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Monday, July 29, 2019
Smooth Jazz Chart - Weekly Top 20 - July 29, 2019 #jazz
TW - LW - Artist - Album - (Label)
1 - 1 - Pieces Of A Dream - "On Another Note" - (Shanachie Entertainment)
2 - 2 - Brendan Rothwell - "Sentiment" - (Independent)
3 - 4 - Phil Denny - "Align" - (Off-Sheet)
4 - 7 - Jazmin Ghent - "The Story Of Jaz" - (Jazmin Ghent Music)
5 - 6 - Jessy J - "Live At Yoshi's" - (Changi Records LLC)
6 - 5 - Althea Rene - "Flawsome" - (Althea Rene Productions)
7 - 10 - Riley Richard - "Captivate Me" - (R&R Music)
8 - 3 - Jeff Ryan - "Embrace" - (Woodward Avenue)
9 - 14 - Bob James - "Espresso" - (Evosound)
10 - 9 - FOUR80EAST - "Four On The Floor" - (Boomtang)
11 - 12 - Norman Brown - "The Highest Act Of Love" - (Shanachie Entertainment)
12 - 21 - Thom Rotella - "Storyline" - (Rotella)
13 - 18 - Jazz Holdouts - "Summer Nights" - (Palm Beach Jazz)
14 - 30 - Gerald Albright - "30" - (Bright)
15 - 17 - Cindy Bradley - "I'm All Ears" - (Trippin 'N' Rhythm)
16 - 13 - Byron Miller - "The Gift: Psycho Bass 2" - (Byron Lee Miller Studios)
17 - 11 - Acoustic Alchemy - "33-1/3" - (OnSide Records)
18 - 15 - The Rippingtons - "Open Road" - (Peak Records/EOne Music
19 - 22 - Ragan Whiteside - "Five Up Top" - (Randis Music)
20 - 24 - Philippe Saisse Trio - "The Body And Soul Sessions Remastered" - (Bandar Log)
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Monday, July 22, 2019
Smooth Jazz Chart - Weekly Top 20 - July 22, 2019 #jazz
TW - LW - Artist - Album - (Label)
1 - 2 - Pieces Of A Dream - "On Another Note" - (Shanachie Entertainment)
2 - 1 - Brendan Rothwell - "Sentiment" - (Independent)
3 - 3 - Jeff Ryan - "Embrace" - (Woodward Avenue)
4 - 10 - Phil Denny - "Align" - (Off-Sheet)
5 - 5 - Althea Rene - "Flawsome" - (Althea Rene Productions)
6 - 7 - Jessy J - "Live At Yoshi's" - (Changi Records LLC)
7 - 9 - Jazmin Ghent - "The Story Of Jaz" - (Jazmin Ghent Music)
8 - 11 - Gregory Goodloe - "Stylin'" - (Hip Jazz)
9 - 14 - FOUR80EAST - "Four On The Floor" - (Boomtang)
10 - 34 - Riley Richard - "Captivate Me" - (R&R Music)
11 - 4 - Acoustic Alchemy - "33-1/3" - (OnSide Records)
12 - 15 - Norman Brown - "The Highest Act Of Love" - (Shanachie Entertainment)
13 - 17 - Byron Miller - "The Gift: Psycho Bass 2" - (Byron Lee Miller Studios)
14 - 16 - Bob James - "Espresso" - (Evosound)
15 - 12 - The Rippingtons - "Open Road" - (Peak Records/EOne Music
16 - 25 - Steve Oliver - "Illuminate" - (SOM)
17 - 16 - Cindy Bradley - "I'm All Ears" - (Trippin 'N' Rhythm)
18 - 26 - Jazz Holdouts - "Summer Nights" - (Palm Beach Jazz)
19 - 20 - Kim Scott - "Free To Be" - (Innervision Records)
20 - 20 - Rheza Kahn - "Next Train Home" - (Painted Media)
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New Orleans music legend Art Neville, a founder of the Meters and Neville Brothers, dies at 81 #jazz
Art “Poppa Funk” Neville shaped the sound of New Orleans music for a half-century. The keyboardist and singer co-founded the Meters and the Neville Brothers, two of the most important bands to come from the city, and was the voice of the enduring Carnival season anthem “Mardi Gras Mambo.”
