Lauren Kinhan - Circle in a Square (2014) Lossless
Artist: Lauren Kinhan
Title Of Album: Circle in a Square
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Dotted I
Genre: Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC
Total Time: 63:49 min
Total Size: 344 MB
Tracklist:
1. Circle in a Square (4:59)
2. My Painted Lady Butterfly (4:56)
3. Another Hill To Climb (6:46)
4. Chasing the Sun (5:18)
5. I'm Lookin For That Number (5:26)
6. To Live Or Die (4:51)
7. Pocketful Of Harlem (4:44)
8. We're Not Going Anywhere Today (5:05)
9. Chaussure's Complex (5:52)
10. Bear Walk (6:18)
11. Vanity's Paramour (4:50)
12. The Deep Within (4:49)
Personnel:
Lauren Kinhan: vocals;
Andy Ezrin: Fender Rhodes;
Ben Wittman: Drums & Percussion;
Will Lee: Bass;
Randy Brecker: Trumpet;
Lauren Kinhan, Marlon Saunders, Ella Marcus: Background Vocals;
David Finck: Bass;
Joel Frahm: Soprano Saxophone;
Sara Caswell: 1st Violin,
Joseph Brent 2nd Violin;
Lois Martin: Viola;
Jody Redhage: Cello;
Aaron Heick: Alto Flute;
Romero Lubambo: Guitar;
Donny McCaslin: Tenor Saxophone;
John Bailey: Flugel Horn;
Chuck Loeb: Guitar;
Gary Versace: Accordion.
Vocalist Lauren Kinhan is the alto quarter of vocal ensemble New York Voices and the leader of two previous solo outings, Hardly Blinking (Orchard, 2000) and Avalon (Koch, 2010). She was most recently hears on New York Voices holiday offering, Let It Snow (Five Cent Records, 2013). Kinhan's solo recordings are all originally composed by the singer making her solo artistic approach different from that of band mate Kim Nazarian and Janis Siegel and Cheryl Bentyne of the The Manhattan Transfer. And Kinhan is quite the songstress to boot..
Employing her long-time core trio of pianist Andy Ezrin, bassist Will Lee and drummer Ben Wittman, Kinhan adds the likes of trumpeter Randy Brecker, whose tart and close open-bell playing gives the production a dry and refined touch. The opening tune is the title piece and is such a perfectly constructed piece with a jazz-pop sensibility, it might be the contemporary missing link of what Frank Sinatra was in the 1940s and '50s.' Kinhan does not belabor the piece with duplicates throughout Circle. Instead, she proceeds through the late-night feel of "Another Hill to Climb" and slick R&B flavored "I'm Looking for That Number." "Pocketful of Harlem" is edgy and modern, instrumentally a showcase for Kinhan's solid alto chimes. This singer's solo recordings stand in fine and forward-thinking contrast to her durable work with New York Voices. (C.Michael Bailey)
Employing her long-time core trio of pianist Andy Ezrin, bassist Will Lee and drummer Ben Wittman, Kinhan adds the likes of trumpeter Randy Brecker, whose tart and close open-bell playing gives the production a dry and refined touch. The opening tune is the title piece and is such a perfectly constructed piece with a jazz-pop sensibility, it might be the contemporary missing link of what Frank Sinatra was in the 1940s and '50s.' Kinhan does not belabor the piece with duplicates throughout Circle. Instead, she proceeds through the late-night feel of "Another Hill to Climb" and slick R&B flavored "I'm Looking for That Number." "Pocketful of Harlem" is edgy and modern, instrumentally a showcase for Kinhan's solid alto chimes. This singer's solo recordings stand in fine and forward-thinking contrast to her durable work with New York Voices. (C.Michael Bailey)
mirror