"Body and Soul" is a popular jazz song featured on Billie Holidays album with the same title. "Body and Soul" was written in New York City for the British actress and singer Gertrude Lawrence. It was first performed in London by her. It was first published in England. Libby Holman introduced it in the U.S. in the 1930 Broadway revue Three's a Crowd. Louis Armstrong was the first jazz musician to record "Body and Soul". The tune grew quickly in popularity, and by the end of 1930 at least eleven groups had recorded it. "Body and Soul" remains a jazz standard, with hundreds of versions performed and recorded by dozens of artists.
Billie's accompanied by Ben Webster (Tenor Sax); Barney Kessel (Guitar); Harry "Sweets" Edison (Trumpet); Jimmy Rowles (Piano); Red Mitchell (Bass); and Larry Bunker (Drums). Recorded January 7th, 1957 (20507-1).
Tony Bennett recorded the classic pop standard Body And Soul, with Amy Winehouse at Abbey Road Studios in London March, 2011. The duet proceeds will be donated to her charity "The Amy Winehouse Foundation."
One of the most famous and influential takes was recorded by Coleman Hawkins and His Orchestra on October 11, 1939, at their only recording session for Bluebird, a subsidiary of RCA Victor. The recording is unusual in that the song's melody is only hinted at in the recording; Hawkins' two-choruses of improvisation over the tune's chord progression constitute almost the entire take. Because of this, as well as the imaginative use of harmony and break from traditional swing cliches, the recording is recognised as part of the "early tremors of bebop". In 2004, the Library of Congress entered it into the National Recording Registry
To this day, "Body and Soul" is the most recorded jazz standard.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Billie Holiday - Body And Soul (Verve Records 1957)
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, December 31, 2013 0 comments
Farid Ali aka Mr Gambus/ One note samba
Farid Ali concert at the Dewan Philharmonic Petronas April 21st 2008
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Labels: Farid Ali
S'pore jazz guitarist Farid Ali dies in KL
The Sunday Times
Tuesday, Dec 31, 2013
SINGAPORE- Veteran Singapore jazz guitarist Farid Ali died yesterday evening at a hospital in Kuala Lumpur, where he has been based since 1993.
Details of the exact cause of his death are unclear, but Farid is said to have had a history of kidney problems and also lost his hearing at one point. He was 50.
Tributes to Farid, who has performed at international music festivals and also fronted progressive blues band Pacific Rim before leaving for Malaysia, were posted on social media platforms.
In a post on his Facebook page yesterday evening, home-grown jazz pianist-composer Jeremy Monteiro called Farid's death "a huge loss to the Singapore and Malaysia music scene".
Speaking to The Sunday Times, Monteiro, who had worked with Farid for 20 years, said: "By 6.45pm, I started getting phone calls and SMSes from people who knew him well.
"I'm still in shock actually."
While attempts to reach Farid's family were unsuccessful, Monteiro said his friend was able to recover only part of his hearing in the last two years after undergoing an operation.
"He was determined to start performing again. That was how dedicated he was to music," he added.
Many in the music industry have fond memories of Farid who, they say, was warm, gracious and deeply passionate about music.
He had done the rounds at jazz festivals in the United States and Europe and picked up several awards along the way, such as the best arranger award in the Curacao International Song Festival in 1988.
Read more: http://news.asiaone.com/news/showbiz/spore-jazz-guitarist-farid-ali-dies-kl
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Charles Mingus: Abroad, 1964
Reprinted from http://jazzwax.com
In the spring of 1964, bassist Charles Mingus was on tour in Belgium, Norway and Sweden with alto saxophonist Eric Dolphy, pianist Jaki Byard, tenor saxophonist Clifford Jordan, drummer Danny Richmond and Johnny Coles on trumpet. Here's Jazz Icons: Charles Mingus Live in '64 (you can buy the DVD here)...
