Product Details
Chanson du Vieux Carre

Chanson du Vieux Carre
Harry Connick Jr.

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Track Listing

  1. Someday You'll Be Sorry
  2. Panama
  3. Ash Wednesday
  4. Chanson du Vieux Carré
  5. Bourbon Street Parade
  6. Petite Fleur
  7. Fidgety Feet
  8. Luscious
  9. New Orleans.
  10. I Still Get Jealous
  11. That's A Plenty
  12. Mardi Gras in New Orleans

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #36701 in Music
  • Released on: 2007-01-30
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
For Harry Connick, Jr. and the members of his big band, New Orleans has always been a constant state of mind. Connick's hometown, the birthplace of so much of America's musical culture, defines all of his performances, but never more so than on Chanson du Vieux Carré, the third disc in the Marsalis Music label's Connick on Piano series. The album was conceived and executed in May 2003, well before Hurricane Katrina, and showcases Connick's talents as a pianist, arranger of favorite New Orleans classics, and composer of three titles in debut performances. While Connick does not sing on the recording, key band members Lucien Barbarin (trombone) and Leroy Jones (trumpet) do. Chanson du Vieux Carré is a Crescent City love letter, composed two years before the deluge yet never timelier. The album will be released on January 30, 2007, the same day Columbia Records issues Connick's vocal tribute Oh, My NOLA. A portion of Connick's royalties from both discs will benefit New Orleans Habitat Musicians' Village.

Amazon.com
As a Sinatra-molded swinger, Harry Connick, Jr. may have had some of his thunder stolen by young star Michael Buble. But with his raved-about performance on Broadway in Pajama Game and his continuing development as a jazz pianist, he's doing quite nicely, thank you. Chanson du Vieux Carre is one of two new simultaneously released big band tributes to his hometown of New Orleans by him. Released on Marsalis Music, it is a largely instrumental big band session divided between originals and classics that shows off his writing and arranging skills while featuring his longtime trumpeter Leroy Jones and trombonist Lucien Barbarin on incidental vocals. (Connick is in full vocal mode on Oh, My Nola, released by his longtime "A" label, Columbia.) Though his surprisingly few turns at the piano are mostly Basie-like in their edgy economy, his coloristic, sectional approach on tunes such as his own "Luscious" and Hoagy Carmichael's "New Orleans" evokes Duke Ellington. Named for the storied old section of the French Quarter, the album takes a few songs to get going, but once it does, it has plenty of spark and swagger--and heart. The ghostlike background voicings on Sidney Bechet's "Petite Fleur" seem to embody spirits of New Orleans past while it's always great to hear Connick honor his onetime mentor, Professor Longhair, on Longhair's bumptious "Mardis Gras in New Orleans." --Lloyd Sachs


Customer Reviews

A very nice album, a bit of a departure from previous releases...4
I am pleased that I bought this album. I think that the arrangements are fresh and interesting. And the tracks with vocals (by band members, not Harry) are really fun. I enjoy being introduced to new songs, and this album delivers.

Sweet Sessions4
This album presents a fantastic blend of big-band and funky New Orleans jazz. A great tribute to the city of that gave birth to it all. Not all of the arrangments shine, but there isn't a bad recording on the disc---all in all, a joy.

big band sounds of new orleans3
a collection of standard and non-standard arrangements that remind HCJ of New Orleans. The journey of the album seems to bring about an eclectic view of a city built beneath the sea. Nice in the background while working.