Esther Kretzinger - Sound of a Poem (2017)

  • 21 May, 12:43
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Sound of a Poem
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Gramola Records
Genre: Crossover/Vocal Jazz, Classical
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 00:41:31
Total Size: 224 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist
---------
01. Lieder und Gesänge, Vol. 3 (Arr. T. Collins for Voice & Jazz Ensemble): No. 2, Waldseligkeit - Esther Kretzinger
02. Lieder und Gesänge, Vol. 3 (Arr. T. Collins for Voice & Jazz Ensemble): No. 9, Selige Nacht - Esther Kretzinger
03. Ariettes oubliées (Arr. T. Collins for Voice & Jazz Ensemble): No. 5, Green - Esther Kretzinger
04. Ariettes oubliées (Arr. T. Collins for Voice & Jazz Ensemble): No. 2, Il pleure dans mon cœur - Esther Kretzinger
05. 3 Lieder, Op. 4 (Arr. G. Endstrasser for Voice & Jazz Ensemble): No. 1, Sommerabend - Esther Kretzinger
06. 3 Lieder, Op. 4 (Arr. G. Endstrasser for Voice & Jazz Ensemble): No. 2. Warum sind denn die Rosen so blass? - Esther Kretzinger
07. 3 Lieder, Op. 4 (Arr. G. Endstrasser for Voice & Jazz Ensemble): No. 3. Wo? - Esther Kretzinger
08. 4 Lieder: No. 2, You Are a Garden (Arr. T. Collins for Voice & Jazz Ensemble) - Esther Kretzinger
09. Waldseligkeit - Esther Kretzinger
10. Wordless - Georges-Emmanuel Schneider

After attracting attention with her clear soprano voice in the classical and opera genre, German singer Esther Kretzinger discovers new paths with her second album Sound of a Poem. Together with a small jazz ensemble of international repute, she sheds new light on a special selection of Romantic and Impressionist songs by Claude Debussy, Joseph Marx and Othmar Schoeck. With the Swiss violinist Georges-Emmanuel Schneider, New York vibraphonist Tim Collins, renowned bassist Wayne Darling and Austrian drummer Gerald Endstrasser, Esther Kretzinger works out the essence of these songs in the language of jazz, showing that the differences between Impressionist music and jazz often lie more in external features such as sound colour, articulation and instrumentation rather than their artistic cores...