Showing posts with label Karin Plato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karin Plato. Show all posts

Thursday, August 27, 2020

Karin Plato - Snowflake Season

Styles: Vocal 
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:39
Size: 110,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:12)  1. Jingle Bells
(4:23)  2. The Friendly Beasts
(3:45)  3. Carol Of The Bells
(5:38)  4. Snow
(4:44)  5. Her Gift
(3:28)  6. Children Go Where I Send Thee
(5:17)  7. Behold That Star
(3:35)  8. The Snowflake Season
(2:49)  9. Sleighride
(4:53) 10. I Saw Three Ships
(5:52) 11. What Are You Doing New Year's Eve?

Karin Plato grew up on the prairies in a small farming community called Alsask in the province of Saskatchewan. She studied the piano throughout her childhood. She later attended the University of Saskatchewan where she received her Bachelor of Music Degree in piano and voice. In 1985 she moved to Vancouver to study jazz and arranging at Capilano College. In 1996 and 1998 she studied vocal jazz at the Banff Centre For The Fine Arts with vocalists Sheila Jordan and Jay Clayton. In the late 1990s Karin seriously began to pursue a career as a jazz vocalist and composer. She began to appear in Vancouver jazz clubs performing a repertoire of jazz standards and originals and started performing in jazz festivals and concerts in BC, Alberta and Saskatchewan. Karin recorded her first album of jazz standards and originals in 1996 on a recording called Pastiche. In 1998 she recorded There's Beauty in the Rain for which she was nominated for a Juno award. (2000 Juno Awards) In the winter of 2000 Karin released two new recordings: Blue Again; a collection of duets; and Snowflake Season; a jazz/Christmas recording. In 2003 she released her fifth album The State of Bliss which features a guest appearance by Canadian vocalist Denzal Sinclaire on two duets. https://arioso-records.com/karinplato

Snowflake Season

Monday, December 3, 2018

Karin Plato - This Could Be the One

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:21
Size: 129,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:45)  1. This Could Be the One
(6:01)  2. I've Just Seen a Face
(5:33)  3. Sweet Summer
(8:47)  4. July
(4:16)  5. Take Time
(4:49)  6. I'm so Lonesome I Could Cry
(3:56)  7. What Came Before
(3:47)  8. Life Is a Beautiful Game
(6:16)  9. Insomnia
(4:27) 10. Heart and Soul
(4:40) 11. Sorrow

Born 31 March 1960, Alsask, Saskatchewan, Canada. As a small child, Plato studied piano, later attending the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, where she received a Bachelor Of Music Degree in Piano and Voice. In 1985, she moved to Vancouver to study vocal jazz and arranging at Capilano College, and has made the city her base ever since. In the late 90s, she also studied with Sheila Jordan and Jay Clayton at the Banff Centre For The Arts. In 2000, There’s Beauty In The Rain was nominated for a Juno Award. Appearing in concert throughout Canada, Plato has also appeared at many jazz festivals. Her appearance at Sasktel Jazz Festival in 2000, at which she opened for Brad Mehldau, was recorded for CBC’s Jazzbeat. The April Arrangement is a concert performance in which she presents some of her original compositions and arrangements of standards for a septet, which she has performed at the Vancouver East Cultural Centre and Festive Jazz (2000), her arrangements of traditional Christmas carols and original songs presented at the Capilano College Theatre for the Performing Arts. In 2000, she became a member of DIVAS For Life, which came about when the Vancouver-based magazine, Lifestyles, profiled six female vocalists: Plato, Laura Crema, Dee Daniels, Kate Hammett-Vaughan, Stevie Vallance and Tammy Weis. Established to help raise money for people living with cancer and other life-threatening illnesses, their debut concert was a huge success and the singers appeared collectively and individually at a series of SOR engagements, including the Vancouver International Jazz Festival. With some personnel changes, DIVAS have continued to perform to rave reviews and to raise money for their espoused cause, making records and broadcasting on CBC. Plato uses her very pleasing contralto to deliver elegant performances of standards and original material with flair and sophistication, singing in an unadorned and intimate style. https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/this-could-be-the-one/1439082010

