Carmen McRae - I'm Coming Home Again (2020)

  • 01 Oct, 03:19
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Artist:
Title: I'm Coming Home Again
Year Of Release: 1978 / 2020
Label: Solid Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue, log, artwork) / MP3
Total Time: 1:20:54
Total Size: 497 / 211 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

DISC 1
01 I'm Coming Home Again (04:20)
02 Burst In With The Dawn (04:36)
03 I Need You In My Life (04:00)
04 Come In From The Rain (04:20)
05 I Won't Last A Day Without You (07:09)
06 Won't Cha Stay With Me (06:11)
07 Mr. Magic(Part 1) (04:58)

DISC 2
01 Everything Must Change (08:57)
02 Sweet Alibis (04:54)
03 The Masquerade Is Over (04:46)
04 I'd Rather Leave While I'm In Love (04:40)
05 Mr. Magic (Part 2) (14:10)
06 New York State Of Mind (07:46)

Carmen McRae always had a nice voice (if not on the impossible level of an Ella Fitzgerald or Sarah Vaughan) but it was her behind-the-beat phrasing and ironic interpretations of lyrics that made her most memorable. She studied piano early on and had her first important job singing with Benny Carter's big band (1944), but it would be another decade before her career had really gained much momentum. McRae married and divorced Kenny Clarke in the '40s, worked with Count Basie (briefly) and Mercer Ellington (1946-1947), and became the intermission singer and pianist at several New York clubs. In 1954 she began to record as a leader' and by then she had absorbed the influences of Billie Holiday and bebop into her own style. McRae would record pretty steadily up to 1989 and, although her voice was higher in the '50s and her phrasing would be even more laid-back in later years, her general style and approach did not change much through the decades. Championed in the '50s by Ralph Gleason, McRae was fairly popular throughout her career. Among her most interesting recording projects were participating in Dave Brubeck's the Real Ambassadors with Louis Armstrong, cutting an album of live duets with Betty Carter, being accompanied by Dave Brubeck and George Shearing, and closing her career with brilliant tributes to Thelonious Monk and Sarah Vaughan. Carmen McRae, who refused to quit smoking, was forced to retire in 1991 due to emphysema. She recorded for many labels including Bethlehem, Decca (1954-1958), Kapp, Columbia, Mainstream, Focus, Atlantic (1967-1970), Black Lion, Groove Merchant, Catalyst, Blue Note, Buddah, Concord, and Novus. ~ Scott Yanow

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  • dhann
  •  04:45
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Thanks so much for this one! (We have a different, abbreviated version of this album which is missing many of the tracks here.)