Showing posts with label Debby Yeager. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Debby Yeager. Show all posts

Saturday, January 23, 2021

Debby Yeager - Live 1999

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:02
Size: 103,9 MB
Art: Front

(1:39) 1. Introduction by James Janisse
(4:20) 2. I'll Remember April
(6:05) 3. Happy Stuff
(3:24) 4. So Nice / Summer Samba
(4:09) 5. Shadow of Your Smile
(3:11) 6. Whisper Not
(4:47) 7. At Last
(7:01) 8. Tribute
(4:24) 9. Manhã De Carnaval
(5:57) 10. All Blues

During the mid-1950’s I was born into a Bohemian environment. Music was like breathing. At the age of three, pop tunes were blasting from a little radio in our kitchen. And in another direction, the ocean breeze carried jazz sounds from our neighbor's hi fi record player, while someone from down the street played bag pipes every morning! Venice, California (known for its eccentric artists and beatniks) was a magical place in time. "Harry Belafonte to the left, Miles Davis to the right, Bob Dorough in back, Scotland coming through the front, and Chet Baker around the corner! I guess I breathed it all in, got a good dose of early ear training and was labelled the goofy kid!”

By the time I was five, the family took a financial tumble and relocated to the inner city of Lynwood, CA, where I first heard Gospel music. Since it came from a small church on the corner of our shabby street, I believed those glorious voices were sent from the heavens above. Ballet training came shortly after and continued well into my teens, dancing and singing my way through a disheveled childhood. At about eight or nine, every bit of my weekly allowance was spent on vinyl and a record collection began to grow like wildfire. Jazz, pop, blues, African rhythms, Broadway, R&B... and then a new sound, the Bossa Nova, which stopped me in my tracks! I discovered the voice of Wanda De Sah. It was true! Brazilian music (at that time) seduced the world. Who would have thought that thirty-seven years later, I'd be recording "Reza" on my debut disc, "Mood Swing" History played the same trick on me when I also recorded a duet with the legendary, Bob Dorough.

Around 1977, divorced as a young mother, music was still the guiding force. Vocal lessons became necessary when I auditioned as a lead vocalist and landed my first job as a singer. Formal training was essential in order to belt out rock tunes for several hours, five nights a week. A few years later with an intensive vocal study regimen and carrying a beautiful daughter in my arms, I landed a gig on a Japan tour as a lead vocalist for a Funk band. As time marched on, I was fortunate to have studied under Grammy winning composer/arranger Alan Copeland, jazz genius Horace Silver and Jim Mooney from the original Sage and Sound Recording Studio in Hollywood, and jumped into the Jazz Scene. Lucky to work with some of the most gifted musicians in LA, my performance level continued to progress, especially in regard to improvisation. Eventually I became a band leader and began to teach vocal technique and therapy while playing jazz clubs, concerts and various venues. But living the dream ended abruptly when repressed memories of childhood abuse surfaced and all hell broke loose. Suffice it to say life got in the way. Early June 1996, “Mood Swing” was released. The album was remastered and re-released in 2017, with a bonus track. Now recording and producing a variety of music, my second disc, "Precocious", was released January 2018, following up with a vocal project, "Psychology of Jazz", to be released in mid 2018. For further information, please visit my website www.DebbyYeager.com, and drop me a line. I’d love to hear from you. Thanks, - Debby 'A portion of proceeds is donated to the education of child abuse prevention services. 'https://debbyyeager.com/bio/

Live 1999

Friday, December 4, 2020

Debby Yeager - Psychology of Jazz

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:05
Size: 97,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:13) 1. Visit Me
(3:48) 2. Devil May Care
(3:16) 3. Suddenly
(2:03) 4. Hear Me Blow
(3:43) 5. Tomorrow's Another Day
(2:19) 6. L’ Étang
(3:58) 7. I Could Write a Book
(4:18) 8. In the Land of Oo Bla Dee
(6:00) 9. Without Rhyme or Reason
(3:44) 10. Relaxin' at Camarillo
(4:39) 11. Happy Endings

During the mid-1950’s I was born into a Bohemian environment. Music was like breathing. At the age of three, pop tunes were blasting from a little radio in our kitchen. And in another direction, the ocean breeze carried jazz sounds from our neighbor's hi fi record player, while someone from down the street played bag pipes every morning! Venice, California (known for its eccentric artists and beatniks) was a magical place in time. "Harry Belafonte to the left, Miles Davis to the right, Bob Dorough in back, Scotland coming through the front, and Chet Baker around the corner! I guess I breathed it all in, got a good dose of early ear training and was labelled the goofy kid!”

