Showing posts with label Lauren Hooker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lauren Hooker. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Lauren Hooker - Life of the Music

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:32
Size: 114,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:34) 1. Life of the Music / Your Music Brings Out the Poetry In Me
(3:24) 2. If That's What You Feel
(3:42) 3. Love Me or Leave Me
(4:14) 4. I Am Doing Very Well
(6:57) 5. Songs to a Seagull
(3:59) 6. I Lied
(4:47) 7. Spring Is Here
(3:52) 8. Countin' on the Blues
(3:48) 9. Hey This Is Me
(2:51) 10. Walkin' on Down the Line
(5:20) 11. Some Other Time

In 2007, vocalist Lauren Hooker turned out an impressive debut, Right Where I Belong (Musical Legends, Inc., 2007), which highlighted her solid, yet flexible, voice, and an ability to graft her own lyrics onto familiar instrumental jazz standards. Three years later, Hooker returns with a program that largely focuses on her own lyrics and music, demonstrating interests in the blues, straight-ahead jazz, funk, pop and Brazilian music. The opening track a collaboration between Hooker and poet Jeanette Curtis Rideau has some bite to it, featuring a burning solo from Scott Robinson's molten soprano saxophone. "If That's What You Feel" begins with Hooker's wordless vocals moving along with Robinson's flugelhorn, over a swaying Brazilian beat. One of the most emotionally powerful originals on the album is "I Am Doing Very Well" a break-up song that touches on all of the conflicting emotions and pain that comes with that territory. Bassist Martin Wind adds a little Brazilian bounce to "I Lied," but John Hart's guitar work is the focal point on this one. Wind and drummer Tim Horner are a solid team behind Hooker on "Countin' The Blues," which features a terrific walking-the-bar-type saxophone solo from Robinson. "Hey This Is Me" is Hooker's take on contemporary pop with a slight R&B tinge to the music and "Walkin' On Down The Line" features some funky drumming from Horner and raunchy guitar sounds from Hart. While Hooker's compositional craft is at the core of the album, she also finds time to tackle four standards, shaped to her own liking. Her vocals cut like a knife on "Love Me Or Leave Me," which features some sublime scatting, and she soars on a waltzing "Spring Is Here." The latter tune is underscored by Horner's crisp, dry and articulate ride cymbal work, and Robinson's fluttery flute is a treat here. "Some Other Time" gently glides long as Hooker is intimately accompanied by Mike Richmond on bass and Hart on guitar. Seagulls had their place on Hooker's first album with "Seagulls (Seagulls of Kristiansund)" and this particular fowl found its way onto this record through Joni Mitchell's "Song To A Seagull." Hooker manages to create wide dramatic range coming off with full throated vocals that Mitchell couldn't match when she penned this early-career classic and the pairing of cello and piano is a nice touch. While this song has a sunny veneer, darker moods seem to lurk around. Life Of The Music, with its engaging original material and intelligently crafted covers, might just get plenty of people hooked on Lauren Hooker.~ Dan Bilawsky https://www.allaboutjazz.com/life-of-the-music-lauren-hooker-miles-high-records-review-by-dan-bilawsky.php

Personnel: Lauren Hooker: vocals, acoustic piano, electric piano; djembe; Jim Ridl: acoustic piano; Tim Horner: drums, congas, pandera, shaker, whistle, flute; Scott Robinson: flute, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, alto saxophone, flugelhorn, trumpet; John Hart: acostic guitar, electric guitar; Jeanette Curtis Rideau: spoken word (1); Mike Richmond: cello (5), acoustic bass (11)

Life of the Music

Monday, April 3, 2017

Lauren Hooker - Right Where I Belong

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:42
Size: 139,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:45)  1. Right Where I Belong
(3:39)  2. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
(6:21)  3. Goodbye To Pork Pie (Goodbye Porkpie Hat)
(5:15)  4. The Eyes Of Chaz
(5:27)  5. The Other Side Of The Sun
(5:00)  6. You Needn't Call Me (Well You Needn't)
(4:54)  7. Time And Space
(3:12)  8. Seagulls (Seagulls Of Kristiansund)
(3:46)  9. Lovebug Jitters (Jitterbug Waltz)
(4:46) 10. No Goodbyes
(5:56) 11. Footprints On My Soul (Footprints)
(3:53) 12. Ill Wind (You're Blowing Me No Good)
(3:41) 13. Creole Love Call

It turns out that not only does jazz singer Lauren Hooker have some impressive credentials, her debut album is also filled with surprises. Born into a musical family, (her father recorded with Bill Evans during their college days in New Jersey), Hooker assumed a career as an entertainer during the early 1980s as well as being a musical educator at The Bank Street School for Children in Manhattan. Her first big break came in 1989, when she recorded with legendary pianist Mal Waldron and wrote original lyrics to his composition, "The Seagulls of Kristiansund." This singular moment has been cited as a raison d'etre for Hooker's writing skills and the ability to tell stories per her lyrics. The makeup of these eleven tracks consists of seven songs where she has written original lyrics to jazz standards, two originals and two from the Great American Songbook. The title tune is really the traditional melody, "Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child" with her own adaptation changing the title to "Right Where I Belong." On the Duke Ellington classic, "Creole Love Call," Hooker uses her three octave range in vocalese fashion to further enhance the timeless melody.

