Showing posts with label John Proulx. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Proulx. Show all posts

Sunday, October 25, 2015

John Proulx - The Best Thing For You

Styles: Vocal and Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:27
Size: 164,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:56)  1. The Best Thing For You (Would Be Me)
(5:36)  2. Sing
(4:31)  3. Jogger Chronicles
(5:17)  4. Love Is For Dreamers
(4:50)  5. I Can't Give You Anything But Love
(5:56)  6. Angel
(5:24)  7. Wabash
(5:33)  8. Before We Say Goodnight
(4:38)  9. Push Hands Anna
(5:29) 10. And So It Goes
(4:12) 11. Two of a Kind
(5:04) 12. In the Days of Our Love
(3:46) 13. Here's to the "Chuckster"
(5:07) 14. Proulx's Blues

While female jazz vocalists outnumber male jazz vocalists five to one, it would be a fallacy to believe there is not a wealth of talent among the men singers. With Louis Armstrong and Chet Baker now memories, and Mark Murphy and Jon Hendricks in twilight, as Kurt Elling ascends their throne, there exists a vocal diaspora of the most refined and sonically appealing voices singing, and they are all men. Andy Bey, Beat Kaestli, Henry Darragh and John Proulx all have beautifully sweet and slightly androgynous voices that are able to flatter a broad range of song types. Proulx, who has previously released the uniformly excellent Moon and Sand (2006) and Baker's Dozen: Remembering Chet Baker on Maxjazz, proves again, on The Best Thing For You, that he is the leader of this pack.

The Best Thing For You weighs heavier with Proulx originals than standards and the entire assembly hangs as if born together. Proulx has great empathy with Irving Berlin, spinning his title tune into a tale that can only be described as delightful. Proulx channels Berlin's stage spirit in his own tunes, like the "Push Hands Anna," which is almost a throwback to the wartime Andrews Sisters, but sings perfectly now. Proulx programs the McHugh/Fields chestnut "I Can't Give You Anything But Love" with his own "Love Is For Dreamers," which he duets with Sara Gazarek. His excellent vocals and piano smooth the two rather different songs together into a homogenous whole, making perfect sense.

Proulx's core trio includes bassist Chuck Berghofer and drummer Joe LaBarbera, who also supported the singer on his two previous outings. Guitarist Larry Koonse, trumpeter Ron Stout and reed multi-instrumentalist Bob Sheppard all appear in different contexts. Pianist Bill Cunliffe shares production and song arrangement services with Proulx, while playing piano on Marian McPartland's "In The Days of Our Love." Proulx sings Peggy Lee's lyrics like they were penned yesterday. The duet between Cunliffe and Proulx is very effective. He also duets with the Berghofer on "Here's to The Chuckster," a song Proulx penned in honor of the bassist. Proulx is not a blues singer per se, but does demonstrate his affinity for the style on the piano, rendering a swinging "Proulx's Blues," which closes this most excellent recital. ~ C.Michael Bailey  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-best-thing-for-you-john-proulx-maxjazz-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: John Proulx: vocals. piano; Chuck Berghofer: bass; Joe La Barbera: drums; Sara Gazarek: vocals (4, 6, 8); Michael Feinstein: vocals (11); Bill Cunliffe: piano (12); Bob Shepphard: soprano, tenor saxophone & flute (1, 3, 5, 8, 10, 11); Larry Koonse: guitar (2, 4, 7-9); Ron Stout: trumpet (1, 3, 7, 11); Jeremy Boersma: cello (6).


