Kaylene Peoples - All Jazzed Up! (2005)

  • 20 Sep, 13:12
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Artist:
Title: All Jazzed Up!
Year Of Release: 2005
Label: Boogsey Music
Genre: Vocal Jazz
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 01:01:27
Total Size: 401 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. One Note Samba
02. Do You Remember?
03. My Favorite Things
04. Funny Valentine
05. Run Away with Me
06. How Insensitive
07. Lush Life
08. Nearness of You
09. Girl from Ipanema
10. Good Morning Heartache
11. Once I Loved
12. My Only Crime
13. Wives & Lovers

Jazz vocalist Kaylene Peoples must have been in a nostalgic mood when she made All Jazzed Up! The 13-track CD has a strong lineup of beloved standards, including “My Funny Valentine” and “Lush Life,” creating late-night jazz club vibe. The album also has a healthy dose of bossa nova tunes, with several numbers from the songbook of Antonio Carlos Jobim. Three original songs round out the CD. Peoples has a big five-octave range that floats above the instruments. This airy quality is especially well-suited for the breezy bossa nova numbers that are never too far away. She kicks off the album with Jobim’s “One Note Samba.” She makes the song sound effortless, interjecting a quick scat as well as a nice flute solo. Another example of this is on “Girl from Ipanema.” She manages to make the well-traveled song her own, with the addition of a lengthy and fitting instrumental solo.”One Note Samba” leads into the original “Do You Remember?” The warm ballad sounds like it could have come off of an old Nancy Wilson or Gloria Lynne album.Peoples then demonstrates her interpretive skills with a jazz treatment of “My Favorite Things.” She is accompanied on the CD by guitarist Rich Mouser and the Peoples Republic Trio.Another track worth mentioning is Hoagy Carmichael’s “Nearness of You.” Here, Mouser’s acoustic guitar and Peoples’ vocals work beautifully together on the slow, gentle start. Peoples then kicks it into high gear, upping the tempo before slowing it down again for the ending. She seems to have made an effort to make sure that the songs have a strong beginning and end, a quality that is missing from many productions today.