Thursday, August 17, 2006

Harry Connick, Jr. - 'All These People '



Columbia Records is set to release All These People by Harry Connick, Jr. on August 29. This song was written and composed by Connick and performed by the acclaimed singer/pianist in duet with gospel singer Kim Burrell, will benefit New Orleans Habitat Musicians' Village.The poignant lyrics, written after Hurricane Katrina had devastated New Orleans, were inspired by the suffering Connick witnessed when he visited his native city in the days immediately following the tragedy, and capture both the individual anguish of those left waiting for rescue and the bonds of brotherhood formed during the disaster. "The song is all about the people who were left stranded at the convention center, " Connick explains. "I wrote four verses, each describing what I saw as I was taken through by a kind fellow I had met on the street earlier that day named Darryl."Burrell, who Connick describes as "the perfect choice" for representing the brave people he met, shaped the final form of the song. "She, too, had been deeply affected by the hurricane, and was moved by the challenge of putting her feelings into song. After I read her the lyrics, she asked that her voice specifically represent 'the first two people we saw [who] left the way they came.' These were two dead bodies I saw when I first arrived at the convention center. Kim also asked that a final verse be added for her to sing, which I wrote in the studio. My favorite part of the performance is when Kim improvises the line 'come see about me, ' which was all those folks wanted that day, someone to come and see about them."
The single is being released on the one-year anniversary of Katrina on iTunes, and is the first single off Harry Connick, Jr.'s forthcoming New Orleans big band album, OH MY NOLA, set for release this fall. In addition to well-known songs associated with New Orleans, the new album will also feature several original songs by Connick that reflect on all aspects of this fabled and embattled cradle of American musical culture.All of Connick's royalties from this single will benefit the New Orleans Habitat Musicians' Village, a project conceived by Connick and his longtime friend and colleague Branford Marsalis. Connick and Marsalis serve as honorary chairs of Habitat for Humanity's hurricane relief program, Operation Home Delivery. Musicians' Village, which began dedicating completed houses on June 1 and is scheduled to dedicate 40 additional completed homes on August 19, will consist of single-family homes and elder-friendly duplexes. In addition, the Musicians' Village will contain the Ellis Marsalis Center for Music, named for the modern jazz pioneer and patriarch of the Marsalis clan who counts Connick among his legion of successful music students.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

JULIE HARDY at Bar Next Door with Brad Shepik


On Monday, August 21st at Bar Next Door, vocalist and composer Julie Hardy will perform with guitarist Brad Shepik and bassist Matt Clohesy.
Hardy is preparing to record her second CD with the recording label Fresh Sound New Talent out of Barcelona, Spain and is currently the only American singer on this label. This evening she will present new pieces including original music and covers of old standards and pop songs.This year Hardy has been acknowledged for her talent as a composer by receiving the 2006 ASCAP Young Jazz Composers Award for her composition "No Turning Back" which is featured on her recent Fresh Sound release.As the only American vocalist currently signed to Fresh Sound New Talent records, Julie Hardy is well on her way to becoming one of the most important voices of the modern jazz scene. Hardy's debut CD, "A Moment's Glance" was released in April 2005 to critical acclaim. This innovative record combines fresh interpretations of standards and pop classics with sophisticated original compositions, and showcases Hardy's diverse talents as an improviser and an interpreter of lyrics. She is joined by Rob Stillman, tenor saxophone and Randy Ingram, piano. Ben Street, bass, and Adam Cruz, drums (of the Danilo Perez trio) round out the ensemble.Last year Hardy released "A Moment's Glance" to a full house at the Jazz Standard in New York City. She was also selected to perform at the Diet Coke Women in Jazz Festival at Jazz at Lincoln Center.Hardy grew up in Fremont, New Hampshire and holds a Masters degree in Jazz Performance from the New England Conservatory of Music. In 2002 Hardy was one of two vocalists in the nation invited to participate in the Jazz Academy Snowmass in Aspen, CO directed by Christian McBride. The following year Hardy was chosen to attend the Betty carter Jazz ahead program where she performed her original composition at the Kennedy center in Washington, D.C.

