Showing posts with label Norma Winstone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norma Winstone. Show all posts

Thursday, November 24, 2011

CD Review: Mike Gibbs - Here's a Song for You

Mike Gibbs - Here's a Song for You
(Fuzzy Moon FUZ005. CD Review by Chris Parker)


Given suitably responsive musicians (here the NDR Big Band) and a versatile singer (Norma Winstone), there are few composer/arrangers as reliably inventive in the field of song-setting as Mike Gibbs.

He was first paired with Winstone by Colin Towns for the latter's Provocateur label, and on this album's sleeve Gibbs describes the UK vocalist as 'extraordinarily extraordinary – who else so effortlessly delights, as if magic were a common ingredient', so it is no surprise to find that this album – a judiciously selected mix of standards and material by contemporary singer/songwriters, plus a Gibbs original, 'Some Shadows', including a transcription of a Kenny Wheeler solo – simply exudes class and elegance.

It begins, appropriately enough (Gibbs having collaborated with the great Canadian songwriter on her double album Don Juan's Reckless Daughter), with one of the most affecting versions of a Joni Mitchell song ever recorded. Winstone brings all her easy grace and touching sincerity to 'Blue', one of Mitchell's most introspective songs, but it is the subtle delicacy of Gibbs's arrangement, gently embellished by pianist Vladislav Sendecki, that immediately arrests the ear. Gibbs then ups the tempo for one of Cole Porter's most heart-on-sleeve proclamations of undying devotion, 'So in Love', and subsequently moves easily between Ellington material (a rousing 'Caravan', an absorbing visit to 'Daydream'), standards and more contemporary songs (Tom Waits's thought-provoking 'Soldier's Things', Nick Drake's 'Riverman', Randy Newman's 'I Think It's Going to Rain Today'), all featuring his characteristic layered, delectable harmonies and impeccably performed by a whip-smart, robust but sensitive band, its powerful rhythm section British (bassist Dave Whitford, drummer Mark Mondesir), its stellar soloists including trumpeter Reiner Winterschladen and tenorman Christof Lauer.

Gibbs praises executive producer Issie Barratt for 'tackling the formidable task of translating my jumbled ideas into the reality of a CD', but don't be fooled by his customary modesty: this is a carefully thought out programme by a master craftsman.

Fuzzy Moon Records

Monday, November 7, 2011

LJF Preview: London Vocal Project - Wednesday 16th Nov, St James's Piccadilly



Pete Churchill writes about the forthcoming London Vocal Project concert with Norma Winstone, in the London Jazz Festival,  (Wednesday 16th November, 7. 30pm, St James's Piccadilly)

The performance on Wednesday 16th November at St James's Piccadilly will be a unique opportunity to hear Kenny Wheeler’s settings of poetry by Stevie Smith, W.B. Yeats and Lewis Carroll – all performed by this amazing ensemble of twenty-four voices, the London Vocal Project – probably now the leading contemporary jazz vocal ensemble in the UK.

BACKGROUND
It was back in September 2009 that the London Vocal Project first performed Kenny Wheeler’s ‘Mirrors’ Suite at the Vortex Club. Norma Winstone was the featured soloist. This performance was reviewed by LondonJazz.

Now, more than two years later, there is a rare chance to hear us perform this great song cycle of Kenny’s one more time, as part of the 2011 London Jazz Festival. It has been fantastic for us to revisit this music after two years. This time Kenny Wheeler himself will be there - joining Norma Winstone, Mark Lockheart and an A-team rhythm section (Nikki Iles, Steve Watts and James Maddren) to perform what is clearly a major, as yet unrecorded, suite for voices.

It was whilst preparing for our concert with Bobby McFerrin in May 2010, that we realised that we would have to memorize everything if we wanted to move our singing to the next level – and so we have taken this approach with Kenny’s suite… it really helps.

The result is more eye contact, more listening and a better blend. Kenny’s music is somehow both demanding and yet extremely singable - and, like all great music, it repays many fold the hours of detailed rehearsal that we have devoted to it.


THE LONDON VOCAL PROJECT

The relationship between jazz and choral music has always been tenuous - but I have always felt that jazz composers would love to write more for voices if they could only be assured of a group of singers with the right sensibility for the music. Issues of phrasing and sound are always cropping up and can lead to unsatisfactory performances of potentially great works. I am sure that a lot of pieces have quietly been shelved after only one unsuccessful performance.

