Showing posts with label Anita Wardell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anita Wardell. Show all posts

Saturday, December 31, 2016

Various - Women With Standards

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:56
Size: 157.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[4:55] 1. Anita Wardell - I Hear Music
[4:03] 2. Alison Bentley - September In The Rain
[3:46] 3. Shirley Kent - Don't Laugh At Me
[5:10] 4. Mandy Fox - Someone To Watch Over Me
[6:01] 5. Alison Bentley - Triste
[6:16] 6. Shirley Kent - Willow Weep For Me
[5:57] 7. Anita Wardell - This Can't Be Love
[4:09] 8. Mandy Fox - Crazy
[2:40] 9. Anita Wardell - Young And Foolish
[2:00] 10. Mandy Fox - No Moon At All
[5:28] 11. Alison Bentley - Eyes Of The Soul
[4:05] 12. Shirley Kent - Time After Time
[3:16] 13. Mandy Fox - The Thrill Is Gone
[3:22] 14. Alison Bentley - Beautiful Love
[4:26] 15. Anita Wardell - Blue Moon
[3:14] 16. Shirley Kent - We'll Gather Lilacs

Anita Wardell, Alison Bentley, Shirley Kent, Mandy Fox (vocals), Liam Noble, Dave Frankel, Richard Simmonds, Simon Purcell (piano), Malcolm Gibbons, Denny Ilett (guitar), Trevor Lines, Duncan Allen, Dave Jones (bass), Ben Clark, Paul Cavaciutti, Dylan Howe (drums). Recorded 1994-7.

Sixteen great jazz standards recorded by four of Britain's finest jazz vocalists, accompanied by the likes of pianist Liam Noble and drummer Dylan Howe.

Women With Standards

Monday, July 18, 2016

Anita Wardell - Why Do You Cry

Size: 109,7 MB
Time: 47:08
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1995
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. I've Never Been In Love Before (6:55)
02. September In The Rain (4:22)
03. Why Do You Cry (4:34)
04. Twisted (4:15)
05. In Love In Vain (3:03)
06. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans (7:07)
07. Bye Bye Blackbird (4:24)
08. Oh What A Beautiful Morning (3:48)
09. Duke Ellington's Sound Of Love (4:22)
10. Deep Purple (4:13)

Jazz vocalist Anita Wardell has been acclaimed for the unique artistry she brings to scat and be-bop singing. Raves from peers and critics alike have cemented her reputation as one of Britain 's finest vocalists.

b. 1961, Guildford, Surrey, England. When Wardell was 12 years old, she and her family emigrated to Australia, where in due time she completed a four-year performance course in jazz and improvised music at Adelaide University. She began singing professionally and appeared at jazz festivals with Richie Cole and with James Morrison and Don Burrows, with whom she later sang on tracks on two albums. In 1989 she returned to the UK where she studied at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. While there she was heard by Norma Winstone who declared, ‘She sings without affectation, and with clarity of voice, which I love.’ In the early 90s Wardell worked extensively in Europe and also visited the USA, singing at festivals at San José, Edinburgh and in Finland. She formed a close working relationship with John Stevens, performing drums/voice duos and they recorded together in 1994. Her debut album under her own name, in 1995, was an exceptional set of duets with pianist Liam Noble.

A rich, expressive and agile voice allows Wardell to excel not only with the great ballad standards, which she sings with remarkable expressiveness, but also with bop classics. The guru of contemporary jazz singers, Mark Murphy, has extolled the quality of her bop singing, stating that it is ‘always so clear and accurate in its linearism’. Wardell also makes considerable use of scat singing in her programming and while many young singers launch into scat with only a faint notion of its strengths and limitations, she is an exceptionally gifted user of the form.

Why Do You Cry

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Anita Wardell - Kinda Blue

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:48
Size: 95.7 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[3:19] 1. I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues
[3:56] 2. Loose Bloose
[3:29] 3. Little Girl Blue
[5:25] 4. Learnin' The Blues
[3:12] 5. The Wrong Blues
[6:52] 6. The Meaning Of The Blues
[3:37] 7. Limehouse Blues
[4:12] 8. Teenie's Blues
[4:16] 9. Parker's Mood
[3:25] 10. Born To Be Blue

This is a straightahead jazz singer's album of blues-related songs, so what can a contemporary singer do to step out of the crowd of generic rivals, or rise above the great performances of the past? Anita Wardell, the UK-resident Australia-raised singer, has been one of the most engaging live performers on standard material over a decade, and last year's Noted album rightly won acclaim. The yearning, lost-love quality that inevitably clings to some of this material gives the album something of a languorous, dinner-jazzy quality and Wardell reserves her compelling combination of Norma Winston's stillness and purity and her own forceful swing and bop-scat agility for the later stages.There's a fine account of The Meaning of the Blues, some quirkily Monkish instrument-like improve and a little Hammond organ earthiness, with excellent pianist Robin Aspland typically sharp-eared. But hardnosed jazzers might want a bit more grit and edge. ~JF, The Guardian

Kinda Blue

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Anita Wardell - Why Do You Cry?

