Showing posts with label Patricia Barber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patricia Barber. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Patricia Barber - Clique

Styles: Vocal
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:20
Size: 104,5 MB
Art: Front

(4:37) 1. This Town
(3:53) 2. Trouble is a Man
(8:04) 3. Mashup
(4:28) 4. Samba de Uma Nota Só (One Note Samba)
(4:56) 5. I Could Have Danced All Night
(4:28) 6. The In Crowd
(4:19) 7. Shall We Dance?
(6:09) 8. Straight No Chaser
(4:23) 9. All in Love is Fair

These time-honored songs, lovingly curated, arranged, and performed by pianist/vocalist Patricia Barber and her band, are at last seeing the light of day when the world needs them more than ever. Pristinely recorded, Clique assembles what began as encores to live performances into an experience all its own. The album comes out of the same sessions that gave us Higher (see review for All About Jazz here), which immersed the fortunate listener in a world shaped by art song and poetry, only now shed of its shadows and reveling in the city lights. "This music is fun, like Patricia Barber without the dark side," is how she describes her project in a recent phone interview. "We'd been booked for four days in the studio but finished Higher in two. Since the band was already there and tight from having been on the road, it was easy for me to pull these out."

There is indeed an ease that characterizes her vocal delivery of Jobim's "Samba de Uma Nota Só / One Note Samba" and the Rodgers and Hammerstein bon mot "Shall We Dance?" Appearances by Neal Alger (acoustic guitar) on the former and Jim Gailloreto (tenor saxophone) add to the nostalgia of these familiar grounds, though it's her core trio, led by the bandleader's keystrokes, that does much of the heavy lifting. Linked arm in arm with bassist Patrick Mulcahy and drummer Jon Deitemyer, she first croons her way onto the rain-slicked streets of "This Town" as if it were the most natural thing in the world.

"In some ways, I'm a control freak," Barber admits of her sound. "These are arrangements. This particular group is one I cherish, so everyone gets time to play. So, while it's stylized, they definitely have an input." Said input is front and center in "The In Crowd," which tracks its nerve impulses outwardly from a spinal bass line. In this and "Trouble Is A Man," Barber shows that her greatest powers as a singer tend to reside in her quietest inflections. From a near whisper, she is able to elicit deep lyrical and emotional conflicts. Chalk this as another victory for Jim Anderson, whose engineering ensures both fine separation and artful blend. "He just gets better," says Barber of the producer with whom she has worked for the better part of three decades. "In my music in general, I value silence as much as I value presence, and he's able to capture that perfectly."

Even when her voice hangs its hat for an instrumental interlude, Barber ensures that the audience, however virtual, is never forgotten. Whether turning the kaleidoscope of her original "Mashup" or navigating the burnished corridors of Monk's "Straight No Chaser," she allows freer energies to occupy the foreground. Notes Barber, "This is a very good representation of what you will hear when you come to see us live. It was true to what this band was playing at the time. We worked very hard on pulling melody away from the rhythm as we know it. It takes a very quiet space and musicians who are listening closely to do that."

Their synergy is especially apparent on "I Could Have Danced All Night," in which the drum kit seems to spread its wings around us as Barber takes a half-lit stage with poise. The sonic whetstone along which she sharpens such tunes is indicative of their somewhat unusual choosing. "When people hear 'standards album,' they're expecting the classic American Songbook of the 30s, but these are from the 50s and 60s, one of my favorite eras. I would call it a covers album." In that spirit, Barber takes the metaphorical connotations of the concept to their fullest, dressing melodies and harmonizing with freshly tailored clothing.

In that respect, one can't help but hear Clique and Higher as complementary. Whereas the earlier release broke new harmonic ground for vocal jazz music and was the result of six years of writing, here we are treated to a set of comforts we know and love. Barber is acutely aware of the timing as well: "This is a pleasant album to throw on right now, though I am disoriented by having a record come out that I can't perform with." How fortuitous, then, that she should end with Stevie Wonder's "All In Love Is Fair." Its sincerity speaks to the heart of the matter and unpacks for us the album's multivalent title, which Barber picked from among a handful of choices because, in her words, "it sounded like the kind of jazz club you'd want to be a part of." Thankfully, not even a pandemic can keep us from walking through its doors, taking a seat, and opening our ears to the hope of a brighter future.~Tyran Grillo https://www.allaboutjazz.com/clique-patricia-barber-impex-records

Personnel: Patricia Barber: piano; Patrick Mulcahy: bass; Jon Deitemyer: drums; Neal Alger: guitar, acoustic; Jim Gailloreto: saxophone, tenor.

