Showing posts with label Patricia O'Callaghan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patricia O'Callaghan. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Don Byron - A Fine Line: Arias And Lieder

Styles: Clarinet Jazz 
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 49:57
Size: 115,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:54)  1. Check Up
(2:52)  2. Zwielicht (Twilight)
(8:06)  3. Glitter And Be Gay
(5:06)  4. Basquiat
(2:43)  5. It's Over
(4:55)  6. Creepin'
(4:02)  7. Nessun Dorma
(3:51)  8. Soldier In The Rain
(4:52)  9. Reach Out I'll Be There
(6:16) 10. The Ladies Who Lunch
(2:15) 11. Larghetto

Don Byron continues to fascinate and puzzle jazz listeners with his refusal to be pigeonholed. Even as he completes one project, he's working on the next one, which inevitably will be a departure from all of the CDs that precede it. Yet, each of Byron's CD's enlarge not only the body of his work, but also the fullness of his musical perspective. Possessing interests in jazz, classical works, pop, klezmer, country/western, funk, theatrical repertoire, rap and Latin music, Byron's background is such that his curiosity about various forms can take any direction in future productions. While many jazz artists remain consistent and predictable, Byron naturally and without pretense investigates approaches that few other jazz musicians would attempt. Plus, Byron's dedication to the revival of the jazz clarinet remains admirable, extending the tradition through an original aesthetic, or perhaps a through an imaginative synthesis, that positions a clarinetist as the creative leader of advances in music, and indeed African-American culture.Thus, no one except perhaps Byron' producer Hans Wendl knows where Byron will go next. This unpredictability leads to one inevitability: that Byron'CD's always will present a thematic concept, complete with detailed musical proof of his hypotheses. Byron recorded the music of Mickey Katz not because it would become the flavor of the month, but because he believes in the excellence of the klezmer music that had been overlooked. He brought together modern poetry and rap on Nu Blaxploitation because it asserts a statement about African-American culture that mainstream culture didn't hear as did Tuskegee Experiments. Music For Six Musicians threw out the common view of Afro-Caribbean music as consisting of a regular beat more akin to jazz and introduced the more authentic clavé that Byron heard in his Bronx boyhood neighborhood and in Boston where he played in Latin bands while attending Berklee. Romance With The Unseen assumed an intellectual basis for the notion of "romance" and associated with it anger, longing and unity. So where is Don Byron going with A Fine Line: Arias & Lieder?  Byron'contention this time is that, even though modern music has advanced to the point of non-singability, African-influenced musical concepts have tethered songs to the tradition of the more classical arias of opera and lieder of composers like Schumann. 

Once again, Byron has recorded a thematic album that posits an idea and then makes his point through example. The listener, then, may be taken aback by the proximity of Bernstein's operatic aria of "Glitter And Be Gay" two tracks away from Roy Orbison's "It's Over." In fact, Byron'choice of singers (who have collaborated in the past with pianist Uri Caine as well) is apt. Patricia O'Callaghan seems to be a student not of genre, but of voice, as she exhibits chameleonic versatility by sounding like two distinctively different singers on her extroverted rendition of "Glitter And Be Gay" and then her soft and subtle performance of Stevie Wonder's "Creepin." Singer Mark Ledford proves to be just as versatile, wordlessly singing the melodic lines of Ornette Coleman's "Check Up" in unison with Byron and then lowering his voice an octave in a range closer to Byron's bass clarinet on "It's Over."The one track involving Cassandra Wilson, Stephen Sondheim's "The Ladies Who Lunch," is notable for the fact that it leads the listener to realize the natural next step in her career: the Broadway theater. She is unexpectedly effective in presenting the story-telling nature of the tune, complete with narrative, rhetorical questions, humor and anecdotal descriptions. So where does all of this leave Byron, the intellectual center of the album? Giving Henry Mancini due respect for his unparalleled talent for tunesmithing, Byron is reduced to playing above the background singers on "Soldier In The Rain" after introducing the melody. And how do you work a clarinet into the overwrought tune, "It's Over"? Rather than taking center stage in the vocal numbers, Byron alternates the sung "arias und lieder" with compare-and-contrast clarineting of classical compositions like Puccini's "Nessun Dorma" or Chopin's "Larghetto." Byron has composed one minor-keyed étude, "Basquiat," that he performs in duo with Caine. As usual, Don Byron is uncompromising, thought-provoking and controversial on A Fine Line: Arias & Lieder. Some listeners, especially those who have followed Caine's just-as-challenging work, will endorse it. Some, with demands for consistency and most easily digestible musical consumption, will argue against it. But once again, no one will be neutral about Don Byron's music. ~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/a-fine-line-arias-and-lieder-don-byron-blue-note-records-review-by-aaj-staff.php

Personnel: Don Byron: clarinet, bass clarinet; Uri Caine: piano; Jerome Harris: bass guitar, acoustic guitar; Paulo Braga: drums, percussion; Mark Ledford, Patricia O'Callaghan, Dean Bowman, Cassandra Wilson: vocals.

