Showing posts with label Herb Pomeroy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Herb Pomeroy. Show all posts

Thursday, May 25, 2017

Donna Byrne - It Was Me

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1996
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:07
Size: 117,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:00)  1. It's You Or No One
(4:21)  2. It Was Me
(4:25)  3. Lulllaby Of The Leaves
(6:27)  4. Lover Come Back To Me
(5:05)  5. The Fool On The Hill
(4:54)  6. Lady Be Good
(5:54)  7. Another Star
(4:57)  8. Exactly Like You
(5:08)  9. Sometime Ago
(3:21) 10. Go Easy
(3:31) 11. Three Bears

In 1995 Donna Byrne was described by Tony Bennett as one of the "best young jazz singers in the country." More often that not, these complements are little more than throw always done as a courtesy. But Byrne's latest album reveals she deserves that complement and more. Teamed with outstanding instrumentalists, they perform a program of a couple of jazz standards, nods to Stevie Wonder and the Beatles, but mostly classic entries from the Great American Songbook. Irrespective of the source of the song, Byrne brings to each of them a freshness and style that's a joy to listen to and, for a musician, a pleasure to share the performance with her. Byrne is blessed with perfect pitch from which she never waivers no matter what she's singing. Her sensitivity to the picture lyrics are conveying and her impeccable phrasing coupled with bass player (and Byrne's husband) Marshall Wood's arrangements that accent the most favorable features of her vocal qualities, help make the album an auspicious event. How all of this comes together is nowhere better illustrated than with the medley of "When Your Lover has Gone" and "Lover, Come Back to Me" an album highlight. On the former, the trumpet of the venerable Herb Pomeroy embroiders pretty musical figures behind Byrne's poignant rendition of the first half of the medley. 

Then Artie Cabral's high powered drumming leads the segue into the second part of the medley as Ken Peplowski's tenor barges upon the scene behind Byrne's exciting swinging. Peplowski picks up the solo cudgels engaging in an extended conversation with Gray Sargent's guitar as Byrne follows on with a moody chorus of the first half of the medley. The result is more than six minutes of an excellent performance of two warhorses with new saddles thrown over them. The other medley on the album shares the highlight award. On the first half of the pair of songs, Byrne's wordless vocalizing and Peplowski's sax replicate tenor sax player Lucky Thompson's authoritative 1956 recording of Oscar Pettiford's "Tricrotism," transforming it into a jazz sonata for vocal scat and tenor sax. Byrne follows by sliding into a medium tempo "Exactly Like You." The remaining tracks are done with equal enthusiasm and proficiency making the listener not only pleased with this album, but looking forward in anticipation of her next release. ~ Dave Nathan http://www.allmusic.com/album/it-was-me-mw0000647908

Personnel: Donna Byrne (vocals); Ken Peplowski (tenor saxophone, clarinet); Herb Pomeroy (trumpet, flugelhorn); Bill Cunliffe (piano); Gray Sargent (guitar); Marshall Wood (bass); Artie Cabral (drums).
 
Thank You my Friend!!!
 

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Irene Kral - The Band And I

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:09
Size: 71.3 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 1958/2006
Art: Front

[2:10] 1. I'd Know You Anywhere
[3:40] 2. Detour Ahead
[2:32] 3. Comes Love
[1:59] 4. Everybody Knew But Me
[2:52] 5. Lazy Afternoon
[2:58] 6. What's Right For You
[2:43] 7. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
[2:55] 8. Memphis In June
[2:04] 9. This Little Love
[2:30] 10. The Night We Called It A Day
[2:30] 11. It Isn't So Good
[2:11] 12. Something To Remember You By

he Band and I pairs Irene Kral with Ernie Wilkins and Al Cohn, whose energetic, robust arrangements capture a dimension of the singer rarely glimpsed on record -- upbeat and persuasive, with little of the spectral melancholy that hangs over her later, more familiar sessions. The titular backing unit in question, led by trumpeter Herb Pomeroy, expertly bridges the gap between traditional big band and modern-era jazz, creating a soulful, lightly swinging showcase that inspires Kral to deliver some of her most appealing performances -- cuts like "This Little Love" and "I'd Know You Anywhere" boast a radiance sadly absent from subsequent sessions. ~Jason Ankeny

The Band And I