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 47:41
Size: 87,7 MB
Art: Front

(6:57)  1. Ive Never Been in Love Before
(4:22)  2. September in the Rain
(4:36)  3. Why Do You Cry?
(4:17)  4. Twisted
(3:05)  5. In Love in Vain
(7:09)  6. Do You Know What It Means
(4:26)  7. Bye Bye Blackbird
(3:50)  8. Oh What a Beautiful Morning
(4:22)  9. Duke Ellington s Sound of Love
(4:33) 10. Deep Purple

Jazz vocalist Anita Wardell has been acclaimed for the unique artistry she brings to scat and be-bop singing. Raves from peers and critics alike have cemented her reputation as one of Britain 's finest vocalists.

Born in Guildford, UK, Anita emigrated to Australia with her family as child. Enraptured by movie musicals on TV, she soaked up the classics by Rodgers and Hammerstein and Cole Porter. Equipped with a portable tape player, she would record the songs off the set and listen to them countless times. She often explored her father's collection of big band albums by Duke Ellington, Count Basie and many more. During her teens, works by the likes of Clifford Brown, Miles Davis and Charlie Parker exposed her to the complexities of modern jazz while she learned her vocal craft from greats like Ella Fitzgerald, Mark Murphy, Carmen McRae, Betty Carter and Jon Hendricks. Attending Adelaide University in South Australia, Anita worked toward a performance in jazz and improvised music and worked regularly on the Australian jazz circuit.

 Performing with a host of local and international artists, including American saxophonist Richie Cole at the Kiama Jazz Festival and supporting the legendary Sarah Vaughan at the Sydney Opera House, her classroom studies were supplemented by real-life experience. Her recording career began when she joined the Adelaide Connection, formed in 1979-80. Founded by Adelaide native John McKenzie, who directed the group until the early 90s, the Connection enjoyed visits from distinguished guest artists and arrangers like Dr. Kirby Shaw, Phil Mattson, Don Burrows and James Morrison. Anita joined the group at its inception and credits the experience for teaching her how to "blend in with other singers and really listen!" Adelaide Connection recorded two albums (Makin' Whoopee and Nice and Easy) and toured throughout Australia. Anita returned to London in 1989, continuing her studies at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, completing a yearlong course in jazz and studio music. Now touring extensively throughout the UK and Europe, Anita played festival and club dates with appearances at the venerable London jazz club Ronnie Scotts, the Royal Festival Hall, National Theatre and a yearly stint at the Paradise Festival in Cyprus each September.

In 1995, Anita went into the studio with pianist Liam Noble to record an album's worth of material with the hopes of finding a label to release it. After shopping the CD around, they signed a deal with FMR Records. Why Do You Cry? was released to great praise. Pioneer Mark Murphy proclaimed Anita, "a gift from Australia", adding "what hits me is how expressive her ballad singing is. Then she has the courage to scat a ballad or two, not unlike a young lady disciple of the Ben Webster school." Singer Norma Winstone praises her "!unexpected vulnerability, which makes her reading of the ballads both beautiful and touching. Her honesty shines in this well-chosen collection of songs!" Jazzwise Magazine called her "energetic and inventive" while The Guardian proclaimed her "a model of the Jazz singer's art." Nearly universal praise was lavished for her timing, clarity, improvisational skills and emotional resonance. A BBC documentary for Channel Four found Anita in the company of Kurt Elling and Dee Dee Bridgewater in a salute to Ella Fitzgerald entitled "Jazz Heroes". "I really enjoyed working on the Ella Tribute," Anita says. "Having grown up listening and transcribing Ella solos, I felt so excited to be asked to talk about one of my great inspirations. Scat is a big part of what I do and so to be able to comment on scat syllables, style and phrasing was a great experience for me."

