtfully over her words, adding “look” with an air of irony as though doubting the value of desire.

Further highlights are too many to mention at length. There’s the brace of Sinatra-associated tunes: “Summer Wind,” with a masterfully undemonstrative piano solo from Chestnut; and Cole Porter’s “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” sporting a dapper turn from Alexander. Trombonist Wycliffe Gordon, whose disc The Intimate Ellington (2013) boasted Daniels’ first Criss Cross appearance, lends a playful arrangement of another Porter number, “Night and Day.” Here, to stress the ineluctable recurrence of romantic longing, the singer matches wits with introductory drum embellishments that conjure beating tom-toms, ticking clocks and dripping raindrops. “Almost Like Being in Love” likewise wears a Gordon arrangement. The repertoire on Daniels’ disc was influenced too by Houston Person, who reportedly recommended a couple of numbers: “I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone” and a comparative obscurity, “Why Did I Choose You.” The latter affords bassist Paul Beaudry his one spotlit moment, when he solos forthrightly against a distant trickle of piano keys.

In fact, like her other two albums that I’ve mentioned, Dee’s State of the Art is all highlights nothing added merely to inch the CD towards a one-hour running time. If this disc is a statement definitive of Daniels’ present intent, it seems she’s concerned these days with finding greater subtlety within vocal constraints. Sure, the expressive means remain markedly more varied than most vocalists’, but just compare them to the extreme thrills and spills she delivered on Feels SO Good! where, for example, Daniels’ original tune “Love Ain’t Love Without You” offered the most passionately charged proof of stratospheric vocal reach that you’re likely to hear. State of the Art installs the master more introspectively in her workshop, still choosing from all the tools available, but only as appropriate to the task at hand. The tasks are assigned by the Great American Songbook: no originals this time, and no David/Bacharach songs (like “The Look of Love” on FSG!); just standards and near-standards whose lyrics Daniels inhabits so fully that you feel her coming to terms with whatever process they document. The songs emerge lived-in, lived-through, and with the Dee Daniels “wow” factor intact. What more can I say? Wow! https://wallofsound.ca/musicreviews/definitive-statement-dee-daniels-state-of-the-art-criss-cross-jazz-2013/

Personnel: Dee Daniels, vocal; Cyrus Chestnut, piano; Eric Alexander, tenor saxophone; Alvester Garnett, drums; and Paul Beaudry, bass.

State of the Art

Joe Locascio - Evidence

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2023
Time: 47:10
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 108,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:32) 1. Bye-ya
(4:06) 2. Let's Cool One
(6:28) 3. Monk's Mood
(3:24) 4. Off Minor
(3:41) 5. Pannonica
(3:58) 6. Evidence
(3:51) 7. Wee See
(3:36) 8. Trinkle, Tinkle
(5:25) 9. Reflections
(4:59) 10. Monk's Dream
(5:04) 11. Nutty

Joe LoCascio, a native New Yorker, has resided in Houston since 1977. A prolific performer/composer, he has twelve recordings to his credit, many of them having attained prominent radio airplay nationally and abroad.

He has performed and/or recorded with jazz luminaries such as Chet Baker, Freddie Hubbard, Dave Liebman, Randy Brecker, Ernie Watts, Tim Hagans, Conrad Herwig, Marvin Stamm, George Coleman, and George Mraz among others. Jazz critics nationwide have acclaimed him as one of the finest artists on the contemporary scene.

He is currently Assistant Chairman of Jazz Studies at Houston Community College where he teaches Piano, Jazz History, Jazz Ensemble and Improvisation Theory (follow this link to view syllabi).

LoCascio performs and records with his trio. He also performs and records with saxophonists Woody Witt and Warren Sneed.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/joe-locascio/

Evidence

Harmonious Wail - Gypsy Swing

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:36
Size: 173.1 MB
Styles: Gypsy jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:38] 1. Moscow Nights
[3:33] 2. Two Guitars Gypsy Campfire
[3:57] 3. I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
[2:38] 4. Valse Samois
[3:36] 5. Some Of These Days
[4:06] 6. Czardas
[5:56] 7. St. Louis Blues
[4:06] 8. The Basso
[4:06] 9. Rose Room
[5:30] 10. Dark Eyes
[2:33] 11. Limehouse Blues
[4:40] 12. Swing Gitan
[4:50] 13. Chanson Pour Henri
[2:27] 14. The Sheik Of Araby
[8:17] 15. Bossa Dorado
[3:34] 16. After You've Gone
[5:29] 17. Minor Swing
[2:31] 18. Ballgame

Sims Delaney-Potthoff - Mandolin, Vocals; Maggie Delaney-Potthoff - Vocals, Percussion; Jeffo Weiss - Bass.

Smoldering vocals laced among the jazzy mandolin and guitar; an infectious blend of continental jazz, swing, gypsy music and melodic vocals …how DOES one describe the sound of Harmonious Wail? The Wail has caught numerous listeners by total surprise during its more than 20-year history. Of all the venues and stages that these ‘NPR regulars’ have graced, it’s the PAC’s, festivals and showcase clubs that bring the most enthusiastic audience response!

Gypsy Swing

Ann Hampton Callaway - Bring Back Romance

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:20
Size: 130,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:28) 1. Music
(4:46) 2. How long has this been going on
(5:10) 3. This might be forever
(5:09) 4. My one and only love
(3:38) 5. An affair to remember
(4:42) 6. Bring back romance
(3:23) 7. You can't rush spring
(3:59) 8. Out of this world
(3:25) 9. A quiet thing
(2:59) 10. There will never be another you
(4:43) 11. Where does love go
(4:39) 12. You go to my head
(1:49) 13. It could happen to yo
(3:23) 14. My shining hour - I'll be seeing you

If, as they say, "variety is the spice of life," Ann Hampton Callaway's second album forDRG is especially piquant. On a program of 14 numbers, including five she composed, Callaway brings a flock of people into the studio. There are three arrangers, including the eminent composer Richard Rodney Bennett, four different piano players, and at least three rhythm-section players along with an assortment of reeds, horns, and strings. The result is an interesting potpourri of more than 55 minutes of swirling but assured and confident singing. Although there's an assortment of arrangers, to their credit their charts complement and reinforce Callaway's vocal strengths. She has a way at least on some cuts of creating an almost eerie atmosphere with her voice, bringing to mind hazy afternoons and hushed foggy evenings with her voice floating overhead. Aiding and abetting in creating this atmosphere are not only the arrangers, but the musicians.

Lou Marini's delicate flute and carefree alto sax are prominent on a slower than usual "How Long Has This Been Going On?" There's a jungle music-like introduction to the Callaway-penned title tune, "Bring Back Romance," then seguing into a soft rock tempo. Some of the arrangements on this CD are complex, but there are less ornate tracks like a jumping "There Will Never Be Another You," with Lee Musiker's piano providing the bulk of the support. Callaway's straight-ahead way with lyrics comes through loud (figuratively speaking) and clear on a jazzy "You Go to My Head," again with Marini's flute fluttering in the background before he takes out his sultry tenor. This track is one of the album's highlights, along with an upbeat and bouncy "It Could Happen to You." The result of all this is something for everybody, from heavily embellished arrangements through very emotional renditions like "My Shining Hour" to comparatively simple and basic jazz singing. Each track is like the weather. If you don't like it now, wait a few minutes and it will change.~Dave Nathanhttps://www.allmusic.com/album/bring-back-romance-mw0000627051

Bring Back Romance