A Fine Line: Arias And Lieder

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Patricia O'Callaghan - Naked Beauty

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2004
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:11
Size: 110,7 MB
Art: Front

(2:25)  1. Dayton, Ohio-1903
(2:46)  2. Naked Beauty
(6:12)  3. The Smokey Life
(4:07)  4. Cry Me A River
(4:15)  5. I Believe In You
(2:58)  6. Yo M'enamori D'un Aire
(2:38)  7. Tonight We Fly
(2:22)  8. The Book Of Love
(5:00)  9. The Ballad Of Lucy Jordan
(3:19) 10. Noches, Noches
(3:29) 11. Sad Boy
(4:31) 12. True Love Leaves No Traces
(4:03) 13. Lost In The Stars

Patricia O’Callaghan is something of a wandering minstrel. Her fifteen-year career has taken her across genres, continents, and a range of disciplines and passions.Her recording career spans six solo CDs and many interesting guest collaborations. A speaker of French, Spanish, and German, her early recordings focused on European cabaret, and she is considered a specialist in the music of Kurt Weill. Patricia has performed his Threepenny Opera, Seven Deadly Sins, and Kleine Mahagonny with Soulpepper Theatre Company, Edmonton Opera, and Vancouver Opera, to name a few. http://www.patricia-ocallaghan.com/about.html

"This Toronto soprano can sing a 100-year-old German tune so lustily that you almost don't need a translation to know that someone's about to get his throat cut or get laid or both." ~ The National Post

One of Patricia’s most unique talents is the ability blend a variety of languages and musical genres seamlessly together in her concerts, and completely embody whatever style she is singing at any given moment.

"O'Callaghan sings her diverse material as if it was always meant to go side-by-side and by the end of the evening, it's easy to believe her." ~ Chart Attack Magazine

She has sung with some of the world's great ensembles and artists (Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Don Byron Quartet, Bryn Terfel), and has performed in venues that range from London's Royal Opera House to New York's Noho cabaret Le Poisson Rouge. Patricia also writes and co-writes songs and has had the honor of premiering many new compositions, from both the classical and pop worlds. It has been her great privilege to work with such creators as R. Murray Schafer, Dennis Lee, Christos Hatzis, George Aperghis, Steve Reich, and Steven Page, to name a few. Patricia's film, theatre and television credits include her own Bravo! special, The CBC produced Ken Finkleman series Foolish Heart, and the semi autobiographical Rhombus / Westwind film Youkali Hotel, which has won several prizes, including a Golden Sheaf Award to Patricia for best female performance. Ms. O'Callaghan has also received other awards, such as a Chalmer's Grant from the Ontario Arts Council and a Fleck Fellowship from The Banff Centre for the Arts.  She just completed a six year stint as a Resident Artist at Toronto's Soulpepper Theatre Company. Her responsibilities there included conducting, teaching, mentoring young artists, producing, curating and performing in festivals, and developing new work. Recent projects are Broken Hearts and Madmen; a collaboration with The Gryphon Trio, which blends classical music with traditional songs from Latin America and pop songs from around the world...

"Broken Hearts and Madmen is an exquisite piece of work. The result is absolutely breathtaking in its attention to detail, with every note carved from their love of the songs..." ~ Vivoscene

And Matador: The Songs of Leonard Cohen

"A truly exceptional blend of natural expressiveness and masterful coloration, her tender versions of Cohen's "Take this Waltz" and "Hallelujah" are revelatory." ~ Billboard Magazine

And brand new is her first Christmas CD, Deepest December. It’s not a typical holiday album, covering Renaissance to modern, and hurdy gurdy to lap steel guitar. Its beautiful carols, haunting arrangements, and unusual juxtapositions will make you feel at once the icy frost of winter and the warmth of the hearth.

"She's one of the best singers ever to come out of Canada."~ Vivascene, 2012

Naked Beauty

Thursday, September 14, 2017

Patricia O'Callaghan - Real Emotional Girl

Styles: Vocal, Swing
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:01
Size: 137,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:00)  1. Hallelujah
(2:49)  2. Betterman
(3:10)  3. Real Emotional Girl
(1:48)  4. Captain Valentine's Tango
(4:22)  5. Je Rêve de Toi
(3:11)  6. I'm Your Man
(5:53)  7. Joan of Arc
(4:40)  8. Nanna's Song
(4:02)  9. Lucky to Be Me
(4:33) 10. Like a Rolling Stone
(2:57) 11. Attendez Que Ma Joie Revienne
(3:37) 12. Stay Well
(3:59) 13. Take This Waltz
(2:27) 14. Mon Manège à Moi
(3:30) 15. A Singer Must Die
(4:54) 16. Creepin'

