Showing posts with label Melissa Errico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Melissa Errico. Show all posts

Friday, September 13, 2024

Melissa Errico - Sondheim In The City

Styles: Jazz
Year: 2024
Time: 54:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 126,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:39) 1. Dawn
(3:23) 2. Another Hundred People
(3:52) 3. Opening Doors / What More Do I Need?
(3:26) 4. Take Me To The World
(3:30) 5. Can That Boy Foxtrot!
(5:02) 6. Anyone Can Whistle
(2:47) 7. Everybody Says Don't
(4:10) 8. Good Thing Going
(3:27) 9. Broadway Baby
(4:15) 10. Uptown, Downtown
(3:53) 11. It Wasn't Meant To Happen
(2:57) 12. Little Things You Do Together
(4:55) 13. Sorry-Grateful
(4:26) 14. Being Alive

Tony-nominated Broadway favorite Melissa Errico has recorded another album of Sondheim songs. Sondheim in the City releases via Concord Theatricals Recordings February 16.

The album is her second dedicated to the late composer-lyricist, following 2018's Sondheim Sublime. The new release focuses on Sondheim's songs about New York City and its myriad of characters, with songs including "Another Hundred People," "What More Do I Need?," "Everybody Says Don't," "Broadway Baby," and more.

“Sondheim is my New York, and his is the city of my dreams,” says Errico in a statement. “I used all these songs to make a Sondheim musical for myself partly my life, partly his mind. He is one of the enduring poets of this complex city, and I walked into one poem after another.”

Errico is also in the midst of a 10-performance residency at Birdland Jazz that began February 14. Shows on February 16 and 17 will celebrate the release of Sondheim in the City.

The album is produced by Rob Mathes and features arranger Tedd Firth on piano, David Finck on bass, Lewis Nash on drums, and Matt Munisteri on guitar. Alex Venguer handled recording, editing, and mixing, while mastering is by Scott Hull.
https://playbill.com/article/melissa-erricos-new-album-sondheim-in-the-city-releases-february-16

Sondheim In The City

Monday, February 21, 2022

Melissa Errico - Out Of The Dark - The Film Noir Project

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:43
Size: 176,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:49) 1. Angel Eyes
(5:02) 2. With Every Breath I Take
(4:39) 3. It Was Written in the Stars
(3:57) 4. The Bad and the Beautiful
(5:52) 5. Haunted Heart
(2:58) 6. Amour, Amour
(5:39) 7. Silent Partner
(4:15) 8. Farewell, My Lovely
(4:07) 9. Laura
(5:18) 10. Blame It on My Youth
(3:29) 11. Checkin' My Heart
(4:50) 12. On Vit, On Aime
(4:10) 13. La Solitude
(5:01) 14. The Man That Got Away
(5:54) 15. Detour Ahead
(1:29) 16. Shadows and Light
(4:07) 17. Again

Melissa Errico is a Tony-nominated Broadway actress who has spent 30 years defying definition. While starring on Broadway and working off-Broadway and in television and film, and now as a writer, she has also steadily kept a keen eye on making ever-newer styles of music. Her new album Out Of The Dark, a cycle of “Noir” songs that reaches towards a new sense of what Noir can be, is only her latest adventure in redefining what a concert of great American (and sometimes French) songs can be and do.

Her first appearance on the intimate concert stage was when she became the youngest performer to ever work at the famed Cafe Carlyle, where she spent a month in an acclaimed cabaret act called New Standards, arranged and musically directed by Lee Musiker. Singing two shows a night and discovering how much she loved the 11 pm shows and the nightlife, a taste still reflected in the imagery of Out Of The Dark she was soon signed to a record deal by her first musical mentor, Bruce Lundvall of Blue Note Records. Under his guidance, Melissa’s solo debut album was the eclectic and jazz-inflected Blue Like That, arranged and produced by Arif Mardin, featuring songs from Richard Rodgers to Rickie Lee Jones. It marked the beginning of what has remained her unique position in the Broadway community as a singer who explores jazz and songwriter material with the same attention she gives Stephen Sondheim or any other great storytelling musician.

