Showing posts with label Fay Victor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fay Victor. Show all posts

Sunday, August 4, 2024

Fay Victor & Herbie Nichols Sung Quintet - Life Is Funny That Way

Styles: Vocal
Size: 166,7 MB
Time: 72:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2024
Art: Front

1. Life Is Funny That Way ( 6:32)
2. The Bassist ( 6:48)
3. Bright Butterfly ( 2:49)
4. Sinners, All of Us! ( 5:58)
5. The Culprit Is You (10:00)
6. Shuffle Montgomery ( 5:32)
7. Tonight ( 9:30)
8. Lady Sings The Blues ( 6:15)
9. Twelve Bars ( 2:51)
10. Descent Into Madness ( 9:59)
11. Non-Faternization Clause ( 6:11)

The jazz world overlooked pianist and composer Herbie Nichols in his lifetime, but musicians such as Roswell Rudd, Misha Mengelberg, and Ted Nash have tried to keep his music in circulation over the years in various projects. Vocalist Fay Victor has been entranced by his music for a long time, and in 2013, she put together a group, Herbie Nichols SUNG, to perform his tunes. This is that group's first recording together and it is excellent.

In most cases here, Victor has written her own lyrics for Nichols' tunes and given them new titles. Some of the arrangements come off loosely swinging with the musicians jangling over the bumpy surfaces of Nichols' melodies in a way that reflects the influence of dance in his music. An adventurous dance company could work out some pretty energetic routines for these treatments. The band, Michael Attias on saxophone, Anthony Coleman on piano, Ratzo Harris on bass and Tom Rainey on drums, moves in quirky ways that complement the broad, elastic sound of Victor's voice as she goes from loud, broad moans to high-pitched jabbering and back, sounding like a cross between Betty Carter and Ellen Christi.

When the music hits a groove, it really comes alive. The leader's full voice rides the twisting rhythm of "Life Is Funny That Way" into the stratosphere as she scats over Coleman's brittle Thelonious Monk-like chords and Attias' squawking alto sax. Alto and voice have a furious race on "The Bassist" after an extended Tom Rainey solo and "Tonight" is a swaggering dance shuffle with Attias jubilantly serenading on baritone sax. "Shuffle Montgomery" is a clanking soft-shoe feature for voice and baritone with Anthony Coleman playing the kind of eccentric piano groove associated with Nichols fan Misha Mengelberg. The wildest track is "Non-Fraternization Clause" where the entire band jumps, sparks, and swoops before Victor leans into her vocal, going up and down with Attias' alto in dizzying fashion, and Coleman lightly creeps through some angular blues moves.

Some of the pieces here have much darker tones. On "Sinners! All of Us!" Victor's stream-of-consciousness blues scat pulls the band along to a slow march cadence while "The Culprit Is You" is a dramatic, minor key piano-voice duet after the fashion of Jeanne Lee and Ran Blake. "Descent Into Madness" is a sinister weave of piano, voice, and alto that conjures up visions of despair and eerieness. The one tune Victor did not write lyrics for is "Lady Sings The Blues." That is performed with the original lyrics written by the woman who first sang the song, Billie Holiday. The track is treated as an art song with Coleman's piano carefully brooding as Victor's voice opens into a powerful siren wail over bowed bass and tense percussion.

There are several fine Herbie Nichols tributes around, but this one has a unique soul and earthiness created by Fay Victor's otherworldly singing and the adventurous spirit of her band. This is a superb album, one of the most delightful releases of the year so far.By Jerome Wilson
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/life-is-funny-that-way-fay-victor-herbie-nichols-sung-tao-forms

Personnel: Fay Victor - (voice, lyrics, arrangements, bandleader); Michae¨l Attias - (alto & baritone saxophones); Anthony Coleman - (piano); Ratzo Harris - (bass); Tom Rainey - (drums)

Life Is Funny That Way

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Fay Victor - Blackity Black Black Is Beautiful

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:09
Size: 92,9 MB
Art: Front

(2:38) 1. Black Woman's Music
(2:48) 2. Breezy Point Ain't Breezy
(3:53) 3. Vocal Layer of Pandemic Doom (Dedicated to All the Loved Ones We've Lost)
(5:22) 4. Scared To Be Happy
(3:46) 5. Governorship/Senate (For Stacey Abrams)
(5:10) 6. How Can You Do It?
(5:55) 7. I Will Be Erased
(6:21) 8. Signs (A Question For Sages Everywhere)
(4:14) 9. Trust The Universe

“Blackity Black Black Is Beautiful is the very first solo record by Fay Victor, whose 30-year-long music career has covered everything from House, New Music, Jazz (Blues) and Free Improvisation. Her deep history with dance music, her genreless output, and her lived experience as a Black woman in the world shaped the brand new process she used to create this prismatic album which touches on all the decades of her life like diary snapshots. It’s a mesmerizing collection of composed work that could only be made by an extraordinary improviser.

From hearing the raw, almost gospel vocal style over a heavy beat of Donna Summer and Sylvester, to obsessing over shows like Soul Train, Solid Gold, and Dance Fever on TV, to experiencing the sweat and groove, the freedom of bodies moving at NYC clubs like Danceteria, The Loft, and the Paradise Garage – her life changed forever. As she was developing as a jazz singer in Amsterdam in the 90s, she danced to trance music in clubs like Mazzo and The Soul Kitchen. She landed on the Billboard charts with a club hit “You Make Me Happy” in ’91. Stoned on the sacred dance floor, Fay found ecstasy in the moving body, the groove, the beat.

