Showing posts with label Betty Bryant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Betty Bryant. Show all posts

Sunday, February 18, 2024

Betty Bryant - Lotta Livin'

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2024
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:52
Size: 103,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:27) 1. Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
(4:18) 2. Put a Lid on It
(5:04) 3. Baby Baby All the Time
(5:40) 4. Blues to Get Started
(3:21) 5. Chicken Wings
(7:48) 6. Stormy Monday
(4:14) 7. Katydid
(4:46) 8. The Very Thought of You
(4:10) 9. A Lot of Livin’ to Do

First, double-check to make sure there aren't any misprints. No, it's an honest-to-goodness fact that Betty Bryant who sings, plays piano, wrote four of the nine numbers and arranged half a dozen on her fourteenth album really was almost ninety-four years old when Lotta Livin' was recorded in 2023.

Bryant's rough and edgy voice is remarkably strong and steady, while her piano playing simply defies any generational labels. As a vocalist, no note seems out of her reach, and she knows how to swing in any setting. Bryant is a true-blue jazz singer whose years of experience underline her every note and phrase. Besides which, she's a sharp and clever writer, as her quartet of likeable compositions proves.

Bryant's groovy "Katydid" is a linguistic delight, as are "Chicken Wings" and "Put a Lid on It." On her other theme, the breezy "Blues to Get Started," Bryant plays piano all the way and shows she's no greenhorn at the keyboard either. Tenor saxophonist Robert Kyle solos neatly there, as he does on several numbers, and moves to harmonica on "Chicken Wings." Other soloists are trumpeter Tony Guerrero, bassist Richard Simon, guitarist Kleber Jorge and drummer Kenny Elliott. Of course, Bryant has to ring down the curtain with Lee Adams and Charles Strouse's "A Lot of Livin' to Do" from the Broadway smash Bye Bye Birdie, taken at a slower and more amorous pace than usual.

Bryant opens with the standard "Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea" and appraises Bobby Troup's "Baby Baby All the Time," Ray Noble's "The Very Thought of You" and T-Bone Walker's "Stormy Monday," all with a style and panache that are clearly her own. She closes "A Lot of Livin' to Do" with a brief look at her bucket list and the affirmation, "ain't life grand" which, in her case, is unarguably true. While others may deem getting out of bed in the morning a triumph at her age, Bryant remains focused, feisty and ready to take on the world. Bravo! Score one for the power of savoir-faire and positive thinking.By Jack Bowers
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/lotta-livin-betty-bryant-self-produced

Lotta Livin'

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Betty Bryant - Mostly Me

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:45
Size: 134.5 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:48] 1. Easy Living
[3:33] 2. Beautiful Friendship
[4:13] 3. He May Be Your Man
[3:20] 4. Improvisation #2
[3:58] 5. 's Wonderful (Feat. Tony Guerrero)
[4:32] 6. Fine And Mellow
[1:46] 7. I Loved Him
[4:06] 8. I Love Being Here With You
[5:06] 9. Everything Happens To Me
[2:32] 10. St. James Infirmary
[3:45] 11. Don't Fall In Love With Me
[4:13] 12. Travelin' Light (Feat. Robert Kyle)
[1:30] 13. Mouvements Perpetuels (First Movement)
[3:02] 14. Scarlet Ribbons
[3:22] 15. Improvisation #1
[4:52] 16. Something Cool

Usually quiet and laid back, I can be forceful when need be. This CD was suggested and produced by Robert Kyle because he thought I should document something solo since that's how I started. The result is this eclectic mostly one-take album with some improvisational piano thrown in for good measure.

Mostly Me mc
Mostly Me zippy

Monday, November 17, 2014

Betty Bryant - Iteration +

Size: 167,9 MB
Time: 72:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2013
Styles: Jazz/Blues Vocals
Art: Front

01. Black Coffee (4:50)
02. Where Did Tomorrow Go (4:02)
03. Scratch (2:49)
04. St. Louis Blues (6:56)
05. When Did You Leave Heaven (4:05)
06. No Regrets (5:20)
07. The Very Thought Of You (4:32)
08. The Breeze And I (4:29)
09. Soon It's Gonna Rain (4:10)
10. Let Me Love You (4:11)
11. You're My Thrill (3:20)
12. Keep Him Away From Me (4:15)
13. I'm Just A Lucky So And So (4:04)
14. Come And Laugh With Me (2:33)
15. Grease In My Gravy (5:13)
16. Until The Real Thing Comes Along (4:12)
17. It's Hard To Say Goodbye (3:08)

Born in Kansas City, Betty Bryant began playing the piano when she was four. After graduating from college in the early 1950s, she began playing and singing jazz and standards professionally in Topeka and Kansas City. She has been a fixture in Los Angeles clubs since she moved out here in 1955 and is still playing regularly.

Iteration + consists of 14 songs drawn from her previous recordings Come Laugh With Me, What’s The Point, No Regrets and Together plus three recently recorded selections. Ms. Bryant is joined by bassist Tomas Gargano, several different drummers (including Kenny Elliot and James Gadson) and, on some of the tunes, Robert Kyle (who produced this reissue) on tenor or soprano.

The music is a consistent delight.

Whether sounding bluesy, joyful, sassy or all three, Betty Bryant is heard throughout at the top of her form. She makes such songs as “Black Coffee” “St. Louis Blues,” “When Did .You Leave Heaven,’ “You’re My Thrill”. and “Until The Real Thing’ Comes Alorig” sound fresh and lively. In ,addition to the well-known songs, she also performs such obscurities as “Scratch,” “Keep Him Away From Me,” and “Grease In My Gravy” plus her “Where Did Tomorrow Go,” “Come And Laugh With Me” and “It’s Hard To Say Goodbye.” Everything works well.

Iteration + serves as a perfect introduction to Betty Bryant’s music; which is always swinging, soulful and. quite enjoyable. Be sure to see the ageless and legendary Betty Bryant when she appears in local clubs. ~Scott Yanow

Iteration +