In the latest blow to a New Orleans music community that had already lost Dr. John and Dave Bartholomew this summer, Neville died Monday after years of declining health. He was 81.
"It was peaceful," said Kent Sorrell, Neville's longtime manager. "He passed away at home with his adoring wife Lorraine by his side. He toured the world how many times, but he always came home to Valence Street."
Arthur Lanon Neville was born on Dec. 17, 1937, the same day as New Orleans piano legend James Booker. As a boy, he lived in the Calliope housing development and Uptown on Valence Street. He was drawn to the Orioles, the Drifters and other doo-wop groups, as well as the piano-driven music of Professor Longhair and Fats Domino.
He attended St. Augustine and Booker T. Washington high schools before earning his GED from Walter S. Cohen High, where he’d hang out in the music room with fellow members of the Hawketts, the group he joined in 1953.
He was barely 17 when, in 1954, he sang lead on the Hawketts’ remake of a country song called “Mardi Gras Mambo.” Local deejay Ken "Jack the Cat" Elliott had convinced the Hawketts to record "Mardi Gras Mambo" at his radio station. More than 60 years later, the song would still be a Carnival staple.
“I was so happy to record,” Neville recalled in a 2013 interview. Jack the Cat “had this song. It sounded good to me. We cut it in the station, with two or three microphones. I knew it felt good to do it. But I had no idea that it would still be around.”
He served six years in the Navy, including two on active duty. During three months at sea aboard the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Independence, he worked as a cook.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, he applied his tenor voice to several New Orleans rhythm & blues singles that are classics of the era, including "Cha Dooky Doo" and the ballad "All These Things," the latter written by Allen Toussaint under his "Naomi Neville" pen name.
He transitioned to the role of bandleader in the mid-1960s with Art Neville & the Neville Sounds. The Neville Sounds featured Art's younger brothers Aaron and Cyril, as well as bassist George Porter Jr., guitarist Leo Nocentelli, drummer Joseph “Zigaboo” Modeliste and saxophonist Gary Brown.
They held down a residency at an Uptown bar called the Nite Cap before moving to the Ivanhoe on Bourbon Street. Brown left the group before Toussaint recruited them to be the house band for his recording studio. Under Toussaint's tutelage, they would record with Lee Dorsey, Dr. John, LaBelle, Robert Palmer and many others.
By 1968, they'd been rechristened the Meters and were releasing singles of their own, including the instrumentals "Sophisticated Cissy" and "Cissy Strut." Neville's playful, sing-song organ, Nocentelli's slinky, chicken-scratch guitar, Porter's deep, rubbery bass and Modeliste's crisp, syncopated rhythms forged a template for much New Orleans music that would follow.
In the 1970s, the Meters recorded songs destined to become New Orleans standards, including "Hey Pocky A-Way," "Fire on the Bayou," "People Say" and "Africa."
Art's youngest brother, Cyril, joined the band as a percussionist and vocalist before the Meters embarked on long tours of North America and Europe with the Rolling Stones. In March 1975, Paul McCartney, a fan, hired the band to perform at a party celebrating the release of his "Venus and Mars" album aboard the ocean liner Queen Mary, which was docked in Long Beach, California; the show was documented on a live album.
By the late 1970s, the Meters had splintered, frustrated by their lack of commercial success and bedeviled by personal conflicts and substance abuse.
"We had some tragedies happen with the group,” Art once said of the Meters’ tumultuous history. “Blame it on who you want to, it don’t make any difference. We didn’t have the wisdom that Mick Jagger or Paul McCartney had: ‘It’s New Orleans, man. Let’s have fun.’ I had fun doing all of it.”