This Could Be the One

Saturday, July 1, 2017

Karin Plato - There's Beauty In The Rain

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:52
Size: 126,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:21)  1. This Can't Be Love
(4:42)  2. If I Were A Bell
(4:58)  3. Hum Drum Blues
(5:05)  4. Innocent Again
(2:59)  5. Mountain Greenery
(6:28)  6. Beauty In The Rain
(3:52)  7. Joy Spring
(4:12)  8. You Don't Know What Love Is
(5:59)  9. Lazy Afternoon
(4:34) 10. You Give Me The Blues
(5:24) 11. Hooray For Love
(3:11) 12. Dog For A Day

Karin Plato is a talented jazz vocalist whose delivery is straightforward and swinging. Rather than being an adventurous improviser or a scat singer, Plato's variations are subtle, soulful and expressive while paying close attention to the words that she improvises. She hits the notes that she aims for and is able to essay wide interval jumps with apparent ease; plus, her haunting voice is appealing. The singer was wise to surround herself with a particularly strong group of jazz players for her debut. Pianist Ross Taggart (who has many short solos), bassist Torben Oxbol and drummer Craig Scott give her a solid and swinging foundation. Campbell Ryga, who is heard on alto and soprano, is often a co-star, taking many inventive spots that fit in well with Plato's voice. Tenor saxophonist Bill Abbott guests on "Beauty in the Rain," one of four originals contributed by the singer. Other highlights include a happy reworking of "If I Were a Bell," Oscar Brown, Jr.'s "Hum Drum Blues," a heated "Mountain Greenery," Clifford Brown's "Joy Spring" (which is not easy to sing) and a slower than usual treatment of "Hooray for Love." This CD is well worth exploring, and Plato clearly has a great future ahead of her.~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/theres-beauty-in-the-rain-mw0000941299

Personnel: Karin Plato (vocals); Campbell Ryga (soprano saxophone, alto saxophone); Bill Abbott (tenor saxophone); Ross Taggart (piano); Craig Scott (drums).

There's Beauty In The Rain

Monday, June 23, 2014

Karin Plato - Out Of Town Disc 1 And Disc 2

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:58 (CD 1)
Size: 89,5 MB (CD 1)
Time: 34:52 (CD 2)
Size: 80,1 MB (CD 2)
Art: Front

CD 1

(3:16)  1. I'd Rather Be Somewhere Hot
(5:50)  2. Blue Skies
(7:04)  3. If I Only Had A Brain
(3:03)  4. Day In, Day Out
(4:38)  5. Golden Earrings
(3:22)  6. I'm Putting All My Eggs In One Basket
(3:51)  7. Summer Night
(3:14)  8. Try To Remember (#1)
(4:36)  9. Get Out Of Town


CD 2

(3:54)  1. The Breeze & I
(3:27)  2. I Remember
(5:18)  3. Butterfly
(4:52)  4. That's All
(4:06)  5. Reality
(5:52)  6. Red Sails In The Sunset
(2:32)  7. Blackberry Winter
(4:46)  8. Try To Remember (#2)

If your familiarity with British Columbian vocalists is limited to Diana Krall and Michael Bublé, then it’s time you got to know Karin Plato. Though she has been based out of Vancouver for a quarter-century, Plato wasn’t actually born in B.C. She hails from a tiny farming community called Alsask, the name derived from its location on the Saskatchewan-Alberta border. Plato’s passion for jazz singing prompted the move west to Vancouver in 1985, where she earned degrees in jazz and arranging at Capilano College. A decade later, first in 1996 and again in ’98, she continued her schooling at the esteemed Banff Centre for the Fine Arts, studying vocal jazz under two of the world’s foremost experts, Jay Clayton and Sheila Jordan. Just prior to her first Banff session, Plato made her recording debut with the aptly-title Pastiche, an eclectic mix of covers and originals that fully showcased the rich fullness of her voice. 

