Betty Roche - Take The “A” Train (2014) [Hi-Res]

  • 20 Aug, 05:13
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Artist:
Title: Take The “A” Train
Year Of Release: 1956 / 2014
Label: Bethlehem Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 41:53 min
Total Size: 515 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Take The “A” Train (3:12)
02. Something To Live For (4:03)
03. In A Mellow Tone (2:29)
04. Time After Time (3:03)
05. Go Away Blues (3:18)
06. Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man (3:40)
07. Route 66 (4:35)
08. All My Life (3:48)
09. I Just Got The Message, Baby (2:39)
10. All Too Soon (4:07)
11. You Don't Love Me No More (3:17)
12. September In The Rain (3:51)

Betty Roché was a superb but little-recorded singer who had a stint with Earl Hines's band and was with Duke Ellington in the 1940s and '50s. A genuine jazz singer rather than just a big band's requisite woman balladeer, Roché had an almost brassy attack, a vibrant sense of swing, and the ability to scat hornlike solos. Recorded in 1956 for Bethlehem, Take the "A" Train was Roché's debut recording under her own name, and it reveals her as a complete singer, with a warmly intimate delivery and a moving way with ballads. The emphasis here is very much on her strong ties to Ellington's music. There are lively versions of well-known Ellington material, such as the title track--composed by Billy Strayhorn--and "In a Mellow Tone," as well as a piquant rendering of "Something to Live For." She also delves into less familiar Ellington, like "You Don't Love Me No More" and "Go Away, Blues," heard here in several different takes. Vibraphonist Eddie Costa and trumpeter Conte Candoli add immeasurably to the settings. The CD will come as a more than pleasant surprise to fans of Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, and Betty Carter. -- Stuart Broomer


  • mufty77
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Many thanks for 24-96!!