Showing posts with label Susie Meissner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Susie Meissner. Show all posts

Monday, May 17, 2021

Susie Meissner With The John Shaddy Quartet - My Foolish Heart

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 26:32
Size: 61,2 MB
Art: Front

(6:02) 1. My Foolish Heart
(4:07) 2. There's a Small Hotel
(2:48) 3. Softly as I Leave You
(4:40) 4. All the Things You Are
(4:34) 5. Never Let Me Go
(4:17) 6. Dreamer

A major jazz and swing singer, Susie Meissner always seems to have a smile in her voice. In addition to her very appealing tone and impeccable musicianship, the enthusiasm that she displays when she performs is infectious. She always swings and is an excellent improviser yet the lyrics that she interprets are especially important to her. “When I perform a song,” says Susie, “I want to express the emotions of the words, so the listener is experiencing the lyrics the way that the writer intended. I’m never casual about the lyrics.” Her skill at reviving and revitalizing classic songs is very much in evidence throughout her recordings.

Susie Meissner performs regularly in Philadelphia, particularly at Chris’ Jazz Café, and for her latest recording she decided to feature some of Philly’s best jazz musicians along with a few guests. Susie’s fourth CD, I Wish I Knew, is the singer’s second release featuring a stellar group of Philly-based musicians: trumpeter John Swana, saxophonist Larry McKenna, bassist Lee Smith and drummer Byron Landham. In addition, Meissner invited some longtime collaborators from outside Philadelphia: pianist/arranger John Shaddy, guitarist Paul Meyers and master clarinetist Ken Peplowski.

“As a child I was always singing,” remembers Susie. Her grandmother played stride piano and her family was very fond of show tunes. “We had the sheet music from the Great American Songbook in the piano bench. The illustrated covers were real works of art and I used to hang them on my bedroom wall. I also listened to the records in my Grandfather’s Dixieland collection early on. Music has been an important part of my life.” Susie, who grew up in Buffalo, had piano and vocal lessons and sang in school choirs and musicals. She became interested in jazz after seeing performances by guitarist Kenny Burrell, pianist Earl Hines, and singer Nancy Wilson. When she was 17 Susie became a professional singer, performing the music from shows such as Oklahoma! and Hello Dolly in dinner theaters. She learned a countless number of songs from the Great American Songbook (Irving Berlin, Lerner & Loewe, Frank Loesser and Cole Porter became some of her favorite composers) and gained experience performing jazz in nightclubs.

After college, Susie Meissner moved to New York City, determined to become a jazz singer. Since the release of her 2009 debut, I’ll Remember April, Meissner has worked with a host of gifted jazz musicians in NYC, including Wycliffe Gordon, Brian Lynch, Joe Magnarelli, Freddie Hendrix, Martin Wind, Dean Johnson, Tim Horner, and Matt Wilson, among others. But she discovered a spiritual home in the City of Brotherly Love. “I am living my musical dream, learning, performing, and recording songs that mean a lot to me and, I hope, to listeners.” Now, with the release of I Wish I Knew, Susie Meissner is on the brink of greater success. Her irresistible and inviting singing, the way that she caresses ballads, her deep understanding of the lyrics that she sings and, most of all, that smile in her voice, make her one of today’s top interpreters of the Great American Songbook. https://susiemeissner.com/biography/

My Foolish Heart

Susie Meissner - Tea For Two

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:05
Size: 151.3 MB
Styles: Jazz vocals
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[3:20] 1. If I Were A Bell
[7:06] 2. Tea For Two
[4:40] 3. Mean To Me
[2:42] 4. Moonlight Saving Time
[6:52] 5. Laura
[4:10] 6. Love Is Here To Stay
[4:04] 7. Moonglow
[2:33] 8. Just You, Just Me
[4:51] 9. Everything I Love
[6:46] 10. Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry
[4:50] 11. I Didn't Know Time It Was
[4:46] 12. Crazy He Calls Me
[4:55] 13. Triste
[4:22] 14. Say It Isn't So

A major jazz and swing singer, Susie Meissner always seems to have a smile in her voice. In addition to her very appealing tone and impeccable musicianship, the enthusiasm that she displays when she performs is infectious. She always swings and is an excellent improviser yet the lyrics that she interprets are very important to her. "When I perform a song," says Susie, "I want to express the emotions of the words so the listener is experiencing the lyrics the way that the writer intended. I'm never casual about the lyrics." Her skill at reviving and revitalizing classic songs is very much in evidence throughout her finest recording, Tea For Two.

Since the New York-based Susie Meissner also performs regularly in Philadelphia, particularly at Chris' Jazz Café, for her latest recording she decided to feature some of Philly's best jazz musicians along with a few guests. Heard along the way are such greats as tenor-saxophonist Larry McKenna (a Philadelphia legend), valve trombonist John Swana, trumpeter Freddie Hendrix, guitarist Paul Meyers and clarinetist Ken Peplowski plus the superb rhythm section of pianist John Shaddy, bassist Lee Smith and drummer Dan Monaghan.