Clique

Sunday, September 17, 2023

Patricia Barber - Higher

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:21
Size: 127,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:45)  1. Muse
(5:43)  2. Surrender
(3:49)  3. Pallid Angel
(4:29)  4. The Opera Song
(3:30)  5. High Summer Season
(5:25)  6. The Albatross
(4:25)  7. Voyager
(3:11)  8. Higher
(5:23)  9. Early Autumn
(6:09) 10. In Your Own Sweet Way
(2:41) 11. Secret Love
(4:46) 12. The Opera Song with Katherine Werbiansky

Patricia Barber is more than the sum of her talents. As a composer, she peels back the craft of song to expose its barest textures, cultivating each like a tree that, while holding its own shape above ground, makes apparent the roots below it. As a singer, she understands not only that we perform our voices but also that our voices perform us. Whether crooning through the Great American Songbook, as on Nightclub (Blue Note, 2000), or rowing through intensely original waters, as on the Ovid-inspired Mythologies (Blue Note, 2006), she shapes words and meanings as one and the same. As a lyricist, she inhales the ingredients of life and exhales the perfume of lessons learned. As far as back "Too Rich for My Blood" on Café Blue (Premonition Records, 1994), her attention to detail has revealed a continuity between the intimate and the grandiose.

And as a pianist (her 2010 concert with Kenny Werner, documented on a 2011 release by Floyd Records, being a quintessential example), she never ornaments for mere effect but draws out shades from the sentiments already flowing inside her. Encountering Barber at this point in her career is like getting to the redemption chapter of a long and fascinating autobiography, and in every line one can feel her retrospective nature in spades. "You can tell what I care about," she says of listening to this album in a phone interview. "In some ways, this is all I care about. In Smash (Concord, 2013) you could tell my heart was broken, but you could also hear those art songs starting to come through. This one is a much happier affair, as it should be in this political climate." Although Higher chronicles an extroverted leap of intuition, it's as much a courageous dive inward, plumbing deeper-than-ever emotional reserves by blending whimsy and seriousness into an organic whole. Its centerpiece is "Angels, Birds, and I...," an eight-part art song cycle that polishes multiple facets of a modern soul trying to maintain her nonstick coating in an abrasive world.

"I feel very much that this album is a manifestation of my hard-won harmonic evolution," Barber says. The result of six years' labor, these sonic dioramas sound at once out of time and utterly relevant: "Art song is its own world. Even though you have these improvisational envelopes, it's distinct from jazz. The harmonies are much vaster and difficult to put into words. One moment it all sounds new to us, and another it sounds familiar. This album is my own particular way of mixing those two things."

"Muse" provides a gloriously subtle introduction to that very dichotomy. Here our narrative guide struggles to marry inspiration with realization as she imagines a stage where another sings in her place. Through images of dressing and undressing, of love both real and imaginary, Barber's unflinching vocals thread every needle as if poised to make one last defining stitch. Storytelling doesn't even begin to describe the fullness at play as she delineates for us a path on which few other feet have made impressions. It's a thread that continues to run through "Surrender" and "Pallid Angel," both of which wrap sacred shades around secular bodies in pursuit of mutual trust. Like stones sinking into love after a wholehearted skip, they leave only ephemeral marks of their passage on the surface yet linger as nostalgic memories to be recaptured in moments of creative fancy.

