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Sarah Vaughan - Live in Japan (1973) {MFSL MFCD II 844-2}
Posted By :
Goodspeed
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Date :
26 Jul 2011 15:57:02
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Comments :
16
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Sarah Vaughan - Live in Japan (1973) {MFSL MFCD II 844-2}
EAC+LOG+CUE | Flac (image) | 2 CD | 609 MB | scans @ 600dpi | Time: 1:54:00 | RS + FSo
Jazz, Vocal | Mainstream Records | Released: 1975 | Catalog #: MRL 419 | 5% Recovery
EAC+LOG+CUE | Flac (image) | 2 CD | 609 MB | scans @ 600dpi | Time: 1:54:00 | RS + FSo
Jazz, Vocal | Mainstream Records | Released: 1975 | Catalog #: MRL 419 | 5% Recovery
| “ | First of all, Sarah has rarely had so flowingly integrated a rhythm section behind her as the crisply swinging unit of pianist Carl Schroeder, drummer Jimmy Cobb, and bassist John Gianelli. Listen, for instance, to their ability to anticipate Sarah's whirlingly inventive improvisational turns. They not only listen well: they listen ahead. Second, there is Sarah's striking sense of design. The basic framework of each song is carefully structured and personalized, and that makes her frequently stunning improvisations within that framework all the more absorbing. The fusion of freedom and resilient design is much more effective than either arrangements that are too tight or instant arrangements that are so slight they are barely perceived by the listener and present hardly any challenge to the improviser. Third, seven of these performances last more than five minutes, thereby enabling Sarah to really stretch out. And fourth, she is very much in an expansive mood. As is evident from her cheerful bantering with the audience ("Just in case you don't know who I am, my name is Carmen McRae"), Sarah was clearly enjoying these performances, at least as much as the audience was. Fifth, as Sarah's previous Mainstream albums demonstrate, she is at that point in her career when the considerable technical demands she makes of herself have become as natural to her as breathing. Therefore, she goes beneath the notes to musical essences. Put another way, all her brilliant virtuosity is now organic to the way she develops each song. This is not agility for its own sake but rather the kind of fusion of skills and conception that mark the work of an artist in the full maturity of her powers. Ever since I first heard Sarah at the beginning of her career, the textures alone of her singing have been almost palpably beguiling. I mean that she makes contact viscerally-as does, let us say, cellist Janos Starker. Hers is so resonant and rich a sound that you feel you can almost touch it. By contrast, Ella Fitzgerald, let us say, as musically as she is, does not have that quality. Another aspect of this voice that Ls the most supple of instruments is its range. Listen, for instance, to the depth and fullness of her lower register and the gliding ascents to the very top of her exceptional range. I know of no other jazz anger with Sarah's startling scope. A further element of Sarahs demanding art is her time. As is amply shown in this set, she is the equal of the most swinging of jazz instrumentalists. Sarah hits a groove from her very first note. So secure and deeply propulsive is her beat that Sarah, if the need should ever arise, can be her own rhythm section. Perhaps in future Mainstream sets, some space can be afforded to Sarah singing a cappella. Rather than trying to point to the various interpretative marvels Sarah creates in each song, I would suggest that the best thing to do with this Tokyo concert is to just put it on a turntable, raise the volume so that you can hear all of the interaction between Sarah and the rhythm section, and just enjoy what happens. But if you do like to read liner notes to check your reactions against those of the scrivener, I would add that an additional dimension of delight in this album is Sarah's penchant, in a number of the songs, to start with the verse (some of which are seldom heard anymore at all). And listen to what she gets out of the lyrics, both verse and chorus. I remember a time when Sarah, undeniably brilliant, tended to pay less attention to words than to instrumentalized stunt flying. These years however, she has become one of the most perceptive illuminaton of lyrics in all of jazz and pop music. To have all this prodigious technical capacity in addition to the quality of intelligence necessary for tile kind of phrasing that enhances rather than distorts the lyrics is to be a masterful artist. And that's what Sarah is. Still another pleasure here is Sarah's witty, crackling and quite exhilarating command of scat singing-a skill that sounds a great deal easier than it is. I would match the scat passages here with Ella's or just about anybody else's except for that antic spirit, Leo Wateon. And there is also Sarah's ability to set and sustain a mood -all kinds of moods-from softly urgent declarations of love to swift spirals of pleasure in the act of letting her improvisatory abilities war and swoop in patterns that, I expect, surprise even her. In sum, this Tokyo adventure has resulted m a nonpareil illustration of a master singer at the peak of her expressive energies. This should be Sarah Vaughan's most successful decade because, as Helen Reddy observes, popular taste has moved "away from loud noise and bock to melody and lyrics." And who can excel Sarah in vivifying a melody and luminously iuieiureting a lyric? Enough leading. Play the music. - Nat Hentoff | ” |
Tracklist:
1 01 A Foggy Day 0:01:50 G. Gershwin / I. Gershwin
1 02 Poor Buterfly 0:05:26 Hubell / Golden
1 03 The Lamp Is Low 0:01:46 Shefter / DeRose / Parish
1 04 Round Midnight 0:05:40 Hanighen / Williams / Monk
1 05 Willow Weep For Me 0:04:35 Ann Ronnell
1 06 There Will Never Be Another You 0:01:37 Warren / Gordon
1 07 Misty 0:03:23 Garner / Burke
1 08 Wave 0:07:19 A. C. Jobim
1 09 Like Someone In Love 0:02:38 Burke / V. Heusen
1 10 My Funny Valentine 0:05:56 Rodgers / Hart
1 11 All Of Me 0:02:21 Simons / Marks
1 12 Love Story 0:05:12 'Where Do I Begin' - Lai / Sigman
1 13 Over The Rainbow 0:07:23 Arlen / Harburg
1 14 Could Werite A Book 0:02:26 Rodgers / Hart
2 01 The Nearness Of You 0:06:59 Cramichael / Washington
2 02 I'll Remember April 0:03:32 Raye / DePaul / Johnson
2 03 Watch What Happens 0:03:04 Legrand / Gimbel / Demy
2 04 I Cried For You 0:01:33 Arnheimer / Lyman / Freed
2 05 Summertime 0:04:01 Gershwin / Heywaed
2 06 The Blues 0:07:31 Arr. Ellen
2 07 I Remember You 0:05:09 Mercer / Schertzinger
2 08 There Is No Greater Love 0:04:03 Jones / Symes
2 09 Rainy Days And Mondays 0:06:10 Williams / Nichols
2 10 On A Clear Day 0:03:08 'You Can See Forever' - Lane / Lerner
2 11 Bye Bye Blackbird 0:06:34 Henderson / Dixon
2 12 Tonight 0:01:05 Berstein / Sonclheim
2 13 Tenderly 0:03:28 Gross Lawrence
Personnel:
Sarah Vaughan, Vocals, Piano on "The Nearness of You"
Carl Schroeder, Piano
Jano Starker, Cello
Jimmy Cobb, Drums
John Gianelli, Bass
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MFSL is always a bless to my ears! :)
Thank you so much for sharing great music with us!
Cheers!
thanks very much
New links and EAC Log with proper AccurateRip summary added as per 31.07.2011!
This happened because EAC gains the disc info from the Freedb database. Since most of the track info on CD's is handed in by unknown individuals other than me from all over the world mistakes like this are hard to avoid.
How thoughtful of you to bring this unforgivable mistake to my attention....