Showing posts with label Nita Whitaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nita Whitaker. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Lee Lessack - In Good Company

Styles: Jazz, Vocal
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:21
Size: 170,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:35)  1. Lee Lessack With Nita Whitaker - The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
(3:50)  2. Lee Lessack With Susan Egan - The Look Of Love
(3:09)  3. Lee Lessack With Jon Philip Alman - Sweet Mystery
(4:39)  4. Lee Lessack With  Mary Jo Mundy - Never Saw Blue Like That
(4:56)  5. Lee Lessack With  Brian Lane Green - Opens Arms
(6:15)  6. Lee Lessack With Ann Hampton Callaway - Bring Back Romance
(3:50)  7. Lee Lessack With Johnny Rodgers - Here's To You
(5:13)  8. Lee Lessack With Joanne O'Brien - Summer Wine
(4:54)  9. Lee Lessack With Franc D'Ambrosio - Vincero Perdero
(4:54) 10. Lee Lessack With Maureen McGovern - If You Go Away
(4:05) 11. Lee Lessack With Stephen Schwartz - For Good
(3:15) 12. Lee Lessack With Susan Werner - Blue Guitar
(3:58) 13. Lee Lessack With David Burnham - Let It Be Me
(3:31) 14. Lee Lessack With Amanda McBroom - The Rose
(4:42) 15. Lee Lessack With Ken Page - Vincent
(3:54) 16. Lee Lessack With Stacy Sullivan - Stay the Night
(4:34) 17. Lee Lessack With Michael Feinstein - May I Suggest

No one is working harder than Lee Lessack to keep the increasingly fragile art of cabaret singing on life support. To date, he has released more than 100 discs by some 70 artists (including himself) on his L.A.-based LML label. But never before has Lessack launched so overt an assault as with this 17-track collection that pairs him with a brigade of the genre's top singers and players. The results are uniformly lovely, especially when Lessack joins forces with Susan Egan on "The Look of Love," Maureen McGovern on "If You Go Away," David Burnham on a slow-roasted "Let It Be Me" and composer Stephen Schwartz on the magical "For Good" from his score for Broadway's Tony-winning Wicked.

Trouble is, despite the accuracy of its title, In Good Company lacks cabaret's most essential spice-variety. The all-ballad assortment is like a damask table runner: beautiful and tasteful, but ultimately just passively decorative. The one notable-indeed, soaring-exception is his teaming with keyboardist Johnny Rodgers (who coproduced the album with Lessack and whose band backs each track) on the Rodgers-penned "Here's to You" that pays superlative homage to Simon and Garfunkel. ~ Christopher Loudon  http://jazztimes.com/articles/16099-in-good-company-lee-lessack

Personnel: Lee Lessack (vocals); David Burnham , Franc d'Ambrosio, Joanne O'Brien, Ken Page, Michael Feinstein, Amanda McBroom, Nita Whitaker, Ann Hampton Callaway, Stacy Sullivan, Stephen Schwartz, Susan Egan, Susan Werner, Maureen McGovern, Jon Philip Alman, Mary Jo Mundy, Johnny Rodgers, Brian Lane Green (vocals); Joe Ravo (guitar); Una Tone (violin); Wolfram Koessel (cello); John F. Rodgers (piano, organ); Danny Colfax Mallon (drums); Tom Harrell (trumpet, flugelhorn).

In Good Company

Friday, January 31, 2014

Nita Whitaker - One Voice

Styles: Soul
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:50
Size: 116,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:42)  1. One Voice
(2:57)  2. I Choose Love
(5:39)  3. Until Now
(3:51)  4. Sending Out A Prayer
(4:50)  5. Use Your Life
(4:06)  6. Eyes of A Child
(3:15)  7. Shine
(3:38)  8. When Mountains Won't Move
(4:05)  9. Climb Ev'ry Mountain
(3:54) 10. That's When I'll Be There
(5:20) 11. A Quiet Place
(4:27) 12. Heaven Hold The Ones I Love

Nita Whitaker is a successful Los Angeles-based session singer, which has earned her the opportunity to make this earnest, if somewhat bland, solo album. On self-written songs and others of a similar tone, she sings of the importance of religion and familial love with a session singer's voice always on key, precise, and well articulated, but lacking something that would make it a real star vehicle. Whitaker once got a walk-on in The Bodyguard by doing an impressive demo for Whitney Houston, and there are several songs here in which she seems to be doing the same thing. But she never goes as far over the top as Houston does, though she has vocal chops at least as good, and her tastefulness makes you focus more on the material, which is mediocre for the most part. A characteristic mistake is her reading of "Climb Ev'ry Mountain," the inspirational song from The Sound of Music written to be sung by a soprano. 

Whitaker is an alto, and her transposition immediately robs the song of much of its force it isn't about climbing mountains anymore, it's just an L.A. pop singer's vocal exercise. It may be odd to criticize a vocalist for not being excessive and indulgent, but Whitaker is performing in not just a singer's, but also an entertainer's medium. Think not only of Houston, but also of Natalie Cole, Toni Braxton, and any number of other stars more interested in calling attention to themselves than to what they're singing. That narcissism is what helps make them stars. Whitaker really cares about her sentimental messages and wants to convey them to her listeners; her more successful peers recognize, intuitively, if not consciously, that they themselves are the message. How can a singer as modest as Whitaker, however good her pipes, compete ~ William Ruhlmann   http://www.allmusic.com/album/one-voice-mw0000015945

Personnel: Anita "Nita" Whitaker (vocals, background vocals); Michael Turner (guitar, acoustic guitar); David Levita (guitar); Dean Parks (acoustic guitar); Maria Casale (harp); Neli Nikolaeva (violin); Robin Ross, Gil Romero, Philip Vaiman, Calabria McChesney, Bette Byers, Harry Scorzo, Alexis Carreon, Michael Allen Harrison, Richard Dodd, Armen Ksadjikian, John Krovoza (strings); Chris Bleth (flute, piccolo, oboe); Daniel Kelley , Marni Johnson , Mark Adams (French horn); Phillip Teele, Bruce Otto, Bob McChesney (trombone); David Foster (piano, keyboards); William Thomas, Jr., Greg Phillinganes, David Loeb (piano); Gary Griffin (toy piano, celesta, keyboards, vibraphone, timpani, tubular bells); Cedric Sampson (drums, percussion); Russ McKinnon (drums); Bryan Brock, Scott Breadman (percussion); Adam Jackson, Ken Stacey, Carol Huston, Debbie Gates, Fred White , Melanie Taylor, Jennifer Cihi, Alex Brown, Peggi Blu, Wil Wheaton, Bridgette Bryant (background vocals).