Soon enough, he had a new project on which to focus.
He and his three younger brothers backed their uncle, Mardi Gras Indian Big Chief George “Jolly” Landry, on a 1976 album called “The Wild Tchoupitoulas.” By the following year, brothers Art, Charles, Aaron and Cyril had resolved to move forward as their own band, dubbed the Neville Brothers.
They presided over countless sweaty late nights in local clubs, distilling funk, rhythm & blues, Mardi Gras Indian music and soul into a distinctly New Orleans, distinctly Neville, sound. In 1979, they became the first New Orleans band to perform on the "Austin City Limits" TV show.
The 1989 album “Yellow Moon" draped the band's natural funk and soul with an evocative mystique conjured by producer Daniel Lanois, best known for his work with U2 and Peter Gabriel. "Yellow Moon" sold more than 500,000 copies and solidified the band’s international reputation as ambassadors of their hometown’s music. The subsequent "Brother's Keeper" album also ranks among the landmark New Orleans albums.
For many years, the Neville Brothers toured the world but always closed the main stage of the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival on its final Sunday. Art, ever funky, ever cool, presided from behind his keyboards, flashing the Vulcan "live long and prosper" salute familiar to fellow "Star Trek" fans. He won a Grammy with the Neville Brothers and another for his contributions to a tribute to his pal Stevie Ray Vaughan.
The Neville Brothers released their final studio album in 2004. The band's last concert was at the Hollywood Bowl in 2012; they later reunited to perform several songs at a "Nevilles Forever" tribute show at the Saenger Theatre during the 2015 Jazz Fest. The possibility of any future reunions died when cancer claimed 79-year-old saxophonist Charles Neville in April 2018.
But their legacy is untouchable.
Even when the Neville Brothers were still active, Art Neville lent his voice and keyboard to other projects. The most enduring proved to be the Funky Meters, featuring Porter and guitarist Brian Stoltz.
Starting in 2000, the original Meters periodically reunited, spurred by a fresh appreciation for their enormous influence. Samples of their recordings have turned up in dozens of hip-hop songs. The likes of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Beastie Boys, Phish and Galactic cite the Meters as a major inspiration.
Two of Neville's children followed him into the spotlight. Arthel Neville, his daughter from his first marriage, is a prominent television newscaster. His son Ian Neville is the guitarist in the funk band Dumpstaphunk.
Art first met Lorraine, his second wife, in her native California. They were married at Jimmy Buffett’s house in Key West, Florida, 33 years ago. She became his most ardent fan and, in recent years, most diligent caretaker.
Of the four Neville brothers, Art was the only one to spend the majority of his life on Valence Street. Rainwater and vandals courtesy of Hurricane Katrina devastated the home there that he and Lorraine had meticulously decorated. They eventually moved a few doors down to a cozy house that was the boyhood home of Meters drummer Modeliste.
Neville battled a number of health issues over the years, including persistent complications from back surgery in 2001. More recently, he suffered at least one stroke. His back problems limited his mobility and required him to use a cane, walking stick or wheelchair. At home, Lorraine helped him to his feet, shadowed him as he walked, and sometimes answered questions for him as he rolled his eyes.
He continued to perform and tour through 2017, sometimes with his nephew, Dumpstaphunk's Ivan Neville, backing him up on keyboards. His humor and determination remained undiminished even as he underwent grueling physical therapy and struggled to make it onto stages.
But as soon as he sat down at a keyboard, the aches, and the decades, dropped away.
“You can bring me there in the ambulance, roll me onto the stage, give me a microphone and a mirror where I can see the people," he said in 2013, joking about his determination to keep performing as long as possible.
“Man, look. I’ve been doing this all my life," he said. "I enjoy it. Even the bad parts of it, the parts I didn’t like … I found out that’s the way things go sometimes. You’ve got to go along with them.”