- See more at: http://www.jazzwax.com/2013/12/charles-mingus-abroad-1964.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Jazzwax+%28JazzWax%29#sthash.Aw8o9nIK.dpuf
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Balkan Brass Meets Gypsy Jazz Guitar
Take the crossroads encounter behind Devil’s Tale, where the eastern force field of Balkan brass meets Gypsy Jazz guitar, as Romania's Fanfare Ciocarlia joins up with Canadian guitarist Adrian Raso. Fanfare Ciocarlia are a 24-legged brass beast whose eastern funk groove has torn up halls and festivals across the planet. Raso is a master guitarist, deeply versed in the French Manouche / Gypsy Jazz stylings of Django Reinhardt. Could a string musician find a way into Fanfare's fierce Balkan brass blast? Could the legends of brass adapt their horns to the fluid eloquence of a jazz guitarist? The answer, as heard on this album, is one of brilliant defiance.
Adrian Raso has dreamt of this project for years. The gifted guitarist possesses a vast musical vocabulary rooted in Gypsy Jazz yet, in his fleet fingers, capable of referencing metal, Latin, funk and his family's Italian tarantella roots. Raso built his virtuoso reputation playing Toronto's toughest clubs as a teenager. More than two decades later he remains on a musical quest that demands he challenge himself. The quest lead to him reaching out to Fanfare Ciocarlia - the Romany Gypsy orchestra from the "invisible" village of Zece Prajini in north eastern Romania - who blast a fierce, very individual brand of Balkan brass. Both Raso and Fanfare share a love of Django and big band jazz but initial concerns surrounded whether their very different backgrounds would allow for a common musical dialogue to ensure.
"Meeting the band was a great experience," says Raso. "We bonded instantly. We joked about being separated brothers as it really did feel like that. Musically we understood each other from the get go."
Fanfare Ciocarlia are the world's greatest Balkan brass band. When a band is at the top, the undisputed heavyweight champion, they have two options: either get lazy and repeat themselves or seek out new challenges. Fanfare Ciocarlia are hungry men and, having seen too many Balkan brass bands descend into the farce of playing-standards-too-fast or allowing tone deaf DJs to exploit them as decoration over a lame electronic beat, they chose to broaden Balkan brass's vocabulary. Meeting Adrian Raso gave Fanfare the perfect musical foil.
Across several chilly Toronto days the Romanians and the Canadian came together. Raso called in several heavy friends to contribute to sessions. These included legendary guitarists John Jorgenson and Rodrigo (of Rodrigo & Gabriela) and rock drummer Kevin Figueiredo (of Extreme). This album - reaching down to New Orleans, across the Atlantic to Paris, deep into the Balkans and back through decaying Detroit to Toronto's grandeur - is the result. Raso's guitar sets off on a fluid journey, caressing and cajoling the horns who tell tales of a music that has ancestors in Africa and India, one shaped in old Europe and young America.
Spread the word - here is magic that might charm even jaded old Mephistopheles!
Read more: https://www.storyamp.com/dispatch/5232/9NBloqWFV_ud81-exbeu2A?storyamp_track=1032
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, December 31, 2013 0 comments
Labels: Adrian Raso
Adam Smale is one of the serious devotees…
“Standing strong in the field of “Jazz”… Adam Smale is one of the serious devotees… an exciting new voice on the scene …take notice!” – Pat Martino
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, December 31, 2013 0 comments
Labels: Adam Smale
Monday, December 30, 2013
Jazz Musician of the Day: Danilo Perez
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Alberta Hunter, in -My Handy Man-, Live, 1981
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Jazz Images ....
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, December 30, 2013 0 comments
Teaching Democracy Through Jazz, Perfecting Party Playlists
by NPR STAFF
December 27, 2013 6:07 PM
The online magazine Ozy covers people, places and trends on the horizon. Co-founder Carlos Watson joins All Things Considered regularly to tell us about the site's latest feature stories.
This week, Watson tells host Arun Rath about a teacher using jazz to educate young students about democracy and a site that could spruce up the playlist for New Year's Eve parties this year.
The Jazzy Side Of Government
"Dr. Wes Watkins grew up in Oakland. There was good music all around him, but he was never a musician himself. [He] made his way to Stanford and Oxford, ultimately got a Ph.D. in music education. And along the way ... he realized that the structure and the improv nature of jazz was not dissimilar from democracy and that in fact you needed both. ... He realized that there was an opportunity to teach junior high school and elementary school students who normally got bored at talk of things like democracy more about it by using principles of jazz."
