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July 2022: Love Of The Tiger

Courtesy Shervin Lainez

Love Of The Tiger
Self Produced
2022
Jazz singing is seeing an uptick of artists stepping out of their "traditional" roles into dramatically different vocal genres altogether. Mainstream-to-progressive

Kristina Koller
vocalsb.1994

Dida Pelled
guitarb.1988
In the welcome process of going rogue, Pelled redefines her voice from the 1930s standards coquette to a solution of

Norah Jones
pianob.1979

Rickie Lee Jones
vocalsKey Selection: "Skinny."

Sweet Invitation
Cafe Pacific Records
2022
If

Mark Winkler
vocalsBeverley Church Hogan
vocals
John Proulx
keyboardsSweet Invitation is a collection of Hogan's specialty, the mature romantic ballad: "Falling In Love With Love," "Here's That Rainy Day," and "When October Goes" all testify to her considerable abilities. Hogan's voice is a well-balanced instrument capable of expressions from sassy to pensive. Joining Hogan is the excellent multi-reedist

Bob Sheppard
saxophone, tenorb.1952

Lyman Medeiros
bassb.1976

Clayton Cameron
drumsKey Selection: "I'm Just Foolin' Myself."

Day By Day
Ave Maria Records
2022
In male jazz vocals, there are many

Frank Sinatra
vocals1915 - 1998

Kurt Elling
vocalsb.1967

Andy Bey
piano1939 - 2025

Paul Jost
vocals
Dan Olivo
vocalsb.1975
Ian Robbins
guitar
Kevin Winard
drumsOlivo in no way tries to emulate the "Chairman of The Board" (Sinatra) or his favorite singer

Tony Bennett
vocals1926 - 2023

Bing Crosby
vocals1903 - 1977

Fred Astaire
vocals1899 - 1987
Key Selection: "It's Only A Paper Moon."

Unspoken
Self Produced
2022
All hail breezy, well-conceived, and -presented jazz vocal collections. The COVID pandemic did a good thing in providing a stasis generously taken advantage of by the best of those who create art. Calgary singer

Deb Rasmussen
vocalsTwo years later the tangible results are this tautly conceived concept recording, using only a jazz trio, to present a program of the unspoken facets of romance and love. Along with bassist Jeremy Coates and drummer
Robin Tufts
drumsKey Selection: "Darn That Dream."

Bitches Blues
Stoney Plain Records
2022
Canadian vocalists

Sass Jordan
vocalsb.1962

Rod Stewart
vocalsb.1945
In 2020, Jordan released a blues cover album, Rebel Moon Blues (Stoney Plain), where she attacks the music with the raspy, slurred abandon of the whole of the 1970s. The singer arrives here fully realized and fully herself. Jordan follows with the present Bitches Blues, a collection of blues-infused rock originals and covers equally inspired as Rebel Moon Blues. Putting a high shine on Rick Derringer's "Still Alive And Well," Jordan's coda takes the song to the river for baptism. "Even" is a nine-bar blues propelled by Jesse O'Brien's barrelhouse piano, unusual for Jordan's typical guitar-dense approach.

Mississippi Fred McDowell
guitar, slide1904 - 1972

Lowell George
guitar, slideKey Selection: "Sailin' Shoes."

What's It Gonna Take?
Exile Music
2022

Van Morrison
vocalsb.1945

Eric Clapton
guitar and vocalsb.1945

Ray Charles
piano and vocals1930 - 2004

Willie Nelson
guitarLyric content aside, Morrison's music has always been solid, regardless of what "phase" he may have been passing through. Presently, Morrison effects a taut, stripped-down sonic environment that evidences some of his favorite genre sources. His assembly of 15 compositions orbits the centers of American soul music: Memphis ("Dangerous"), Muscle Shoals ("Fighting Back Is The New Normal"), Detroit ("Not Seeking Approval"), Philadelphia ("It's My Stage Name"), and other parts unknown ("Fear And Self-Loathing In Las Vegas"). Morrison can make more out of two and three chords than others can with the whole harmonic shooting match. Musically, the singer remains always on point. While Armond White, writing in the
Key Selection: "Fear And Self-Loathing In Las Vegas."

Jukebox Fury
Cleopatra Records
2022
Country & western/rockabilly devotee " data-original-title="" title="">Dale Watson interprets his favorite cover material in Jukebox Fury. His choice of songs is as compelling as his selections look and sound, which is like a personal playlist of an average late Baby Boomer born in the early '60s. The recital is compelling because Gordon Lightfoot's "Sundown" makes a strange bedfellow with

Tony Joe White
guitar, electric
Michael Johnson
vocalsGiving his regular band, the Lone Stars, time off, Watson is joined by several notable personalities: Linda Gail Lewis on "Always On My Mind,"

Steve Cropper
guitar, electricb.1941
Key Selection: "Sundown."

