Showing posts with label Darden Purcell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Darden Purcell. Show all posts

Friday, February 16, 2024

Darden Purcell - Love's Got Me in a Lazy Mood

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:28
Size: 155,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:37) 1. Willow Weep for Me
(6:24) 2. Love's Got Me in a Lazy Mood
(5:41) 3. Come Back to Me
(5:48) 4. It's a Most Unusual Day
(4:57) 5. I Concentrate on You
(5:35) 6. A Cottage for Sale
(5:55) 7. Estrada Branca (This Happy Madness)
(7:24) 8. Chatterbox
(7:09) 9. Estate
(6:32) 10. Taking a Chance on Love
(5:21) 11. You've Changed

Darden Purcell's album Love's Got Me In A Lazy Mood (OA2 Records, 2023) shows her keen ear for the subtleties and nuances which define the West Coast cool jazz vocal sound. Purcell's album comprises eleven tracks which blend the laid-back, sophisticated rhythms and melodic inventiveness that characterize the style with beautiful singing and nimble playing.

Purcell is joined by an ensemble of musicians whose contributions are pivotal to the album's charm and success. On six tracks the ensemble features Joe Locke on vibraphone, whose nuanced textures and rhythmic sophistication add depth to each track. Shawn Purcell, who arranged all the songs, weaves intricate harmonies and melodies which complement and converse with Darden Purcell's vocals. Todd Simon's piano provides a supportive undercurrent, binding the ensemble's sound. The rhythmic foundation laid down by Jeff Reed on acoustic bass and Todd Harrison on drums is compelling, creating a rhythmic flow which allows each musician to flourish in the various feels and styles. The ensemble creates a cohesive, explorative, and resonant sound with an overall essence of West Coast cool jazz.

Purcell's vocal delivery is a journey through the emotional landscapes of each track. Her rendition of "A Cottage for Sale" is a highlight as she confidently conveys the song in a heartfelt narrative. "You've Changed" is another song in which she displays those qualities, matching the lyrics with the coloring of her tone and inflections. In the title track, "Love's Got Me in a Lazy Mood," Purcell uses the lyrics to explore love's complex, layered emotions through her vocal inflections. Her vocal delicacies hint at an undercurrent of both contentment and longing, a duality often explored in the introspective nature of West Coast cool jazz, where the focus is often on expression and mood.

In "Estrada Branca (This Happy Madness)," Purcell's switch between Portuguese and English adds a unique storytelling dimension. Her nuanced and deliberate phrasing engages in both linguistic settings, creating a creative and universal performance. "Estate" has a moody and dark arrangement. The laid-back phrasing of Purcell's vocals makes the song's story come alive. This ability to tell a story through subtle vocal inflections is reminiscent of the West Coast jazz ethos, where less is often more.

Shawn Purcell's original, "Chatterbox," is one of the album's many highlights. The song has an exciting approach to the vocal, guitar, piano, and vibes possibilities to create varying orchestrative dialogues. Purcell's voice engages with the ensemble as an instrument which happens to be singing lyrics. This interplay is done with a command of jazz rhythms and articulations. Purcell's personal touch comes through in her lyric choices and vocal expression. By choosing both aspects, Purcell can give a performance that distinctly displays her jazz articulation and rhythm with excellent lyric writing.

Throughout Love's Got Me In A Lazy Mood, Purcell comprehends jazz's expressive potential. Her vocal delivery is built upon solid technical skills, but her artistry is about weaving a melody with stories and emotions.By Geannine Reid
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/loves-got-me-in-a-lazy-mood-darden-purcell-oa2-records

Love's Got Me in a Lazy Mood

Saturday, April 8, 2017

Darden Purcell - Easy Living

Size: 123,2 MB
Time: 52:37
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2009
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. What A Little Moonlight Can Do (5:14)
02. Comes Love (4:59)
03. Alice In Wonderland (5:55)
04. Love For Sale (4:46)
05. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow (4:26)
06. Your Red Wagon (4:33)
07. Last Night When We Were Young (4:40)
08. Get Happy (3:41)
09. You Don't Know What Love Is (5:06)
10. Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead (3:35)
11. Easy Living (5:38)

Working backwards, I discovered DC-area jazz vocalist and educator Darden Purcell with her second recording, Where the Blue Begins (Armored Records, 2016). It was an impressive recital with the nominal theme of twilight winding through its repertoire. While less thematically focused, Easy Living remains a well programmed set of eleven standards, "My Funny Valentine" thankfully not among them.