Over the next seven years, four more albums followed. Apart from the 2000 Christmas release Snowflake Season, each followed a similar pattern: a well-chosen balance of ballads and up-tempo standards mixed with a few laudable originals. Her fifth CD, 2003’s The State of Bliss also featured several duets with another underappreciated Canadian vocalist, Nat “King” Cole sound-alike Denzel Sinclaire. After The State of Bliss there was, in terms of recordings, a prolonged silence. Finally, in 2008, Plato delivered Downward Dancing. It remains the most obscure of her albums and, oddly, is not included in the discography on her website. Nor will you currently find it on iTunes or, apart from an occasional second-hand copy, on Amazon. (It is, however, listed as available on CD Baby.) Its obscurity is a shame. Though all of Plato’s output has been exceptionally fine, Downward Dancing represented a new plateau, perhaps precipitated by her long absence from the studio. 

During that break, Plato’s voice grew deeper and slightly throatier. The stylistic result suggests a close kinship with both Krall and Rosemary Clooney. Fortunately, the same superb sound that emerged on Downward Dancing is equally evident throughout Plato’s latest release, a double-disc set entitled Out of Town. As she explains in the liner notes, the title can be taken literally. Plato departed Vancouver and relocated in London (London, Ontario that is) for the sessions. In recent years, pianist John Roney has often accompanied Plato on her club dates across Canada. On Out of Town the superbly simpatico relationship they’ve established on the road is at last captured. Though Roney is front-and-center on most of the 17 tracks, additional support is provided by cellist Christine Newland and bassist Brendan Davis. The first disc is intentionally the more upbeat of the two. 

Plato opens with a bouncy original, the peppery “I’d Rather Be Somewhere Hot,” a paean to warmer climates dedicated to snowbound Canadians. The tempo remains bright and sunny for her arrestingly offbeat arrangement of “Blues Skies.” Then the proceedings slow for a leisurely, seven-minute ramble through “If I Only Had a Brain.” Plato again revs up for a feverish “Day In, Day Out” and a mid-tempo “I’m Putting All My Eggs In One Basket” that is cunningly sensuous. “Golden Earrings” is given a balladic reading that is fittingly mysterious. Plato’s unfettered handling of Harry Warren’s too-rarely covered “Summer Night” packs plenty of lusty August heat and there’s s parallel abundance of barely-contained hunger in her “Get Out of Town.” 

Rounding out the first CD is an appropriately wistful “Try to Remember.” The second platter gets underway with a gorgeously reflective “The Breeze and I.” The meditative mood continues through Stephen Sondheim’s pensive “I Remember” and “Butterfly,” a sweet ode to youthful curiosity from celebrated children’s entertainer Jennifer Gasoi. Plato’s “That’s All” is suitably tender, and the raw power of her “Red Sails In the Sunset” superbly captures the lyric’s profound sense of contentment. As a counterpointed bookend to the sizzling “I’d Rather Be Somewhere Hot,” Plato closes with a masterfully barren exploration of Alec Wilder’s regret-fueled “Blackberry Winter.” A second, more contemplative version of “Try to Remember” is added as a bonus track. ~ Christopher Loudon http://jazztimes.com/articles/26933-karin-plato-jazz-vocals-north-by-northwest

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Karin Plato - Blue Again

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:21
Size: 122,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:05)  1. Takes Two To Tango
(4:16)  2. Someone To Light Up My Life
(4:30)  3. Blue Again
(4:07)  4. What'll I Do?
(5:27)  5. If You Never Come To Me
(5:13)  6. No Moon At All
(4:18)  7. A Sleepin' Bee
(5:03)  8. Fools Rush In
(3:13)  9. We Kiss In A Shadow
(3:42) 10. December
(3:20) 11. Love For Sale
(3:32) 12. Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year
(3:28) 13. Songbird