All the more fitting then that the content of these songs should revolve around its perennial themes: "Angels, Birds, and I..." is an homage to music and singers. It's about love for music, and love as music. As the protagonist I take on godly role, looking down on my singer and wishing I could do what she does." In this regard, "The Opera Song" glistens. This multilingual tale of allusions takes musical terms as reflections of one whose heart longs to belt out an aria for all to hear, but whose commitment to the status quo threatens to overtake that spark of individuality. Nowhere has Barber's deft balance of the Apollonian and the Dionysian been so present. "High Summer Season" parlays further climatic shifts into view. Accompanied only by guitar, Barber embodies every fluttering wing as if it were hers alone. Even more so in "The Albatross Song." What at first appears to be the monologue of a wife seeking fulfillment in a more familiar, less distant lover turns into a playful commentary on modern ennui. Said fulfillment blossoms in "Voyager," a somewhat surreal evocation of singing as a springboard for extraterrestrial journeying. As in the closing title song, it ends above the clouds, riding thermals of personal histories, closer to the edges of dreams. Through it all, bassist Patrick Mulcahy, drummer Jon Deitemyer, guitarist Neal Alger and saxophonist Jim Gailloreto document every emotional turn of phrase with nothing short of archival assurance.

"These musicians have been working with me for a long time," says Barber. "I was lucky in not needing to travel far to find the best people for this project. Because they're basically playing chamber music, they had to approach it differently. They were vital to its development." Vital, too, is Barber's pianism as it winds through a smattering of standards to round out the album. Her rendition of Dave Brubeck's "In Your Own Sweet Way" is a highlight, and stands firm alongside a savvily arranged "Secret Love." The encore, as it were, comes to us by way of lyric soprano Katherine Werbiansky, whose take on "The Opera Song" gives us another side of the story. By the end of all this, we have encountered songs that change both within their own skins and between them, each a life in miniature waiting to nourish itself on the food of our attention. ~ Tyran Grillo https://www.allaboutjazz.com/higher-patricia-barber-artistshare-review-by-tyran-grillo.php

Personnel: Patricia Barber: piano, voice; Patrick Mulcahy: bass; Jon Deitemyer: drums; Neal Alger: acoustic guitar; Jim Gailloreto: tenor saxophone; Katherine Werbiansky: lyric soprano.

Higher

Thursday, July 21, 2022

Patricia Barber - Monday Night: Live at the Green Mill Volume I

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz 
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:01
Size: 114,7 MB
Art: Front

( 7:52)  1. Touch of Trash
( 7:06)  2. The Moon
( 4:07)  3. Narcissus
( 9:25)  4. Company
(17:22)  5. Groovin' High
( 4:07)  6. Autumn Leaves

Jim Gailloreto is one of the only musicians I can add comfortably to the quartet. In this set you can hear how he makes us sound 'better.' Jim and I are working together (I have written two tunes) on his project, "American Complex" with string quartet, saxophone and voice due out in the fall. 

This is the first of many "live" downloads that will appear on this site from the past, present and future. http://www.patriciabarber.com/store/monday-night-recorded-live-green-mill

Personnel:  Patricia Barber - piano/vocals;  Neal Alger – guitar;  Michael Arnopol – bass;  Eric Montzka – drums;  Jim Gailloreto - saxophone

Monday Night: Live at the Green Mill  Volume I

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Patricia Barber - Monday Night: Live At The Green Mill - Volume 2

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:24
Size: 175,1 MB
Art: Front

(10:00)  1. Triste
(11:47)  2. Like JT
( 4:42)  3. I Fall In Love Too Easily
(12:58)  4. Blue Bossa
( 9:33)  5. On The Road Again
( 7:24)  6. Post Modern Blues
( 5:44)  7. Smile
( 5:50)  8. The Beat Goes On
( 6:23)  9. Summertime

Monday Night: Live at the Green Mill II.  Exactly what jazz fans of all ages have been waiting for! Patricia Barber (www.patriciabarber.com) has just released yet another stunning album, "Monday Night: Live at the Green Mill, Volume 2." From the first heart-humming tones of "Triste," to the last, lingering note of "Summertime," this 9-track album (currently available in MP3 and FLAC format) holds the listener suspended in time, awash in a sea of emotion. "Like JT," a powerful, yet artful piece of piano work; "Blue Bossa," a waterfall of vocalizations blended with delicate melody; "Smile," a rendition that makes you sure that its being played especially for you; along with some old favorites (made new again) is the penultimate for audiophiles worldwide.  I would be remiss however if I didn't acknowledge my personal favorite "On the Road Again." Don't expect Willie Nelson! This piece d'resistance in a mesmerizing piece of dark storytelling at it's finest. This album of one of the world's foremost jazz artists is not to be missed. ~ Lajadjie Sebela http://www.jazzreview.com/jazz-news/press-releases/monday-night-live-at-the-green-mill-volume-ii.html

