Showing posts with label Ilse Huizinga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ilse Huizinga. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Ilse Huizinga - Here's To Maya Angelou

Size: 104,3 MB
Time: 44:26
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. A Caged Bird Sings (4:33)
02. Equality And I Will Be Free (3:01)
03. Turned To Blue (2:54)
04. The Old Ones (3:49)
05. Song For Willie (3:34)
06. Gamut (3:14)
07. Call Letters (3:58)
08. Work (4:46)
09. Poor Girl, Just Like Me (4:50)
10. Adhering (3:37)
11. The Human Family (3:20)
12. A Phenomenal Woman (2:45)

The Amsterdam jazz singer Ilse Huizinga has made six albums up to now. Here's to You Maya Angelou is her latest pitch, an album with new compositions for which composer and pianist Erik van der Luijt wrote the music, while the artist browsed through the oeuvre of the American author and poet Maya Angelou (deceased in 2014). In The Jazz Singer, the Ultimate Guide by Scott Yanow, Ilse Huizinga is rated among the 500 best international jazz vocalists, and that is reason enough to listen to her latest album.

The songs on Here's to You are performed on piano, double bass and drums. Consequently, the material sounds very different than what we can expect in a smoky jazz cafe, where blaring trumpets and saxophones often deter interested listeners. Ilse Huizinga opts for simplicity, and as a result her warm and sexy voice gets a lot of space. She studied Public Administration at the University of Amsterdam and later at the Amsterdam Conservatory, which has guaranteed her a wide range of vocal possibilities, amply illustrated on this album.

The lyrics that Ilse Huizinga has selected from the work of Maya Angelou deal with racism, identity, travel and love. The atmosphere, tone and strength of the poems struck me deeply, the singer says in the liner notes, Maya Angelou found the words that we often seek to express love, loss, hope and confidence. Erik van der Luijt is the perfect translator of those feelings, resulting in a versatile and often cheerful piano sound, sometimes dreamy and subdued, other times explicit and pronounced, with quiet and then rumbling drums in the background and a silky double bass as in the beautiful and understated peace ballad A Caged Bird Sings. Equality and I Will be Free refers to Angelou’s political commitment that inspired many people. Huizinga hops at a reasonable rate through the lyrics, backed by a sparkling piano and panting percussion: a testimony and an indictment at the same time. Turned to Blue gets a dreamy and peaceful pace with Ilse Huizinga's understated vocals against a backdrop of warm double bass sounds. A deep and throbbing bass introduces the first notes of The Old Ones, a fragile composition in which Huizinga can steam ahead, supported by versatile percussion and an appealing piano.

The drums take the lead in Song of Willie. The piano rises and falls, and Ilse Huizinga spreads beautiful vocals over it, while Gamut is quieter again, with a relaxed jazz voice, a gentle rippling piano and minimal percussion: an attractive love song that grows into a beautiful ballad. Call Letters is again more upbeat with a singing piano, pretty much spoken vocals, but also beautiful inflections in the melody. Halfway through, Work gets a strong melody. It's an up-tempo ballad that settles in your ear during the first listen. In Poor Girl, Just Like Me, Ilse Huizinga pulls out all the stops to color the melody, subdued and dreamy, backed by gorgeous and versatile piano music by Erik van der Luijten. Adhering would fit on a Billy Holliday album, a melancholy jazz ballad with varied piano, rumbling percussion and gentle vocals. The Human Family attracts our attention with a nice rhythm, and closing song A Phenomenal Woman is an attractive and sunny ballad with the quality of a singer-songwriter’s composition.

