Flora Purim - Speak No Evil (2003) CD Rip

  • 06 Dec, 17:28
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Artist:
Title: Speak No Evil
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Narada Jazz[72435-43537-2-7]
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Post Bop
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 50:22
Total Size: 330 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

01 - This Magic
02 - You Go To My Head
03 - Speak No Evil (All For One)
04 - I've Got You Under My Skin
05 - Tamanco no Samba
06 - Don't Say A Word
07 - Primeira Estrela
08 - It Ain't Necessarily So
09 - I Feel You
10 - O Sonho (Moon Dreams)
Flora Purim - Speak No Evil (2003) CD Rip

personnel :

Flora Purim – vocals
Gary Meek – flute, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, clarinet, bass clarinet
Bill Cantos – keyboards
Oscar Castro-Neves – keyboards and acoustic guitar
Russell Ferrante – keyboards
Christian Jacob – keyboards
Marcos Silva – keyboards
Yutaka Yokokura – keyboards
Gary Brown – bass
Jimmy Haslip – bass
Trey Henry – bass
Jimmy Branly – drums and percussion
Airto Moreira – drums, percussion and vocals
Michito Sanchez – percussion
Diana Booker – vocals

Two realities are abundantly clear from listening to this Brazilian songstress legend's latest mix of standards and originals -- she swings magnificently with great jazz company (including her husband, percussion legend Airto Moreira) and she's far more emotionally effective singing in her native Portuguese than in her heavily accented English. Her phrasing is solid on classics like "You Go To My Head" and the samba flavored "I've Got You Under My Skin," but her thick accent keeps the ears distracted somewhat from the message her heart seeks to convey. Fortunately, on these and other English language tunes by Don Grusin, Wayne Shorter and the vastly underrated L.A. keyboardist/songwriter Bill Cantos, she's surrounded by bandmates that propel her to great heights. On the opener "This Magic," that includes Moreira's jamming with flutist Gary Meek and members of The Yellowjackets. The same crowd turns "Speak No Evil" into a similarly wild trad-jazz affair. But compare her strained vocals on those tracks with her effortless vocal magic on Brazilian classics like "Tamanco no Samba" and "O Sonho" and the distinction between mere very good and close to perfection is clear. Another gem is the samba-lite tune written by Airto and Yutaka Yokokura, "Primeira Estrela," which rolls along on the strength of Purim's vocal harmonies with Yutaka and Oscar Castro Neves' beautiful acoustic guitar. To truly speak no musical evil, Purim should concentrate on mas Portugues.~ Jonathan Widran