Rick Braun - Sings With Strings (2011)

  • 03 Oct, 04:36
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Artist:
Title: Sings With Strings
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Artistry Music / Mack Avenue
Genre: Smooth Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 49:26
Total Size: 367 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Time After Time [04:29]
02. I Didn't Know What Time It Was [04:14]
03. Once Upon a Summertime [05:47]
04. I Thought About You [03:58]
05. It's Love [04:26]
06. Lucky To Be Me [04:38]
07. Say It [03:38]
08. The Good Life [05:16]
09. I've Never Been in Love [04:04]
10. Plus Je T'Embrasse [04:26]
11. The Things We Did Last Summer [04:22]

There is a long tradition of jazz trumpeters putting aside their horns and singing into the microphone, dating back to Louis Armstrong and including Chet Baker, and Rick Braun belatedly joins this confraternity on Sings with Strings. Braun has occasionally added background vocals in his sideman work behind the likes of Rod Stewart and Sade, but this is the first time he has sung upfront. He has enlisted Philippe Saisse to come up with the string charts for this collection of standards and, wisely, brought along his flügelhorn (but not his trumpet) to add to the tracks. Braun certainly doesn't embarrass himself as a singer. He has a light, breathy tenor that marks him as a sort of little brother to Mel Tormé, and he is sufficiently assured to try a few note substitutions and time variations in his warm readings of familiar songs like "Time After Time," "I Didn't Know What Time It Was," and "The Things We Did Last Summer." He is still much more accomplished as an instrumentalist, of course, and the real jazz comes in with his expressive playing, which generally follows the vocals. Saisse comes in here and there, notably adding a lengthy vibes solo to "It's Love." Having established his vocal bona fides, Braun even risks singing in French on "Plus Je T'Embrasse," while sharing the microphone with Jasmine Roy. The album is not the revelation that Chet Baker Sings was, and it does not suggest that Braun should hock his horns. But it is a more than respectable side project. ~ William Ruhlmann

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