Patricia O'Callaghan's Real Emotional Girl was her first album distributed in the U.S. and is also her major-label debut. This O'Callaghan album reduces the number of Kurt Weill tunes to just three, increases the Leonard Cohen quotient to five, and includes other songs from slightly more mainstream writers, such as Pearl Jam and Bob Dylan. Those who were introduced to O'Callaghan with Slow Fox may be critical of the inclusion of such songs as Eddie Vedder's "Better Man" or even Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone." But her interpretations are often inspired. (In fact, can listeners be so hopeful as to expect that O'Callaghan's next record will be exclusively Cohen material?) Some expecting jazzy vocals may be disappointed; those familiar with her operatic soprano voice should be impressed again. For the pop music fan, covering lesser-known (but highly engaging) material may play better on the ears. One could argue that Real Emotional Girl is too pop and mainstream. Others would say that her take on those pop hits is not of interest to the early 20th century pop expert. The risk this collection takes may be considered a weakness by some. But it is hard to criticize a singer who covers Randy Newman as well as Cohen. (Real Emotional Girl repeats five songs from Slow Fox.) Standout tracks include "Je Rêve de Toi," "I'm Your Man," and "Real Emotional Girl." Real Emotional Girl, because of its diverse song selection, should be where a pop listener starts. But fans of Kurt Weill would be wise to check out this album too. ~ JT Griffith http://www.allmusic.com/album/real-emotional-girl-mw0000000686

Personnel: Patricia O'Callaghan (vocals); Howard Hughes (acoustic, piano); Rob Piltch (guitar); Mark Fewer, Barry Shiffman (violin); Claudio Vena (viola, accordion); Kathleen Kajioka, Max Mandel (viola); David Heatherington (cello); Camille Watts (flute); Mike Sweeney, Chris Sharpe (bassoon); Tom Szczesniak (accordion); Phil Dwyer (soprano saxophone); Robert Kortgaard (piano); Andy Morris (vibraphone, percussion).

Real Emotional Girl

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Patricia O'Callaghan - Matador: The Songs Of Leonard Cohen

Size: 133,5 MB
Time: 57:34
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2012
Styles: Jazz/Folk
Art: Front

01. The Gypsy’s Wife (4:14)
02. The Window (5:21)
03. Dance Me To The End Of Love (Feat. Mike Ross) (4:12)
04. Who By Fire (3:11)
05. Alexandra Leaving (Feat. Sienna Dahlen) (4:58)
06. Everybody Knows (3:58)
07. Suzanne (4:24)
08. If It Be Your Will (Feat. Maryem Tollar) (3:37)
09. Anthem (Feat. Sienna Dahlen) (4:26)
10. The Smokey Life (Feat. Steven Page) (6:10)
11. Joan Of Arc (5:51)
12. I’m Your Man (3:08)
13. Hallelujah (3:56)

Often described as the most promising cabaret artist of her generation, Canadian soprano Patricia O'Callaghan's back catalog is littered with cover versions of her homeland's most famous troubadour, Leonard Cohen, but named after the Toronto tavern he regularly used to frequent, Matador is the first time she's dedicated a whole album to his hugely influential body of work. Featuring material from 1967's The Songs of Leonard Cohen ("Suzanne") right up to 2001's Ten New Songs ("Alexandra Leaving"), its 13 tracks prove she certainly knows her stuff, but her elegant delivery and tasteful arrangements should also help appease those who argue his celebrated output should remain untouched. Indeed, although two of Cohen's forays into synth territory, "Everybody Knows" and "I'm Your Man," are transformed into a rousing slice of theatrical blues and a seductive lounge-pop number respectively, O'Callaghan largely opts for subtle changes rather than radical reworkings, whether it's pushing the lilting strings to the forefront on "The Window," whipping up a singalong finale on "Dance Me to the End of Love," or opening the somber breakup song of "The Gypsy's Wife" with some trip-hop-tinged beats. Elsewhere, she's joined by an array of guest vocalists including Barenaked Ladies' Steven Page on the shuffling jazz of "The Smokey Life," Arabic singer Maryem Tollar on the understated melancholy of "If It Be Your Will," and Toronto musician Sienna Dahlen on the poignant folk of "Anthem," while the much-covered "Hallelujah" and "Joan of Arc" (two of four songs that have appeared on her previous releases) see her showcase the operatic leanings that defined her early career. A graceful and respectful homage to a true musical icon, Matador: The Songs of Leonard Cohen cements O'Callaghan's position as one of his most accomplished interpreters. ~by Jon O'Brien

Matador