By the time I was five, the family took a financial tumble and relocated to the inner city of Lynwood, CA, where I first heard Gospel music. Since it came from a small church on the corner of our shabby street, I believed those glorious voices were sent from the heavens above. Ballet training came shortly after and continued well into my teens, dancing and singing my way through a disheveled childhood. At about eight or nine, every bit of my weekly allowance was spent on vinyl and a record collection began to grow like wildfire. Jazz, pop, blues, African rhythms, Broadway, R&B... and then a new sound, the Bossa Nova, which stopped me in my tracks! I discovered the voice of Wanda De Sah. It was true! Brazilian music (at that time) seduced the world. Who would have thought that thirty-seven years later, I'd be recording "Reza" on my debut disc, "Mood Swing" History played the same trick on me when I also recorded a duet with the legendary, Bob Dorough.

Around 1977, divorced as a young mother, music was still the guiding force. Vocal lessons became necessary when I auditioned as a lead vocalist and landed my first job as a singer. Formal training was essential in order to belt out rock tunes for several hours, five nights a week. A few years later with an intensive vocal study regimen and carrying a beautiful daughter in my arms, I landed a gig on a Japan tour as a lead vocalist for a Funk band. As time marched on, I was fortunate to have studied under Grammy winning composer/arranger Alan Copeland, jazz genius Horace Silver and Jim Mooney from the original Sage and Sound Recording Studio in Hollywood, and jumped into the Jazz Scene. Lucky to work with some of the most gifted musicians in LA, my performance level continued to progress, especially in regard to improvisation. Eventually I became a band leader and began to teach vocal technique and therapy while playing jazz clubs, concerts and various venues. But living the dream ended abruptly when repressed memories of childhood abuse surfaced and all hell broke loose. Suffice it to say life got in the way. Early June 1996, “Mood Swing” was released. The album was remastered and re-released in 2017, with a bonus track. Now recording and producing a variety of music, my second disc, "Precocious", was released January 2018, following up with a vocal project, "Psychology of Jazz", to be released in mid 2018.

'A portion of proceeds is donated to the education of child abuse prevention services'https://debbyyeager.com/bio/

Personnel: Debby Yeager - vocals; Stu Goldberg - piano; Tony Dumas - bass; Willie Jones III - drums; Doug Webb - tenor & soprano saxophones; Ron Stout - trumpet & flugelhorn; Ron Escheté - guitar; Melissa Hasin - cello;Yayo Morales - percussion

Psychology of Jazz

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Debby Yeager - Mood Swing (21st Anniversary Remastered)

Size: 134,7 MB
Time: 57:55
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1996/2017
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. My Little Boat (5:28)
02. The Day It Rained (4:10)
03. Senor Blues (5:44)
04. Summer Dreams (4:36)
05. Reza (4:30)
06. Chances Are (3:56)
07. New Song / Venice Beach Memory (3:29)
08. You Don't Know What Love Is (5:16)
09. Pucker Up (4:45)
10. Nothing Like You (3:15)
11. True Turtle Tale (2:01)
12. Songo Mongo (4:59)
13. It Might As Well Be Spring (5:40)

The pulling power of the names of top stars is quite strong. Here the attraction is Bob Dorough who is "featured" on jazz vocalist Debby Yeager's initial album. "Featured" translates into duets with Yeager on two of the album's 12 cuts. Nonetheless, after this release Yeager should have some pulling power of her own. Showing an affinity to a wide swath of Latin music, she combines that syncopation of a jazz singer with the lyrical feel of a good cabaret singer, where that feel is needed. But it's the use of her voice as an instrument that sets her apart. On an exhilarating, exciting "Songo Mongo" her wordless vocalizing fits right in there with the pulsating piano of Mark Massey and the tenor sax of Doug Webb andSteve Crum on trumpet. There are times when Yeager comes across like a one-person New York Voices or Manhattan Transfer, so much energy does she exude with her voice. Other times she can deliver an ear-grabbing version of a tune like "My Little Boat" with distinctive and, more important, subtle phrasing. There is no need to pull any vocal gimmick from the bag of vocal tricks to put the song across. And once more, her voice is part of the overall musical tableau in which this song is presented and which makes it one of the more attractive tracks on the CD. The fretless bass of Marco Mendoza is prominent. Setting aside the voice as an instrument approach for a while, she gives full ballad treatment to "The Day It Rained" riding atop Webb's soulful flute, and has some fun with spoken semi-novelty tune "True Turtle Tale." Oh yes, the two cuts with Dorough are OK too, with "Nothing Like You" the better of the two cuts. ~ by Dave Nathan

Mood Swing