Showing posts with label Melanie Dahan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Melanie Dahan. Show all posts

Thursday, May 18, 2017

Mélanie Dahan - Latine

Styles: Vocal, Chanson
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:52
Size: 135,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:32)  1. Utile
(3:59)  2. Berimbau
(5:48)  3. Retrato em branco e preto
(3:25)  4. Vingt ans
(4:45)  5. Que feras-tu de ta vie ?
(4:30)  6. Luiza
(5:00)  7. Le prochain amour
(4:53)  8. El cosechero
(4:31)  9. Flor de lis
(5:41) 10. J'ai eu trente ans
(5:38) 11. Catavento e girassol
(6:04) 12. Que reste-t-il de nos amours ?


Following the success of her first album ("La Princesse et les Croque-notes") and numerous concerts, Mélanie Dahan returns to us in a formula favorable to the expression of her great qualities as an interpreter. She continues to create bridges between French chanson and jazz and we also embark this time in a program more mixed, with Latin sounds. This second opus balances with grace and elegance between France, Brazil, Argentina and reflects nicely the diversity of its influences. Two, three repertoires, therefore, with common roots, which she declines in several forms and colors, in ease from one register to another, and in a style that belongs only to her. It succeeds the tour de force to offer an extraordinarily coherent, dark and luminous universe in the same inflection. Everything Mélanie sings is borrowed from a gentle sensitivity to the service of a refined phrasing, a gourmet mastery of words, a natural know-how. Loving the nuance and the beautiful and just phrase, she has the ability to move and touch the heart without resorting to artifice. The arrangements accord soloists large spaces in which they can move freely. For the occasion, she surrounded herself with the accomplices of her first album: the lyrical flights of harmonic sculptor Giovanni Mirabassi, Marc-Michel Le Bévillon's balloon, round and melodic double bass, and a perfectly Cuban drummer: Lukmil Perez. She made a wish: to record half of the disc with a string quartet, the Storycordes (arrangements: Marc-Michel Le Bévillon), where she only has to distill her delicate voice which finds in this context a new setting. https://www.amazon.fr/Latine-Giovanni-Mirabassi/dp/B004Z1Z9D8

Personnel:  Melanie Dahan : voix;  Giovanni Mirabassi: piano;  Marc-Michel Le Bévillon : Ctb;  Lukmil Perez: Batterie;  Eve-Marie Bodet : violon;  Johan Renard: violon;  Frédéric Eymard: alto;  Clément Petit: violoncelle;  Marc Berthoumieux: accordéon

Latine

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Mélanie Dahan - La Princesse Et Les Croque-Notes

Styles: Vocal, Chanson
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:21
Size: 127,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:58)  1. La Salle Et La Terrasse
(4:29)  2. L'enfant Maquillé
(6:52)  3. La Princesse Et Le Croque-Notes
(6:14)  4. Les Poètes
(4:57)  5. J'aimerais Tant Savoir
(1:44)  6. Rimes
(4:10)  7. Je Hais Les Dimanche
(6:29)  8. Si Tu Me Payes Un Verre
(5:17)  9. A Bicyclette
(3:42) 10. La Mer À Boire
(1:01) 11. Je Me Suis Fait Tout Petit
(5:22) 12. Le Petit Bal Perdu

There is a certain something about La Princesse et les Croque-Notes, and it is the same je ne sais quoi that exists in the first blush of wine and in the beguiling smile of Mona Lisa. It is that mesmerizing something filled with duende and saudades. It is Spanish and African and Brazilian all rolled into French, but above all it is, tantalizing, memorable, chanson and jazz. Melanie Dahan is a vocalist of the highest order and on this record she connects the art of chanson from its earliest times through modern chanson turning the music of Charles Aznavour, Jacques Brel and Leo Ferre into contemporary standards swirling in a powerful vortex of jazz. Blessed with a gymnastic contralto Dahan stretches her lithe voice to leap and dart and soar across a vocal stratosphere as if she were painting a canvas delicately with sound. Whether she is channeling pathos or being heraldic, Dahan appears able to pirouette across space, glide subtly between tones and she can vault from rhythmic precipice to rhythmic precipice, always seeming to recover enough to take flight again.