Anita continued to work throughout the UK with her trio: pianist Robin Aspland, bassist Jeremy Brown and drummer Gene Calderazzo. Aspland has worked with George Coleman, Bobby Watson, Steve Grossman, Van Morrison, Georgie Fame and is the pianist for Curtis Stigers when he tours England . Calderazzo hails from New York where he worked with legends Joe Henderson, Lionel Hampton and Michael Brecker. Moving to London in 1995, he has become one of the most demanded jazz drummers in Europe . Brown studied at the Royal Academy of Music and has become a very sought-after sideman throughout the UK . Anita and her trio returned to the studio in 1999 and recorded Straight Ahead, released on 33 Jazz. Critics praised her "vibrant delivery," finding in her style the "sweetness of Ella, the creativity of Mark Murphy whilst using her laughter, sadness and technique to tell a story like no other (Amazon). Japan 's most popular jazz publication, Swing Journal, gave its endorsement, writing, "!she's the real thing who can fluently scat and vocalese!" Her latest CD, Until the Stars Fade, finds Anita returning to her first love, tackling Porter, Rodgers and Hammerstein and Rogers and Hart. She and her trio deftly interpret well-known standards in a fresh way, whether it's playful scatting on an energetic "Get out of Town" or a tender reading of "Make Someone Happy". Throughout the disc, her vocalese rivals the storied lyricists in its expressiveness. It's no wonder The Guardian calls her "one of Britain 's most exciting talents."http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/anitawardell2

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Anita Wardell - Straight Ahead

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:41
Size: 120,9 MB
Art: Front

(3:03)  1. It could happen to you
(5:53)  2. Young and Foolish
(4:48)  3. Polkadots and Moonbeams
(4:21)  4. Jackie
(4:18)  5. The thrill is gone
(5:46)  6. Humpty Dumpty Heart
(4:54)  7. I've got just about everythin
(5:12)  8. But not for me
(5:47)  9. We kiss in a shadow
(5:02) 10. Memories of you
(3:34) 11. East of the Sun

Great Britain has long been a fertile ground for singers and an awesome lot they are. Among the better known are Norma Winstone (the grande dame of English jazz singers), Carol Kidd, expatriate American Stacey Kent, Clair Martin and Jan Ponsford. Susannah McCorkle's career also blossomed there. Now we have Australian born Anita Wardell cutting her first album in England for the British record company, 33Jazz. I wish I could report that Ms Wardell belongs in this select group. But based on this recording, she is not quite there yet. The major problem is that she tends to get a bit shrill with the high notes as on "Young and Foolish". But this small problem should not be difficult to correct. Ms Wardell has a great sense of tempo and good diction which she employs with vigor to a play list of mostly standards along with some songs one doesn't hear too often these days. Ergo, we have "Humpty Dumpty Heart" made famous by Ray Eberle and the Glenn Miller Orchestra with their 1941 recording. Then there's the Frank Sinatra/Tommy Dorsey 1940 hit, "Polka Dots and Moonbeams". 

The wonderful Claude Thornhill Orchestra made a fine recording of this Jimmy Van Heusen/Jimmy Burke tune. "Jackie" by Hampton Hawes and to which Annie Ross added lyrics and like Ms Ross, Wardell does it vocalese style and quite well. Wardell also engages in some serious scatting on this tune. The remaining tunes are offered in a variety of styles mostly to a medium to up tempo beat. "The Thrill Is Gone" is the designated "let's do something with a Latin beat" tune. Ms Wardell's somewhat coy little girl voice goes nicely with such tunes as "We Kiss in a Shadow" and "It Could Happen to You". But it's her interpretation of "But Not for Me" where Ms Wardell's potential as a top flight vocalist becomes apparent. Kicking off with an interplay between Wardell, bass and drums with the piano coming in after the first chorus along with the introduction of some intelligent, well-placed scatting, this tune is the highlight of the album. While Ms Wardell possesses all the tools to become a good singer, she is still a work in progress. She's getting there, but has not reached the point where her performances are consistently at a high level. ~ Dave Nathan   
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=6048#.U0dBoFdSvro

Personnel: Anita Wardell - Vocal; Jason Rebello - Piano; Arnie Somogyi - Bass; Marc Meader-Drums

Straight Ahead

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Anita Wardell - The Road

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:26
Size: 122,3 MB
Art: Front + Back

(5:01)  1. Travels / The Road
(6:43)  2. You're My Thrill
(6:15)  3. Without a Song
(6:37)  4. With Every Breath I Take
(5:09)  5. Frevo Em Maceio
(6:15)  6. Surrey with the Fringe on Top
(5:55)  7. Superwoman
(6:03)  8. Mirrors
(5:25)  9. Você e Eu