Tea For Two

Saturday, May 15, 2021

Susie Meissner - I'll Remember April

Styles: Vocal Jazz
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 60:14
Size: 137,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:02)  1. I'll Remember April
(4:40)  2. Never Let Me Go
(3:57)  3. You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To
(4:03)  4. I'm Old Fashioned
(3:10)  5. How Deep Is the Ocean
(4:13)  6. Dreamer
(4:09)  7. What a Wonderful World
(4:05)  8. There's a Small Hotel
(4:15)  9. Meditation
(5:21) 10. I Remember You
(8:08) 11. Little Girl Blue
(6:02) 12. My Foolish Heart
(2:04) 13. They Say It's Wonderful

Susie Meissner is one of those no-frills jazz singers who dot the American landscape. Her voice is pleasant enough; she sings only the best-known or well-worn standards with some Brazilian tunes; and she sticks by the book in terms of arrangements, the author of those charts not being credited. A slight vibrato shades her thin, plain-Jane, girl-next-door sweetheart of a voice, but she takes virtually no risks nor accepts any challenges in making these songs more than they are, or could be. It is good to hear the addition of stellar sidemen like the acclaimed trumpeter Brian Lynch, who always enlivens a session when he's not playing his personal brand of hard to post-bop, or sizzling Afro-Caribbean jazz with Eddie Palmieri. 

Alto saxophonist David Mann also appears in a refreshing move toward the mainstream and away from his contemporary commercialized comfort zone. Tenor saxophonist Greg Riley rounds out a fine front line that should do an album on its own. At her most convincing, Meissner sings "I'm Old Fashioned" simply, while "Never Let Me Go" is the softest of ballads and "How Deep Is the Ocean?" is an easy swinging traipse, including a good exchange with Riley. She's most effective on the light samba version of "Dreamer" with the horns cavorting about her, while the very slow take of "Meditation" allows Lynch to unfold his prettily wrapped gifts of melody. "My Foolish Heart" is a livelier bossa with a better concept in adapting this standard to a different arena. The remainder of the material ranges from maudlin to cutesy to lightweight with little distinction. At times Meissner's voice is flat and strained, the song is not suited for her key, or she sounds uninspired and the instrumentalists have to pick up the load. Pianist John Shaddy is a fine addition to the band, but lacks the firepower of the horns. If this is a starting point for Meissner, it's a decent one, although the instrumentalists lift the cachet of this music measurably. She's clearly competent and on the road to being a successful jazz singer. ~ Michael G.Nastos  
http://www.allmusic.com/album/ill-remember-april-mw0001741085

Thursday, May 13, 2021

Susie Meissner - I Wish I Knew

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:33
Size: 142,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:08) 1. The Great City
(5:13) 2. I Wish I Knew
(3:20) 3. It Could Happen to You
(5:31) 4. I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face
(6:20) 5. Poinciana
(7:00) 6. Alfie
(3:39) 7. Hello Young Lovers
(3:39) 8. The Theme from "The Sandpiper" (The Shadow of Your Smile)
(5:48) 9. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
(3:23) 10. In a Mellow Tone
(8:20) 11. You Go to My Head
(3:07) 12. The Party's Over

Over the past decade and three previous recordings, Philadelphia-based vocalist Susie Meissner has crafted an intelligently conceived and thoughtfully paced survey of the Great American Songbook. Meissner's considerations of the standard jazz repertoire, in concert with pianist John Shaddy's sturdy arrangements and educated performance manner, have emerged, evolving from chaste and reverent beginnings, into rich and supple layerings of stylistic and technical outreach with each subsequent recording.

Meissner's debut, I'll Remember April (Lydian Jazz, 2009), emerged as a fully realized collection of the most standard of standards. Whether a strolling "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To" or a languidly humid "Never Let Me Go," Meissner delivered the goods with a clear-bell tone and brightly quaffed control. The addition of a tenor saxophone (David Mann) and trumpet (Greg Riley) to her solid rhythm section rounded out the routine mainstream jazz combo, who proved capable of close reading of The Songbook.

On I'm Confessin' (Lydian Jazz, 2011), Meissner adds her earlier horn front with Wycliffe Gordon's solid trombone. Gordon brought his deep knowledge of 1920s through '40s popular music to the project providing that slight sepia tint to the music. Meissner remains in close orbit with better known standards, delivered with the same commanding confidence delivered on I'll Remember April. The singer embraces Duke Ellington and Hoagy Carmichael with equal fervor and authority.

Meissner's vision evolves and, at the same time, begins to quicken, on 2015's Tea for Two (Lydian Jazz), where the singer begins to mix things up beginning with a rare slow take on the title song, featuring the electronic valve instrument of John Swanna. The EVI updates the song in a surprising way, giving it just a nick of modernity within its shell of nostalgia. She also brings on the reeds of Ken Peplowski and Larry McKenna who ground the recital firmly in the mainstream. This is a nocturnal recording anchored by "Moonlight Saving Time" and "Moonglow." Peplowski and McKenna strike the necessary conservative tone to counter Swanna's progressive stance.

