Sarah Partridge - I'll Be Easy to Find (2019)

  • 17 Nov, 10:13
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Artist:
Title: I'll Be Easy to Find
Year Of Release: 1998 / 2019
Label: USA Music Group
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:12:11
Total Size: 332 / 166 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Great Scot (03:29)
2. My One And Only Love (05:31)
3. Any Place I Hang My Hat is Home (04:14)
4. I'll Be Easy To Find (03:43)
5. Norwegian Wood (03:09)
6. Love Look Away (03:57)
7. Black Coffee (06:06)
8. Kiss and Run (03:38)
9. About a Quarter to Nine (03:10)
10. Small Day Tomorrow (05:22)
11. Don't Call It Love (02:48)
12. One For My Baby (03:51)
13. Bourbon Rain (04:09)
14. Something Cool (04:42)
15. I Got a Right to Sing the Blues (05:35)
16. Street of Dreams (04:40)
17. Moonshine Lullaby (04:05)

It is quickly obvious (after hearing a chorus or two of this fine CD) that Sarah Partridge is a first-class jazz singer. It is not that she completely remakes the material, but she has lived the songs enough to make most of them sound as if they written for her. Partridge (based in New York) has a strong voice, is able to scat effectively and, even when singing the words fairly straight, adds constant creativity to her recording debut. Perhaps the Beatles' "Norwegian Wood" and "Black Coffee" did not need to be revived but the singer's versions of such tunes as "Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home," the always-delightful "About a Quarter to Nine" (first sung by Al Jolson), "Something Cool" and "Street of Dreams" are memorable and fresh. In addition, she performs a fine sampling of obscurities including a new song ("Bourbon Rain") by Los Angeles pianist-arranger Dick Shrieve. Partridge is accompanied by a few overlapping small groups that include pianist Tony Monte, sometimes Bucky Pizzarelli or Gene Bertoncini on guitar and Frank Wess on tenor and flute. Recommended.

Review by Scott Yanow