Showing posts with label Karen Blixt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karen Blixt. Show all posts

Monday, January 30, 2017

Karen Blixt - Mad Hope

Size: 151,7 MB
Time: 65:00
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2008
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front & Back

01. Billie's Bounce (4:14)
02. Jazz Ants (3:33)
03. Antigua (5:03)
04. Shadow And Light (5:37)
05. Five & Five (Take Ten) (7:36)
06. Sundown In My Heart (5:52)
07. Time For Earth (Follow Your Heart) (5:40)
08. Faith Baby Faith (2:28)
09. My Blue Shadow (5:47)
10. Frida (4:58)
11. Desire Is Your Name (5:57)
12. 7th Heaven (5:00)
13. You Are There (3:07)

Spring 2008 welcomes the release of Mad Hope by San Francisco based jazz singer, Karen Blixt. Building on her successful 2006 jazz debut, this recording reveals the confidence of an artist in full voice – taking bold strides in odd meters, intricate rhythms and engaging lyrics. Performing for years in jazz clubs in Northern and Southern California, Karen arrived via her debut album “Spin This”, acclaimed for its inventive take on the masters and resoundingly refreshing original compositions, including the surprisingly politically charged anti-Bush title track. Suddenly the former “nice church girl” from upstate New York, who discovered soulful compatriots in the Bay area arts scene, had found her voice a relevant gift to jazz enthusiasts and pop music fans whose appreciation of the form was confined to coffeehouses and art galleries. Two years since her debut, she reflects further on the state of affairs and a deliberate choice to keep faith by returning with Mad Hope, an uplifting collection of 13 tracks, 7 of which are originals and 2 additional instrumentals with new lyrics by Blixt.

“On Mad Hope, we wanted to put out some really different material,” says Blixt. “Different in the sense of going beyond re-interpreting the great american songbook. That meant writing new material. And beyond that, writing it in a variety of ways, using several odd-meters and different feels, like jazz/funk, latin/world, ballad, and straight ahead jazz. With the dream band we had assembled for the project, we knew the sky was the limit – so we went for it.”

Working collaboratively once again with Arranger/ Producer Frank Martin (Stevie Wonder, Sting, Patti Austin, Angela Bofill, Al Jarreau, and Dori Caymmi), the pair enlisted the top notch rhythm section of Abraham Laboriel (Bass), Jose Neto (Guitar), Alex Acuña (Percussion), Will Kennedy (Drums), and Patrice Rushen (Piano), along with musicians Randy Brecker (trumpet) Sheldon Brown (Bass Clarinet),Paul Hanson (Bassoon), and Kenny Washington (vocals) the album was recorded over two days in November 2007, at Skywalker Studios in Northern California. To say the team had to make a mad dash to complete the record on schedule is an understatement. “Due to everyone’s hectic schedules, we had to be structured to fit in all the work at hand. But I also knew who I was working with and really trusted these musicians—and knew instinctively I was in great hands to pull it off in two days. I was able to focus on the music, rather than all the extraneous stuff.”

The band of musicians were the chosen ones, the top brass of a wish list Blixt and Martin had drawn up prior to the recording session. With over 100 years of musical experience between them, “great hands” may be the understatement. With Laboriel, the most recorded electric bassist in history driving the rhythm section, and Patrice Rushen, a legendary composer and singer in her own right, Will Kennedy (the Yellowjackets) and Alex Acuna (Weather Report) the Mad Hope session was a dream on fast forward. Approaching the tunes from their own expert angles, the musicians intersected in a magical place, where their individual talents flourished and propelled Karen’s vocals in unexpected directions.

Mad Hope

Karen Blixt - Spin This

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:49
Size: 144,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:36)  1. Swingin' The Blues
(5:14)  2. Carefully Taught
(4:12)  3. My Favorite Things
(5:53)  4. You Don't Know Me
(8:24)  5. NIght and Day
(4:37)  6. Spin This
(3:46)  7. It's Over Now (Well, You Needn't)
(0:21)  8. Now It's Over
(6:59)  9. When You're Smiling
(4:04) 10. Kitchen Blue
(4:56) 11. Four
(5:22) 12. I Thought About You
(4:19) 13. Something So True

It started when she was a little church girl. Listening to her organist mother sing the harmony parts of hymns, Karen Blixt soon developed a knack for improvising. The New York-born West Coast transplant has spent her life exploring different ways to present a song. After years of live performances in nightclubs, weddings, receptions and fund-raisers, she took a friend's advice and recorded her own album, Spin This, on her label HiFli.  A fixture on the Bay Area jazz scene, Blixt has enlisted the aid of a variety of session musicians. They include keyboardist Russell Ferrante of the Yellowjackets, former Yellowjacket Will Kennedy on drums, and percussionist Alex Acuna. The album is mostly covers of songs by Count Basie, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Cole Porter, Thelonious Monk and Miles Davis, among others. It also includes three originals penned by Blixt and keyboardist Frank Martin, who appears on several tracks.

With a soothing alto voice comparable to Swing Out Sister's Corinne Drewery, Blixt delivers a jazz lover's treat, mixing message songs like "Carefully Taught and "Spin This with fun on "When You're Smiling, and standards, like "My Favorite Things, that have proven to be irresistible to many an upstart artist. The latter has been done so many times and so many ways, it's difficult to cover with anything worthy of notice. Blixt does an admirable job as vocalist, but what makes this arrangement work is the exceptional play of Kennedy, Acuna and bassist Troy Lampkins. Blixt is more dominant on such selections as the opening track, Basie's "Swingin' the Blues, which features Kennedy, Acuna and Joey DeFrancesco on Hammond B-3 organ. It's a delightful appetizer that prepares the listener for a jazz buffet. The title song, penned by Blixt and Martin, is a bouncy political statement, expressing the singer's displeasure for President George W. Bush. Backed by Martin on Fender Rhodes, Ferrante, Lampkins, Kennedy and Acuna, Blixt sings about political maneuvering: "Spinning, twisting, turning, stretching 'til the truth comes back around Spin this!  

Spin This should be appreciated for its purity if not for the excellent sounds created by Blixt and her cast. With a lot of modern music being heavy on production and light on artistry, it's always good to hear the opposite. Blixt expresses herself well from start to finish. And by surrounding herself with an array of dedicated professionals, she's created an album that's got some staying power. That is the beauty of music: when it's done right, it never gets old. ~ Woodrow Wilkins https://www.allaboutjazz.com/spin-this-karen-blixt-hifli-records-review-by-woodrow-wilkins.php
 
Personnel: Karen Blixt: vocals;  Joey DeFrancesco: Hammond B-3 organ (1, 4, 8, 10);  Bruce Forman: guitar (1);  Will Kennedy: drums (1-3, 9-10);  Alex Acuna: percussion (1-3, 5-7, 10, 12), drums (5, 7, 12);  Russell Ferrante: piano (2-3, 6, 9, 12);  Darek Oles: acoustic bass (2, 9);  Frank Martin: Fender Rhodes (3, 6), piano (4-5, 10);  Troy Lampkins: electric bass (3, 6);  Byron Landham: drums (4);  Paul McCandless: English horn (5), bass clarinet (7), oboe (12);  Sheldon Brown: bass clarinet (5, 7);  Joe Herbert: cello (5, 12);  Buddy Montgomery: vibes (8), piano (11);  Brian Bromberg: acoustic bass (12).

Spin This