Monday Night: Live At The Green Mill - Volume 2

Monday, July 18, 2022

Patricia Barber - Monday Night: Live At The Green Mill, Vol. 3

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:45
Size: 160,1 MB
Art: Front

( 8:07)  1. In Your Own Sweet Way
( 4:49)  2. Romanesque
( 5:09)  3. Fotografia
( 8:49)  4. Crash
( 4:58)  5. I Could Have Danced All Night
( 4:19)  6. The Thrill Is Gone
( 4:12)  7. Moon River
( 5:06)  8. You Gotta Go Home
( 6:31)  9. Stay With Me
( 4:32) 10. Orpheus (Sonnet)
(11:09) 11. Groovin' High

I have been blessed to have a weekly Monday Night gig at The Green Mill, one of the hippest jazz clubs in the world in one of the most exciting cities in the world, Chicago.  enormous thanks to Dave Jemilo for keeping this Chicago treasure alive and for letting me a part of it.  Also, thanks to our soundman here Chris Grabowski who increasingly is recognized for his very special "live" sound recordings.  On this, the third "Live from the Green Mill " download, you'll hear not only the music, but the soft landscape of the club and the city. Larry Kohut is on acoustic bass, Jon Deitemyer is on drums and Jim Gailloreto is on tenor saxophone. The recording is exceptional.  I suggest you get one of the better sound file downloads, close your eyes and time travel to this Monday Night at the Green Mill.  http://www.patriciabarber.com/store/monday-night-live-green-mill-volume-3

Musicians:  Patricia Barber - piano, vocals;  Jim Gailloreto - sax;  Larry Kohut - bass;  John Deitemyer - drums;  Tom Hipskind - drums.

Monday Night: Live At The Green Mill, Vol. 3

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Patricia Barber - The Cole Porter Mix

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:15
Size: 128.8 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2008
Art: Front

[3:36] 1. Easy To Love
[5:14] 2. I Wait For Late Afternoon And You
[4:29] 3. I Get A Kick Out Of You
[3:39] 4. You're The Top
[3:47] 5. Just One Of Those Things
[4:45] 6. Snow
[3:37] 7. C'est Magnifique
[4:22] 8. Get Out Of Town
[5:02] 9. I Concentrate On You
[5:25] 10. In The Still Of The Night
[3:59] 11. What Is This Thing Called Love
[4:11] 12. Miss Otis Regrets
[4:01] 13. The New Year's Eve Song

Jazz songwriter and pianist Patricia Barber's 2006 album Mythologies, a song cycle based on Ovid's Metamorphosis, is a sprawling work of poetic and musical adventure. Upon its release, it garnered universal acclaim from critics and responsive concert audiences across the United States and Europe. After this rigorous undertaking, Barber could have been forgiven for taking a breather. And on its surface, that seems to be what the Cole Porter Mix is. But in Barber's case, this is far from true. While she claims in her bio that she's been singing his songs for years, and that he's her favorite songwriter, she does anything but a "standard" read on his tunes, though she never undermines their integrity. The album is called a "mix" because Barber has woven three of her own tunes -- written after the manner of Porter's -- into the fabric of the album. Given her austere yet highly original readings of his songs, they fit in seamlessly. She is accompanied here by her longtime backing group of Neal Alger (guitar), Michael Arnopol (bass), and Eric Montzka (drums), with drummer Nate Smith alternating on three tunes, and guest saxophonist Chris Potter appearing on five.

