Showing posts with label Angela Verbrugge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angela Verbrugge. Show all posts

Sunday, May 19, 2024

Angela Verbrugge - Somewhere

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
Time: 29:30
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 68,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:58) 1. I Had the Craziest Dream
(3:52) 2. Somewhere
(3:56) 3. Born to Be Blue
(3:09) 4. Until I Met You (Corner Pocket)
(5:00) 5. For You, For Me, Forevermore
(4:13) 6. Je Ne Veux Pas Te Dire Bonsoir (Remix)
(4:19) 7. If the Moon Turns Green

The proper response to Beauty is an awed admiring silence. So these liner notes should be one word in a large font: LISTEN. But Angela asked me to add a few hundred keystrokes to the project, so here we are. Incidentally, I have chosen to focus on Angela in the midst of the most superb musicians and arrangements. I hope they will forgive me!

Angela Verbrugge is a great subversive. Her work is so quietly insinuating that listeners might easily underestimate it in favor of singers who make their work look arduous. But in every song, she creates singular landscapes of feeling that run parallel with melody and lyrics, as if the songs were sheets of colored tissue paper through which she shines light to make magic shadows on the wall.

In her casual-sounding way, she offers us truths of the heart, urgent and genuine. A gentle authenticity without pretense. Rather than a throbbing vibrato, long-held notes in forests of violins, she offers us a light-hearted tenderness, a speaking naturalness. And she is an elegant improviser, a risk-taker, a great horn-player who doesn't bring a case to the gig.

Her musical range is anything but narrow: on one track, she suggests the Basie band without all those suits and music stands; on another, she serves us a croissant in an imaginary cafe on Boulevard Saint Germain in Paris.

I am so impressed by her light touch with songs that ordinarily lead singers to melodrama. Forgive the domestic metaphor, but it is as if Angela had gone to the laundry room with these songs, put them in the spin-dryer on high heat for a few seconds to remove decades of damp sentimentality, and brought them out, resuscitated.

Her "Craziest Dream" is nearly whimsical ("let me tell you about the weird thing that happened last night!") an interlude of love-making at the breakfast table. "Somewhere" is sweetly sustaining: in her production of West Side Story, Tony and Maria live on and leave the city to sell their own goat cheese, far from skyscrapers. "Born to Be Blue," a self-pitying lament in others' hands, is now a playful duet for voice and piano. "For You, For Me, Forevermore" is a series of airy footsteps through the never-heard verse and chorus.

The one exception is her "If the Moon Turns Green," a 1935 song by Bernie Hanighen, Billie Holiday's friend and advocate. Billie didn't record it when it was new, but Angela's version makes up for that. It is a masterpiece of delicate ardor, and I do not overstate. By Michael Steinman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/angela-verbrugge-somewhere

Personnel: Angela Verbrugge - vocals; Erik Kalaidzis - vocals (2); Ray Gallon - piano (3,4,5,7); Cameron Brown - bass (4,7); Anthony Pinciotti - drums (4,7); Dave Say - saxophones (2,6); Miles Black - piano (1,2,6); Jodi Proznick - bass (1,2,6); Joel Fountain - drums (1,2,6)

Somewhere

Monday, June 13, 2022

Angela Verbrugge - Love for Connoisseurs

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:25
Size: 113,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:24) 1. Love for Connoisseurs
(3:37) 2. Enough's Enough
(3:44) 3. This is Manhattan
(4:13) 4. Je Ne Veux Pas Te Dire Bonsoir
(4:08) 5. Cold and Hot Blues
(4:16) 6. Corn on the Cob
(3:47) 7. Mr Right
(5:26) 8. Jive Turkey
(3:43) 9. Not Here, Not Now
(3:40) 10. Twentieth Century Fox
(4:33) 11. Quarantine
(3:48) 12. Maybe Now's the Time

Based in British Columbia’s picturesque capital of Victoria, jazz vocalist and songwriter Angela Verbrugge introduced herself with 2019’s captivating debut The Night We Couldn’t Say Goodnight. That project covered a lot of ground, leading off with two originals that, in hindsight, offered a telling glimpse of her prowess and ambition. Focusing entirely on original material, written mostly in collaboration with veteran musicians, her second album Love for Connoisseurs establishes Verbrugge as a jazz artist mining everyday life for lyrical nuggets.

Well integrated into her capable band with pianist Miles Black, bassist Jodi Proznick, drummer Joel Fountain, and saxophonist Dave Say, she applies her considerable wit and winsome sound to songs that tend to focus on the vicissitudes of romance. She turns pianist Ray Gallon’s intricate tune “Enough’s Enough” into an exasperated list of offenses by a slobby housemate. One hopes that their collaboration detailing the exploits of a boorish cad, “Jive Turkey,” refers to someone else. On the all-too-topical “Quarantine” they take a left turn from an “All Blues”-like intro into a forbidding portrait of life in the pre-vaccination phase of the pandemic.~ Andrew Gilbert https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/angela-verbrugge-love-for-connoisseurs-gut-strings/

Love for Connoisseurs

Monday, July 26, 2021

Angela Verbrugge - The Night We Couldn't Say Good Night

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:15
Size: 113,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:34) 1. I'm Running Late (That's the Question)
(3:51) 2. The Night We Couldn't Say Good Night
(4:39) 3. Love Walked In
(5:13) 4. All Too Soon
(3:27) 5. You're Almost Perfect
(3:00) 6. This Could Be the Start of Something Big
(3:11) 7. Interlude (A Night in Tunisia)
(4:17) 8. Cool Baby
(3:40) 9. Si Tu Pudieras Quererme (You and the Night and the Music)
(3:52) 10. Speak Softly, Love
(3:01) 11. Plus je t’embrasse
(3:06) 12. The Moon Was Yellow
(3:17) 13. How Did I Know This Was the End?

Angela Verbrugge seems to understand the importance of a first impression, as her debut album offers a wide-angle look at her manifold talents without feeling forced or showy. A singer nurtured on the British Columbia jazz scene, the Vancouver-based Verbrugge possesses a winsome, brightly burnished, pliable voice, ample emotional intelligence, considerable songwriting skills, and conspicuously good taste. With top-notch accompanists Ray Gallon on piano, Anthony Pinciotti on drums, and Cameron Brown on bass she delivers 13 songs, including four originals, that cover a lot of territory.

It takes some moxie to lead with two pieces of her own the steeplechase collaboration with Gallon, “I’m Running Late (That’s the Question),” and the sultry title track before offering a wondrous version of the Gershwins’ “Love Walked In” complete with oft-overlooked verse. The album’s sequencing often amplifies a song’s impact, as when Steve Allen’s rousing “This Could Be the Start of Something Big” follows her original “You’re Almost Perfect.” https://jazztimes.com/reviews/albums/angela-verbrugge-the-night-we-couldnt-say-goodnight-gut-string/

The Night We Couldn't Say Good Night