Read 'America the Bebop' On Ozy.com
Read more: http://www.npr.org/2013/12/28/257672489/teaching-democracy-through-jazz-perfecting-party-playlists?ft=1&f=1049
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, December 30, 2013 0 comments
2014 preview: Art, music and dance travel in from Buffalo, Boise and beyond
By Ray Mark Rinaldi
The Denver Post Fine Arts Critic
Follow us: @Denverpost on Twitter | Denverpost on Facebook
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, December 30, 2013 0 comments
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Billy May in 'Nightmare' (1956)
Reprinted from http://jazzwax.com
Normally you find a Weekend Wax Bits in this space. Today, something a little different: a link sent along by reader John Cooper. It's Nightmare, a film noir with Edward G. Robinson and Kevin McCarthy. The music is by bandleader-arranger Billy May, with an on-screen cameo by Meade Lux Lewis on piano and May on trumpet and several lines by May about "lousy progressive arrangements." Get out the popcorn...
- See more at: http://www.jazzwax.com/2013/12/billy-may-in-nightmare-1956.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Jazzwax+%28JazzWax%29#sthash.Qy4rjCxd.dpuf
Used with permission by Marc Myers
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NPR Music
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A BLOG SUPREMEA History Of Phone Calls With Yusef Lateef
The late jazz multi-instrumentalist, a bluesy experimentalist, was known for his soulful, internationally flavored music. He died Monday at 93. For one struggling photographer, he was also close counsel for more than a decade.
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MARIAN MCPARTLAND'S PIANO JAZZGerald Wilson On Piano Jazz
Wilson is a bandleader dedicated to the infinite possibilities of jazz. Hear a 2006 session.
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MUSIC INTERVIEWS'Together Again' With Wynton Marsalis, 20 Years Later
Celebrated jazz pianist Marcus Roberts is releasing three albums simultaneously. One is a 12-movement suite titled From Rags to Rhythm. The other two are collaborations with the now-famous trumpeter who helped launch his career.
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MUSIC REVIEWSMichele Rosewoman Goes Back To Afro-Cuban Jazz's Future
You could look at Rosewoman's New Yor-Uba band as reuniting cousins who've drifted apart: jazz and folkloric Cuban music with its own family ties to the slave coast of West Africa.
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Posted by jazzofilo at Sunday, December 29, 2013 0 comments
Saturday, December 28, 2013
June Fest lineup: Diana Krall, Steve Winwood, Tony Bennett and Trombone Shorty
Stewart Oksenhorn
stewart@aspentimes.com
December 27, 2013
Last summer, Jazz Aspen Snowmass wowed music fans with the lineup for its 23rd annual June Festival. The program featured headliners Jackson Browne, the Tedeschi-Trucks Band and the duo of Ben Harper and Charlie Musselwhite. Many pointed out that the roster of acts was more in line with Jazz Aspen’s Labor Day Festival, which tends toward styles of music with mass appeal. Just as many pointed out that the June Festival didn’t offer a whole lot of jazz.
This June, Jazz Aspen seems likely to wow listeners again — this time with sounds that are a lot closer to jazz. The headliners include Diana Krall, Tony Bennett and Trombone Shorty, all acts firmly rooted in jazz. Rounding out the lineup is Steve Winwood, the keyboardist and singer who came out of British classic rock.
The main portion of the June Festival is set for June 19 through 21, with headline shows in the Benedict Music Tent and two additional music stages as part of the free lawn party outside the tent. Bennett will perform June 28 in the tent in a show co-presented by the Aspen Music Festival. There also will be a series of small-venue performances at the JAS Cafe in the Little Nell hotel.
Tickets for the June Festival will go on sale Jan. 6 through the Jazz Aspen box office and the Belly Up box office. Tickets for Bennett will go on sale Jan. 6 at the Aspen Music Festival box office.
The festival opens June 19 with Trombone Shorty, who played on the main stage at the Labor Day Festival in 2012. The band is led by Troy Andrews, a trombonist and trumpeter who got his start playing in street brass bands in his hometown of New Orleans. In recent years, Trombone Shorty and his band, Orleans Avenue, have added funk, rock and hip-hop to their sound; guests on his past few records include Kid Rock, Lenny Kravitz, the Meters and Jeff Beck.