"A remarkable jazz singer, her vocals are hauntingly beautiful, filled with sensitivity and a sense of mellow desire, and she sings each word with perfect clarity...flawless jazz vocals...Five stars" ~ (THE JAZZ REVIEW)

Karin Plato grew up on the prairies in a small farming community called Alsask in the province of Saskatchewan. She studied the piano throughout her childhood. She later attended the University Of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon where she received a Bachelor Of Music Degree in piano and voice. She later studied vocal jazz in Vancouver, British Columbia at Capilano College and at The Banff Centre For The Fine Arts in Banff Alberta. She has performed festivals and concerts in Western Canada since the mid 1990's and has released four albums of Jazz standards and originals. Her release of "There's Beauty In The Rain" garnered her a Juno nomination for best vocal jazz recording of the year in 2000. Recent concert highlights include opening up for Brad Mehldau in 2000 at the Sasktel Jazz Festival in Saskatoon and opening up for Peter Appleyard in 2000 in Vancouver. Karin currently resides in Vancouver, British Columbia with her husband Lou and their black lab "WORF" who inspired one of Karin's originals "Dog For A Day".

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Karin Plato - A State Of Bliss

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:59
Size: 147,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:01)  1. Up With The Lark
(5:43)  2. Let's Take An Old Fashioned Walk
(3:34)  3. Blue Room
(3:52)  4. Big Black Crow
(6:21)  5. Diamonds On The Waves
(4:02)  6. I Hear Music
(4:54)  7. My Favorite Things
(5:32)  8. Time Will Not Wait For You
(5:57)  9. Pennies From Heaven
(7:08) 10. Here It Is
(4:26) 11. Cast Your Fate To The Wind
(5:53) 12. Summer Will Follow
(3:29) 13. The State Of Bliss

The State Of Bliss is Karin Plato’s fifth recording since 1996. Released in May 2003 the disc features Karin singing with three different rhythm sections. The songs include arrangements of familiar jazz standards as well as several of Karin's original compositions. A special highlight on "The State Of Bliss" is the guest appearance by acclaimed Canadian jazz vocalist Denzal Sinclaire. Denzal sings two duets with Karin: the swinging "I Hear Music" and the lovely waltz "Let's Take An Old Fashioned Walk" by Irving Berlin.  Noted Canadian producer Torben Oxbol who collaborated with Karin on previous CD's including her JUNO NOMINATED "THERE'S BEAUTY IN THE RAIN" in 1998 and "BLUE AGAIN " in 2000 is the producer of "The State Of Bliss ". Musicians on the recording include guitarist Bill Coon, saxophonist Campbell Ryga, pianist Ross Taggart, pianist Bob Murphy and several other of Canada's finest jazz musicians based in Vancouver, BC.

Nominated "Canadian Jazz Vocalist of the Year" at THE NATIONAL JAZZ AWARDS 2003 in Toronto, Canada (the award went to Diana Krall), Karin continues to win new fans everywhere that she performs. "The State Of Bliss " showcases the talent of one of Canada's rising stars in jazz. A blissful state indeed... http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?pid=7156261&style=music&fulldesc=T

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Karin Plato - Downward Dancing

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:31
Size: 122,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:41)  1. Gypsy In My Soul
(3:38)  2. Let There Be Love
(6:06)  3. So In Love
(4:35)  4. He Was Too Good To Me
(3:27)  5. Shoe Passion Blues
(4:58)  6. Falling In Love With Love
(4:58)  7. Sometimes I'm Happy
(7:39)  8. You Are Too Beautiful
(4:39)  9. Oh, What A Beautiful Morning
(4:52) 10. Downward Dancing
(3:53) 11. Sometime Ago / Hi Li Li Hi Lo

Passionate swinging standards and tender ballads sensitively sung by this Canadian jazz vocalist and composer. Here on her sixth release she is featured with acclaimed Toronto musicians: pianist Nancy Walker, bassist Steve Wallace and drummer Joel Haynes.  http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/plato5