Closely associated with the music of Michel Legrand, after starring in his only Broadway musical, “Amour,” Melissa went on to make a symphonic album Legrand Affair - The Songs of Michel Legrand with the 100-piece Brussels Philharmonic (and an American jazz trio featuring Steve Gadd on drums) arranged and conducted by Legrand and produced by Phil Ramone, with Legrand at the piano. Upon Legrand’s passing, she was asked to write his eulogy by The New York Times and invited to become the only American performer to participate in the extraordinary two-day memorial to Legrand held in April 2019 at Paris’s Le Grand Rex Theatre. Her re-issued album of Legrand’s music, Legrand Affair Deluxe Edition (Ghostlight/ Warner Music Group), appeared in 2019 and led one critic to proclaim, “Errico is, and will continue to be, the premier interpreter of the musical legacy of Michel Legrand.”

Melissa has also made two studio albums produced by Rob Mathes, the first, Lullabies and Wildflowers (Velour/Universal 2008), was a set of songs about motherhood, while she and Mathes then collaborated a decade later on her path-breaking 2018 album Sondheim Sublime (Ghostlight/ Warner Music Group). Called “The best all-Sondheim album ever recorded” by The Wall Street Journal. The album generated superlatives among the fiercest Sondheim aficionados, with one critic writing that, “with the warm, gentle purr of vibrato that invades her exquisite delivery ever-present Ms. Errico engages, grabs and holds no matter what Sondheim song falls from her lips.”

Melissa’s gifts and ambitions as a writer have also become increasingly evident, with a series of much-talked-of essays in the New York Times, touching, with wit, wisdom, and insider mischief, on the many unseen aspects of the theatrical profession from the pleasures and pains of being a ‘terminal ingenue’ to the ambiguities of auditioning to the sheer pleasure of being fitted for a costume, post-pandemic. She is currently working on a memoir that will include and expand on these “Scenes from An Acting Life,” as the Times, in a rubric specially invented for her work, calls them.

Her vocation as a writer has also led her, in recent years and throughout the pandemic, to writing and performing unique and poignant concert experiences-- ranging from tributes to Sondheim, or Legrand and the French love song, to shows about the history of Manhattan and the Broadway masters of Bucks County. With scripts often co-written with her frequent lyricist and collaborator, the New Yorker essayist Adam Gopnik, Broadway World calls these concerts “one-of-a-kind shows that balance whimsy with intellect, hilarity with empathy, music with conversation, and always in a style so unique, so personal, so original that they might as well make a blueprint!” Another critic has said that “Melissa is in a constant state of creation, looking to grow as an artist, and when she puts out shows like this, she effectively grows the art form of cabaret.”

Her Broadway starring roles include My Fair Lady as Eliza Doolittle, Cole Porter’s High Society, Dracula, White Christmas (playing the role made famous by one of her idols Rosemary Clooney), Anna Karenina, Les Miserables, and Michel Legrand’s Amour; and her many Sondheim roles include Dot in Sunday In The Park With George at The Kennedy Center, opposite Raul Esparza; Clara in the hit John Doyle production of Passion at Classic Stage Company; and Leona in Do I Hear A Waltz? at New York City Center.

In addition, she has sung at The Ravinia Festival, Royal Festival Hall, and The Palladium in London, and with such orchestras as the NSO at The Kennedy Center and Wolf Trap, several times with Marvin Hamlisch conducting her; as well as with The Cleveland Orchestra, The San Diego Symphony, The New World Symphony with Michael Tilson Thomas, and at The Hollywood Bowl, Catalina Jazz in LA, Feinstein’s/54 Below, Birdland Jazz Club and Dizzy’s Club at Lincoln Center.” https://www.thefilmnoirproject.com/about.html

Thank you Flyingfinger!

