Showing posts with label Sandy Dennison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sandy Dennison. Show all posts

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Sandy Dennison - Jazzed!

Size: 132,5 MB
Time: 57:32
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2007
Styles: Vocal Jazz
Art: Front

01. A Wonderful Day Like Today (3:22)
02. Close Your Eyes (3:22)
03. Primrose Color Blue (3:49)
04. On The Street Where You Live (5:06)
05. They Say It's Wonderful (5:17)
06. Moonlight (6:12)
07. Like Someone In Love (4:36)
08. Lonely Hours (5:15)
09. Sway (4:02)
10. I Get The Blues When It Rains (3:40)
11. A Sunday Kind Of Love (4:14)
12. Ooh Whatcha' Doin' To Me (2:53)
13. You're The One (5:36)

Sandy Dennison explores jazz and pop standards from the Great American Songbook on Jazzed! There are many CDs like this lately, but this one is a fine effort. Dennison does not try to do anything new. In fact, her press release calls her "sound uniquely centered in the tradition of vocalists such as Chris Connor and Helen Merrill of the 1950s era."

This CD sounds like a release of a 1950s singer updated with modern production values and a high degree of jazz sensibility. Unlike recordings from an earlier era, Andre St. James's upright bass can be easily heard, adding to the rhythm. The production by Vincent Frates, who also plays piano on the CD, brings out Dennison's clear-as-a-bell voice.

The songs are delivered in traditional style, but many are approached with a different tempo or feel. "A Wonderful Day Like Today" has fast, breezy solos by Derek Sims on muted trumpet. Frates uses three note patterns to anchor the rhythm for "Primrose Color Blue" and "On The Street Where You Live." David Evans's sax turns "Lonely Hours" into a film noir type of song. "They Say It's Wonderful" and "A Sunday Kind of Love" become plaintive ballads.

It is a subjective judgment that depends on the listener, but it seems to me that Dennison has more of a feel for these songs than nearly all the singers who are turning to standards to revive their careers, and her interpretive skills are far superior. In other words, this CD is the real thing.


Jazzed!

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Sandy Dennison - Love You Madly: Sandy Dennison Sings Duke Ellington

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:28
Size: 131.5 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[6:36] 1. Love You Madly
[4:23] 2. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
[4:21] 3. Everything But You
[5:12] 4. I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good
[4:17] 5. I'm Just A Lucky So-And-So
[4:40] 6. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
[4:01] 7. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
[6:33] 8. Do Nothin Til You Hear From Me
[5:44] 9. I Didn't Know About You
[5:46] 10. I'm Beginning To See The Light
[5:49] 11. Ain't Got Nothin' But The Blues

Sandy Dennison is a wise woman. On her debut CD, "Love You Madly," she sings 11 evergreens by Duke Ellington and his assorted collaborators. The choice of material is evidence of Dennison’s good taste, but she’s also smart enough to approach the songs in a straight-ahead, understated manner. Dennison knows that the songs are great, and she knows better than to mess with a good thing.

"Love You Madly" arrives years after Dennison first started performing. She put her career on hold in the 1970s to raise a family and then a surgery left her unable to sing. She, however, still felt the desire to sing, and not long ago worked her way back to performing in clubs around Portland, Ore. Dennison doesn’t have a big voice, but it bursts with good cheer. Her enthusiasm can be heard throughout the easy-listening album and is one of her best assets. The mood of the CD is set with the title song, which opens the album. Dennison’s snappy delivery works well. You can practically see her winking as she sings a line that may sum up the long road she took in making the CD, "Good things come to those who wait so I’ll relax and wait for fate..." The song also gives her band plenty of room to get into the act. She is backed on the CD by Darrell Grant on piano, Mel Brown on drums, Andre St. James on bass and Dave Evans on sax. Overall, "Love You Madly" is a charming CD. ~Donna Kimura

Love You Madly: Sandy Dennison Sings Duke Ellington