Anita Wardell, the Australia-raised vocalist who appeared on the UK scene in the 1990s, makes albums that deploy familiar vocal-jazz methods and plenty of well-travelled standard songs, but also demonstrate a real care for her art. This set finds her accompanied by a sophisticated quintet led by her regular pianist Robin Aspland, on a repertoire mixing standards such as You're My Thrill and Without a Song with material by Pat Metheny, Bobby Hutcherson, Hermeto Pascoal and Stevie Wonder. Wardell's own lyrics are confidingly delivered over the country-song sway of Metheny's and Lyle Mays' Travels/The Road, and You're My Thrill stretches and swoops between an eerily distracted hover and straight jazz time. Pascoal's Frevo Em Maceio is a vehicle for Wardell's boppish agility, skipping flutelike over the mercurial melody, and she quietly caresses the meanings out of Stevie Wonder's Superwoman with an expertise that never betrays a hint of artifice. An unobtrusively classy vocal album. ~ John Fordham  http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/aug/22/anita-wardell-the-road-review

The Road

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Anita Wardell Quartet - Until The Stars Fade

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2002
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:16
Size: 144,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:01)  1. Get Out Of Town
(8:15)  2. Love For Sale
(8:39)  3. Make Someone Happy
(6:41)  4. Yor Are Looking At Me
(5:55)  5. I Have Never Been In Love Before
(6:52)  6. For All We Know
(5:38)  7. People Will Say We Are In Love
(6:10)  8. With A Song In My Heart
(6:20)  9. Devil May Care
(4:41) 10. My Shining Hour

Anita Wardell is one of England's best-kept secrets, but with talent like hers she won't be a secret for much longer. Possessing a natural swing and scatting ability like Kitty Margolis but with the sensuality of Julie London, Wardell is the complete jazz singer. Her sidemen are extremely gifted soloists in their own rights, and hearing this album should make North American jazz fans with the wherewithal want to hop the next plane to Ronnie Scott's when Wardell's quartet plays there the next time.

Until the Stars Fade contains only standards, but they are all performed with new interpretations that make the tunes sound as fresh as the day they were composed. The latin groove is a particularly nice touch to Bobby Troup's tragically-neglected classic "You're Looking at Me." Nothing short of amazing is the complete reharmonization of Rogers and Hammerstein's "People Will Say We're in Love." In the hands of Wardell and company the tune sounds as though it were composed by Herbie Hancock or McCoy Tyner.

Wardell also knows how to sing a torch song, and her rendition of "For All We Know" is particularly lugubrious and poignant. But when it comes to scatting, Wardell is right up there with Kurt Elling and Mark Murphy. Her performances of "Devil May Care" (most recently recorded by Diana Krall), "I've Never Been in Love Before" and "My Shining Hour" are masterpieces of vocal improvisation. Anita Wardell is an amazing talent whose artistry deserves much wider recognition. Until the Stars Fade is a flawless recording of a great jazz singer at the top of her game. ~ William Grim 
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=10746#.UoJTA-Jc_vs

Personnel: Anita Wardell, voice; Robin Aspland, piano; Jeremy Brown, bass; Gene Caldarazzo, drums; Mark Taylor, drums

Until The Stars Fade

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Anita Wardell & Benn Clatworthy - If You Never Come To Me

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:02
Size: 128,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:29)  1. If You Never Come To Me
(6:15)  2. Spring Is Here
(5:55)  3. I Wish You Love
(3:42)  4. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(7:13)  5. I Get Along Without You Very Well
(4:22)  6. I'll Be Seeing You
(7:38)  7. I'm A Fool To Want You
(4:22)  8. Love Came On Stealthy Fingers
(6:54)  9. Weaver Of Dreams
(4:08) 10. Falling In Love With Love

Anita Wardell's singing is exciting and breathtaking. She is noted for her mesmerizing and captivating vocal improvisations and vocalese lyrics to instrumental solos. Anita is a musician who uses the voice as her instrument, displaying precision and agility, mixed with heartfelt emotion. Singer Norma Winstone praised her “unexpected vulnerability, which makes her reading of the ballads both beautiful and touching. Her honesty shines in this well-chosen collection of songs.” Bebop pioneer, Mark Murphy, proclaimed Anita, “a gift from Australia”, adding “What hits me, is how expressive her ballad singing is. Then she has the courage to scat a ballad or two, not unlike a young lady disciple of the Ben Webster school.” Born in Guildford, UK, Anita moved to Australia with her family as a child. Anita's formative years were spent soaking up the Rodgers and Hammerstein and Cole Porter classics. She also explored her father's collection of big band albums by Duke Ellington, Count Basie and many more. During her teens, she started to get to grips with the complexities of modern Jazz when she discovered Clifford Brown, Cannonball Adderley, Miles Davis and Charlie Parker. At the same time she learned her vocal craft from greats like Ella Fitzgerald, Mark Murphy, Carmen McRae, Betty Carter, Jon Hendricks and Eddie Jefferson. 