Commencing with the opening number "Easy to Love," with its skeletal bossa nova rhythm (Barber doesn't play in the body of the tune and only contributes a wonderfully economical piano solo), and the relative austerity of her voice, it's obvious this isn't an ordinary standards set. She is faithful to the intent of these songs both lyrically and musically, but she shifts their arrangements in such a way that they are more suited to her deliberately restrained singing voice, and her own vocation as a songwriter. It's the songwriter she is paying tribute to here -- not the tradition. "I Concentrate on You" also carries within it the kernel of bossa, but this time, with her piano fills and artfully incisive manner of accenting, to quote Porter, "how strange the change from major to minor" without invoking the blues (the standard for doing so). Barber's pianism is elegantly idiosyncratic, even enigmatic. Her "cool" singing voice peels away the weight these songs have borne over the years, and instead returns to them their subtlety and gentle sense of humorous irony. There are some wild moments here -- such as the Latin polyrhythms at the heart of "In the Still of the Night," that set up a space for some serious blowing tenor by Potter -- but the spirit of "song" is never compromised. Barber's originals are truly canny, empathic evidence of her true understanding of Porter. "Snow," with its minor-key piano intro opens with: "Do you think of me like snow/cool, slippery and white? Do you think of me like jazz/as hip, as black as night?" The mysterious, dull ache of love and lust in "New Year's Eve Song" evokes the forlorn aspect of Porter but the strange, covert voyeurism of poet Robert Lowell's "Eep Hour": "Will he/peek in the mirror while she/knowing he's watching her tease/stripping the gown with ease/bare as the New Year, she/so in love with her is he..." All the while, the sense of a taut harmonic melody is inseparable from the lyrics, unveiling the secret intent in the song for both listener and singer. The Cole Porter Mix is a very modern form of imitation, as evidenced not only by interpretation but in her evocative compositions too; they mark the greatest form of flattery. But it is also an ingenious manner of reconsidering Porter -- and Barber -- with fresh ears. ~Thom Jurek

The Cole Porter Mix

Friday, September 1, 2017

Patricia Barber - Cafe Blue

Styles: Vocal And Piano Jazz
Year: 1994
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:08
Size: 146,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:24)  1. What A Shame
(4:30)  2. A Taste Of Honey
(8:01)  3. Too Rich For My Blood
(4:29)  4. Romanesque
(5:08)  5. Yellow Car III
(0:58)  6. Wood is a Pleasant Thing to Think About
(5:06)  7. Inch Worm
(5:22)  8. Ode to Billy Joe
(7:01)  9. Morning Grace
(4:42) 10. The Thrill Is Gone
(9:01) 11. Nardis
(3:20) 12. Manha de Carnaval

Patricia Barber, who is both a fine keyboardist and an atmospheric singer, contributes roughly half of the material to her Premonition debut. Her dark voice and the generally esoteric program takes awhile to get used to (listeners will have to be patient), but after two or three listens, this thought-provoking and rather moody set becomes more accessible. 

The music ranges stylewise from sophisticated pop sensitivities to the avant-garde and even touches of minimalism, while not fitting securely into any category. Barber gives a new slant to "The Thrill Is Gone," "Ode to Billy Joe," and even "A Taste of Honey," and her vocals are all quite haunting and contemporary. An added plus to this unusual music is adventurous guitarist John McLean. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/caf%C3%A9-blue-mw0000658292

Personnel: Patricia Barber (vocals, piano); John McLean (guitar); Michael Arnopol (bass); Mark Walker (drums, percussion).

Cafe Blue

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Patricia Barber - Mythologies

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:56
Size: 135,8 MB
Art: Front

(7:10)  1. The Moon
(4:34)  2. Morpheus
(4:39)  3. Pygmalion
(4:35)  4. Hunger
(5:13)  5. Icarus (for Nina Simone)
(4:33)  6. Orpheus/ Sonnet
(6:00)  7. Persephone
(3:40)  8. Narcissus
(5:21)  9. Whiteworld/ Oedipus
(5:20) 10. Phaethon
(7:46) 11. The Hours

In much the same way that a visual artist paints memorable themes on canvas, Patricia Barber puts her ideas into music by establishing an open avenue of communication with her audience. Her voice is always a pleasure. Her piano work is comfortable in the context of her role as storyteller. Her compositions are deep enough that we'll revisit them again and again. Barber puts the blues into each of her adventurous musical portraits. Her quartet partners, guitarist Neal Alger, bassist Michael Arnopol and drummer Eric Montzka, surround the singer/pianist with hot stuff from start to finish. The scenes vary, as the characters that she's chosen to represent come from different viewpoints. "Icarus is light and positive, while "Pygmalion suffers from a heavy dose of the blues. "Narcissus drowns in romantic sorrow; "Orpheus treads heavily while crying out in sorrow. "Oedipus perks up with a raging storm of percussion activity, while "Persephone waltzes slowly and lightly as if through a meadow of flowers in full bloom. The five-star program delivers a thousand images bound by progressive, enduring jazz wrappings. Barber, now fifty, grew up in South Sioux City, Nebraska. Her music retains the influence of America's heartland through its storytelling, down-home comfort and soulful sharing. Through Mythologies, we're transported home to our own roots: the church, school and neighborhood organizations that helped us to develop and mature. ~ Jim Santella https://www.allaboutjazz.com/mythologies-patricia-barber-blue-note-records-review-by-jim-santella.php
 