Monday, August 14, 2006

Sergio Mendes and Brazil '66 - Crystal Illusions and Ye-Me-Le


By 1969, Sergio Mendes and Brasil ’66 were proven hitmakers, with an effervescent signature sound that was instantly recognizable. Crystal Illusions kept that sound alive, and it also added some new elements to the mix — digging deeper into Mendes’s roots with dazzling new tunes by young Brazilian songwriters like Milton Nascimento and giving the band a chance to stretch out and experiment on the adventurous title track.




TRACK LIST:


1. (Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay
2. Vila
3. Song of No Regrets
4. Salt Sea
5. Empty Faces
6. Pretty World
7. Dois Dias
8. You Stepped Out of a Dream
9. Crystal Illusions (Memorias de Marte Sare)

Ye-Me-Le


Exotic rhythms, catchy melodies, jazzy piano, sexy vocals — it was a unique mixture of all these elements and more that propelled Sergio Mendes and Brasil ’66 to the top of the charts in the mid-1960s, and by the end of the decade they were still going strong. The Brasil ’66 sound is as fresh and as irresistible as ever on this album, with everything from the Beatles (“Norwegian Wood”) to Burt Bacharach (“What the World Needs Now”) to Hair (“Easy to Be Hard”) getting a sparkling Mendes makeover.




TRACK LIST:


1. Wichita Lineman
2. Norwegian Wood
3. Some Time Ago
4. Moanin'
5. Look Who's Mine
7. Easy to Be Hard
8. Where Are You Coming From?
9. Masquerade
10. What The World Needs Now

Saturday, August 12, 2006

Carmen Lundy at Ford Amphitheatre

Get ready to enjoy a summit of jazz notables who've won acclaim far and wide — featuring Jazz vocalist Carmen Lundy, violinist Regina Carter, pianist Robert Glasper, trombonist Steve Turre and a dozen more artists — as they open an international tour spotlighting their own compositions. The concert, entitled, "Jazz And The New Songbook Artists, Starring Carmen Lundy, " will be performed on Sunday, September 10th at 7:00 PM at the Ford Amphitheatre in Los Angeles, California.This all-star event, nationally acclaimed jazz lineup for one night only, and the evening will present new, original and visionary jazz compositions performed by The New Songbook Artists.Joining Lundy onstage are: Robert Glasper, Anthony Wonsey – piano; Marvin "Smitty" Smith, Terri Lyne Carrington – drums; Mayra Casales – percussion; Curtis Lundy, Bob Hurst – bass; Sekou Bunch – electric bass; Steve Turre - trombone, shells; Bobby Watson – alto; Greg Diaz – trumpet; Regina Carter – violin; Lori Andrews – harp; Phil Upchurch – guitar; Krystal Davis Williams – background vocals.Her newest release, "Jazz and The New Songbook-Live at The Madrid, " is Lundy's first live recording and features 16 musicians including Robert Glasper, Nathan East, Phil Upchurch, Steve Turre, Bobby Watson, Curtis Lundy, Marvin "Smitty" Smith, Victor Lewis, Mayra Casales and Kenny Davis.Lundy has performed and recorded as a soloist with the Akron Symphony Orchestra and The Vallejo Symphony Orchestra. She has performed and recorded with such musicians as Walter Bishop Jr., Wynton Marsalis, Ray Barretto, Don Pullen, Kenny Barron, John Hicks, Ernie Watts, Mulgrew Miller, Billy Childs, Teri Lynn Carrington, Jimmy Scott, Kip Hanrahan, Courtney Pine, Marian McPartland, Regina Carter, and the late Kenny Kirkland.Her work has been critically acclaimed by The New York Times, The Village Voice, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, as well as numerous foreign publications. Ms. Lundy is also a composer and songwriter whose catalogue numbers about forty published songs. Her compositions have been recorded by such artists as Kenny Barron ("Quiet Times"), Ernie Watts ("At The End Of My Rope"), and Straight Ahead ("Never Gonna Let You Go"), and can also be found on her own recordings Something To Believe In and This Is Carmen Lundy (both for Justin Time), Old Devil Moon (JVC), Self Portrait (JVC), Moment To Moment (Arabesque), Night And Day (CBS/SONY), and Good Morning Kiss (CLR/Justin Time).A native of Miami, Florida, Carmen Lundy's path to being one of today's most talented, respected and sophisticated jazz singers began at age six, with her first piano lessons. Deeply inspired by her mother, Oveida, who was then lead singer in the gospel group The Apostolic Singers, Carmen joined her church's junior choir.Armed with a devoted following and critical kudos, the uncompromising Ms. Lundy continues to make waves, not just in North America, but in Asia and throughout the UK and Europe.Carmen is featured on 3 popular CDs: Geri Allen's "Timeless Portraits and Dreams, " on "Hear Now! Jazz Vocalists, " a Hallmark Production, and on Mayra Casales' new release, "Woman on Fire."