Krall will make her first Aspen appearance since 2006 on June 20. In past shows in Aspen, dating back to her local debut in 1999 in a Snowmass Village club, the singer-pianist has given her take on the traditional jazz piano combo. Her new show is built around the 2012 album “Glad Rag Doll,” which had Krall experimenting with new sounds and arrangements as she interpreted songs from the 1920s and ’30s.
Read more: http://www.aspentimes.com/news/ticker/9496790-113/june-jazz-aspen-festival
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, December 28, 2013 0 comments
Mis-education at 'twerk: Where shall we go?
Though some of us had made a lot of money producing pop (more were owed money), over time we developed a phobia, which has made it extremely painful to even participate in the creation of the songs/drivel that we were then expected to produce for record companies. Additionally, music had also reached a plateau of simplicity, which allowed a moderately talented 15-year-old child to produce the same results. This meant that we were now competing with a few hundred 15-year-olds who would sign any contract and produce any song for $1,000!
I remember talking with my friend, who is a well-known producer, at great length concerning the direction that things were headed and deciding that something had to be done. Like the Titanic, the industry desperately needed a change in direction.
Fortunately (or unfortunately) shortly after this conversation the entire music industry imploded, which made the choice of finding an alternative much easier. Many blamed this implosion on mp3s and song sharing, but I to this day hold the incessant pedaling of an inferior product to the public responsible. You can only tell somebody that the turd in their hand is actually gold for so long…
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/entertainment/music/Mis-education_at_twerk_Where_shall_we_go_.html#emMX8DbCXqUdrSM3.99
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, December 28, 2013 0 comments
Maynard Ferguson Big Bop Nouveau Band
- You Got It
- Caravan
- Sweet Baba Suite
- It Don't Mean A Thing
Maynard Ferguson - trumpet, flugelhorn, leader
Scott Englebright - trumpet
Carl Fischer - trumpet
John Roberts - trumpet
Tom Garling - trombone
Matt Wallace - saxophone
Chris Farr - saxophone
Mike Willmers - piano
Phil Palombi - bass
Phil Maturano - drums
10. Internationale Jazzfestival Viersen, Germany, September 9, 1996
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Labels: Maynard Ferguson
Early Stan Kenton on Film
Back in the 1940s, when radio, record company and movie studio efforts began to merge, shorts were viewed as a highly strategic way to promote bands in movie theaters before feature films came on. Here's a series of short films made with Stan Kenton...
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, December 28, 2013 0 comments
Labels: Stan Kenton
Friday, December 27, 2013
A Jazz Pianist Gets His Big Break — At Age 85
December 09, 2011 3:59 PM
Photo:Brendan Bannon
Back in the 1930s, Boyd Lee Dunlop taught himself to play music on a broken piano left out on the streets of Buffalo, N.Y. Only half the keys worked.
He also taught his little brother Frank to play the drums while they were growing up. Frankie Dunlop went on to record with Thelonious Monk and Charles Mingus, among other jazz greats. Boyd Lee Dunlop went to work in the steel mills and rail yards of Buffalo, occasionally playing piano at local clubs.
Another chance encounter with a busted piano has now led Boyd Lee Dunlop to record and release his first album, at the age of 85. Brendon Bannon, a documentary photographer by trade, is the album's producer.
"We met when I went into the nursing home where Boyd's living, in Buffalo, to talk to the doctors there about doing a photo project. Boyd was sitting down in the waiting area also, and we struck up a conversation really quickly," Bannon says. "He told me about his piano playing and invited me down to the cafeteria to listen to him play. I looked at the piano, and there were keys broken off of it ... It didn't look well. But Boyd was wrestling some beautiful sounds out of it."
Here, Weekend Edition Saturday host Scott Simon speaks with Bannon and Dunlop about Dunlop's debut album, Boyd's Blues.
