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Billy Strayhorn: Lush Life
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Billy Strayhorn: Lush Life
Current price: $14.49
Barnes and Noble
Billy Strayhorn: Lush Life
Current price: $14.49
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Despite his crucial role in 20th century
jazz
and popular music as a songwriter, musician and arranger,
Billy Strayhorn
is still too often seen as a postscript to the
Duke Ellington
story -- the two collaborated for nearly three decades. If
Strayhorn
had done nothing else but compose
Ellington
's theme
"Take the 'A' Train"
(oddly absent from this tribute session), his place in history would still be fortified, but indeed he gave so much more. This collection features
contemporary jazz
musicians and vocalists interpreting 15 of
's compositions, some co-written with
or others, some penned only by
-- most of the tracks feature one or two quartets, or a piano soloist. Those solo pieces, performed by
Bill Charlap
(
"Fantastic Rhythm,"
"Valse"
) or
Hank Jones
"Satin Doll"
), as well as the two musicians' frisky duet on
"Tonk,"
necessarily hew closely to the
template, while the groups are more willing to chance modernization. But not by much -- for the most part, the arrangements stay within formats that would have been recognizable to
.
Joe Lovano
-- accompanied by
Jones
on piano,
George Mraz
on bass and
Paul Motian
on drums -- never strays too far afield in his sax solos, and
Dianne Reeves
, who provides the bulk of the vocals, similarly plays it straight, her husky tone lending warmth and richness to such
compositions as
"Day Dream,"
"My Little Brown Book"
(her playful scatting lifts the already enjoyable set up another notch),
"Something to Live For"
and a stunning
"Lush Life,"
on which she is supported solely by
Russell Malone
's guitar.
Elvis Costello
doesn't take a different approach to his guest vocal on the ballad
"My Flame Burns Blue (Blood Count)"
than he does on the many other
vocals he'd recorded by this time, but he's still always a pleasure to hear, his nuanced reading close to perfection and as heartfelt as everything else he does. ~ Jeff Tamarkin
jazz
and popular music as a songwriter, musician and arranger,
Billy Strayhorn
is still too often seen as a postscript to the
Duke Ellington
story -- the two collaborated for nearly three decades. If
Strayhorn
had done nothing else but compose
Ellington
's theme
"Take the 'A' Train"
(oddly absent from this tribute session), his place in history would still be fortified, but indeed he gave so much more. This collection features
contemporary jazz
musicians and vocalists interpreting 15 of
's compositions, some co-written with
or others, some penned only by
-- most of the tracks feature one or two quartets, or a piano soloist. Those solo pieces, performed by
Bill Charlap
(
"Fantastic Rhythm,"
"Valse"
) or
Hank Jones
"Satin Doll"
), as well as the two musicians' frisky duet on
"Tonk,"
necessarily hew closely to the
template, while the groups are more willing to chance modernization. But not by much -- for the most part, the arrangements stay within formats that would have been recognizable to
.
Joe Lovano
-- accompanied by
Jones
on piano,
George Mraz
on bass and
Paul Motian
on drums -- never strays too far afield in his sax solos, and
Dianne Reeves
, who provides the bulk of the vocals, similarly plays it straight, her husky tone lending warmth and richness to such
compositions as
"Day Dream,"
"My Little Brown Book"
(her playful scatting lifts the already enjoyable set up another notch),
"Something to Live For"
and a stunning
"Lush Life,"
on which she is supported solely by
Russell Malone
's guitar.
Elvis Costello
doesn't take a different approach to his guest vocal on the ballad
"My Flame Burns Blue (Blood Count)"
than he does on the many other
vocals he'd recorded by this time, but he's still always a pleasure to hear, his nuanced reading close to perfection and as heartfelt as everything else he does. ~ Jeff Tamarkin