On July 15, Ivan, Ian and the rest of Dumpstaphunk opened for the Rolling Stones at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. It was the continuation of a family tradition: In the 1970s and '80s, Art shared stages with the Stones as a member of the Meters and the Neville Brothers.
In July 2018, the Meters received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award during a ceremony in Los Angeles. Art did not attend; his son Ian represented him.
Weeks later, Nocentelli said the Meters were taking a "wait and see" approach to Art's health: “I’m hoping and praying that he’ll be able to play again."
But it wasn't to be. In December, Neville officially announced his retirement. He spent his last months at home on Valence Street, enjoying the company of family and friends.
"There’s some things that happen, especially in the business I’m in, that you’re not prepared for," he said in 2013. "You’ve got to find a way to work through it.
“I didn’t make a lot of money. Maybe we did make it and didn’t get it. I don’t know. But it don’t matter. My life is happy, I’m happy, the people that are closest to me are happy. Don’t worry about the other part.”
Survivors include his wife, Lorraine Neville; his three children, Arthel, Ian and Amelia Neville; brothers Aaron and Cyril Neville; and a sister, Athelgra Neville Gabriel.
Funeral arrangements are pending.
By Keith Spera, source: https://www.nola.com/entertainment_life/keith_spera/article_4059d432-ac9f-11e9-9615-9f5f01d9ebd6.html
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Pianist Dave Bass "No Boundaries" Release on Whaling City Sound August 2nd - #jazz
The saying goes that everyone’s got a story to tell. But chances are good that few, if any, have the kind of story Dave Bass has. Without resorting to detail, Bass’s rebirth as a jazz musician after decades away from the art is nothing short of astonishing. Having retired from the Office of the Attorney General of California back in 2015, Bass is back at the piano, where he promises to keep the torch burning for classic songs, elegant bebop, and beautiful performance. NO BOUNDARIES features two-time Grammy® winner Ted Nash (flute, alto flute, clarinet, bass clarinet, soprano sax, alto sax, tenor sax), five-time Grammy® nominee Karrin Allyson (vocals), and two-time Grammy® winner Carlos Henriquez (bass) and Jerome Jennings (drums). Three great Cuban musicians join Dave on selected tracks: Mauricio Herrera, Miguel Valdes, and two-time Latin Grammy winner, Carlos Caro adding bata, conga, guiro, bongo and timbales. Dave’s third album since his comeback, his second for the acclaimed Whaling City Sound label, is a celebration of gorgeous playing and lovely Latin influence. It’s also a dream come true, not only for Bass who is fulfilling his own lifelong dream but also for his fans, who have waited a long time to hear this gifted musician-interrupted by injury and another incredibly successful but unrelated career – come into his own.
Dave celebrates his new release NO BOUNDARIES, with a debut performance at the Auburn State Theatre (Auburn, CA) on August 10 with the Dave Bass Jazz Quartet featuring Jacam Manricks, (flutes, clarinet, saxes), Ben Kopf (bass) and Jim Frink (drums). Dave will be playing standards and originals from his new CD. The music ranges from swingin’ straight-ahead jazz and ballads to a taste of evocative Brazilian and Afro-Cuban music.
Dave celebrates his new release NO BOUNDARIES, with a debut performance at the Auburn State Theatre (Auburn, CA) on August 10 with the Dave Bass Jazz Quartet featuring Jacam Manricks, (flutes, clarinet, saxes), Ben Kopf (bass) and Jim Frink (drums). Dave will be playing standards and originals from his new CD. The music ranges from swingin’ straight-ahead jazz and ballads to a taste of evocative Brazilian and Afro-Cuban music.
