Label: Fat Note
Styles: Female Vocal Jazz
Original Release Date: 2009
Quality/Bitrate: eac-flac.cue.log.cover
Size: 411MB(recovery 5%)
With her vintage dresses and unabashedly sexy posturing, Lavay Smith evokes a bygone era, one when jazz was for dancing rather than for sitting and ing to, and when jump blues hadn't yet been displaced by rock & roll. The other thing that is unabashed about Smith is her repertoire, which on her third album consists primarily of standards -- and not just any standards, but songs so familiar they border on period cliche: "It Don't Mean a Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing," "'Deed I Do," "On the Sunny Side of the Street," even (heaven help us) "When the Saints Go Marching In." What can justify a program like this is any combination of the following: innovative arrangements; tremendous energy; a voice that either surprises or simply knocks down the walls; or undeniable chops. All of those elements are in evidence in various combinations throughout Miss Smith to You. Smith's voice is a very fine thing, powerful and flexible, capable of both purring insinuation and brazen assertion, and always full of joy. Her band is, if anything, even better: pianist Chris Siebert has created brilliant arrangements that combine comfortably mainstream principles of horn voicing with subtly crafty articulations and filigrees that tend not to assert themselves brassily, but rather lurk in the background for you to discover if you make the effort to for them. The three original songs are almost as good as the classics that make up the rest of the program, which is high praise indeed. ~ Rick Anderson
1. Miss Brown To You
2. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
3. Daddy
4. With My Man
5. I'm Not Evil
6. 'Deed I Do
7. I Ain't Got Nothin' But The Blues
8. Boogie Woogie (I May Be Wrong)
9. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
10. Need A Little Sugar In My Bowl
11. Jumpin' In The Morning
12. When The Saints Go Marching In

1 comments:
cette video est une catastrophe ! au secours ! lol
Post a Comment