Read more: http://www.npr.org/2011/12/10/143388964/a-jazz-pianist-gets-his-big-break-at-age-85
film by Jon R. Hand -- 1st two songs from The Boyd Lee Dunlop Concert, 12.10.11, Buffalo NY // The Boyd Lee Dunlop Trio - Boyd Dunlop (piano), Sabu Adeyola (bass), and Virgil Day (drums).
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, December 27, 2013 0 comments
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Wallace Roney and His Mission to Record and Perform Wayne Shorter's Long-Lost "Universe"
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, December 27, 2013 0 comments
Labels: Wallace Roney
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Renowned Czech jazz critic dies at 89
December 17, 2013 11:46 AM
PRAGUE (AP) — Lubomir Doruzka, a renowned Czech music critic who led his readers through the world of jazz in the turbulent 20th century, has died. He was 89.
Doruzka's son Petr confirmed his Monday's death to Czech public radio, where Doruzka had a regular jazz show.
Born March 18, 1924, Doruzka first wrote about jazz for an underground magazine during World War II when Czechoslovakia was occupied by Nazi troops and jazz coming from the American enemy was banned.
After 1948 Communist takeover, Doruzka gave Czechs a chance to read the literature of the Jazz Age with his translations of F. Scott Fitzgerald.
He published a number of jazz and pop music books and helped create Prague's International Jazz Festival and International Jazz Federation.
Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/renowned-czech-jazz-critic-dies-89-164601477.html
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, December 26, 2013 0 comments
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Gerry Gibbs releases new jazz album
Drummer Gerry Gibbs named his band Thrasher Dream Trio and often refers to the trio as his dream band. The band also includes Rob Carter and Kenny Barron.
Dreams did come true when it comes to Gibbs, he is living his life playing music with his good friends and making hit albums that jazz fans love. Following their passion and success the band is back with another release.
Gibbs has just released their latest album, Thrasher Dream. The album features a variety of jazz covers which include, pianist Herbie Hancock's "The Eye of the Hurricane," Thelonious Monk's "Epistrophy" and "The Shadow of Your Smile."
These covers are standout tracks off of Thrasher Dream.
Read more at http://thecelebritycafe.com/reviews/2013/12/gerry-gibbs-releases-new-jazz-album#TQJPtWBCpEVIolUG.99
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, December 26, 2013 0 comments
Labels: Gerry Gibbs
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
How TV Sabotaged Racism
Reprinted from http://jazzwax.com
Radio's greatest achievement in the late 1940s and early 1950s may have been its ability to narrow America's racial divide. As independent radio stations flourished after World War II and the wattage of radio towers grew more powerful, young listeners had access to all types of music. Favorite records weren't chosen based on the race of musicians but whether or not the music knocked them out. With the rise of R&B during these years—an offshoot of jazz that filled the dance vacuum that bebop, cool and hard bop left unfilled—teens found an exciting form that suited their energy levels and drove their parents nuts. [Pictured above: Johnny Maestro and the Crests]
In the 1950s, television picked up where radio had left off, subversively educating a national audience on the extraordinary gifts of black and Latino musicians and further erasing the lines between blacks and whites. TV didn't set out to liberate American minds but, over time, TV did play a significant role in loosening the country's racial knot. The more Americans saw blacks, Latinos and whites interacting on TV—laughing, performing and acting together—the more likely they were to challenge segregation's place in society and oppose racial injustice.
While TV didn't operate in this capacity with a plan or a manifesto, white musicians along with white actors, writers and producers did begin a conscious effort to accelerate the frustratingly slow pace of desegregation by creating opportunities for black performers and exposing audiences to what they already believed—that all artists should be judged by the quality of their contributions, not their race.
I was thinking about TV's role the other day while riding a crosstown bus in New York. The more I thought about it, the more I wondered whether it was possible to create a list of TV shows and performers who did the most to chip away at America's way of racial thinking in the 1950s and '60s. These would be '50s shows I had heard about as a kid and the shows I actually watched in the 1960s that influenced my own thinking as I grew up.
Dinah Shore and Ray Charles (1963)—This one from reader Bob Stumpel features Shore resting her hand on Ray Charles' shoulder, which triggered headlines at the time...
