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Coleman Mellett: Sing You a Brand New Song
By
Chuck Mangione
flugelhorn1940 - 2025
Which is why Sing You a Brand New Song comes as such a welcome surprise this year, along with the rerelease of the accompanying documentary directed by singer and Mellett's widow

Jeanie Bryson
vocalsb.1958

Barry Miles
pianob.1947

Larry Goldings
organ, Hammond B3b.1968

Will Lee
bassb.1950

Steve Gadd
drumsb.1945

James Taylor
guitar and vocalsb.1948
The album opens with "Everymornin'" and "Life Goes On," two cheery, smooth ballads where Mellett's licks alternate between bluesy folk simplicity and the sensitive, swooning coos of his jazz work. His vocals are sunny, without pretensionexactly what his instrumentals would suggest. Goldings, Lee and Gadd are a serviceable rhythm section, erring close to overproduction on tracks that suggest a more muted accompaniment for the guitar to really shine. "Honeykiss" is perhaps the most awkward example, where Goldings and Gadd threaten to confuse some of Mellett's more complex chord progression and drown out gorgeous back-up vocals by Bryson. However, such choices can also be attributed to the archival quality of Mellett's recordings as much as an overzealous player, and for every "Honeykiss" there is, too, an "Oh Kayo" and "Digibob," where the group forms a solid front around the vocals and guitar, and it is easy to forget the accompaniment is playing one or two decades after the leader!
Mangione plays on "Everymornin,'" and then again on the moody "Morning Line." Where a posthumous contribution to an unfinished song always brings with it the risk of overriding the artist's intent, Mangione is unobtrusive and remarkably in tune to his peer's textural experiments. Especially on the latter track, he is soft, even mournful, against Mellett's guitar, an emotional reach into the past that serves to complicate the song's tonal construction without compromising it. Bryson, who duets with her late husband on the buoyant and soulful "You Got Me Too," plays a similar role to even greater effect. The song itself is cheerful, and Mellett's solos drip with melodic ecstasy. But Bryson's vocals are elegiac, full of longing sopranos swooping in under Miles' groovy piano. Unlike Mangione, her contribution does not claim to meld exactly with the initial recording, and is all the more haunting for it. A ghostly dialogue occurs, unlike anything else on the record, both embracing the unusual nature of the project and lamenting the circumstances that made it necessary. Listeners, beware of goosebumps at their first harmony.
Despite these guest stars, the record is at its most successful when Mellett's alone. "What You Are to Me," his instrumental cover of James Taylor's "Fire and Rain," and the short coda "Island Home," all reflect a performer at the height of his emotive capability, able to fuse disparate traditions into moving sonic expeditions. "What You Are to Me" embraces the saccharine strumming of jazz fusion and the bleary-eyed sentimentality of mid-century folk numbers, and reconciles them into a romantic, pastoral transformation. And if there is anything that typifies both Mellett's work and memory, it is a sensitive virtuosity and generosity of form, one that continues beyond its host's all-too-short career. ">
Track Listing
Everymornin'; Life Goes On; Rainy Days; Honeykiss; Morning Line; Oh Kayo; Digibob; What You Are To Me; You Got Me Too; Come On Home; Fire And Rain; Island Home.
Personnel
Coleman Mellett
guitarLarry Goldings
organ, Hammond B3Barry Miles
pianoSteve Gadd
drumsChuck Mangione
flugelhornJeanie Bryson
vocalsJames Taylor
guitar and vocalsTerry Silverlight
drumsJames Scholfield
guitarAdditional Instrumentation
Coleman Mellett: vocals
Album information
Title: Sing You a Brand New Song | Year Released: 2025 | Record Label: Mirror Image Distribution
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