After attending secondary School she completed her degree in Music at the Adelaide University. In 1990, Anita relocated back to the UK where she studied at the Guildhall school of music and drama.  Anita's recording career began in 1995 with her CD,Why do you Cry? featuring pianist Liam NobleIn 1998 she released Straight Ahead with international star pianist Jason Rebello. Japan's most popular jazz publication, Swing Journal, gave its endorsement, writing, “she's the real thing who can fluently scat and vocalese!” Her longstanding musical relationship with pianist Robin Aspland started with the release of Until The Stars Fade in 2001 also featuring the exciting US drummer Gene Calderazzo and Jeremy Brown on bass. Jazzwise Magazine called her “energetic and inventive” while The Guardian proclaimed her “a model of the Jazz singer’s art”, highlighting her clarity, improvisational skills and emotional resonance. In 2004 she teamed up with tenor saxophonist, Benn Clatworthy, and recorded If You Never Come to Me. Anita was signed to Proper Records in 2006 and recorded Noted (2006) and Kinda Blue (2008). Her latest album, The Road, is due for release in summer 2013. Anita received the prestigious BBC Jazz Award for Best of Jazz category in 2006. This, coupled with the release of Kinda Blue has propelled Anita into the major artist arena. She has guested on many local and international recordings.  http://m.allaboutjazz.com/musician.php?id=2420

If You Never Come To Me

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Anita Wardell - Noted

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:09
Size: 137,7 MB
Art: Front

(7:47)  1. Moanin'
(7:03)  2. Watermelon Man
(7:46)  3. Autumn Leaves
(4:16)  4. Night And Day
(5:24)  5. Lonely Woman
(4:44)  6. Doodlin'
(6:03)  7. The Sidewinder
(6:51)  8. Blues On The Corner
(4:39)  9. Wonderful, Wonderful
(5:33) 10. And What If I Don't

The best straight-ahead jazz singer on the scene today is Anita Wardell, the winner of the prestigious BBC Jazz Award last month, and Noted is one of the most impressive displays of vocal jazz and vocalese in many years. Backed up by her usual working trio of pianist Robin Aspland, bassist Jeremy Brown and drummer Steve Brown (along with guest saxophonist Alex Garnett), Wardell delivers knockout performances of well-known jazz classics and less familiar works that she has updated using her own unique swinging style.

The album starts off with a rousing rendition of Jon Hendricks' vocalese to the jazz classic "Moanin'. Aside from her scatting and improvisational abilities, Wardell possess an almost flawless vocal technique. Indeed, one would be hard pressed to find clearer enunciation and pitch from a Bartoli or Netrebko.

Standards receive their due from Wardell and company, in particular "Night and Day and "Autumn Leaves. The arrangement of the latter is especially nice when it goes into double time. The unrelenting swing of the former displays Wardell's scatting in its fullest virtuosity and also features a particularly nice piano solo by Robin Asplund.

Horace Silver's well-known "Doodlin' was a logical choice for this album, and it is performed here with great aplomb. But a real treat is the soulful rendition of Silver's less well-known "Lonely Woman. Herbie Hancock receives similar treatment with a pairing of his oft-performed "Watermelon Man and his lesser-known "And What If I Don't. As far as I am aware, this is the first recording of a vocal version of the latter tune.

Another piece that Wardell has rescued from relative obscurity is Ben Raleigh and Sherman Edwards' "Wonderful, Wonderful, which was a minor hit for Johnny Mathis in 1957 and for the Supremes in the early '60s. Wardell's up-tempo version completely transforms this tune and would make a great candidate for a big band accompaniment.

As always, Wardell surrounds herself with first-class musicians. Long-time collaborators Robin Asplund, Steve Brown and Jeremy Brown make up an almost perfect rhythm section for a singer. They are all superb soloists in their own rights, and their understated accompaniment is a paradigm of taste and musicality. Saxophonist Alex Garnett combines the intensity of an Art Pepper with a lighter tone a la Grover Washington, Jr. Noted is an important album and a testament to Anita Wardell's rising status as a jazz artist of the first caliber. With a BBC Jazz Award under her belt, a Jazz Grammy should not be too far behind. ~ William Grim  
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=22983#.UmgSnBAufMo

Personnel: Anita Wardell: vocals; Robin Asplund: piano; Jeremy Brown: bass; Steve Brown: bass; Alex Garnett: saxophones.