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(Vocal Jazz,Smooth Jazz,Crossover Jazz) Clare Teal - Hey Ho! - 2011, MP3, 320 kbps

Clare Teal / Hey Ho! Жанр: Vocal Jazz,Smooth Jazz,Crossover Jazz Год издания: 2011 Аудиокодек: MP3 Тип рипа: tracks Битрейт аудио: 320 kbps Продолжительность: 00:57:13 Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: нет Треклист: 01. If Love Were All 02. One More (Baby Be Good To Me) 03. Why 04. It’s Not Unusual 05. The Sally Gardens 06. Love Is the Sweetest Thing 07. Whole (It Isn’t Like Me) 08. Care Of Cell 44 09. Try A Little Tenderness 10. Chasing Cars 11. Sing It Back 12. He Was Beautiful 13. A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square 14. We'll Gather Lilacs   Об исполнителе (группе) Growing up in a tiny village near Skipton in Yorkshire, England, a young Clare Teal was unlike many other teens of 1980s. Resisting the charms of Simon Le Bon and unmoved by the pleadings of Nik Kershaw, Teal spent her time in the attic listening to her Nan’s 78s "I was obsessed with the singers of the 30s, the 40s and 50s." Trained as a child in the Organ, Piano and Clarinet, Clare Teal went on to study Music at the University of Wolverhampton. Upon graduation she entered a national competition to find the country’s best Billie Holiday soundalike, in which she came second. One of Clare’s first jobs was writing jingles "I'd write these jingles, and then sing them in the manner of Julie Andrews, Madonna, my old favourite Billie Holiday and, well, anybody, really," she recalls. "They were singing telegrams, effectively, and it was actually a lot of fun.” At 27, fate then stepped in. A pianist she had met years earlier during her Billie Holiday episode called, requiring a singer to perform alongside him for one night only and wondering whether Clare would be interested. It proved to be the night of her life, where everything suddenly felt natural and right. "This was my toe in the door of the industry," she says, "and I was going to make the very best of it." This entailed making a selection of demos, guesting with various jazz bands, playing locally and losing a lot of money. But she was nevertheless gradually making a name for herself, and people were beginning to take notice. In 2001, she inked a deal with independent label Candid, for whom she wrote and recorded three albums, ‘That's the Way It Is’, ‘Orsino's Songs’, ‘The Road Less Travelled’ Clare signed with the Sony Jazz label in 2004, which spawned what would become her breakthrough album ‘Don't Talk’, an exquisite record of tender jazz that perfectly exemplified just what a talent she was. Critical acclaim poured in from the broadsheets and magazines. ‘Don't Talk’ topped the British jazz charts and cracked the UK Top 20, shipping 60,000 copies and winning several awards. Clare’s fifth studio album ‘Paradisi Carousel’ saw the music move towards a more mainstream pop style, however in 2008 Clare embraced a return to her first love - jazz with the release of 'Get Happy’ on the Universal imprint W14 Music. Alongside her music, Clare has a successful career in broadcasting, presenting Clare Teal, Sunday night at 10pm and Big Band Special, Monday night at 11pm for Radio 2. She also contributes a weekly column to her beloved Yorkshire Post. Clare made a welcome return to recording in 2011 with her tenth album ‘Hey Ho’ a celebration of The Great British Songbook, spanning a period of almost 120 years from Yeats to Snow Patrol and including two of her own compositions. She also appeared at the Royal Albert Hall during the Proms, appearing with the John Wilson Orchestra and singing, amongst others, "Secret Love" to great acclaim. Clare won British Jazz Singer of the year in both 2005 and 2007, and BBC Jazz Singer of the Year 2006.     Об альбоме (сборнике) This tenth album from Clare Teal grabs its title from a line in the opening song, from Noel Coward’s 1929 Operetta “Bitter Sweet.” The song is “If Love Were All,” and its opening lines are: “I believe in doing what I can | Crying when I must, laughing when I choose | Hey ho, if love were all, I would be lonely.” So it’s a shrug, a resignation to reality. And it’s in these bittersweet, melancholy songs that Ms. Teal really shows off. I can’t think of a better lyrical interpreter working today, and the really cool part is that she makes it seem so effortless. It’s more like she’s bending herself around the lyrics, rather than bending the lyrics to her will. The songs themselves come from a wide variety of sources – ranging from Yeats’ 1890s poem, “(Down By) The Salley Gardens,” through a track first recorded by the pop-rock “Zombies” in the sixties, “Care Of Cell 44,” and a Latin-tinged “It’s Not Unusual,” which remains true to the sixties sound, if not the tempo of the original. I am particularly fond of that track, along with an up-tempo version of Ray Noble’s “Love Is The Sweetest Thing,” another 1930s cover. The arrangements by Grant Windsor, who also performs as a pianist, are delightfully surprising. Then again, I’m never surprised at being delighted by the work turned in by Ms. Teal and the musicians with whom she surrounds herself. Доп. информация: http://www.clareteal.co.uk/
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