Out Of The Dark - The Film Noir Project

Friday, February 18, 2022

Melissa Errico - Sondheim Sublime

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2018
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:55
Size: 138,6 MB
Art: Front

(3:34)  1. Sooner or Later
(3:49)  2. Loving You
(4:27)  3. I Remember
(3:56)  4. No More
(4:05)  5. The Miller's Son
(4:50)  6. Losing My Mind
(4:06)  7. Send in the Clowns
(3:42)  8. Not While I'm Around
(4:32)  9. Not a Day Goes By / Marry Me a Little
(4:16) 10. Children Will Listen
(3:35) 11. Isn't He Something
(3:39) 12. Move On
(2:36) 13. Goodbye for Now
(3:20) 14. With so Little to Be Sure Of
(5:21) 15. Children and Art

In Sondheim Sublime, Melissa Errico shows us a side of Stephen Sondheim’s music that no singer has explored so completely before. It’s not the satiric or slyly disillusioned Sondheim – it’s the soulful Sondheim, the heartfelt, hungering Sondheim, author of songs of aching love and slowly dawning wisdom, the exalted, and reflective Sondheim: Sondheim Sublime. Accompanied by pianist Tedd Firth, Errico sings in a tone by turns hushed, electric and ecstatic, giving us a new understanding of the emotional intensity that has always equaled Sondheim’s virtuosic verbal magic. It’s a program of songs of love and life lessons, including a perfectly protective mother’s version of “Not While I’m Around” – while still having time for a provocative “Sooner or Later.” An album to place alongside her earlier Legrand Affair and Lullabies & Wildflowers as part of a uniquely lyrical and romantic library, Sondheim Sublime is an Errico album meant for the three-o-clocks in the mornings of the soul, when love is lost and wisdoms sought from one wise friend. Bio: Melissa is best known for her starring roles on Broadway in the musicals My Fair Lady, Anna Karenina, High Society, Dracula, White Christmas and Amour, which won her a Tony nomination for “Best Actress” and began a longtime association with its composer Michel Legrand. She has also been a recording artist and concert singer, releasing several solo albums and working with some of the world’s best symphonies and in jazz and cabaret spaces. More recently, she has been establishing a reputation as a writer, publishing essays in The New York Times and beyond. Television roles include the series Central Park West by Darren Star, recurring roles on Steven Soderbergh’s The Knick, and Showtime’s Billions. Melissa has also recently finished shooting a role in The Magnificent Meyersons, an Eric Oppenheimer film with Kate Mulgrew. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Sondheim-Sublime-Melissa-Errico/dp/B07HC5H94C

Sondheim Sublime

Friday, May 28, 2021

Melissa Errico - Legrand Affair (Deluxe Edition)

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 122:37
Size: 283,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:37) 1. I Was Born in Love with You
(5:39) 2. The Summer Knows
(6:08) 3. His Eyes, Her Eyes
(5:11) 4. The Windmills of Your Mind
(4:09) 5. I Will Wait for You
(3:45) 6. In Another Life
(2:39) 7. Martina
(2:44) 8. Dis moi
(4:52) 9. You Must Believe in Spring
(5:37) 10. What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?
(4:14) 11. How Do You Keep the Music Playing?
(4:45) 12. Something New in My Life
(4:14) 13. Maybe Someone Dreamed Us
(4:58) 14. Once Upon a Summertime
(2:55) 15. Celui-la
(5:03) 16. I Haven't Thought of This in Quite A While
(3:35) 17. Little Boy Lost
(3:47) 18. What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life? - Guitar Duo
(4:17) 19. The Way He Makes Me Feel
(4:47) 20. Hurry Home
(4:23) 21. Something New in My Life - Demo
(4:37) 22. Maybe Someone Dreamed Us - Demo
(4:50) 23. The Summer Knows - Demo
(6:29) 24. Once Upon a Summertime - Demo
(5:59) 25. The Windmills of Your Mind - Demo
(3:09) 26. Dis moi - Demo
(5:04) 27. Michel & Melissa at Work

A re-release of Melissa Errico’s album Legrand Affair further deepens her exceptional relationship to Michel Legrand’s songbook

“The time will come when all the waiting’s done”