Personnel: Patricia Barber: piano, vocals; Neal Alger: guitar; Michael Arnopol: bass; Eric Montzka: drums; Jim Gailloreto: alto saxophone, tenor saxophone; Paul Falk, Grazyna Auguscik, Lawrice Flowers, Airreal Watkins.

Mythologies

Monday, June 12, 2017

Patricia Barber - Nightclub

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:26
Size: 118,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:03)  1. Bye Bye Blackbird
(4:58)  2. Invitation
(6:40)  3. Yesterdays
(3:20)  4. Just For A Thrill
(3:46)  5. You Don't Know Me
(4:50)  6. Alfie
(5:05)  7. Autumn Leaves
(3:44)  8. Summer Samba
(3:25)  9. All Or Nothing At All
(3:42) 10. So In Love
(4:18) 11. A Man & A Woman
(3:28) 12. I Fall In Love Too Easily

The harping of rigid purists or self-proclaimed visionaries aside, the enduring strength of jazz has always been its ability to accommodate both tradition and innovation. Patricia Barber has done plenty of experimenting on albums like Café Blue, Modern Cool and Companion. Her smartly crafted originals and reinventions of rock tunes like “Light My Fire” and “The Beat Goes On” have earned Ms. Barber a much deserved reputation as one of the most unique and interesting singer/songwriter/pianists in jazz. Having found her own distinctive voice and having demonstrated a willingness to push boundaries, Ms. Barber turns her attention to the music’s tradition with this collection of twelve standards. Nightclub provides Ms. Barber with an ideal showcase for her formidable keyboard skills. She is an astonishingly creative improviser who manages to burrow deep inside a song without losing her sense of proportion. Her piano solos on “Bye Bye Blackbird,” “Invitation” and “All or Nothing at All” are concise, brilliantly constructed explorations of those tunes. She undertakes a more extended improvisation on “Yesterdays” where she creates a fascinating dynamic between relaxation and tension. Ms. Barber has surrounded herself with musicians who can match her own high standards. “Autumn Leaves” features a remarkable solo from bassist Marc Johnson, and “Alfie” is highlighted by Charlie Hunter’s 8-string guitar. 

Ms. Barber is a quiet, intense, enormously intelligent singer who can make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up with a single word or phrase. She has chosen these standards with care and her singing is blessedly free of irony or tongue-in-cheek sarcasm. Rather than trying to subvert the lyrics, Ms. Barber underscores the timelessness of their themes by infusing them with her own thoroughly modern perspective. She turns “Just for a Thrill” and a perfectly phrased “You Don’t Know Me” into meditations on dependency and desire that feel completely contemporary. She makes a spare, evocative “I Fall in Love Too Easily” into an exercise in painful self-examination and an exceptional reading of Cole Porter’s “So in Love” into the last word on romantic obsession (no singer has ever gotten as much from the lines “so taunt me / and hurt me”). The CD is not, however, all brooding introspection. There are some lighter moments like the deliciously romantic “Summer Samba.” Some critics will no doubt express consternation over the fact that Nightclub is not a repeat of the Modern Cool formula. However, Ms. Barber deserves credit for refusing to adhere to pre-set expectations. So long as she continues to make CDs with the kind of musicianship and insight she demonstrates here, then the past, present and future of jazz are all in good hands. ~ Mathew Bahl https://www.allaboutjazz.com/nightclub-patricia-barber-review-by-mathew-bahl.php

Personnel: Patricia Barber (vocals, piano); Charlie Hunter (8-string guitar); Michael Arnopol, Marc Johnson (bass); Adam Cruz, Adam Nuzzbaum (drums).

Nightclub