Showing posts with label Ivory Coast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ivory Coast. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Cecile Verny Quartet - Memory Lane (Live)

Size: 227,0 MB
Time: 98:02
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. The Wild Heart Of The Earth (Live) (7:42)
02. No ID (Live) (4:47)
03. I Would (Live) (7:19)
04. Amoureuse (Live) (5:15)
05. Car Desesperee (Live) (7:01)
06. On Another's Sorrow (Live) (5:40)
07. Humming (Live) (6:41)
08. As Soon As They Have All Aligned (Live) (7:13)
09. How Do I Love Thee (Live) (5:24)
10. One Smooth Ride (Live) (7:35)
11. I Am Broken (Live) (6:19)
12. Snow Falling (Live) (7:06)
13. The Bitter And The Sweet (Live) (6:32)
14. To Thomas Butts (Live) (5:22)
15. J‘aime L'Idee (Live) (7:57)

After 25 years of worldwide success, the Cécile Verny Quartet is topping of their career with a magnificent reflection. The four musicians presented their audience with a thrilling silver anniversary celebration on the stage of Jazzhaus Freiburg on a hot Whit Monday.

Their first CD release was in 1992 and in the following two decades the foursome, which also included pianist Andreas Erchinger and drummer Lars Binder, played their way to international esteem. The tour route led from Paris to Nairobi, from Antibes to Asmara, and from South Africa to Latvia. Eight CDs accompany the amazing career, they span from the Afro-colors (“Métisse”, 1999 and “Kekeli”, 2001) in which Verny reflects upon her heritage, through delicate Jazz poetry in French (“Amoureuse”, 2008), to the sophisticated, rocking soulful tones that characterize the last album “Fear & Faith” (2012). German record critics are enthusiastic about the qualities of the CVQ and their 2006 production, “The Bitter & The Sweet,” was awarded the Grand Prix by the Jury at the festival in Antibes. Numerous radio recordings characterize the varied work of the three men and their front lady. Today the Quartet can accredit themselves with 78 original compositions and 8 CDs.

Now, more than a decade after the, until now only DVD documentation from the Jazz festival at Antibes, can the splendid atmosphere of a live performance by CVQ – and a very special one at that – be relived not only in picture but also in sound. The selection of the repertoire is based on the idea from bassist Bernd Heitzler, to look back once again at different “places” in which the band has visited along their path in the past 25 years, a sort of “Memory Lane” in sounds. “In a relatively emotional and intuitive way, we were able to come up with a pool of titles that were firmly rooted in the present but also drew from our past,” explains the musician. Each piece represents for the band a place, which still today invites you to linger and discover. “It’s exciting for us to see how strongly some titles have changed along the way compared to earlier. Others, however, appear almost like Déjà Vu and still have striking actuality!”

All the way from the album “Kekeli”, “Memory Lane” leads the way back, during the live performance, that amazes with its stylistic diversity and sparks enthusiasm in its audience. From the opening with “Wild Heart Of The Earth” with its bluesy-swing, to the grand Scat insert by Verny and a distinctive solo from Heitzler, to the lovely Bossa inspired encore, “J’aime l’idée”, the audience experiences CVQ in top form. There is the rock shifting number “No ID” with Andreas Erchinger’s piano explosion, the great hymn-like soul ballad “How Do I Love Thee”, and the by far most dramatic and rhythmically refined farewell to love in the melodic flirt “Amoureuse”. Verny gives a taste of her entire vocal range in the deep, almost archaic blues carried William Blake narration “On Another’s Sorrow”, or as an intimate speech with Bernd Heitzler on the Bass Guitar, in a just as intensive prayer “Humming”.

Lars Binder leads the way with a tom tom thunderstorm in “As Soon As They Have All Aligned”, and then gives way to a melodic, overflowing electric bass solo and the casual, groovy “Smooth Ride”. In “I Am Broken”, Verny shows what kind of a fantastic, theatrical voices she can conjure up, and in the earthy, stomping “Snow Falling” she switches effortlessly from a rock singer to jazzy scat. “The Bitter & The Sweet” thrills as a melancholic review of the past, with shimmering insert of Fender Rhodes: “I’m walking down memory lane…”, the chorus of the song, which has thus given the live album its title: Bitter and sweet moments together form the complex overall picture of an amazing career, what is reaffirmed in the finale when "To Thomas Butts" even leads into the gospel terrain.

The "Memory Lane", which CVQ embarked on, on that memorable day of Pentecost, holds in every level great musicality, unbridled joy, deep soul and improvisational ingenuity. With this recording, Cécile Verny and her three confidantes, prove once again that they belong on the forefront of today’s European Jazz scene.

Memory Lane

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Cécile Verny Quartet - Got a Ticket

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:26
Size: 139,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:15)  1. A Sleepin' Bee
(6:15)  2. Hometown Blues
(5:39)  3. Devil May Care
(5:11)  4. Listen to the Rainbow
(6:53)  5. Je Ne Veux Pas Mentir
(6:20)  6. Got a Ticket
(6:23)  7. Mina's Song
(5:38)  8. An Ocean to Go Sea ("Você Maluco")
(7:22)  9. Hideaway
(4:25) 10. African Flower

A musical journey through the landscapes of jazz and its musical fringe areas with dreams and expectations, packing of suitcases and goodbyes. Experience the strange and new and rediscover that already known in unexpected turmoil and the peace and quiet, which you have long sought. And of course obligatory hometown-blues has to be an integral part of it all. "Got A Ticket" presents mainly original compositions in a stylistic variety, which makes a comparison with the trip mentioned above comprehensible. Sometimes with a swinging rhythm as in the opener "Sleeping Bee", sometimes with a dreamy ballad-like sound as in "Hometown Blues" and "Je ne veux pas mentir" among others, and then Latin-influenced bebop ("Devil May Care") again and traditional jazz singing.

Where is the trip heading? The quartet around the brilliant and charming singer Cécile Verny entices listeners of "Got A Ticket" to engage in a pleasurable search for new paths away from well-trodden ones without fear of crossing linguistic or stylistic borders and without rigidly giving in to imaginary or real constraints. As a result, the texts are very emotional and evocative in addition to having fantastic arrangements. She sings them in her own unique way and proves that she is of a special quality. Cécile Verny has the right feeling for swing, always gets the different moods of the 10 beautiful tunes precisely right and shines above all thanks to her improvisatory skills.

The Cécile Verny Quartet is composed of four artists, who have gained all kinds of different experience in their own careers very individual and very far-reaching. First and foremost is the singer and leader Cécile Verny, who was born in the Ivory Coast and has lived in France since the beginning of the 80s where she could be found involved in very different music genres (jazz, gospel, musical, pop, blues and lots more). One of her and her quartet’s biggest successes was first prize at the song festival "Concours Vocal du Festival de Crest" in 1992. Pianist Andreas Erchinger is the "main composer" in the quartet. He comes from hardbop and modern jazz, graduated from the Swiss Jazz School where he developed into one of the best pianists for accompanying singers. He has worked with Charlie Antolini and Dusko Goykovic, among others. Bassist Bernd Heitzler made a name for himself above all with his numerous creative works as sideman in bands of very different sizes and styles jazz, pop, rock, world music, Latin, salsa and and and  there seems to be no genre where he is not at home. The same applies to drummer Matthias Daneck, who has also made a name for himself across European borders working with Randy Brecker, Arturo Sandoval and many others.  http://www.doublemoon.de/en/cddetails/dmcd1002.shtml