The Best Thing For You

Saturday, October 24, 2015

John Proulx - Moon And Sand

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:11
Size: 124,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:47)  1. I've Never Been In Love Before
(4:58)  2. Moon and Sand
(3:59)  3. Alice in Wonderland
(4:23)  4. My Love For You
(4:15)  5. Do Nothin' Til You Hear From Me
(3:38)  6. What A Difference A Day Makes
(4:51)  7. Stuck In a Dream With Me
(2:55)  8. There Is No Greater Love
(4:09)  9. I Should Care
(5:00) 10. So In Love
(3:59) 11. East of the Sun
(4:50) 12. You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To
(4:22) 13. I Can't Make You Love Me

Los Angeles-native pianist/singer/composer John Proulx possesses the most thrillingly androgynous voice since Chet Baker whispered "My Funny Valentine. The comparison cannot stop there. Both Baker and Proulx nominally hail from the Midwest (Baker from Oklahoma, Proulx from Michigan). Both men sing with a vibrato-less high tenor; and both men gravitated to the same corner of the American musical canon. But there is where the similarities end. To dispense with the necessary Chet Baker comparisons from the get go, John Proulx is light years ahead of Baker as an expressive singer, and his classically trained pianism permits him to be a superior musician and composer. Proulx's debut recording, Moon and Sand, is part of MaxJazz's vocal piano series, whose previous releases have included Dena DeRose's A Walk in the Park (2005) and Patti Wicks' Love Locked Out (2003). Veteran bassist Chuck Berghofer and drummer Joe LaBarbera join Proulx for this recital.

What's most striking up front is the overt expressiveness of Proulx's voice. It is a pretty instrument, in the same way as the late Bobby Short's and Jimmy Scott's voices. It is a purely distilled spirit able to convey all emotions in the same way that stem cells convey all subsequent cell types, fundamental and basic. This element is best expressed on the disc's slower ballads, such as "Moon and Sand, "Alice in Wonderland, and the Proulx compositions "My Love for You and "Stuck in a Dream with Me (the ostensible redux for Baker's "Deep in a Dream ). 

Proulx's pianism is best heard on up-tempo pieces like "I've Never Been In Love Before and "You'd be so Nice To come Home to. His playing shines on these faster pieces, particularly during the bright solo sections. A superb recital by any name. 
~ C.Michael Bailey  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/moon-and-sand-john-proulx-maxjazz-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: John Proulx: piano, voice; Chuck Berghofer: bass, Joe LaBarbera: drums.

Moon And Sand

Friday, October 23, 2015

John Proulx - Baker's Dozen (Remembering Chet Baker)

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:15
Size: 138,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:05)  1. Let's Get Lost
(4:21)  2. Long Ago And Far Away
(4:29)  3. Time After Time
(4:44)  4. But Not for Me
(5:15)  5. I Get Along Without You Very Well
(3:58)  6. Reunion/There Will Never Be Another You
(4:00)  7. I Remember You
(5:23)  8. You Don't Know What Love Is
(3:29)  9. Before You Know It
(6:25) 10. I Fall in Love Too Easily
(3:21) 11. Line For Lyons
(6:02) 12. My Funny Valentine
(3:36) 13. Look For The Silver Lining

John Proulx is a new jazz singer and pianist with a light touch (and very good taste), as evidenced by his 2006 debut on MaxJazz, MOON AND SAND, which featured the sultry Alec Wilder bossa-inflected title track as well as nods to both Bill Evans ("Alice In Wonderland") and Dinah Washington ("What A Difference A Day Made"). As the subtitle to BAKER's DOZEN indicates, Proulx's followup is a more-or-less straight tribute to Chet Baker, the eerily romantic vocalist even more than the cool jazz trumpter. The warmed-toned Dominick Farinacci ably takes care of the trumpet and flugelhorn duties anyway, so this is very much a singer's album, a singer with a strong, lush style on piano it should be mentioned. As a singer, Proulx has a youthful spare sound, much like Baker himself, although he has greater range and staying power. (As effective as he was, Baker's semi-amateur vocals always made it on novelty value too). 

It's a pleasure to hear these note-perfect versions of "Let's Get Lost," "Look For The Silver Lining," "My Funny Valentine," and other Chet Baker signature tunes. For lovers of song-oriented jazz musicianship in a contemporary context, one could hardly improve on John Proulx. ~ Richard Mortifoglio  http://www.allmusic.com/album/bakers-dozen-remembering-chet-baker-mw0000822417

Personnel: John Proulx (vocals, piano); Dominick Farinacci (trumpet, flugelhorn); Joe La Barbera (drums).

Baker's Dozen (Remembering Chet Baker)