As she entered deeper into the world of jazz, she was attracted to the rhythmic qualities of Thelonious Monk, Eddie Harris, Eric Dolphy, Art Ensemble of Chicago, Betty Carter, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Nicole Mitchell, Milford Graves, Julius Hemphill, Charles Mingus, Herbie Nichols. Their confrontational rhythm sends her soul leaping, connecting her back to her clubheadheart.

With Mavin Gaye’s “Got To Give It Up” as a template, Fay started thinking about how her solo album might unfold. She sang, played keyboards, added textures and further dimensions with no other humans, without electronics. That was her process. Thoroughly creative, composed with music and words straight from her spirit.”
https://www.fayvictor.com/2023/08/25/new-fv-album-blackity-black-black-is-beautiful-released-today/

Blackity Black Black Is Beautiful

Friday, April 7, 2017

Fay Victor - Darker Than Blue

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:40
Size: 154.9 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2001
Art: Front

[4:13] 1. Eclipse
[5:58] 2. Zootoon
[8:14] 3. Tonight (House Party Starting)
[4:26] 4. My Reverie
[4:47] 5. Strollin' (Nostalgia In Times Square)
[7:00] 6. Last Night's Dinner
[9:12] 7. Star Eyes
[4:47] 8. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
[4:15] 9. Sometimes
[7:09] 10. In The City (Sham Time)
[7:35] 11. Detour Ahead

Fay Victor: Vocals; Anton Goudsmit: Guitar; Vijay Lyer: Piano; John Herbert Bass; Steve Hass: Drums; Marc Mommaas: Tenor Saxophone.

If American expatriate Fay Victor assimilates the grace of Nancy Wilson, the delivery of Betty Carter, and the courage of Cassandra Wilson, her guitarist, Anton Goudsmit channels the tone of Kenny Burrell, the image of Charlie Christian and the attitude of James Blood Ulmer. This is fairly well illustrated on "Tonight," Ms. Victor's take on Herbie Nichols' "House Party Starting." This song is populated with Victor's elastic vocals and Goudsmit's elastic plectra. Goudsmit's extended solo is full of crags and hallows, devoid of regard for time or rhythm. In short, refreshing and daring. This delivery is reminiscent of Cassandra Wilson's Miles Davis deconstructive vision. Not a mere copy, but certainly influenced by it.

So it is with Ms. Victor's delivery. She and her band take this most ill behaved composition and spank it into total rebellion before turning it into the quiet eight-minute tour de force it is. "Tonight" also illustrates another core characteristic of this disc, that of "less is more." The majority of the instrumentation is spare and spread out, as on the voice, bass, drum treatment of Debussy's "My Reverie." The music is almost self propelled, sporting a sharp efficiency, music stripped to the bone. Even upbeat pieces like "Strollin'" a characterized by a certain economy that can only derive from practice and reference. If the earlier Herbie Nichols piece was not challenging enough, Victor bases "Strollin'" on Mingus' ("Nostalgia in Times Square").

Fay Victor shows she knows her way around standards on "Star Eyes" and "What A Little Moonlight Can Do." She sings these not so much straight as expelling them with some creative entropy. She possesses a voice and a style that will have to be honestly confronted by the astute listener. Fay victor is a thinking person's jazz vocalist. ~C. Michael Bailey

Darker Than Blue

Monday, December 30, 2013

Fay Victor - In My Own Room

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:09
Size: 131,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:25)  1. In My Own Room - 39 All Blues
(2:50)  2. I Remember You
(8:57)  3. Ask Me Now
(7:03)  4. Wave
(4:33)  5. This Masquerade
(4:00)  6. Sister Sadie
(3:00)  7. All of You
(5:25)  8. Skylark
(2:57)  9. Upside Down (Fleur de Lis)
(7:19) 10. Old Devil Moon
(5:35) 11. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye

Fay Victor’s name is new to this reviewer. On this new CD from Timeless records we get a glimpse of Victor’s ability to perform some pretty crafty vocalese on such standards as Miles Davis’ “All Blues”, Monk’s “Ask Me Now”, Jobim’s “Wave” and others. 11 tracks in total, all of which are uniquely personal renditions of tried and true classics. At times Ms. Victor rekindles thoughts of the late Betty Carter. Fay Victor possesses a wide vocal range and often changes pitch on a moment’s notice, emphasizing the lyrics as if she wrote them. 

Good non-intrusive support from a band that appears to be comprised of Dutch/European musicians especially since this CD was recorded in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. On “All Blues”, Ms. Victor articulates passionate, steamy vocals while staying within the boundaries of this jazz classic. Victor jazzes it up a notch more on Cole Porter’s “Everytime We Say Goodbye”. Throughout “In My Own Room”, Victor displays a good tonal range and overall possesses an infectious, appeasing voice that is quite appealing. Victor’s diction and phrasing draws some parallels to Betty Carter but not quite as prominent or exceedingly noticeable. 

This is a good effort that serves up a nice hodgepodge of standards and classics. Fay Victor, while at times low key and sublime doesn’t re-invent the wheel but identifies herself as a worthy addition to a legacy of fine jazz vocalists that are worth hearing. ~ Glenn Astarita   http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=3249#.Ur7t97TJI0g

In My Own Room