Liane Carroll - Seaside - Jazz Views
A new recording by Liane Carroll is always a most
welcome event for all lovers of great vocal jazz. It was always going to be a
difficult task to surpass her last two offerings "Up And Down" and
"Ballads", but this has been easily achieved and then some. This
multi award winning singer and pianist is one of the brightest stars in the
jazz firmament. She is highly emotive on ballads and can roar with the best as
well. Totally inhabiting a song is what Liane is about. There is never any
sense of insincerity about what she does, you always feel she means
every word personally.
The producer on this recording is the highly
proclaimed and Grammy Award nominated James McMillan who also contributes on
six separate instruments during the session. The albums
main theme is a reflection of the leaders childhood days in Hastings and
her love of everything to do with the sea and coastline. On this album she has
chosen to play piano on only four of the ten tracks , leaving space for the
talents of Malcolm Edmonstone and the superb Brighton
born pianist Mark Edwards.
The album opens with the title track
"Seaside" a wonderfully emotional ballad by Joe Stilgoe. This look
back at a childhood on the shoreline should bring back memories to all who hear
it. The use of Andy wood's euphonium in the mix gives an aural sepia
feel to the sound and even reflects the family photographs inside the cd cover.
Liane accompanies herself using time and space to full effect at slow tempo
before winding up the delivery to torch song levels before the close. A brief
up tempo version of the great standard "Almost Like Being In Love" in
trio format follows with Ian Thomas driving things forward on drums.
A scat unaccompanied vocal is the highlight here before the verse is repeated
to close.
"Bring Me Sunshine" is evocative of
Saturday night tv with Morecambe and Wise in the seventies, but the
style of delivery is one of yearning for times long forgotten. A wonderful
rendition of the song, enhanced further by Mark Edwards exquisite piano solo.
An adventure into the world of Led Zeppelin is next, a fine gospel tinged blues
by Jimmy Page and Robert Plant "Nobody's Fault But My Own" which
introduces the tenor of Partisans front man Julian Siegel. Liane's voice
interweaves with the saxophone to extract the full meaning of the compelling
lyrics.
The recording stays in a melancholy mood with the desperate plea to "Get Me Through
December" another lament where the full vocal range is used with mature
and stunning effect blending towards the end with Mark James acoustic guitar.
The subject matter does not lighten and uses the full octet to underpin the
mournful words composed by Mary Gauthier on "Mercy Now" a song
concerning the death of a father and a brother's fear. Once again the
vocal is of the highest quality and delivered with the greatest passion. A more
tender and relaxed approach is found on Ned Washington's "Wild Is The
Wind" which contains fine piano from Malcolm Edmonstone along with the
flugelhorn of James McMillan.
Liane projects a fully personal approach
in duet with Robert Luft's guitar on "I Cover The Waterfront", a song
much loved by Billie Holiday, where the mood is lighter and swings more easily
than previous versions. The classic "My Ship" composed originally by
Kurt Weill is an album highlight where Ira Gershwin's great lyrics are given
the full emotional treatment at half tempo before the
performance segues into a high octane but well controlled scat interlude
until the piano returns the song to it's roots.
A version of the traditional hymn "For Those
I Peril On The Sea" closes the album and reminds us of the the overall
subject matter of the recording. Here the words are sung respectfully, but with
jazz phrasing highlighted by the burnished sound of the producer's flugel horn
to finish.
This is a wonderful album by one of our greatest
jazz talents so full of quality and diversity. I doubt if there will be a
better vocal based recording issued anywhere this year.