Her vocals are deliciously dainty on "La Salle et la Terrasse," feminine yet sinewy on "L'enfant Maquille" and majestic on "La Princesse et le Croque Notes," all the while being the model of precision in her interpretations of the inner rhythms and slurring gentility of the chansons of Aznavour and Brassens. On Claude Nougaro and Aldo Romano's "Rimes," she hits the rhythmic center of the music with aplomb and she shows she can skit puckishly on Pierre Bourouh and Francis Lai's "A Bicyclette." On every other song, especially "La mer a Boire," she finds the heart of the piece from the very first notes she begins to sing. This is contemporary chanson at its very best. There are moments though when Dahan steers her song through the heart of the polyphonic song, conjuring up spirits of rondeau, virelai and chanson baladee just a hint though, enough to praise the art and worship at the altar of its high priests and priestesses from Daufay to Piaf.

In a miraculous manner, Dahan the producer has also managed to bring just that perfect musical balance to the instrumentation of each song with the core group of bassist Marc-Michel le Bevillon and drummer Matthieu Chazarenc. But the most magnificent interplay is between vocalist and pianist. On songs like "La Salle..." and the title track, when vocalist and pianist get into the heart of the song, it feels as if medieval sorcery is at work. Not since Chick Corea and Flora Purim on Light As A Feather (Polydor, 1973) and specially on "500 Miles High," has there been such a sublime, symbiotic relationship between singer and pianist. And now Melanie Dahan and Giovanni Mirabassi on La Princesse et les Croque-Notes intertwine in a marvelous relationship of music and lyric poetry. The art of chanson cavorts sensuously with the art of jazz in an unforgettable way. ~ Raul D’Gama Rose  http://www.allaboutjazz.com/la-princesse-et-les-croque-notes-melanie-dahan-sunnyside-records-review-by-raul-dgama-rose.php
 
Personnel: Melanie Dahan: voice; Giovanni Mirabassi; piano; Marc-Michel le Bevillon: contrabass; Matthieu Chazarenc; drums; Pierrick Pedron: alto saxophone (5, 9).

La Princesse Et Les Croque-Notes

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Melanie Dahan - Keys

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:44
Size: 129.9 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[5:33] 1. Whisper Not
[5:45] 2. I'm Through With Love
[6:04] 3. Poor Butterfly
[5:09] 4. Dedicated To You
[6:00] 5. Beautiful Love
[5:17] 6. Everytime We Say Goodbye
[6:38] 7. Some Other Time-Lucky To Be Me
[4:57] 8. Star Eyes
[5:01] 9. What's New
[6:16] 10. Never Said

Baptiste Trotignon (piano); Thomas Enhco (piano); Pierre de Bethmann (piano); Manuel Rocheman (piano); Franck Amsallem (piano); Thomas Bramerie (doublebass); Lukmil Perez (drums).

Following 2 well-received recordings, French jazz vocalist Melanie Dahan has just recorded a new one. She has a history of working with excellent musicians (pianist Giovanni Mirabassi) and this album continues this fine tradition. The distinctive, continually surprising sound of this new album is the result of an especially satisfying collaboration with 5 pianists, a veritable who's who of the best in France. A smartly conceived concept recording made up of 10 jazz standards where each pianist pays tribute to the American songbook in his fresh and inventive own way. Each one of their unique and contemporary arrangements acts to highlight Dahan's vocal qualities and to make her voice an instrument.

Melanie's strengths - expressive delicacy at low volumes, flexible phrasing - are all here. Above all, there's her voice - light but expressive, engaging and evocative, whether she's singing in English (here), French (in her first album) or Portuguese (in her second album).

Keys