Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta stacey kent. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta stacey kent. Mostrar todas as mensagens

quarta-feira, 8 de julho de 2020

domingo, 22 de outubro de 2017

Tender Stacey

Original released on CD Sony Okeh 88875156772
(EU, 2015)

Stacey Kent has always delivered her music tenderly and has shone best on standards from the Great American Songbook. Thus, it's appropriate that she returns to the pages of the Great American Songbook and performs some of its most romantic ballads with only a guitar, a bass fiddle and an occasional woodwind. However, two of her three accompanists are tried and tested musicians. Alternating between the saxophone and the flute is Stacey's longtime accompanist and husband, Jim Tomlinson, while the guitarist is Brazilian master Roberto Menescal himself. The performances here stay true to the tender theme of the album. Even when a swing beat is injected into standards like "Tangerine" and "No Moon at All", the mood remains warm and cozy while the rest of the ballads in the album also contribute to the after-hours feel of the album which is perfect for de-stressing after a hard day's work. Although the arrangements do the album justice by remaining original, Stacey's mostly straightforward readings of these standards with a thinner voice (due to aging) lack that certain zest which jazz albums usually possess. (in AllMusic)

sábado, 16 de abril de 2016

Share Your Breakfast With Stacey

Original released on CD Blue Note 5099950161126 
(2007, October 2)

Kent is what men used to call a classy broad. Her elegant fashion sense and understated vocal style make her sound like a woman from another time, an unflappable sophisticate with a warm, slightly world-weary persona. She was born in the United Sates but after a trip to France, she decided to become a jazz singer. In the early '90s she landed in Oxford where she met her husband, musical director/sax player Jim Tomlinson. Tomlinson also produces Kent's albums, and this time out, he composed several charming tunes that sound like potential standards, plus collaborations with lyricist Kazuo Ishiguro, author of "Remains of the Day". Original tunes like "The Ice Hotel" and "I Wish I Could Go Traveling Again" are full of wry humor, and Kent delivers them with her usual effortless grace. "The Ice Hotel" is a samba that talks of forsaking the tropics for a room that keeps the temperature at a "steady five degrees." The ambivalent lyric is perfectly suited for Kent's unassuming style. Is she chiding a lover for his detached demeanor or promising a passionate night that will raise the temperature and put a sizzle in the air? 


It's hard to tell, and with the music is as warm as the lyric is cool, the tune has a delicious tension. "I Wish I Could Go Traveling Again" sounds like the kind of tune Noël Coward used to write, full of urbane humor and references to "overpriced hotels devoid of charm." Its melancholy meditation on lost love is enhanced by John Parricelli's rippling guitar and Graham Harvey's subtle bluesy piano. Kent slows down "What a Wonderful World" making it sound more blue than celebratory. Her wistful phrasing imbues the song with a painful melancholy. On "Hard Hearted Hanna," Tomlinson supplies a brief, breezy solo while Kent sounds sly and impudent, playing up the lyric's over the top humor. "Ces Petits Riens," a Serge Gainsbourg tune, benefits from a percussive arrangement featuring bongos, muted guitar notes, and drummer Matt Skelton's brush work; Kent drops in brief faux trumpet accents. Kent's band provides subtle support throughout. Each player steps out for brief impressive solos, but mainly they lay back and support their boss' unobtrusive style. (in AllMusic)

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