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Cat Conner: Cat Conner: Cat Tales
By
Cat Tailes
Self Produced
2011
One of the greatest jazz performance challenges is playing and singing ballads slow...sometimes called "calendar slow." The trick is playing slowly without dragging or stalling. It is simple physics, the difference between velocity and momentum. Simple tempo may be understood in terms of speed (or velocity) but swing, swing has the added element of musical weight about it, ensuring that once motion is started, no matter how slow, it is properly maintained by the spirit of the delivery.
The mistress of the slow ballad was the late

Shirley Horn
piano1934 - 2005

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Ahmad Jamal
piano1930 - 2023

Rebecca Parris
vocals1951 - 2018

Patti Wicks
piano1945 - 2014
Add to this school a voice that has been a long time coming. West Coast vocalist Cat Conner has been performing the better part of her adult life as part of her rather impressive collection of creative talents that include body art and performance art. After enduring a considerable amount of encouragement from her friends in the music industry, Conner brings her light from beneath the basket on her long overdue debut, Cat Tails. This recording is a collection of mostly 1930s and '40s standards performed with a minimum of instrumentation and haste.
Conner's slow ballad prowess is amply illustrated on the quartet center of the disc: Billy Eckstein's "I Want to Talk About You,"

Tadd Dameron
piano1917 - 1965

Leonard Bernstein
composer / conductor1918 - 1990

George Mesterhazy
piano1954 - 2012
Of these four songs, the most revelatory is Conner's and Mesterhazy's treatment of "If You could See Me Now." Again, the song is slowed to the point where its subatomic compositional mechanics can be nakedly seen. Conner delivers the lament languidly with a relaxed intent, one with equal amounts of regret and gratitude. She exercises all sub-ranges of her sturdy and muscular alto voice, singing with perfect poise and delivery. Conner is a student of the song rather than its melodic interpretation. She captures the composers' and lyricists' intentions faithfully without being boring.
Conner includes two

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
Jim Hughart
bassb.1936

Gene Cipriano
saxophone
Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991
Cat Tails compares only with Rebecca Parris' phenomenal My Foolish Heart for sheer ballad performance. Conner's well-structured voice and delivery beg the question of what took so long for this talent to be recorded. Thankfully, that question is moot.
Tracks: Hello Ma baby; I Want to Talk About You; Them There Eyes; If You Could See Me Now; In A Mellow Tone; Some Other Time; Caravan; Embraceable You; I Hear A Rhapsody.
Personnel: Cat Conner: vocals; George Mesterhazy: piano (1-6, 8, 9); Gene Cipriano: tenor saxophone, clarinet and bass oboe (1, 3, 5-7); Jim Hughart: bass (1, 4, 5). ">
Personnel
Cat Conner
vocalsAlbum information
Title: Cat Conner: Cat Tales | Year Released: 2011 | Record Label: Unknown label
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