Easy Living smacks of youthfully precocious invention, a collection of master musicians trying their individual talents out in creative ways. Vocalist Purcell possess an instrument finely tuned through study and performance. She is easily the most precise singer I have heard in sometime. Her delivery and sense of time are impressive and immediately evidenced of the opener, "What a Little Moonlight Can Do." Purcell displays some pretty impressive scat chops in the introduction before launching into a very precise delivery of the song. Clinically precise.

The "clinical" part of this precision softens, particularly in the soft ballads like "Alice in Wonderland" and a terrific reading of the Goffin-King classic, "Will You Love Me Tomorrow." "Love for Sale" finds both Purcells relaxed and swinging. Singing with sardonic humor, Purcell reveals the same delicate shabby hopelessness present in Billy Strayhorn's "Lush Life" and, in doing so perfectly capturing Cole Porter's intention for his 1930 The New Yorkers showstopper.

The satisfying surprises lay in a rollicking "Your Red Wagon," that finds pianist Chip Stephens and winds player Chip McNeill playing con brio supporting both Purcells to do the same. What? Another tired performance of the 1930 Arlen-Koehler chestnut, "Get Happy?" Not on your life. Just as he did on "The Nearness of You" from Where the Blue Begins, Shawn Purcell transforms what begins as a churchy reverent performance into a Ben Monder—Shawn Lane shootout that is delightful. Now, that's what I am talkin' about! Easy Living finds Darden Purcell doing some pre-event warm ups in anticipation of the classroom, concert stage, and Where the Blue Begins. ~C. Michael Bailey

Personnel: Darden Purcell: vocals; Chip McNeill: winds; Shawn Purcell: guitar; Chip Stephens: piano; Dennis Carroll: bass; Stockton Helbing: drums.

Easy Living

Monday, October 31, 2016

Darden Purcell - Where The Blue Begins

Size: 124,8 MB
Time: 53:51
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. Destination Moon (5:21)
02. Moon And Sand (5:17)
03. Lullaby Of The Leaves (4:40)
04. You Stepped Out Of A Dream (4:35)
05. This Bitter Earth (5:12)
06. Old Devil Moon (6:13)
07. Dam That Dream (5:45)
08. No Moon At All (3:29)
09. The Nearness Of You (4:46)
10. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams Weaver Of Dreams (4:22)
11. Stairway To The Stars (4:06)

Darden Purcell's highly anticipated second CD, Where the Blue Begins, masterfully showcases her honey and spice drenched voice, artistic sophistication, and vocal maturity. From her adept navigation of intricate lines on "Destination Moon" to her delicate interpretation of "Stairway to the Stars," Where the Blue Begins demonstrates Purcell is a musical "tour de force."

Shawn Purcell's arrangements illuminate fresh adaptations on well-worn standards such as "Old Devil Moon" and "You Stepped Out of a Dream" as well as more obscure pieces "This Bitter Earth" and Alec Wilder's "Moon and Sand." Produced by Doc Severinsen drummer, Stockton Helbing (drums and cymbals), with musical direction by Shawn Purcell (nylon string and electric guitar), Where the Blue Begins also features first-call Washington D.C. musicians, Todd Simon (B3 organ, piano, wurlitzer and Fender Rhodes), Paul Henry (acoustic and electric bass) and Kenny Rittenhouse (flugelhorn and trumpet). From the Jazz neophyte to the most seasoned aficionado, Where the Blue Begins satisfies all.

Where The Blue Begins