For more information about Carmen Lundy, her music and tour dates, visit: www.carmenlundy.com or www.myspace.com/carmenlundy .

The intimate 1200-seat outdoor amphitheatre of the Ford lends itself to Lundy's artistry. The Ford, nestled in the Hollywood Hills, is just off the 101 (Hollywood Freeway) across from Hollywood Bowl and south of Universal Studios at 2580 Cahuenga Blvd. East. Picnickers welcome, food and beverage available on site. Grounds open two hours before show time for picnicking.This event is part of the Ford Amphitheatre 2006 Season, a multi-disciplinary arts series produced by the Los Angeles County Arts Commission in cooperation with Los Angeles County-based arts organizations.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Diana Krall - From This Moment On



“This album coincides with a happier time in my life. I think it’s very obvious in the music. It reflects how I’m feeling now, the joy that I have in my marriage and family, and hopefully in the future.”

It had only been a few days since singer and pianist Diana Krall publicly announced that she and husband Elvis Costello were expecting their first child. Her remarks may have primarily focused on her upcoming album, but it was easy to discern the rosy glow as she discussed imminent arrivals, and how she came up with the name for one of them.

“I already knew before we went into the studio the title of the record. I definitely knew it was going to be From This Moment On.”

Cole Porter’s romantic ode to great expectations (with its hip, heartening couplet, “No more blue songs/Only whoop-dee-doo songs”) could not be more apt a title track for Krall’s tenth album. From This Moment On is an eleven-song collection that captures the Canadian-born sensation in full swing, in great company, and at the top of her game. It could also be called her strongest, most cohesive release to date.

Krall is the first to admit that the album’s marked, upbeat theme was not originally her intention (“I never try to link tunes together or find songs that work together as a whole. It happens organically in the recording process, or not at all.”) But she does assume credit for knowing the songs she would be recording when she, her quartet and the Clayton/Hamilton Jazz Orchestra assembled for two weeks in Los Angeles’s famed Capitol Studios this spring.

“I didn’t really sit down with anybody prior to recording it and say, ‘I think I want to do this.’ I knew exactly what I wanted from the get go. I started writing down song titles last summer, but a lot of these tunes I’ve had in my back pocket for years. I’ve been working on ‘How Insensitive’ for about ten years. ‘Day In, Day Out’ I started working on when I was about 24. I mean these are all tunes that finally have found their place.

“Every tune has to have some sort of personal connection. But I didn’t want it all to be too upbeat – like ‘Willow Weep For Me’, which for me is more of a social comment, adds a question mark to that positive feeling.”

In songs, mood and delivery, From This Moment On reveals Krall’s personal ardor for that golden era of song-making, when Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald and (especially) Nat “King” Cole were in their prime. It’s musical territory that Krall has often explored, but this album was certainly not a case of simply repeating past formulas: Krall’s A-team of support – producer Tommy LiPuma, engineer Al Schmitt and arranger/bandleader John Clayton – were on hand to ensure that inspiration was kept on an edge, unhindered by the studio environment.

“I’m not exactly working with people who are going to just say, ‘Oh it’s lovely, Diana.’ We never go an automatic pilot, you know? Sometimes I feel incredibly exposed during the recording process but fortunately I have the safety net of people whom I can listen to, and agree or disagree with. There’s nobody hanging over me and saying you have to do this or that. But that doesn’t mean that there aren’t surprises and it can be an extraordinarily intense environment. The emotions can run high since people care so passionately about the music and what we are doing.”