The London Vocal Project was formed in an attempt to remedy this situation. Its members are largely made up of Jazz singers or Jazz instrumentalists and, as a result, they are able to bring a certain understanding of style to everything they do. Such rhythmic assuredness and harmonic awareness are unusual in a choir and they are able to approach each project with certain essential things already in place. We meet once a week for between two and three hours, scheduling extra sectionals when necessary, and we even try to get away for a week every summer - just to get deeper inside all the music we do… and I think it pays off.

The secret of our cohesiveness is that LVP is more than a choir – it is a meeting place for people who have found that they like to spend time together. And I believe that the music we make benefits from this sense of community… all the eating, drinking, baking, laughing and crying we do together is reflected in how we sing as an ensemble. In a world where people seem to be trying to spend less time together, it is a rare thing to find an ensemble that have invested so much time – regular time – in each other.

ST JAMES'S PICCADILLY

The Christopher Wren church of St James's Piccadilly feels like it was built for the sound of voices – and the stones have echoed with the sounds of many choirs over centuries past. The sounds of Kenny Wheeler’s ‘Mirrors’ suite on the 16th November will be new and fresh in that space and I know they will linger in the air long after we are gone.

Check your diaries, and come and share in this great event with us.

Pete Churchill

London Vocal Project website / Tickets (£15/ £12 concessions)

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Round-Up: Georgia Mancio's ReVoice! Festival

Georgia Mancio (photo by Brian O'Connor)

ReVoice! Festival
(Pizza Express, Dean Street. Thursday 6th to Friday 14th October. Round-up by Zena James.)


All credit once again to popular vocalist and innovator Georgia Mancio for achieving sell-outs and a genuine sense of international teamwork throughout her second annual (we hope) ReVoice! festival at Pizza Express Dean St earlier this month.


Norma Winstone and Klaus Gesing (photo by Dave Ohm)

Following the rousing opening night featuring a true first, a striking duet between Georgia and electric bassist and composer, Laurence Cottle and sealed with the ever-flawless, inventive and much-loved doyenne Norma Winstone, came one of the hippest highlights of this nine-day, 37-artist celebration. Gregory Porter, the hugely engaging baritone jazz singer fast making a name for his intense originals, chose against the odds to treat his audience to the full-on energetic soul of a pure Motown opener, Way to Harlem. You can’t find it on I-Tunes yet but the song is already on the list for his planned second release in 2012, featuring mix of swing, soul, R&B, gospel and “a lot about love, family and life”.

But pure jazz lovers didn’t have long to wait. Already well-served by Georgia’s nimble opening jazz set with pianist Nikki Iles, Porter’s audience relished a rich-toned compelling Skylark, one of the best versions I’ve heard. Wayne Shorter’s Black Nile from Porter’s current much-acclaimed album Water brought his raw energy to the fore as he almost physically propelled an already incredibly powerful rhythm section of Geoff Gascoyne, Grant Windsor and Dave Ohm. Outstanding full-pelt solos from saxophonist Ben Castle and trumpeter Graeme Flowers made this an exhilarating start to a set that never faltered.

Gregory Porter (photo by Brian O'Connor)

Irresistible tones of 70’s and 80’s pop-soul singers were present throughout and easily as prominent as the smooth Nat King Cole sound he is so frequently credited with.

The highlight was Be Good, a beautifully written and perfectly delivered ballad about “a woman who broke my heart”, the title track of his next album. It was upstaged only by his magical signature tune Illusion and the high-energy political soul anthem single, 1960 What? A great start to the weekend.

Sachal Vasandani (photo by Cat Munro)

And the treats kept coming. Following a scat-collaboration and whistle –off on Sunday between Georgia and guitarist Jim Mullen, the American vocalist Sachal Vasandani, a mentee of Jon Hendricks, played an almost continuous sophisticated and slick set for an entire hour without pause.

Kenny Wheeler, John Taylor and Diana Torto (photo by Dave Ohm)

Monday saw Italy's newest diva, Diana Torto, who fronted trumpet legend Kenny Wheeler's new and remarkable Something Else quartet for two popular nights. This was one of Georgia’s personal favourites, as well as a tearjerker, in her own duo set, of a piano solo on In My Life by James Pearson, which she admits would have rendered her soundless has she not been on stage with him…

Barbara Raimondi & Roberto Taufic (photo by Dave Ohm)

Wednesday’s magic was Contigo en la Distancia led by Italian vocalist, Barbara Raimondi, with Brazilian guitarist, Roberto Taufic, and UK-based Italian percussionist and drummer, Enzo Zirilli. Their musical painting of Latin America showcased Raimondi's wonderful sense of rhythm and passionate delivery.

