  |
|
 |
Ballad Essentials |
Carol Sloane |
első megjelenés éve: 2001 |
|
(2001)
|
|
 CD |
3.726 Ft
|
|
1. | I'm Getting Sentimental over You
|
2. | Autumn Nocturne
|
3. | In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
|
4. | Soon
|
5. | You Go to My Head
|
6. | Heart's Desire
|
7. | One for My Baby (And One More for the Road)
|
8. | Moonlight in Vermont
|
9. | I Was Telling Him About You
|
10. | You Must Believe in Spring
|
11. | The Folks Who Live on the Hill
|
Jazz / Vocal, Bop, Standards, Vocal Jazz
Carol Sloane - Vocals Ben Brown Bass Bill Charlap Piano Bill Easley Saxophone Byron Stripling Trumpet Clark Terry Trumpet Colin Bailey Drums Dennis Mackrel Drums George Horn Mastering Glen Barros Executive Producer Greg Gisbert Trumpet Howard Alden Guitar John Burk Executive Producer John Lockwood Bass Marcus McLaurine Bass Michael Moore Bass Nick Phillips Compilation Producer Phil Woods Clarinet Ron Vincent Drums Scott Robinson Saxophone Scott Yanow Liner Notes Sean Smith Bass Stefan Scaggiari Piano Steve Gilmore Bass Steve Turre Trombone
Part of the compilation series Ballad Essentials, this CD features the jazz vocals of Carol Sloane. The vocalist's smoky renditions of such ballads as "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You" and "Moonlight in Vermont" are among the featured songs, previously recorded and released on Sloane's six projects for the Concord Jazz label. However, it is Sloane's work on the Fred J. Coots and Haven Gillespie gem "You Go to My Head" -- featuring Steve Turre's great trombone solo -- that makes this collection of ballads worth the price of the CD. ~ Paula Edelstein, All Music Guide
Carol Sloane
Active Decades: '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s Born: 1937 in Providence, RI Genre: Vocal Styles: Bop, Standards, Vocal Jazz
Singer Carol Sloane started singing professionally when she was 14 and at 18 she toured Germany in a musical comedy. She was with the Les and Larry Elgart orchestra during 1958-1960 and, after appearing at a jazz festival in 1960, she was heard by Jon Hendricks who later sent for her to sub for Annie Ross with Lambert, Hendricks and Ross. Sloane made a big impression at the 1961 Newport Jazz Festival and soon cut two records for Columbia. Unfortunately, her career never got going and, except for a live set from 1964 released on Honey Dew, Sloane would not record again until 1977, working as a secretary in North Carolina and singing just now and then locally. However, in the mid-'70s she became more active again, caught on in Japan (where she began to record frequently), and her career finally got on more solid footing. Sloane's releases for Audiophile, Choice, Progressive, Contemporary, and later Concord feature a mature bop-based singer with a sound of her own. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
|
CD bolt, zenei DVD, SACD, BLU-RAY lemez vásárlás és rendelés - Klasszikus zenei CD-k és DVD-különlegességek |  | Webdesign - Forfour Design |
|
|