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Tierney Sutton At The Jazz Corner

The Jazz Corner
Hilton Head Island, SC
February 8, 2020
When a lady has chosen nine new outfits, attended nine nerve wracking awards dinners and been nominated for nine Grammys since 2006, it would simply be impolite not to vote for her to win next time.

Tierney Sutton
vocalsb.1963
Tierney Sutton was born in Milwaukee and studied at Berklee College of Music. She now lives in Los Angeles, but has visited Hilton Head Island since she was a girl. She was joined on stage by the leader and trumpeter of

Johnny Mercer
composer / conductor1909 - 1976
The duo were backed by The " data-original-title="" title="">Eric Jones Trio with " data-original-title="" title="">Jonathan Baptiste on bass and Robert Sanders on drums. The band set off with "I'm Old Fashioned," one of the many Mercer standards from more than 1,400 lyrics that he wrote. Although Mercer was often depicted at a piano or writing on a score, he was a lyricist not a musician. His contributions were poetic, romantic and descriptive words set to the music of others. His work appeared often in Broadway shows and movies where he won an Oscar which is displayed in the Mercer Museum. Gransden sang and played trumpet while drums tapped the high hat and the piano lid was raised only on the short stay. That set the tone for the evening, the music was played quietly and precisely, enticing the audience to listen and giving space for all the musicians to concentrate on detail and delivery of exceptional quality. They switched to a Gershwin standard next "(It's Very Clear) Our Love is Here to Stay" which Sutton and Gransden sang as a conversational duet. As the music progressed Gransden added trumpet phrases to the conversation. Throughout the delivery was impeccable, nobody was going to strain or split the notes of those romantic ballads. The band continued on in the same style with Days of Wine and Roses capturing those heady times of first infatuation expressed in

Henry Mancini
composer / conductor1924 - 1994

Hoagy Carmichael
piano1899 - 1981
"Day In, Day Out" is another Mercer lyric which Sutton sang fast, accompanied just by Sanders' cymbal taps and a stick on the snare drum. Her diction was crystal clear and they ended cleanly and sharply together. The band ended the first set with another beautiful standard, "East of the Sun and West of the Moon" written by Brooks Bowman while at Princeton. His songwriting career was tragically cut short when he died in a car accident four days before his 24th birthday.
The second set opened with Gransden demonstrating his recent interest in the Bel Canto style of singing, projecting his voice long and strong without microphone as an opera singer would, in "Fly Me to the Moon." Tierney Sutton returned to the stage to start a conversation just with the bass in "(Tell Them) I Remember You" another Mercer lyric which was a hit for Frank Ifield who in a novelty recording, yodeled it with great gusto. Sutton delivered the tune without yodeling at all. Passing on, they arrived at the sadly dramatic but calm story-telling

Nancy Wilson
vocals1937 - 2018
Sutton called for suggestions from the audience which Gloria Krolak answered with Tierney Sutton's The Sting Variations (BFM, 2016) which was nominated for a Grammy in the Best Jazz Album category. The album featured a mix of

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Sting
bass, electricb.1951

Nat King Cole
piano and vocals1919 - 1965
A very fine, quiet after midnight performance rolling easily into inventive territory in some of the best known tunes from the golden era and beyond. The trio and trumpet never once played over Tierney Sutton's precise and delicate voicing. They stayed respectfully within the limits of a soft piano notation, concentrating on style and delivery as Sutton called tunes and suggested keys, gently indicating solos with feather light gestures.
Photo Credit: Martin McFie
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