Showing posts with label Jessica Pilnäs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jessica Pilnäs. Show all posts

Thursday, March 2, 2017

Jessica Pilñas - Bitter And Sweet

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:07
Size: 126,7 MB
Art: Front

(4:35)  1. There Must Be An Angel
(3:58)  2. Hurry
(4:10)  3. So I Fell
(5:34)  4. Just Not Today
(3:37)  5. Bridge Over Troubled Water
(4:58)  6. Don't Dream It's Over
(4:16)  7. Bitter And Sweet
(5:08)  8. The Winner Takes It All
(5:15)  9. Stupid
(4:37) 10. The More I See
(3:54) 11. Man In A Balloon
(4:59) 12. Don't Explain

Jessica Georganne Pilnäs, (born 5 July 1978 in Åryd, Växjö ), is a Swedish singer perhaps mostly known for her song "Jag ger dig allt" (English: I give you all). She sang the song in Melodifestivalen 1995, and came in third place. In 2000, Her song, "Pretender", which she recorded under the name Isa, also became a hit single in Sweden. Born in Åryd, she is the daughter of Thommy Gustafsson, keyboard player for the Swedish band Sven-Ingvars. She married the guitarist Johan Norberg and by that taking his family name and known as Jessica Norberg although continuing to use her original name Jessica Pilnäs in various recordings and appearances at concerts. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jessica_Piln%C3%A4s

Bitter And Sweet

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Jessica Pilnäs - Norma Deloris Egstrom - A Tribute to Peggy Lee

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:54
Size: 115,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:18)  1. There'll Be Another Spring
(2:56)  2. Do I Love You
(3:29)  3. Blue Prelude
(4:34)  4. Smile
(4:10)  5. Fever
(2:57)  6. This Is a Very Special Day
(6:11)  7. It Never Entered My Mind
(2:52)  8. What's New
(3:01)  9. Boston Beans
(2:17) 10. I Wound It Up
(2:53) 11. I'm Gonna Go Fishin'
(6:34) 12. The Folks Who Live On the Hill
(3:36) 13. The Gold Wedding Ring

Peggy Lee is not an artist who is usually associated with Sweden, but as Norma Deloris Egstrom A Tribute To Peggy Lee indicates, her real name comes straight from her family's roots in that Scandinavian country. Singer Jessica Pilnäs is Swedish, although this link is of relatively little importance to the music on offer here. More vitally, she's a talented interpreter of songs who can do justice to the legacy of one of the great singers of jazz and popular music. Pilnäs doesn't, as yet, have Lee's international profile or status although she's been singing for most of her life and has worked with trombonist Nils Landgren, among others. She's a talented singer and she's wise enough not to simply copy Lee's style. She's capable of replicating Lee's emotional engagement, however, be it the seductiveness of Cole Porter's "Do I Love You" or the pathos of Rodgers and Hart's "It Never Entered My Mind." Pilnäs' vocals have panache and, in combination with the unusual instrumental lineup and Johan Norberg's arrangements, she gives the songs a very personal touch. Mattias Ståhl's vibraphone is used to particularly good effect as the album's lead instrument, with telling contributions from trumpeter Karl Olandersson.

Two songs in particular emphasize the range of moods and emotions that Lee commands. Pilnäs retains Lee's assertive sexuality on "Fever" but the music exchanges the original's cool, hip, style for a lighter and more humorous arrangement that puts Olandersson's muted trumpet and Ståhl's vibraphone to the fore. Ståhl opens "The Folks Who Live On The Hill" with a few bars of gentle, relaxing vibes before Pilnäs and bassist Fredrik Jonsson make their own understated entrance. With subtle use of the Fleshquartet's strings, this is a beautiful version of the song, all the better for eschewing the full-on and rather over-dramatic orchestral arrangement of Lee's own recording. The song selection does occasionally seem rather quirky, with a few undistinguished numbers taking up space that might have been better occupied by much finer compositions. Lee may have written "I Wound It Up" and co-composed "Boston Beans," but they're a poor substitute for "Why Don't You Do Right," "Alright, Okay, You Win" or Leiber and Stoller's stunning "Is That All There Is?," to name just three songs she's strongly associated with. At least Pilnäs hasn't simply gone for the obvious entries in the Peggy Lee Songbook and she gives the same amount of care and spirit to every one of her performances. Norma Deloris Egstrom A Tribute To Peggy Lee is a welcome reminder of Lee's talents as a singer and composer. It's also a showcase for Pilnäs' own talent: she's an excellent interpreter of these classic songs and in creating a fine tribute to Lee, she has enhanced her own reputation. ~ Bruce Lindsay https://www.allaboutjazz.com/norma-deloris-egstrom--a-tribute-to-peggy-lee-jessica-pilnas-act-music-review-by-bruce-lindsay.php
Personnel: Jessica Pilnäs: vocals; Mattias Ståhl: vibraphone; Karl Olandersson: trumpet; Fredrik Jonsson: bass; The Fleshquartet (Sebastian Öberg, Örjan Högberg, Mattias Helldén, Christian Olsson): strings.

Norma Deloris Egstrom - A Tribute to Peggy Lee