PERSONNEL
Dave Bass – piano
Ted Nash – flute, alto flute, clarinet, bass clarinet, soprano sax, alto sax,
tenor sax (all tracks except 13)
Karrin Allyson – vocals (tracks 4, 7)
Carlos Henriquez – bass
Jerome Jennings – drums (all tracks except 5, 8, 10)
Carlos Caro – guiro, bongos, bell (tracks 2, 4, 5, 8, 10)
Miguel Valdes – bata, conga (tracks 5, 8, 10)
Mauricio Hernandez – timbales, maracas (tracks 4, 5, 8, 10)
Produced by: Dave Bass and Ted Nash
Recording Engineer: Marc Urselli, Eastside Sound
Mixing Engineer and Associate Producer: Ben Allison, Allisonics Studio
Mastering Engineer: Alan Silverman, Arf! Mastering
Photography: Adrien H. Tillmann
Friday, July 12, 2019
A jazz legend said he was in desperate need of money. His friends had questions. #jazz
It had been more than two years since Jacques Lesure had seen Kenny Burrell, 87, but the legendary jazz guitarist seemed okay on the phone in April. No mention of overwhelming medical bills or impending eviction. No suggestion that he feared that merely allowing a visitor into his home could lead to a fatal illness.
“I’ve never heard him sound like he’s on death’s door,” said Lesure, a fellow guitarist who has known Burrell for 25 years and had been delivering groceries to his door until recently. “And I’ve never had a financial conversation with Kenny.”
But on May 9, Katherine Goodrich, 50, Burrell’s wife, launched a GoFundMe campaign because, she wrote, the couple desperately needed help. Their medical expenses, a case of identity theft and a dispute with the homeowner’s association in their building made her fear they faced homelessness. “I can’t maintain Kenny’s health and safety in that kind of environment,” she wrote.
Continue reading on the Washington Post:
https://wapo.st/2Y64Cuq
Thursday, July 11, 2019
Guitar Innovator Todd Mosby's New Album 'Open Waters' Coming August 1 #jazz
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Tuesday, July 09, 2019
“High Hopes” for six-year-old jazz singer Sophie Fatu’s recording debut #jazz
The youngest “America’s Got Talent” star is in the studio working on “Love is…,” an EP slated for September release.
Six-year-old jazz singer Sophie Fatu charmed the nation singing Frank Sinatra classics on national television and her videos have amassed over 150 million views. She cheekily called “Mr. Simon” (Cowell) her favorite judge when she became the youngest contestant ever on “America’s Got Talent”; she told Ellen DeGeneres secrets on the host’s top-rated daytime show before crooning “Fly Me To The Moon”; and she teasingly asked Steve Harvey what happened to his hair on “Little Big Shots” prior to belting out “My Way.” Now the bubbly chanteuse is working on her debut recording, a six-song set of selections from the Great American Songbook sung by her biggest influences: Sinatra, Dean Martin, Nina Simone and Michael Bublé. Sophie’s “Love is…” EP is slated for September release.
Sophie is an effervescent spark, a joyous entertainer with a bluesy jazz voice who exemplifies “born to sing” and “an old soul in a young body.” Even her mother, award-winning classical music pianist and vocalist Victoria Fatu, describes her middle child as “a male crooner in a little girl’s body. Her style and delivery are more patterned after male singers than any of the female vocal legends like Nina Simone or Ella Fitzgerald.”
On the surface, Sophie’s desire to sing is simple: “I want to sing to make people happy.” But the maturity of her underlying mission has meaning and significance far beyond her years. “I sing Sinatra because I don’t want people to forget him or this music. I want to travel the world to share this music, to sing these great songs and keep his legacy alive.”
Sophie excitedly elected to sing “(Love is) The Tender Trap” because it fits her sassy and brassy style. The lyrics are about love in a mocking way with a sense of humor, which is more apropos for someone so young. Culling a slow, romantic ballad from Sinatra’s catalogue, “All The Way” spoke to the Fatus the most because of its beauty. Representative of who Sophie is as a performer, “Ain’t That A Kick In The Head” is a statement song for her. She sings it to open her live performances because she literally blooms while singing it. A signature Simone tune, Sophie feels more drawn to Bublé’s version of “Feeling Good” and she dreams of singing it with him one day. “High Hopes” is being completely restyled into a big band number, resisting the obvious cutesy, adorable nature of the song. The jazzy-bluesy production will be strong, explosive, disjointed, creative and unique. Sung by Sinatra and Frankie Lymon, the impish and audacious “Goody Goody” is challenging vocally, requiring plenty of slow vibrato for which Sophie rises to the occasion.
