Showing posts with label Georgia Mancio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgia Mancio. Show all posts

Monday, October 25, 2021

Georgia Mancio & Alan Broadbent - Quiet Is The Star

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:14
Size: 95,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:34) 1. I Can See You Passing By
(5:11) 2. When You're Gone From Me
(4:44) 3. Let Me Whisper To Your Heart
(5:19) 4. Tell The River
(2:46) 5. All My Life
(4:45) 6. If I Think Of You
(4:50) 7. Night After Night
(4:50) 8. If My Heart Should Love Again
(3:11) 9. Quiet Is The Star

Quiet Is The Star is the new album by vocalist/lyricist Georgia Mancio and Grammy-winning pianist/composer Alan Broadbent and the much anticipated companion to their 2017 Songbook. The album spotlights the purity and parity of the duo setting in 9 co-written songs exploring the ties we weave in life: sisterly, maternal, romantic, universal. One voice, one piano, one dialogue. Georgia’s deeply nuanced singing (“sublime, clarity and poise personified, intimate yet dynamic”, Jazzwise) is embraced by Alan’s rhapsodic solo piano, indicating the breadth of his musicianship, from accompanist to Big Band/orchestral leader. Recorded in late 2019, it re-unites with Songbook producer Andrew Cleyndert and artist Simon Manfield, whose bespoke watercolours perfectly accompany the subtle variations of mood. The album will be released 27 March 2021, alongside The Songs Of Alan Broadbent & Georgia Mancio a book of 33 co-written works from both albums (Songbook and Quiet Is The Star) and many more besides. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/album/quiet-is-the-star-georgia-mancio

Personnel: Georgia Mancio (voice & lyrics); Alan Broadbent (piano & music)

Quiet Is The Star

Sunday, April 25, 2021

Georgia Mancio - Silhouette

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:07
Size: 127,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:54) 1. Sihouette
(5:09) 2. Question the Answer
(5:00) 3. Solace
(5:11) 4. Take It With Me
(5:29) 5. Just in Time
(5:48) 6. Slowly
(5:24) 7. TransOceanica
(5:10) 8. Modinha
(4:46) 9. Slice
(4:43) 10. Finisterre
(2:27) 11. Sihouette 2

Georgia Mancio celebrates 10 years as a professional jazz singer with Silhouette, her third album. The mix of standards and original compositions, delivered in Mancio's light but distinctive voice, and accompanied by some of the finest musicians on the British jazz scene, is a genuine cause for such celebration. Silhouette is innovative, lyrically inventive, risky at times and always rewarding.

Mancio's vocal delivery is reminiscent of Anita O'Day's; her enunciation is clear and precise but there is a lightness in the delivery that is immediately enticing. On most of the original songs she acts as lyricist, while two of the album's three pianists take responsibility for the music Tim Lapthorn composed four songs while Kate Williams does the job on "Silhouette." Only one original song, "Finisterre," is written by Mancio alone. It's a strange, slightly threatening, first person tale on which Mancio is accompanied solely by Dave Ohm's percussion. "Silhouette" opens the album, with a sad tale of an old man reflecting on his life "like a dream half-remembered" that could be inspired by the plays of Samuel Beckett. The backing, especially Williams' piano and Julie Walkington's bass, is superb and sets the standard for the remaining songs. A fresh arrangement of "Silhouette" closes the album this time it's a wordless a capella duet between Mancio and Ian Shaw that adds even more mystery to the song.

"Question the Answer" is a quirky number that might best be described as "semi-original," wedding Mancio's lyrics to Pat Metheny's song of the same name. The arrangement, by Mancio and pianist John Pearce, features fine piano from Pearce and elegant flute from Gareth Lockrane, while the lyric challenges the cynicism of politics and religion, albeit a little disingenuously. The tune swings, and the overall feel is strongly reminiscent of songs featured on the satirical British '60s TV show That Was The Week That Was, as a musical commentary on current events. That program was both popular and controversial the singer was Millicent Martin, a stylish jazz vocalist who later found greater fame as Daphne's mother on the TV show Frazier.

Two covers merit special mention and ably demonstrate Mancio's risk-taking. On Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan's "Take it With Me," Mancio delivers a beautiful and ultimately optimistic vocal, underpinned by sparse and empathic bass and cello from Walkington and Gregor Riddell. Mancio and Ohm's arrangement of "Just In Time" plays with the rhythm and tempo of the tune, creating shifts in mood and style but never failing to ensure that the tune swings from beginning to end. It's helped enormously by two more fine performances from Pearce and Lockrane, although Mancio's vocal would benefit from added bite in the faster passages.

Silhouette is a fine album, demonstrating what can be accomplished by singers when they are prepared to innovate and take risks. Mancio's performance often within arrangements that would expose any weakness puts her at the top of the ever-growing tree of jazz vocalists, and can only enhance her reputation.~ Bruce Lindsay https://www.allaboutjazz.com/silhouette-georgia-mancio-roomspin-records-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php

Personnel: Georgia Mancio: vocals; Julie Walkington: double-bass; Dave Ohm: drums, percussion; John Pearce: piano (2, 5, 8); Kate Williams: piano (1); Tim Lapthorn: piano (3, 6, 7, 9); Dave Colton: guitar (6); Gareth Lockrane: flute (1, 2, 5, 9); Gregor Riddell: cello (4, 7); Ian Shaw: vocals (7, 11).

Silhouette