- See more at: http://www.jazzwax.com/2013/12/how-tv-sabotaged-racism.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Jazzwax+%28JazzWax%29#sthash.sPW3bfJ5.dpuf
Used with permission by Marc Myers
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, December 25, 2013 0 comments
Yusef Lateef dies at 93; Grammy winner blended jazz, world music
By Don Heckman, Special to the Los Angeles Times
December 24, 2013, 7:27 a.m.
Yusef Lateef, a Grammy Award-winning multi-instrumentalist, composer and educator who brought the sounds of world music to jazz and became one of the first jazz musicians to convert to the teachings of Islam, has died. He was 93.
Lateef died Monday at his home in Shutesbury, Mass., his family announced.
Lateef initially was best known as a dynamic tenor saxophonist with a big tone and a strong sense of swing. But his persistent creative and intellectual curiosity led him to the discovery of an array of other instruments as well as a fascination with various international forms of music.
He was an early advocate for the flute as a credible jazz voice. And his performances on the oboe as early as the '50s and '60s were definitive – and rarely matched – displays of the instrument's jazz capabilities. He searched the globe for more exotic instruments, while mastering, among others, the bamboo flute, the Indian shenai, the Arabic arghul, the Hebrew shofar and the West African Fulani flute.
Tall and shaven-headed, his powerful presence offset by a calm demeanor and the quiet, articulate speaking style of a scholar, Lateef combined thoughtfulness and a probing intellectual curiosity with impressive musical skills. Early in his career, he established his role as a pathfinder in blending elements from a multiplicity of different sources.
His first recordings under his own leadership, released on the Savoy label in the mid-'50s, already revealed a fascination with unusual instruments: In addition to tenor saxophone and the flute, he also plays the arghul. Several of Lateef's original compositions on those early albums also integrated rhythms and melodic styles from numerous global musical forms.
"In any given composition," wrote Leonard Feather in The Times in 1975, "there may be long passages that involve classical influences, impressionism, a Middle Eastern flavor, or rhythmic references to Latin America."
Like a number of musicians – from Duke Ellington to his contemporaries, Max Roach and Sonny Rollins – Lateef objected to the use of the word "jazz" to describe his work. He preferred, instead, the phrase, "autophysiopsychic music," which he defined as "music which comes from one's physical, mental and spiritual self."
He also acknowledged the importance of the blues, in his music and elsewhere.
"The blues," he said in an NPR interview in 2003, "is a very elegant musical form which has given birth to wonderful compositions. I recognize the blues. In fact, if the African had not been brought to America as a slave, the blues would never have been born."
http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-me-yusef-lateef-20131225,0,7549278.story#ixzz2oUjrFwWC
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, December 25, 2013 0 comments
Labels: Yusef Lateef
Jazz Music Images ....
More: ca.news.yahoo.com 24 hours ago
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, December 25, 2013 0 comments
Jazz Singer Kate Ross Releases Debut CD
Jazz singer Kate Ross is launching her debut CD, titled People Make the World Go Round, on January 4, 2014 at the Sidebar Restaurant. “Releasing the CD is the fulfillment of a dream for me,” says Ross, whose distinctive contralto voice has been a feature of the Columbus, OH Jazz scene for about three decades. “I’m also realizing another dream, – making my songwriting debut. I’ve co-written the track, Kate’s Song, which tells the story of my life.”
Ross has led an eventful life. Diagnosed with Degenerative Disc Disease (DDD) in the 1970s, she has battled pain and occasional depression throughout her career. Her indomitable spirit has helped Ross rise above the disease to work, sing and successfully raise her two daughters as a single mother.
Working on the CD has been very therapeutic for Ross, who hopes that other people coping with physical and mental challenges will find the same solace in music she has. “I’ve always seen music as magical and enchanting; I just didn’t know how healing it would be,” she says. “I hope to share that gift with others through my CD.”
Ross’s fans will recognize the CD’s title track as her signature tune. It was originally performed by the Stylistics and was written by Thom Bell and Linda Creed. One of the reasons for including it is to honor the contribution of the many friends and family members who have helped her achieve her dream. “No-one achieves anything alone,” she says.
Read more: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2013/12/prweb11436022.htm
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, December 25, 2013 0 comments
Labels: Kate Ross