In addition to making the record this summer, Sophie is currently shooting her feature film debut, an action thriller scheduled to arrive in movie theaters in 2020.
The “Love is…” EP contains the following songs:
“(Love is) The Tender Trap”
“All The Way”
“Ain’t That A Kick in the Head”
“Feeling Good”
“High Hopes”
“Goody Goody”
For additional information, please visit https://www.sophiefatumusic.com.
Eliane Elias - "Love Stories" - Release on Concord Records August 30th - #jazz
GRAMMY AWARD-WINNING ELIANE ELIAS’
LOVE STORIES SERVES AS A CLASSIC HOMAGE
TO LOVE IN ITS MANY FACETS AND FORMS
New orchestral project features originals, compositions
from bossa nova’s golden age, and songs made famous
by Frank Sinatra and Antonio Carlos Jobim
Eliane Elias ascends to a new echelon of artistic expression with the August 30, 2019 release of Love Stories on Concord Jazz. A multi-hyphenate musician whose recent releases Made in Brazil (2015), Dance of Time (2017) and Man of La Mancha (2018) have earned her multiple GRAMMY Award wins and No.1 Billboard chart debuts, Elias’ new orchestral project serves as a classic homage to love in its many facets and forms.
Love Stories is an orchestral album, revealing Elias’ mastery and preeminence as a multifaceted artist – a vocalist, pianist, arranger, composer, lyricist and producer. Sung almost entirely in English, the album features three original compositions plus seven superb arrangements of pieces from bossa nova’s golden age, including songs made famous by Frank Sinatra and Antonio Carlos Jobim.
As both an interpreter and composer, Elias inhabits the rich tradition of bossa while bringing the music into the present. She infuses familiar songs with unexpected twists that intensify the music’s evocative power – whether by creating harmonic modulations that enhance a lyric or shifting the rhythmic feel of a section to heighten its emotion – allowing the subtle complexities of her voice to take centerstage, all the while.
Noting that romantic love is just one of a wide range of ways the emotion gets manifested, Elias says, “The idea for this album was to bring to life various stories of love and loving through this collection of songs.”
As she tells those stories, Elias brings a depth of feeling to the album that comes courtesy of her evocative approach as a pianist and singer as well as the precision with which she’s able to execute her musical vision.
“From the moment of conception, it couldn’t be more integrated,” she explains. “From the first note that’s chosen, every color I create in the arrangements, the modulations, the choice of keys, the small group arranging, the possibilities for orchestra – it’s as deep into my personal taste as it can go…because I’m envisioning the arrangement; deciding how to convey the song and perform it with the band, and being mindful of the future orchestrations all at once.”
For the album, Elias invited some of her favorite Brazilian rhythm section players to join her –
Marcus Texiera on guitar and Edu Ribeiro, Rafael Barata and Celso Almeida on drums – plus her core collaborators, co-producer and bassist Marc Johnson and co-producer Steve Rodby. Orchestrator Rob Mathes returns for his fourth recording with Elias as well, bringing his lush string arrangements into flawless sync with Elias’ rich harmonic and varied rhythmic approaches, as he did on her GRAMMY Award-winning 2015 album, Made in Brazil.
A celebrated interpreter of Jobim, Elias sees undercurrents of his long collaborative history with orchestrator Claus Ogerman in the working relationship she’s developed with Mathes.
Says Johnson: “Rob’s orchestrations all go so deep and are so beautifully intertwined with
Eliane’s small group arrangements. He also understands voice distribution so well. He’s said that in the process of writing the arrangements, he immerses himself in the recorded basic tracks, and, in even more detail, into Eliane’s piano voicings. Rob is absolutely on the same emotional wavelength as Eliane.”
