Jason Palmer - Sweet Love - Jason Palmer Plays Anita Baker (2019)
Artist: Jason Palmer, Domi Degalle, Max Ridley, Lee Fish
Title: Sweet Love - Jason Palmer Plays Anita Baker
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: SteepleChase
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:14:30
Total Size: 438 / 171 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Sweet Love - Jason Palmer Plays Anita Baker
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: SteepleChase
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:14:30
Total Size: 438 / 171 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Fairy Tales
02. Sweet Love
03. Same Ole Love (365 Days of the Year)
04. Body and Soul
05. Caught up in the Rapture
06. Giving You the Best That I Got
07. No One in the World
08. Angel
Personnel:
Jason Palmer (trumpet)
Domi Degalle (piano)
Max Ridley (bass)
Lee Fish (drums)
Sweet Love: Jason Palmer Plays Anita Baker is the final installment in a trio of albums trumpeter Palmer has recorded during the past seven years on which he’s paid tribute to great female soul and r&b singers. The first was a 2012 nod to Minnie Riperton, which was followed in 2015 by his bow to Janelle Monáe.
If you’re a fan of the Baker songbook, then this record—which includes classics like “Sweet Love,” “Giving You The Best That I Got” and “Body And Soul” (no, not the jazz standard)—will hit the right pleasure nodes. But even if you aren’t too familiar with her oeuvre, the album still is worth seeking out. Palmer and his group are dutiful in the best sense of the word—they respect the source, but make each track their own. The trumpeter is also accompanied by an ace rhythm section: pianist Domi Degalle, bassist Max Ridley and dexterous young drummer Lee Fish, whose funky rhythms bring to mind a New Orleans snare player. For the most part, this is a joyful album that reminds you of something the late Roy Hargrove might have put out 10 years ago—Earfood, for example. But to paraphrase an Anita Baker tune, the album will bring you joy.
If you’re a fan of the Baker songbook, then this record—which includes classics like “Sweet Love,” “Giving You The Best That I Got” and “Body And Soul” (no, not the jazz standard)—will hit the right pleasure nodes. But even if you aren’t too familiar with her oeuvre, the album still is worth seeking out. Palmer and his group are dutiful in the best sense of the word—they respect the source, but make each track their own. The trumpeter is also accompanied by an ace rhythm section: pianist Domi Degalle, bassist Max Ridley and dexterous young drummer Lee Fish, whose funky rhythms bring to mind a New Orleans snare player. For the most part, this is a joyful album that reminds you of something the late Roy Hargrove might have put out 10 years ago—Earfood, for example. But to paraphrase an Anita Baker tune, the album will bring you joy.