Ed Reed - Born To Be Blue (2011)

  • 30 Jan, 16:03
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Artist:
Title: Born To Be Blue
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Blue Shorts
Genre: Vocal Jazz
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:58:34
Total Size: 332 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Old Country (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana, Anton Schwartz)
02. Born To Be Blue (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana, Anton Schwartz)
03. Inside A Silent Tear (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana)
04. Throw It Away (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana, Anton Schwartz)
05. All My Tomorrows (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana, Anton Schwartz)
06. End of A Love Affair (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana, Anton Schwartz)
07. She's Funny That Way (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana)
08. You're Looking At Me (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana)
09. Some Other Time (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana, Anton Schwartz)
10. Kiss and Run (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana, Anton Schwartz)
11. Monk's Dream (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana, Anton Schwartz)
12. How Am I To Know (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana)
13. Wee Baby Blues (feat. Randy Porter, Robb Fisher, Akira Tana, Anton Schwartz)



Ed Reed joins fellow West Coasters Art Pepper and Frank Morgan in returning to a critically acclaimed career previously derailed by substance abuse. After 40 years of scuffling, Reed cleaned up, became a chemical dependency treatment professional and began recording in earnest. Reed has released two recordings, Love Stories (Self Produced, 2007) and The Song is You (Blue Shorts Records, 2008), each well-received and now followed up by Born To Be Blue, featuring a youthful and upbeat take on Jon Hendricks' vocalese treatment of Thelonious Monk's "Monk's Dream."

Reed has a unique voice, not overtly powerful but nuanced and experienced. He navigates Hendricks' circuitous phrasing without unnecessary tonal alteration, singing with straight grace and confidence. Pianist Randy Porter and tenor saxophonist Anton Schwartz turn in blazing solos, angular and curious in a hot sort of way. Reed reenters, cooling things off in the coda—the complete professional. This is refined vocal jazz that only a lifetime can produce.