If you do not like jazz and jazz-related music, then we may not be able to convince you with this album, but fans and interested music lovers will surely be interested in these 12 compositions. ~William Lienard

Here's To Maya Angelou

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Ilse Huizinga - Easy To Idolize

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:03
Size: 135,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:07)  1. That's All
(2:08)  2. The Sound Of Music
(3:00)  3. I Only Have Eyes For You
(5:04)  4. Willow Weep For Me
(2:50)  5. The Thrill Is Gone
(2:48)  6. Skylark
(3:48)  7. Easy To Love
(2:37)  8. Someday My Prince Will Come
(3:58)  9. Time After Time
(2:21) 10. Isn't It Romantic
(4:11) 11. The Nearness Of You
(2:20) 12. I'm A Fool To Want You
(2:57) 13. When You Wish Upon A Star
(3:16) 14. All The Things You Are
(3:19) 15. Somewhere - Over The Rainbow
(3:38) 16. A Child Is Born
(1:53) 17. I Love You
(3:06) 18. The Man I Love
(1:33) 19. What'll I Do

Leading newspapers in the Netherlands describe Ilse Huizinga as one of the most distinguished of the new generation of Dutch jazz singers. From the very beginning of her career with the release of her first album Out Of A Dream (1997) to her most recent Easy To Idolize (2003), media and audiences have spoken highly of her. Numerous articles, interviews and appearances on radio and television followed and connected her to a diverse and broad audience. She performed in Spain, Turkey, Switzerland, France and England. An old piano drew Ilse to music and at the tender age of six she received her first piano lessons. She took up singing lessons as a teenager and discovered the music and albums of Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday and Abbey Lincoln. Although her passion was aroused she decided against a career in music and enrollend in the University of Amsterdam to graduate in Public Administration. As a student however, she regularly took part in open mike nights at the famous jazz club Casablanca, in the heart of the Amsterdam Red Light District. Then and there she decided to follow her heart and become a professional jazz singer. 

Ilse went on to study at the Amsterdam Music Conservatory and performed in many venues in the Netherlands. On stage she met pianist/composer Erik van der Luijt, whom she married in 1998. Together they produce Ilse's four albums to date. Ilse and Erik have a daughter, Ellen, born in 2000. What others say: “A voice of which other singers only dream: full, clear and sensitive...” Nouveau “One of the most distinguished of the new generation of Dutch jazz singers. In the titlesong we get genuine coloratura, in This Can't Be Love she manages to fit entire octaves in a single syllable - great that the poignang lyrics meanwhile never suffer...” De Volkskrant “La Huizinga exhibits the hallmarks of a diva in the making. We are getting to know her better and better as one of the leading Dutch jazz singers...” http://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/ilsehuizinga

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Ilse Huizinga - Beyond Broadway

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:29
Size: 102,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:59)  1. I Loves You, Porgy
(3:31)  2. Wouldn't It Be Loverly
(3:21)  3. Someone To Watch Over Me
(4:33)  4. I Got Plenty Of Nuttin'
(2:51)  5. Goodbye
(4:19)  6. Mad About The Boy
(3:32)  7. On The Street Where You Live
(3:51)  8. I Could Have Danced All Night
(3:01)  9. I'll Close My Eyes
(3:59) 10. You And The Night And The Music
(3:27) 11. Ev'rytime We Say Goodbye
(3:59) 12. Manhattan

A talented jazz singer from the Netherlands, Ilse Huizinga has recorded consistently excellent recordings throughout her career, mostly emphasizing standards. She took piano lessons starting when she was at six and at 17 took lessons in classical singing, but jazz interested her much more. She remembers taking tapes of such favorite singers as Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Abbey Lincoln, and Billie Holiday wherever she went. Huizinga spent a year living in Australia and earned a degree in public administration at the University of Amsterdam. But after graduating, she switched permanently to music and attended the Conservatory of Amsterdam during 1993-1996. Ilse Huizinga performs regularly all over Europe, usually with a group that includes her husband, pianist/arranger Erik Van Der Luijt. Her first two CDs, Out of a Dream and Voices Within (the latter has her voice overdubbed five times), were self-produced releases. Her next two CDs, The Sweetest Sounds and Easy to Idolize, were released by the Daybreak label; Beyond Broadway is on Maxanter; there is a Japanese-only CD (The Club Sessions); and a set of duets with Erik Van Der Luijt, Intimate Jazz Sessions, was issued on the Foreign Media label. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/ilse-huizinga-mn0002072839