The jazz
trumpeter Till Bronner decided to make his voice the centerpiece of his new album “The Good Life”. Bronner has built a bulletproof reputation as
a skilled jazz trumpeter, particularly in his native Germany. There Bronner’s success
as a jazz musician is well-known. In America, Bronner has worked with such jazz
immortals as James Moody, Dave Brubeck, and Ray Brown. Bronner is also a damn good
jazz vocalist. His trumpeting is equally as lovely as his voice. “Good Life” on
Okeh Records, which has bassist John Clayton, pianist Larry Goldings, drummer
Jeff Hamilton, and guitarist Anthony Wilson manning the rhythm section, features
Bronner’s vocal chops. Bronner chose often-performed material from the American
songbook such as the “In The Wee Small Hours of the Morning,” “Sweet Lorraine,”
“Her Smile” and “I’ll Be Seeing You”. Bronner's
relaxed easy to get into phrasing is akin to the great jazz trumpeter and
vocalist Chet Baker. Throughout “The Good Life” Bronner sounds a lot like the
late trumpeter. There’s no proof that Bronner’s motivation for making
“The Good Life”—which by the way is genuinely special and worth spending
quality time with—was to emulate Baker’s style, or in some way pay homage to
him.
Allan
Harris is a red-blooded American jazz
vocalist who owns a voice that could melt your soul. Unfortunately, the
Brooklyn native isn’t as wildly popular as he ought to be. However, in a music career
nearing three decades Harris has consistently put out wonderful music. There isn’t
a public record of the number of babies conceived to Harris’s
albums. Harris’s new album for Love Productions Records
“Nobody’s Gonna Love You Better (Black Bar Jukebox Redux) is a noteworthy
outing. The album is a mix of familiar jazz standards, originals, and
re-imagined pop songs performed tenderly and thoughtfully by a vocalist
comfortable and confident navigating any musical genre. Harris is at his best,
however, singing slow jams. He does so beautifully he could make Satan fall in love.
“Sama
Rou-Songs From My Soul” is jazz pianist
and vocalist Amina Claudine Myers eleventh album. It has three Myers originals, and spirituals such
as “My Soul’s Been Anchored In The Lord,” and “Go
Down Moses’. “Myers infused the spirituals with new
spirits. This is a hauntingly beautiful solo album. On piano, her style straddles the fence of free-jazz. The Arkansas native has
worked with free-jazz lions such as Lester Bowie, Archie Shepp, Antony Braxton,
and Charlie Haden. Vocally, Myers’s singing begs comparison to Nina Simone and Abbey
Lincoln. “Sama Rou-Songs From My Soul” is so good, so powerful. If you aren’t careful, it will paralyze you.
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