This emotional connection is essential given the circumstances from which the album was born.
Elias began working on the music for Love Stories through a difficult year in which she lost her
father, and four months prior to his passing, fractured her shoulder in an accident in her
hometown of Sao Paulo, Brazil. She was rendered virtually immobile for months while
recovering in her apartment there. As she recuperated, her window view of breeze-tickled palm
trees and balconies against the blue Sao Paulo sky became the backdrop for a new set of
musical inspiration.
“During that period, I wasn’t allowed to move, my left arm was in a sling and so to avoid surgery
I had to stay immobilized and really still,” she recalls. “Meanwhile, I created and wrote all of
these arrangements in that state.”
The album opens with a tone-setting bossa nova groove and Elias’ sensual, velvety voice,
inspiring us with the message of taking a chance on love, from the vintage pop gem of Frances
Lai’s theme song from the Oscar-winning 1966 French film, “A Man and a Woman.”
It’s a seamless jump from that to Elias’ take on “Baby, Come to Me.” Made famous in the early
’80s by Patti Austin and James Ingram, the song gets reworked here in characteristic Elias
fashion, as she smoothly moves from a bossa nova to a hybrid Latin feel, with brilliant harmonic
and tempo modulations. Added to the backdrop of soaring strings and rich piano voicings, the
tune becomes altogether new.
“I like the message of cultivating a relationship, of keeping the romance alive when you find someone you love.” says Elias, who enlisted yet another of her go-to collaborators, Take 6’s multiple GRAMMY Award-winning Mark Kibble, to cover the background vocals.
There’s a heartfelt vulnerability to Elias’ lilting, expressive singing on “Bonita,” a dreamy rendition of one of Jobim and Sinatra’s late ’60s collaborations that features some lovely interplay between the piano and orchestra alongside Elias’ delicate and nuanced vocal phrasing.
“It’s a very pure expression of someone who wants their love to be accepted and returned,” Elias says.
The Sinatra homage continues with a twinkling, sexy take on “Angel Eyes,” followed by a brilliant rendition of “Come Fly with Me” that’s re-imagined with a Brazilian groove and carries
the listener away with a passionate, high-flying piano solo.
Elias explores yet another aspect of love on her warm toned original “The Simplest Things,” a
rich and multi-layered musing on a love that has stood the test of time. The message here – about looking back on a love that’s matured and discovering that “the simplest things are the wonderful things” in that shared life – is a profound and sweet universal truth that we can all relate to.
On “Silence,” the album’s second original piece, the mood is decidedly more intense as Elias
channels the protagonist of the story’s anguish. “My voice here is the most exposed on the
album,” Elias says. “I believe that most everyone has experienced disappointment or
disillusionment at some point in their lives. The question is how does one respond to that?”
A bright and buoyant rendition of “Little Boat,” where you can almost feel the waves gently undulating in time with Elias’ rocking piano solo, changes the mood again. Roberto Menescal, the song’s composer, plays the guitar on this track and the opening verse features the only moment on the recording in which Elias sings in Portuguese.
The album closes with one more original, “The View.” This story is a bit more adult and complicated, given its suggestive imagery. There’s a rendezvous and a vision of a woman rolling down her stockings – but her apparition is almost like a dream or an angel. “The story is about something more internalized,” says Elias, “somewhere between reality and imagination, erotic yet pure in love and love’s expression.”
It’s also an appropriately complex finish to an album that digs deep musically to shine new light
on one of our deepest human experiences. In the process, it offers a portrait of an
incomparable artist whose sound resonates from decades of experience – in music as in life.
Of the connection with her instrument Elias has said, “the piano is an extension of my body and
the deepest expression of my soul.” Love Stories proves her voice now occupies that place, as well.
Eliane Elias on the web:
Website: http://elianeelias.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/4ElianeElias
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