Product Details
I Heard It on NPR: Ladies Jazz It Up

I Heard It on NPR: Ladies Jazz It Up
Various Artists

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


18 new or used available from $6.19

Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Embraceable You - Sarah Vaughan
  2. Love Me or Leave Me - Anita O'Day
  3. Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You - Massimo Fara�
  4. It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) - Ella Fitzgerald
  5. Some Other Spring - Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra
  6. Don't Go to Strangers - Etta Jones
  7. Teach Me Tonight - Dinah Washington
  8. Best Is Yet to Come - Carmen McRae
  9. But Beautiful - Shirley Horn
  10. Inner City Blues - Carla Cook
  11. Say It (Over and Over Again) - Karrin Allyson
  12. I Love Being Here with You [Live] - Diana Krall
  13. Almost Like Being in Love [Live] - Dee Dee Bridgewater, Marian McPartland, Massimo Fara�

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #76980 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-05-09
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

4 1/2 An Exquisite Introduction5

NPR put together this ravishing collection of female jazz singers, and they've doena an admirable job. It features 15 singers, and is more of a sampler than a historical document; Peggy Lee gets as much attention as Billie Holiday--they're each allotted one track each. Still, it's a superb introduction to these jazz vocalists, most of them considered the very best in the genre, with a few newcomers as well. Many of the songs share an emotional base of blues, regret, and other love-wrought musings, but there's enough variety to steer clear of easy stereotyping. Highlights include Sarah Vaughan's opening "Embraceable You" (1954; Sassy at her best, with Clifford Brown on trumpet); the understated but powerfully expressive styles of Carmen McCrae and the late Shirley Horn, and a very sensual, teasing rendition of "Teach Me Tonight," by the great Dinah Washington.

While I wish the producers had chosen a different quintessential Billie Holiday song, and the final duet of Nancy Wilson and Dee Dee Bridgewater is almost embarrassing in its forced "we-still-can-sing-can't-we-grrl" tone, the album delivers rich surprises as well. These include Diana Krall's fast-paced vocal on "I Love Being Here with You," Ms. Anita O'Day, whose Vaughan-like sound was a personal revelation, and Carla Cook doing justice to Marvin Gaye's hard-hitting, tough/beautiful "Inner City Blues (Makes Me Wanna Holler)." Inevitably, any listener will complain of omissions, but for the price, the quality of the recordings, and the variety of styles, this is one of the best single-disk collections you'll find.