Meissner's band from Tea for Two is kept mostly intact on I Wish I Knew with the exception of drummer Byron Landham replacing Dan Monaghan at the trap set. This is not the only change. Meissner adjusts her repertoire outside of the tried and true to include the peripheral chestnuts like the opener "The Great City." The Curtis Lewis composition was first recorded by Nancy Wilson in 1960, showing up most recently on Lauren Henderson's Ármame (Brontosaurus Records, 2018). Meissner minds Art Peppers admonition to never start a set with a ballad. "The Great City" crackles with a steady and determined swing featuring her equally steady and determined delivery. John Swanna's clipped trumpet solo mimics the urban stop-and-go of city life.

But I Wish I Knew is equally a ballad recording featuring the title song, "I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face," and "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye." All of these are performed with punctilious detail at blissful ballad tempos. "You Go to My Head" is the "Tea for Two" on I Wish I Knew. Meissner takes the song at a very slow pace. Not morphine-honey slow, buy reticent in a way that is carefully crafted like fine spirits. This is the song featuring Swana's EVI, which, like on "Tea for Two" he performs to great effect, approximating the tone of the flute and delivery of a Moog. The disc highlight is a brisk and bright "In A Mellow Tone." Ken Peplowski provides the perfect swing foil to Meissner's down-the-middle delivery. Slippery and sly, Peplowski recalls the entire history of jazz clarinet in his solo, from Johnny Dodds to Buddy DeFranco. Meissner sounds perfectly comfortable in her foray into lesser considered standards. She is moving toward something significant, something of an enduring beauty, a testament to her vision.~ C. MICHAEL BAILEY https://www.allaboutjazz.com/i-wish-i-knew-susie-meissner-lydian-jazz

Personnel: Susie Meissner: voice / vocals; John Shaddy: piano; Lee Smith: bass; Byron Landham: drums; Ken Peplowski: clarinet; Larry McKenna: saxophone, tenor; John Swanna: trombone; Paul Meyers: guitar.

I Wish I Knew

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Susie Meissner - I'm Confessin'

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 69:01
Size: 158.0 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:31] 1. Close Your Eyes
[5:27] 2. I'm Confessin'
[3:12] 3. I Love You
[4:56] 4. Just Squeeze Me
[4:07] 5. I'm Just A Lucky So And So
[4:03] 6. Tangerine
[6:25] 7. The Nearness Of You
[4:43] 8. How About You
[5:39] 9. Skylark
[3:36] 10. On A Slow Boat To China
[4:50] 11. Embraceable You
[8:12] 12. Detour Ahead
[4:25] 13. Day By Day
[5:50] 14. A Time For Love

Susie sings and swings with a lush tone and playful rhythm. Growing up in Buffalo, N.Y., Susie surrounded herself in music through piano and vocal lessons, choirs, glee clubs, school musicals, and performances with local professional singing groups. Her grandmother played stride piano and her sheet music from the 20’s and 30’s inspired Susie to look back into the Great American songbook. In her youth, Susie began to explore the world of jazz through the recordings of Ella Fitzgerald, and after witnessing the performances by jazz greats such as Earl “Fatha” Hines, Kenny Burrell and Nancy Wilson, her interest was piqued and she started down the jazz discovery road.

Susie began her early professional career in dinner theatre (earning $7 a night!) where she became smitten with the words and music of Cole Porter, Irving Berlin and Rodgers and Hart. Susie’s warm and effortless articulation puts an intimate spin on her jazz repertoire.

Meissner’s 2009 debut CD release, “I’ll Remember April,” with trumpet sensation Brian Lynch, features her fresh and intimate vocals in a collection of much-loved jazz and Brazilian standards. Her passion and exuberance for this music is unmistakable, and her CD was chosen by W.R. Stokes of the Jazz Journalist’s Association as “one of the top 20 Jazz Vocal CDs of the year.” Susie’s new release “I’m Confessin’” includes Wycliffe Gordon on trombone, one of the true greats on the jazz scene today. Her natural swing, ability to caress a ballad, and impressive versatility really shine on this recording. Of her appearance at the IRIDIUM in New York City, Joe Lang of Jersey Jazz Journal wrote “she’s as impressive in live performance as she is on her recording.” Susie is scheduled to appear at other top venues in the coming year.

To date, Susie has recorded or performed with Jazz greats including Wycliffe Gordon, Brian Lynch, Joe Magnarelli, John Swana, Freddie Hendrix, Martin Wind, Dean Johnson, Tim Horner, Lee Smith, Byron Landham and Matt Wilson.

Susie Meissner - vocals; Wycliffe Gordon - trombone; John Shaddy - piano; Dean Johnson - bass; Tim Horner - drums; Greg Riley - tenor and soprano sax; Freddie Hendrix - trumpet and flugelhorn; Paul Meyers - guitar.

I'm Confessin' (see comments)