I can’t pretend to be anywhere near objective about the music of Michel Legrand, it just touches my soul in the most intimate, indescribable way, so naturally the news of his death at the beginning of the year was devastating. And it is apparent that he inspires such devotion from many others too, most notably US Tony nominee Melissa Errico. Her 2011 album Legrand Affair was a real labour of love, recorded over a number of years with Legrand and the Brussels Philharmonic. And it deservedly established her as such a first-rate interpreter of his material that she has been called upon to participate many of the memorials that have celebrated his legacy this year. So the choice to release a deluxe edition of the album with 12 new tracks – demos and sketches, new recordings and incredibly, the last song Legrand ever composed feels entirely justified. It proves an unexpected but much-welcome addition to an already superb collection. With music of this quality, there’s something beautiful about the luxury of being able to bathe in the lushness of these orchestrations, and it isn’t often that you long for instrumental breaks in a vocal album but here, they are just dreamy to a fault. The interlude in ‘His Eyes, Her Eyes’ stands out, along with that new track ‘I Haven’t Thought of This in Quite a While’. The additional demos are fun, if not quite essential, given the masterly originals earlier in the album but as the last crumbs available from this superlative collaboration, they’re well worth the investment. https://oughttobeclowns.com/2019/12/album-review-melissa-errico-legrand-affair-deluxe-edition.html/

Legrand Affair (Deluxe Edition)

Monday, February 4, 2019

Melissa Errico - What About Today? Live at 54 Below

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 109:30
Size: 254,4 MB
Art: Front

(2:37)  1. “Why are actors so nuts?” (Live)
(3:31)  2. What About Today? (Live)
(6:15)  3. “Do you like this hair flip?” (Live)
(5:39)  4. The Summer Knows (Live)
(3:31)  5. “Those were seals...” (Live)
(2:39)  6. The April Fools (Live)
(6:18)  7. “Let's stay at the movies a little longer...” (Live)
(6:09)  8. His Eyes, Her Eyes (Live)
(3:08)  9. “How ‘bout we do a little Broadway?” (Live)
(5:25) 10. It’s an Art (Live)
(3:55) 11. “One perfect storm of a song...” (Live)
(5:08) 12. Meadowlark (Live)
(5:31) 13. “Where does that leave us?” (Live)
(4:12) 14. Getting Married Today (Live)
(6:02) 15. “Time to regroup...” (Live)
(5:04) 16. No More (Live)
(2:55) 17. “It doesn’t get better than this...” (Live)
(4:00) 18. Small World (Live)
(5:25) 19. Show Me (Live)
(4:30) 20. The Heart Is Slow to Learn (Live)
(2:27) 21. “I got the idea to write this...” (Live)
(1:50) 22. “I am really bananas about Eydie Gormé...” (Live)
(2:40) 23. What Did I Have That I Don’t Have? (Live)
(4:42) 24. Last Dance (Live)
(2:37) 25. “I’m like Cher in Moonstruck!” (Live)
(3:07) 26. How Are Things in Glocca Morra? (Live)

Recorded at the popular New York cabaret and restaurant venue 54 Below, What About Today is a mix of Broadway classics, film tracks and more contemporary songs as well as one of Melissa Errico’s own compositions. A slightly breathless start to the album, maybe through excitement and audience banter, it opens with What About Today by David Shire, but it’s by the third track The April Fools from the motion picture of the same name, that Errico really hits her stride. Possibly best known for her leading lady roles on and off Broadway, one of her earliest was back in 1993 was that of Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady, and fans will relish the opportunity to have a recording of the fiery and forceful Show Me. In contrast is the beautiful Gentle Child, which Errico wrote for her first daughter Victoria, a soft and sensitive lullaby. There are three tracks from composer Stephen Sondheim, including Getting Married Today from the musical Company, previously described as “one of Sondheim’s toughest songs” but Errico captures the crazed humour of a bride having a mental breakdown on her wedding day, perfectly. This is balanced by the reflective yet stirring, No More from Into the Woods (cut from the movie version), and the flirtatious Small World from Gypsy. There are two songs by Stephen Schwartz, who Errico calls “The King of Broadway”; the comedic and lyrically witty It’s An Art from the little known 1978 musical Working and Meadowlark from The Bakers Wife. This is Errico’s fifth album, and it features a diverse range of material, including 11 previously unrecorded tracks, however, this recording doesn’t do her justice. A large amount of dialogue is also included, which frustratingly interrupts the flow of the album somewhat. This isn’t to say that the narrative isn’t interesting, and to the producers’ credit, is tracked giving the listener the option to skip on repeat listening, but with 15 songs out of 27 tracks, gives a sense as to the quantity. While audience banter may be good in the live show, it doesn’t translate as well to the recording and as a result, the album feels busy, and a difficult listen, despite Errico’s phenomenal vocals. That said, there is also a sense of fun that comes across with this recording, and it undoubtedly captures the cabaret atmosphere on the evening. Throughout the album, Errico herself is scintillating and her impressive range is evident, with a welcome infusion of soft jazz at times. https://www.thereviewshub.com/cd-review-melissa-errico-what-about-today-live-at-54-below/