Beethoven: Piano Concertos 0-7
CPO
2022
If for scholarship and completeness only, German pianist Michael Korstick's survey of the "eight" Beethoven Piano Concertos would be notable. This "kitchen-sink scholarship" serves the artistic purpose here as it did when German clarinetist Dieter Kl?cker allowed his informed imagination to run wild while recording a series of albums under the main title of ? Mozart! where Kl?cker sought out every clarinet composition even suggested to be composed by the master and recorded them, figuratively saying "maybe it is...maybe it's not, but ain't the music great!" Korstick does the same thing with every piano concerto fragment penned by LVB, including Muzio Clementi's requested adaptation of the Violin Concerto, which was also successfully adapted for clarinet by Michael Collins and performed with the Russian National Orchestra under the baton of Mikhail Pletnev on Clarinet Concertos: Mozart & Beethoven (Deutsche Grammophon, 2006).
Korstick divines from the musical literature, count 'em, eight piano concertos (0-7): the original five, the violin concerto adaptation, an early E-flat major three movements, WoO 4 that smiles at Georg Frederick Handel by way of Mozart, and an unfinished, very classical sounding D major concerto (only the allegro movement realized) Hess Catalogue 15 which was previously fleshed out by British musicologist Nicholas Cook with a new cadenza and coda composed by Hermann Dechant. The playing and sonics are so fine in this collection that the source and its artistic validity are beside the point. Korstick's playing brims with brio and dance, spurned along by the ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, directed by Constantin Trinks. We, as listeners, should heed Wordsworth's admonition in his preface to Lyrical Ballads, and accept a "willing suspension of disbelief" allowing oneself to enjoy the music.
Key Selection: "Piano Concerto in E-flat major, WoO 4."

Reflections: Scott Joplin Reconsidered
Rising Sun Music
2022
American composer Scott Joplin may be seen as many things. He is an evolutionary creative force binding Louis Moreau Gottschalk with

Jelly Roll Morton
piano1890 - 1941
Downes has been on a tear, weaving the social, cultural and musical together using the loom of African American experience. Her most recent recordings New Day Begun (Rising Sun Music, 2021) and Florence Price Piano Discoveries (Flipside Music, 2020) (many selections here also considered on Samantha Ege's recent Fantasie Nègre: The Piano Music of Florence Price (Lorelt, 2021)) bring attention to seldom heard African American artists deserving more attention. Downes sharpens her focus, directing it toward that American original Joplin. Her desire with Reflections is to present Joplin's music as elevated art suited for the performance hall, "classical" music, as it were, rather than barroom or movie soundtrack music. She accomplishes this with her solo performances, "Tremonisha: Prelude" and "Heliotrope Bouquet," being notable while she gives inventive and smiling small band treatment to "Maple Leaf Rag'' and "Magnetic Rag," which are delightful. Downes's playing style is more romantic than that of the didactic Josua Rifkin or the militant William Appling. She makes Joplin "sing." Downes is passionate and committed, both shining through her presentation of the American Scarlatti, Scott Joplin.
Key Selection: "Tremonisha: A Real Slow Drag."

Klavierstücke: Reading Alban Berg (1901-1908) (Classical For Steel Guitar)
Bandcamp
2022
The number one question here is, "When does

Noël Akchoté
guitarBerg was perhaps the most accessible of the Second Viennese School of composers (that included Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern). His short life allowed him only a limited output, part of which Akchoté addresses here. Three examples of the composer's Jugendlieder are included with two brief piano pieces. Of the songs, "Wo Der Goldregen Steht" is masterfully wrought and well-served compared with Andreas Scholl and Tamar Alperin's performance on Twilight People (BMG, 2019). The guitarist bayonets the wounded in the song's interior, disintegrating into ravenous particles, before coming back around for a mostly well-behaved coda. An even better comparison is Akchoté's performance of "Klavierstück H-Moll" with that of Jean-Jacques Dünki on Alban Berg: Fruhe Klaviermusik, Sonata Op.1, Sonata Fragments & Variations (Jecklin Disco, 1975), where Akchoté attempts a creative explanation of Berg's 12-tone approach using a very schizophrenic method of emphasizing the muted elements of Dünki's performance. The effect is enjoyably educational.
Key Selection: "Wo Der Goldregen Steht (1901-1904, Jugendlieder)."
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