Brian Hanlon (photo by Dave Ohm)

Georgia and monthly Dean St bassist Michael Janisch brought subtlety and gentleness to Thursday’s audience, which gave way to a dynamic groove-laden set again featuring Janisch alongside sax maestro Nigel Hitchcock, exciting young pianist Ross Stanley and led by Irish-American singer/guitarist Brian Hanlon.

The week closed with a double bill of sheer class as Georgia and Ian Shaw opened the show with easily their most impressive and entertaining collaboration to date. Highlights were a moving Alone Again Naturally (Gilbert O' Sullivan), an outstanding vocally dexterous multi-tempo/multi-feel Willow Weep For Me and a rousing bi-lingual treatment of a favourite of these longstanding friends and collaborators, Bowie’s Life on Mars.

David Linx (photo by Dave Ohm)

And so to the very eagerly anticipated Belgian singer and composer David Linx, with his award-winning Dutch pianist and collaborator of 20 years, Diederik Wissils. Steeped in classical influence and with incredible agility, this was a bold presentation of 8 originals, from dark, almost sinister ballads to high-speed percussive scat-fests reminiscent of Bobby McFerrin. Always commanding and very physically expressive, yet locked reflectively inside the melody and lyrics, he is at once both showman and introvert, quirkily original and somehow quite incomparable. The touching Proper Shelter, featuring Wissels extraordinary classical talents and the closing I’m Going Home were notable high points; yet judging by the reaction at Dean St, it won’t be long before he’s invited back to the UK…perhaps by Georgia….

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Review: Norma Winstone at the Oxford Jazz Festival


Norma Winstone, Klaus Gesing, Glauco Venier
(Randolph Hotel, April 24th 2011,part of Oxford Jazz Festival, review by Paul Guest, photo credit: Barker Evans)

  
My first encounter with Norma Winstone in concert was at the London Jazz Festival in November last year. I remember that I had been apprehensive beforehand, but that her trio's performance had dramatically changed my perspective: music which I hadn't known at all had brought me the same feelings of contentment as the renewal of an old friendship.

Now I find myself in Oxford to hear their beautiful music once more, as part of the Oxford Jazz Festival. You couldn’t have had a more perfect day, with Oxford basking in the sunshine. I decided to arrive at the Randolph Hotel early to get the feel of the venue, to take stock of the audience before the concert began.

In London I had been greeted by a wealth of young people. I wanted to know whether this transcended to the Oxford Jazz scene: Not really. I sat in the bar waiting and all I saw was grey hair after white hair, but then, late - as ever - a flock of young professionals came through the doors, thank god!

On first impressions, the venue was dire; it was the room where I would have had my sixth birthday party with a cheap DJ, party balloons and probably a twister mat: Yes, my parents were that cruel to me. Not that I’m a usual jazz goer but the seating seemed much too formal, I really wanted to be in a dark room with the spotlight on Norma; you know, something much more intimate, because that is how I feel when I listen, like Norma’s best friend, it can be very personable.

“I wear flats for the sound check and heels for the gig” Norma said while adjusting her mic. The music began, instantly I had disappeared into a world of just the music; the venue that I hated didn’t matter; the damn photographer snapping photographs in front of me didn’t matter.

Norma Winstone, Klaus Gesing and Glauco Venier are a trio matched in heaven; they can read each other like books and they also create beautiful music but not only do they create music but they give you story, a journey. That journey begins from the very first note and only ends at complete silence. Gesing’s well-placed harmonic lines slyly become the second voice with his beautiful velvety notes from either the bass clarinet or soprano sax that acted so versatile throughout the performance. Venier on the piano becomes a master of his craft visibly using both eyes and ear to deliver a compilation of chord, melody and décor; he gives the piano some touch love. When Norma Winstone starts to sing the flower blossoms, the Barbra Streisand of Jazz; her beautiful lyrics combined with her sublime vocal colour of a deep red transport you from reality to another world; far away, somewhere unknown; you feel the floor disappear beneath you.
The programme was a mixture of work from the trio’s most recent album “Stories Yet To Tell” and the previous “Distances”.

During a chat with Norma she told me “I never remember the order… I didn’t even realise we were going to perform ‘Mermaid’… it just felt right, right key, right time” – It shows just how lost Norma is in the music too. Renditions of ‘Just Sometimes’, ‘Among the Clouds” and a personal favourite “Goddess” all portrayed immense beauty. Norma sings into the microphone as it if were a delicate rose. ‘Rush’ is most haunting, beautiful too.

Even the incredibly technical improvisations and the mass of talented, articulate scat singing that split up the trio’s softer songs came together to create something so perfectly infectious, in fact I found it really overwhelming. During the improvisation you had to search through a jungle of notes to find the melody- appropriately like a musical egg hunt.