What About Today? Live at 54 Below

Sunday, January 20, 2019

Melissa Errico - Lullabies & Wildflowers

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:52
Size: 106,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:56)  1. Mockingbird
(3:04)  2. Hushabye
(3:14)  3. Since You Asked
(3:42)  4. The Wind Says Shhh
(3:30)  5. Gentle Child
(4:18)  6. Someone To Watch Over Me
(3:27)  7. Gartan Mother's Lullaby
(3:33)  8. Rockabye Baby
(3:12)  9. Wildflowers
(3:25) 10. A Child Is Born
(4:18) 11. Tiny Sparrow
(4:00) 12. Goodnight
(3:07) 13. Walking Happy

For what was intended to be her second solo album following the 2003 collection Blue Like That, Broadway star Melissa Errico reportedly teamed with composer Michel Legrand (having earned a Tony Award nomination for her performance in his 2002 musical Amour) and producer Phil Ramone in 2005. But that disc apparently was put aside, perhaps due to the singer's pregnancy; she gave birth to a daughter in 2006. The experience influenced her to take a new tack in assembling a sophomore effort, and instead she returns to solo recording with Lullabies and Wildflowers, a thematic album of songs about mothers and children. Since the children's music genre is such a well-established one, it should be stated at the outset that this is not an album of songs intended to amuse children, although, as the word "lullabies" in the title suggests, it may be useful in putting them to sleep; the arrangements, dominated by piano and acoustic guitar are calm, and should be calming. That said, Errico is mostly concerned about reflecting on a mother's (especially a new mother's) perspective on her child. At times, she tries to re-contextualize the songs she chooses to support that perspective. In terms of this album, for example, the listener is expected to suppose that the Gershwins' "Someone to Watch Over Me" is actually being sung by a child in search of a parent, which is not what Ira Gershwin had in mind, and Errico edits Judy Collins' "Since You Asked" slightly to give the impression it is being sung by a mother to a child. Such revisionism isn't entirely successful, but Errico sings the songs so feelingly that neither Gershwin nor Collins would be likely to mind. The choice of a Collins' song points up one of the singer's chief vocal influences. 

An even stronger one, accentuated by the jazz/folk/pop arrangements provided by producer Rob Mathes, is another Melissa, Melissa Manchester. At times (such as in "A Child Is Born"), Errico sounds so much like the young Manchester of albums like Bright Eyes that even Manchester fans might be fooled. Again, though, it's hard to complain about the similarity, which is largely a matter of timbre. Errico makes her debut as a songwriter with an excellent contribution, "Gentle Child," and as usual gives a nod to her brother Mike Errico, covering his "The Wind Says Shhh." The real end of the album comes with its penultimate track, the Beatles' "Goodnight," but then, after a pause, there's a playful coda, as what sounds like a scratchy old 78 begins to play at a low volume, and Errico goes into a light version of the old show tune "Walking Happy." It puts a pleasant capper on a lovely album, giving a mother something to tiptoe out of the room to after her child has been lulled to sleep. ~ William Rulhmann https://www.allmusic.com/album/lullabies-wildflowers-mw0000784779

Lullabies & Wildflowers