Krall – for the few still unknowing – is the 41-year old sensation whose cool, heavy-lidded vocals and strikingly sensitive piano-playing has helped her transcend barriers of genre to become a popular artist of the first order who has carved herself a permanent position at the top of the jazz charts.

The seeds of Krall’s crossover success are firmly rooted in her upbringing. Born in Nanaimo, Canada, to a musical family – her father is a stride-style pianist and serious record collector -- she grew up absorbing music that laid the foundation for her future growth. She attended Berklee College of Music in the early ‘80s, moved to Los Angeles where she continued her studies with the likes of bassist Ray Brown and pianist Jimmy Rowles, who convinced the young pianist to focus on her singing as well. By 1990, Krall relocated to New York City where she began performing on a regular basis with her trio. In 1993, she released her debut album on a small Canadian independent label.

Thirteen years later, she can look back over a stellar career path: in ’99, signed to Verve, her career exploded when When I Look in Your Eyes won a GRAMMY© for best jazz vocal and became the first jazz disc to be nominated for Album of the Year in twenty-five years. In 2002, The Look of Love was a #1 bestseller in the US and a seven-time platinum album in Canada. 2004’s The Girl in the Other Room, was her first to focus on her own songwriting – featuring six tunes co-written with her husband – and last year’s Christmas Songs proved one of the season’s best-sellers.

From This Moment On delivers Krall closer than ever to her musical aspirations and, in many ways, serves as a tribute to her heroes and mentors. One can detect her gratitude in a variety of musical moments.

“There’s a couple of pieces that I put Ray Brown into – like his introduction to Count Basie’s Little Darlin’ on ‘You Can Depend On Me’ -- and a lot of [vocalist/pianist] Shirley Horn was present in ‘Come Dance With Me.’ Our treatment of ‘From This Moment On’ came together after listening to [trumpeter/composer] Kenny Dorham’s version which I really love. I hear [arranger] Billy May especially in ‘Day In Day Out.’

“I have to mention Fred Astaire’s influence on ‘I Was Doing All Right’ – and in fact, all through the album. I listened to a lot of Fred with Oscar Peterson while preparing for this project, as well as watching a lot of his early movies, like Swing Time."

“Do you know that great album with Duke Ellington and Frank Sinatra, where he sings ‘Poor Butterfly’? ‘ Isn’t This A Lovely Day’ is very reminiscent of that. John [Clayton] wrote that arrangement at dinner the night before we recorded it. We were all sitting at a restaurant and he’s got a pad of paper. He was laughing and having the conversation and you see the wheels turning at the same time. And I loved playing piano on that. I think that’s my favorite piano work on the whole record – that, and ‘Exactly Like You.’”

Krall’s piano work and her arrangements – particularly on the album’s four quartet performances – are all standouts, as are a number of instrumental solos that she recalls with a marked fondness.

“That’s Gerald Clayton on piano on the title track -- he’s an amazing piano player and I think he played the hell out of that tune. I think Jeff Clayton’s alto sax solo on ‘Isn’t This A Lovely Day’ is a masterpiece -- definitely one of the highlights of the record. And Terrell Stafford played the perfect trumpet solo right after that! He walked in, nailed it in front of the whole band, and I said ‘Terrell, you sound like an old man.’ He’s only in his 30s! I meant it as the best compliment.

Krall is quick to point out that she is happy with everything on the album for different reasons, especially for the collaborative results. “I’m proud of tunes like ‘Exactly Like You’ specifically for every little note that [guitarist] Anthony [Wilson] plays, and simply for how the subtlety can work when we all play together, and how we all play what matters.”

“Playing what matters” could well be the subtitle to From This Moment On. There’s an economy and confidence that speak to the maturity of Krall as a performer, and a recording artist. “I really settled in with this record. I think I’ve let go of trying to prove something, and I wasn’t out to overplay solos. To just settle back into the bench and play those tough tempos and keep the solos simple and melodic and beautiful, and not have to pass a poll of some kind? That’s enough.”

