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(Vocal Jazz) Ian Shaw - A Ghost In Every Bar - 2012, WEB, FLAC (tracks), lossless

2007 BBC Vocalist of the Year Ian Shaw - A ghost in every bar Жанр: Vocal Jazz Год издания: 2012 Издатель (лейбл): Splash Point Records Номер по каталогу: SPR014CD Аудиокодек: FLAC (*.flac) Тип рипа: tracks Битрейт аудио: lossless Продолжительность: 50:59 Источник (релизер): WEB Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: нетТреклист: 1. Feet Do Your Stuff 2. Only Why No More 3. Small Day Tomorrow 4. Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most 5. In a New York Minute 6. Love Go Round 7. In a Matter of Moments 8. Down 9. Nothing Is Mine Now 10. Scars 11. Stranger 12. Killing Time 13. Noir 14. Nothing Lasts Forever 15. Ballad of the Sad Young Men  Лог проверки качества AUDIOCHECKER v2.0 beta (build 457) - by Dester - opdester@freemail.hu~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=== DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE! ===-Path: ...\Ian Shaw - A Ghost In Every BarThe Lyrics of Fran Landesman (2012)01 -=- 01 - Feet Do Your Stuff.flac -=- CDDA (100%)02 -=- 02 - Only Why No More.flac -=- CDDA (100%)03 -=- 03 - Small Day Tomorrow.flac -=- CDDA (100%)04 -=- 04 - Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most.flac -=- CDDA (85%)05 -=- 05 - In a New York Minute.flac -=- CDDA (99%)06 -=- 06 - Love Go Round.flac -=- CDDA (94%)07 -=- 07 - In a Matter of Moments.flac -=- CDDA (100%)08 -=- 08 - Down.flac -=- CDDA (99%)09 -=- 09 - Nothing Is Mine Now.flac -=- CDDA (100%)10 -=- 10 - Scars.flac -=- CDDA (100%)11 -=- 11 - Stranger.flac -=- CDDA (100%)12 -=- 12 - Killing Time.flac -=- CDDA (94%)13 -=- 13 - Noir.flac -=- CDDA (100%)14 -=- 14 - Nothing Lasts Forever.flac -=- CDDA (100%)15 -=- 15 - Ballad of the Sad Young Men.flac -=- CDDA (87%)Summary 97,20% CDDA120478548  Об альбоме  AllAboutJazzIan Shaw's warm and evocative voice, Fran Landesman's superb lyrics and music from some of her best collaborators: A Ghost In Every Bar has them all. Put it another way: on A Ghost In Every Bar one of the finest singers in contemporary music interprets some of the greatest songs of the last 50 years. If either—or both—of those descriptions sound like hype, that's OK; sometimes the hype hits the nail on the head.Landesman was born in New York in 1927, moved with her family to London in 1964 and died there on July 23, 2011. Around the mid-'80s a young Shaw was in a band called This Bed with Landesman's son. Miles. Shaw and Landesman met and became friends, while Shaw went on to develop his solo career and to record and perform many of Landesman's songs. While artists including Ella Fitzgerald and Barbra Streisand have recorded their own versions, Shaw's direct, emotionally honest, and very personal interpretations are the benchmark.On A Ghost In Every Bar Shaw performs songs which Landesman wrote with three of her many collaborators: Tommy Wolf, her first writing partner, who she met in '50s St Louis; singer and writer Bob Dorough; and British composer/pianist Simon Wallace, who accompanies Shaw on most of this album's songs. The singer has recorded some of these songs before—most notably "Scars," on Somewhere Towards Love (Splash Point Records, 2009), and the title track of In A New York Minute (Milestone, 1999) (with Cedar Walton)—but this album features new versions recorded in April, 2012.Dorough co-wrote "Small Day Tomorrow," a joyous anticipation of the night before a day with nothing to do. Shaw sings his bluesy take on the song with obvious relish. Wallace was one of Landesman's final co-writers, collaborating between 1994 and 2011 on around 400 compositions. Twelve of his collaborations are on this album, including four ("Stranger," "Killing Time," "Nothing Lasts Forever" and "Noir") that have not previously been recorded. Shaw's performances of "Only Why No More" and "Scars" are heart-rending, while "Feet Do Your Stuff" and "Down" manage to be both cynical and funny at the same time.Wolf wrote the music for what are probably Landesman's two best known songs: "Ballad of the Sad Young Men" and "Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most" (apparently a jazz response to T. S. Elliot's assertion that "April is the cruelest month"). Shaw captures the sadness of both lyrics, heightening the emotion through a dignified approach which never asks for pity. The melancholy of "Ballad of the Sad Young Men" is emphasized by Sue Richardson's flugelhorn, which echoes Shaw's vocal.Landesman's stories have a universal emotional resonance. All human life is here, presented by a masterly vocalist with an empathic understanding of the lyrics. It's not always easy to listen to a Landesman song, but it's always worthwhile. Shaw ensures that the experience is a life-affirming one. (Bruce Lindsay)  Jazzwise MagazineFran Landesman (1927-2011) will forever be associated with the two songs, now standards, she penned with Tommy Wolf in the 1950s: ‘Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most’ and ‘Ballad Of The Sad Young Men’. In fact, Landesman’s most fruitful creative partnership came in the latter part of her life when she joined forces with pianist and composer Simon Wallace in 1994. And it’s their songs, of which they penned over 400 in a 17-year period, that make up the meat of this 15-track anthology.Recorded by some of the jazz greats including Ella Fitzgerald and Betty Carter, Landesman confessed towards the end of her life how tired she was of hearing ‘Spring’ until she heard Ian Shaw sing it. High praise indeed. Given that imprimatur, and with her co-writer Wallace in the piano chair (for the most part), it would be no exaggeration to say that the interpretations of A Ghost In Every Bar are definitive. Shaw is brilliantly insightful in every song, whether it’s the salutary caught-with-your-pants-down tale of ‘Feet Do Your Stuff’, the slacker anthem ‘Small Day Tomorrow’, or the confessional ‘Scars’ (the song Landesman was most proud of). The quartet of previously unrecorded songs is an unexpected treat, from the slow, slightly disquieting tread of ‘Stranger’ (‘I was never someone normal, I was always a surprise’) to the bittersweet ‘Nothing Lasts Forever’, one of three tracks in which Shaw assumes piano duties. Oh, and his take on ‘Spring’, beautifully accompanied by Wallace, really is quite brilliant. (Peter Quinn)  СоставIan Shaw - vocals, piano (6, 7, 12) Simon Wallace - piano Sue Richardson - flugelhorn (15)
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