Perhaps the most impressive part of the album is Lauren Hooker's writing for some of the more modern bebop era compositions with completely different lyrics than originally submitted by the original songwriters. On Wayne Shorter's "Footprints" (here called "Footprints on My Soul"), the lyrics are quite different than those previously recorded, including the Grammy-nominated album by Karrin Allison. Charles Mingus' "Goodbye Porkpie Hat" offers none of the meaningful Lester Young tribute lyrics that made the Mingus tune so appropriate. I'm not so sure that I prefer this one over the original. Thelonious Monk's "Well You Needn't" is given a new dressing via Hooker's title, "You Needn't Call Me," despite previously submitted lyrics (and title changes) from Jon Hendricks and Carmen McRae. "Lovebug Jitters" offers her own take on the classic Fats Waller standard "Jitterbug Waltz."  What matters most with regard to these original rewrites is not whether or not they are better than the words that we may be more interested in hearing, but that Lauren Hooker has the ability and drive to submit these lyrics and deliver them in a swinging sense that befits the works of Shorter, Waller, Monk, Waldron and Mingus. Lauren Hooker's musical companions are an excellent group consisting of über-piano accompanist Allen Farnham, bassist Rufus Reid and much in-demand drummer Tim Horner. ~ Michael P.Gladstone https://www.allaboutjazz.com/right-where-i-belong-lauren-hooker-self-produced-review-by-michael-p-gladstone.php

Personnel: Lauren Hooker: vocals; Allen Farnham: piano; Rufus Reid: bass; Tim Horner: drums.

Right Where I Belong

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Lauren Hooker & Friends - All For You/My Heart And Soul

Size: 148,1 MB
Time: 63:17
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. All For You (Feat. Mike Richmond, Joe Cardello & Paul Meyers) (4:22)
02. No More Blues Blues (Feat. Joe Cardello, Mike Richmond, Vince Ector, Dave Rimelis & Jonathan Luks) (5:14)
03. As Long As I’m With You (Feat. Mike Richmond & Joe Cardello) (4:52)
04. Lucky In Love (Feat. Mike Richmond, Jonathan Luks, Vince Ector & Dave Rimelis) (4:17)
05. But Where Were You (Feat. Ted Brancato, Vince Ector, Joe Cardello & Mike Richmond) (4:29)
06. Love Still Alive (3:25)
07. Too Soon (Feat. Dave Rimelis, Mike Richmond & Joe Cardello) (6:09)
08. Both Sides Now (Feat. Dave Rimelis, Mike Richmond & Joe Cardello) (4:57)
09. Shaman’s Call (2:22)
10. Just Carry Me (Feat. Mike Richmond & Dave Rimelis) (4:49)
11. Little Child (4:23)
12. Hold Onto The Light (Feat. Dave Rimelis) (3:06)
13. Do You Remember (Feat. Mike Richmond, Joe Cardello & Paul Meyers) (6:09)
14. Here’s To Life (4:38)

Personnel:
Lauren Hooker: Vocals/Acoustic Piano, Native American Flute, Drum
Paul Meyers: Acoustic Guitar
Dave Rimelis: Violin/Guitar
Mike Richmond: Acoustic Bass/Cello
Ted Brancato: Rhodes Piano
Vince Ector: Drums
Joe Cardello: Percussion
Jonathan Luks: Tap

"In her wide-ranging life, Lauren Hooker has had many accomplishments as a singer, lyricist, composer, arranger, pianist, actress, educator, producer, founder of an arts coalition, and the head of her musical education company, Musical Legends. Much more than a singer or a musician, she has lived the life of an artist, going from one important project to another and uplifting each area of her life with her creativity, wit and sensitivity.

All For You - My Heart and Soul builds on the success of her first two recordings: Right Where I Belong (Musical Legends 2007) and Life Of The Music (Miles High 2011) with an eclectic set of fresh music that, while not confined to one musical genre, is consistently inspired by the influence and chance taking of jazz. The music on All For You is logically programmed with the first four songs being about the joy and importance of love and the next three dealing with being jilted and disappointed by love. Joni Mitchell's "Both Sides Now" acts as a transition before the final six numbers discuss getting deeper into oneself and one's life.

For Lauren Hooker, All For You - My Heart and Soul is more than just pretty music, it is music with a purpose. It certainly provides listeners with a memorable experience and it is a strong step forward for the creative artist.".

All For You/My Heart And Soul