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

Monday, October 17, 2016

Melissa Morgan - Until I Met You

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:44
Size: 163,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:56)  1. Save Your Love For Me
(4:53)  2. Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby
(4:31)  3. Until I Met You
(3:11)  4. He Loves Me I Think
(3:40)  5. The Lamp Is Low
(3:24)  6. Cool Cool Daddy
(3:38)  7. A Sleepin' Bee
(3:30)  8. Yes, I Know When I've Had It
(4:53)  9. I Wonder
(5:22) 10. I Just Dropped By To Say Hello
(3:40) 11. The More I See You

Many young jazz vocalists reach into the book of standards for their first recording. Melissa Morgan follows the tradition, but in a way that works to her advantage. Morgan, 29, grew up on Teaneck, N.J. She became a jazz fan upon hearing her grandmother's old records the music of such inspirational vocalists as Nancy Wilson, Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington and Sarah Vaughan. A 2004 semi-finalist in the Thelonius Monk International Jazz Competition, Morgan performed before a panel of judges that included Quincy Jones, Al Jarreau, Kurt Elling, Dee Dee Bridgewater and Flora Purim. For her debut, Until I Met You, Morgan is accompanied by the quartet of Gerald Clayton on piano, Randy Napoleon on guitar, Joe Sanders on bass and Kevin Kannar on drums. A slightly slower-than-usual pace is heard in the arrangement of "Save Your Love for Me." Morgan's voice at first is flutelike, but as the song warms up, so does her emphasis. The core quartet is complemented nicely by trumpeter Christian Scott, whose middle solo is crisp, clean, and comfortably loud without being overpowering.

Sassy is the theme for "Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby." Morgan begins with a finger-snapping count as the backing quartet adds to the feel, particularly Sanders and Clayton. During the piano solo, Kannar mixes it up on the drums and cymbals, punching here and subtly striking there. As Clayton builds, the other musicians also crank it up before backing off when Morgan reenters. Scott and tenor saxophonist Ben Wendel help on "Cool Cool Daddy" as Morgan delivers like a classic blues singer. The sass is in high gear and evident in the play of all musicians. Wendel and Scott add to the enjoyment of this piece with solos, as well as their answers to Morgan's calls. Already a lively piece, the energy picks up even more to set up the songs emphatic ending.  "Yes, I Know When I've Had It" has a Latin vibe. Scott and Wendel are joined by alto saxophonist Tim Green and trombonist Francisco Torres. The horn section brilliantly supports Morgan and the rhythm quartet. During the middle break, the horns play as a group before ceding the lead to Green. Throughout, Kannar kicks in some action on the toms. The tendency of new recording artists to cover standards can work against them as they're not giving the audience anything they haven't heard. However, Morgan succeeds with the combination of her vocal style and free-spirited arrangements. Until I Met You, named for the Donald Wolf and Freddie Green classic, is an excellent introduction to Morgan. 
~ Woodrow Wilkins https://www.allaboutjazz.com/until-i-met-you-melissa-morgan-telarc-records-review-by-woodrow-wilkins.php
Personnel: Melissa Morgan: vocals; Gerald Clayton: piano; Randy Napoleon: guitar (1-4, 9); Joe Sanders: bass; Kevin Kannar: drums; Christian Scott: trumpet (1, 3, 6, 8); Tim Green: alto saxophone (3, 5, 8); Ben Wendel: tenor saxophone (3, 6, 8); Francisco Torres: trombone (3, 8).

Until I Met You

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Melissa Morgan - Days Like This

Size: 99,2 MB
Time: 42:23
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Jazz/Blues Vocals
Art: Front

01. You Let My Love Grow Cold (3:38)
02. Days Like This (3:51)
03. I Got A Right To Cry (3:44)
04. Wild Is The Wind (6:49)
05. California Soul (4:00)
06. Some Of My Best Friends Are The Blues (5:39)
07. You Don't Know Me (7:53)
08. By Myself (3:49)
09. West Coast Blues (2:57)

"You have to check out this voice. It is interesting. It is sassy. It is sexy.", says producer John Clayton. Brought up in the jazz clubs of New York City, Melissa Morgan has a voice that is unexpected. From the exterior you would assume a sultry lounge singer, which does make an appearance once and awhile, but from inside she contains a powerful instrument. "Prepare to fall in love" (Bay Area Reporter), and fall in love you do. On stage she bares everything and makes you laugh while doing it. While belting a blues or tenderly massaging a ballad, she has come a long way from her appearance at the 2004 Thelonious Monk Competition. In 2009, Melissa released her debut album on Telarc Records, "Until I Met You" to enthusiastic reviews and was embraced by the jazz community as "the one we've been waiting for" (Dr. Herb Wong, jazz critic and historian). Downbeat Magazine included her on their 2009 Rising Star List and JazzTimes has named her "audacious and decidedly salty". With her new album close to completion, she has gathered together her dearest friends to tell her story of the last five years, growing in the business and as a musician. While you will always hear definitive influences from Nancy Wilson, Dinah Washington and Billie Holliday, "Melissa isn't copying anybody" (London Evening Standard) and most certainly has a definitive sound all her own.

MC
Ziddu