From This Moment On is also a recording that cannot help but expose Krall’s feelings of being a wife and expectant mother. “It’s a reflection of who I am and where I am at this time. So I need to get that album out like now because that’s how I feel now. I don’t know how I’m going to feel six months down the road, so ‘Only whoop-dee-doo songs’? Yeah. Exactly.”

Nancy Wilson- Hollywood - My Way and Broadway My Way



Nancy Wilson- Hollywood - My Way


Hollywood — My Way was Nancy Wilson’s seventh album for Capitol Records in the 1960s, and as the follow-up and companion to Broadway — My Way, was the second album of hers with a thematic program. This CD reissue also marks the first time that this album is released on CD in the U.S. and remastered directly from the original master tapes at the same legendary Capitol Studios in Hollywood, where the music was originally recorded.


These seventeen songs, written between 1936 and 1966, all emanate from the classic repertoire of the movies and feature the works of some of the idiom’s greatest composers and lyricists including Arlen, Mercer, Mancini, Kern, Van Heusen, Cahn, Porter, Bacharach, Mandel, and Legrand. The arrangements here, by Jimmy Jones (first twelve tracks), Billy May, Oliver Nelson, and others, perfectly support Nancy’s brilliant forays in exploring the sound of the cinema.


The bonus tracks (13–17) appear for the first time on CD in the U.S.

Track Listing

1 My Shining Hour
2 The Days of Wine and Roses
3 Moon River
4 Secret Love
5 Dearly Beloved
6 I'll Never Stop Loving You
7 When Did You Leave Heaven
8 Almost in Your Arms (Love song from 'Houseboat')
9 Wild is the Wind
10 The Second Time Around
11 Did I Remember
12 You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
13 Alfie *
14 The Look of Love *
15 More (Theme from 'Mondo Cane') *
16 The Shadow of Your Smile (Love theme from 'The Sandpiper') *
17 Watch What Happens *






Nancy Wilson- Broadway - My Way

Broadway — My Way was Nancy Wilson’s sixth album for Capitol Records in the 1960s and was the first to feature a thematic program. This CD reissue also marks the first time that this album is released on CD in the U.S. and remastered directly from the original master tapes at the legendary Capitol Studios in Hollywood, where the music was originally recorded.


These seventeen songs, written between 1944 and 1965, all emanate from the classic repertoire of the Broadway stage and feature the works of some of the idiom’s greatest composers and lyricists, including Berlin, Bernstein, Sondheim, Rodgers & Hammerstein, Frank Loesser, and Lerner & Loewe. The arrangements here, by Jimmy Jones (first twelve tracks) and others, perfectly support Nancy’s brilliant forays in exploring the music of the Great White Way.


The bonus tracks (13–17) appear for the first time on CD in the U.S.

Track Listing

1 A Lot of Livin' to Do
2 You Can Have Him
3 Tonight
4 Make Someone Happy
5 I Believe in You
6 As Long As He Needs Me
7 Getting to Know You
8 My Ship
9 The Sweetest Sounds
10 Joey, Joey, Joey
11 Loads of Love
12 I'll Know
13 Hello, Young Lovers*
14 If Ever I Would Leave You *
15 I'm All Smiles *
16 Come Back to Me *
17 Don't Rain on My Parade *

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

DianaKrall.com - NEW ALBUM 'FROM THIS MOMENT ON' OUT SEPT 19TH

NEW ALBUM 'FROM THIS MOMENT ON' OUT SEPT 19TH

“This album coincides with a happier time in my life. I think it’s very obvious in the music. It reflects how I’m feeling now, the joy that I have in my marriage and family, and hopefully in the future.”



It had only been a few days since singer and pianist Diana Krall publicly announced that she and husband Elvis Costello were expecting their first child. Her remarks may have primarily focused on her upcoming album, but it was easy to discern the rosy glow as she discussed imminent arrivals, and how she came up with the name for one of them.

“I already knew before we went into the studio the title of the record. I definitely knew it was going to be From This Moment On.”"