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3.161 Ft
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1. | Bad for Me
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2. | It's the Falling in Love
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3. | Tequila Mockingbird
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4. | Don't Say It (If You Don't Mean It)
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5. | Is This What Feeling Gets?
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6. | Back of Your Mind
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7. | For the Girls
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8. | Love Won't Let Me Go
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9. | Street Singer
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Jazz / Standards
Dee Dee Bridgewater - Vocals Alphonso Johnson Bass Becky Lopez Vocals (Background) Bill Riechenbach Trombone Bobby Bryant Trumpet Bobby Lyle Clavinet, Piano (Electric), Moog Synthesizer Byron Miller Bass Carolyn Dennis Vocals (Background) Darole Mukagawa Strings Don Menza Sax (Tenor) Douglas Davis Strings Fred Jackson, Jr. Sax (Baritone) Frederick Seykora Strings Gayle LaVant Strings George Bohannon Trombone George Duke Synthesizer, Piano (Electric), Keyboards, Producer Greg Phillinganes Keyboards James Getzoff Strings Janet Lakatos Strings Jay Rosen Strings Jerry Hey Flugelhorn, Trumpet Jim Gilstrap Vocals (Background) Jorge del Barrio Strings Josie James Vocals (Background) Joy Lyle Strings Judith Perett Strings Larry Dunn Keyboards, Moog Synthesizer Larry Williams Sax (Tenor) Lew McCreary Trombone Louis Satterfield Trombone Lynn Davis Vocals (Background) Marvin Limonick Strings Maurice Spears Trombone (Bass) Murray Adler Strings Napoleon Murphy Brock Vocals (Background) Pamela Goldsmith Strings Paulinho Da Costa Percussion Petsye Powell Vocals (Background) Rahmlee Michael Davis Trumpet Richard Perissi French Horn Ricky Lawson Drums Robert Konrad Strings Robert L. Adcock Strings Robert Popwell Bass Roland Bautista Guitar Shiela Escavedo Percussion Sidney Muldrow French Horn William Kurash Strings
Remastered from Original Analogue Tapes. With a Predilection for Funky Grooves, Dee Dee Bridgewater Forges an Awesome Synergy of Rb, Funk and Jazz on this 1979 Gem, Displaying the Extensive Range and Emotional Expression that Made her Famous.
Dee Dee Bridgewater
Active Decades: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s and '00s Born: May 27, 1950 in Memphis, TN Genre: Jazz Styles: Disco, Contemporary Jazz, Crossover Jazz, Standards, Quiet Storm, Vocal Jazz, Smooth Soul
One of the best jazz singers of her generation, Dee Dee Bridgewater (who was married to trumpeter Cecil Bridgewater in the early '70s) had to move to France to find herself. She performed in Michigan during the 1960s and toured the Soviet Union in 1969 with the University of Illinois Big Band. She sang with the Thad JonesMel Lewis orchestra (1972-1974) and appeared in the Broadway musical The Wiz (1974-1976). Due to erratic records and a lack of direction, Dee Dee Bridgewater was largely overlooked in the jazz world by the time she moved to France in the 1980s. She appeared in the show Lady Day and at European jazz festivals, and eventually formed her own backup group. By the late '80s, Bridgewater's Verve recordings were starting to alert American listeners as to her singing talents. Her 1995 Horace Silver tribute disc (Love and Peace) is a gem and resulted in the singer extensively touring the U.S, reintroducing her to American audiences. She would find even more success with her tribute album, Dear Ella, which won a Grammy in 1997. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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