| Jazz 
 Carol Sloane - vocals
 Ken Peplowski - clarinet, tenor sax
 Bucky Pizzarelli - guitar
 Steve LaSpina - bass
 
 Carol excells in a special rendition of timeless love songs. "Whenever Carol sings, her voice has a transfixing quality that commands full attention. The magic rests in her warm, swinging delivery. With a breathy vibrato, Carol's voice smolders with tenderness and seduction, like Lester Young's horn. Her approach is so intimate and confessional that you're often left feeling as though you've just been told a lover's secret." Marc Myers, who writes and edits JazzWax.com, one of the Internet's most popular daily jazz blogs.
 
 
 
 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
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