I’ve read things about Norma that suggest she has found success late in the game; I disagree, her voice has matured into something of great beauty and almost like finding your soul mates, she has found two perfect musical partners in Venier and Gesing.

The magic of their music is that the Piano, Voice and Saxophone coalesce into one, one self, one existence.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Review: Duncan Lamont 80th Birthday Celebration



Duncan Lamont 80th Birthday Celebration
(Leicester Square Theatre, part of Art of Song Festival, 15th April 2011, review by Frank Griffith. Photo credit: Roger Thomas )


Duncan Lamont is a rare bird. A jazz tenor sax player who writes lyrics. Good ones. His songs accomplish that elusive target of a happy marriage between music and lyrics. His lyrics are often in homage to great American song titles and places. He follows in the tradition set by Kern, Gershwin, Ellington, Mandel, Dearie and Bricusse,et al.

His role at this concert - in the inaugural Art of Song Festival - was a wide-ranging one: narrator, introducer, general cheerleader, and celebrant of his own birthday (actual date 4th July). The nineteen songs, performed by three of the UK's finest, Tina May, Lee Gibson and Norma Winstone, were the true stars of the show. There were some suites, of sorts, in the way of a New York Medley (four songs at the outset) and an equally charming triptych of Kenny Wheeler songs with lyrics by his longtime collaborant and friend, Duncan.

Lee Gibson was first out of the blocks, tall and elegant, bedecked in a glitteringly dark long gown. Her somewhat veiled and smoky voice is offset by her ability to dramatize and excite. Her rendition of "52nd Street" (NYC's famed Bebop 1940s locale) was delivered with a cultured ease and understatement - she knows precisely how to put an audience at its ease.


Next up was Tina May (bove), also fully gowned up with a streak of glitter highlighting a bold yet subtle bracelet on her left wrist which shone and resonated throughout the large theatre much like her mane of beautiful blonde hair that only helped to set the scene for her equally stunning singing to follow. Her treatments of "Where were you in April" and "Hymm for Jobim" were a testament to unfettered poise and poetry with her honeyed voice and crafting.




Longtime collaborator of Duncan's, the eminent Norma Winstone, sporting a springlike melange of reds and yellows in the form of a dress adjoined by a welcome bright red jumper wooed the audience with her tender readings of three Kenny Wheeler songs lyricised by Duncan. She was joined by the great composer himself, who while needing assistance alighting and dismounting the stage proved the point that "Doctor Footlights" has amazing powers as, once the flugelhorn touched his lips, beautiful, healthy and impassioned music poured forth. Wheeler's songs brought about a nice compositional change of seasons with their harmonic richness and searching melodicism wedded with Lamont's words.




Vocalist David McAlmont lent the evening a distinctive contrast with his reading of "The darker side of the rainbow" - dedicated to Judy Garland - showing off his shining falsetto voice. Not to be outdone in the fashion stakes either, his tempered brown suit also included a hint of glitter (red tie in this case) and went well with his poised, touching and simply brilliant delivery of this haunting song. Resembling what could have been a young Billy Strayhorn, this was clearly a high point of the evening with echoes of 1950s New York or Paris cafe society culture.

Many plaudits to the trio led by pianist, Brian Dee, an ideal accompanist with his lyrical and understated manner. His ability to guide the singers through these challenging songs while keeping a steady and comforting eye on his rhythm boys poses the question- who says men can't multitask?


Bassist to the stars, Chris Laurence, has played with nearly everybody and as his performance demonstrated, no surprise there. His accompanying is full of a dancing melodicism that never overextends or interferes but in fact colours the backdrop in his unique and flavoursome fashion. This is equally balanced with solid time and and his role as chief executive of all things in the "nether regions" (basso profundo) of the ensemble.

The ebullience and professionalism of veteran drummer, Les Cirkel is always evident when he takes the throne. "Driving the bus" as they say, at an even keel while goading and sparking soloists throughout providing a necessary pinch of drama and excitement.




Duncan Lamont already had his hands full with compering, etc, so his melodic and sometimes quirky tenor sax solos were a tremendous bonus. He is a true Rennasaince Man- tenorist, composer, lyricist and imminent octogenarian. Long may he, his singers and music thrive. And may the Art of Song Festival - imaginatively programmed by Joe Paice and Dave Shepherd - return stronger in years to come.

Tina May has an upcoming CD with the Frank Griffith Big Band on the HEPJAZZ label entitled "Holland Park Non Stop".