And what about Singers ? |
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dionisio
Forum Newbie Joined: 16 Aug 2011 Location: Bucharest Status: Offline Points: 20 |
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Posted: 16 Aug 2011 at 4:43pm |
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I hope that i didnt miss someone talking about this already, if so, tell me !
So, and what about singers? I have to admit it, the scat thing, or jut the great voices, they really get to me. So this is my top three: Ella Fitzgerald, she really doesn't need an introduction right? Still, her version of How High the Moon, i could listen to it in loop for hours http://youtu.be/T8Ji4uG4cac this version is as good as the live in berlin one, and she sings a bit of bossa on her solo ! And i have to admit that her humor is a big influence on myself while improvising. O Nosso amor vai ser assim, o nosso amor vai ser assim ! Jon Hendricks, for me the king of scat, different from ella, different from pops, different from everybody else, first of all he does not have a 'beautiful voice' i mean, its not a sinatra, its not a clear thing, its something like a bluesy, whiskey kind of voice, bt damn.. believe me he can sing high, and he's known as the only one that all the other musicians trusted to put lyrics on musics such night in tunisia or translating the O Pato from Joćo Gilberto. And to not forget his work lambert and ross on the trio Lambert, hendricks & Ross ( in this one there is no scat.. bt try to sing that, and then youll see ! http://youtu.be/sgr17FfnxtI there is some weird sounds on the beginning bt it doesnt affect the song.. damn youtube users ahah) Maria Joćo, and now something from portugal.. if you dont know her already you really should, some critics call her the portuguese monk (the meredith, not the thelonious), because of her experiments with her voice while improvising, she is really gifted, and when it comes to improvising she is really inspiring. http://grooveshark.com/#/s/H+Gente+Aqui/33vMb7?src=5 and http://www.musicme.com/#/Maria-Jo%C3%A3o/titres/Modern-Mode---I'm-Old-Fashioned-t1782287.html?play=0602517897830-01_06 what about you, what singers inspire you? |
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js
Forum Admin Group Site admin Joined: 22 Dec 2010 Location: Memphis Status: Offline Points: 35206 |
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I like Cool singers, Chet Baker, Peggy Lee, etc.
Billy Holiday is nice too. I also like those old school blues shouters like Big Joe and that guy who was always with Count Basie. Moving into RnB I like ensemble vocals like EW&F and Parliament, also individuals like Stevie Wonder, Prince, Marvin Gaye, Otis Redding etc.
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Sean Trane
Forum Senior Member Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Brussels Status: Offline Points: 789 |
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I'm not big on sung jazz...
Sure Satchmo and Ella have their merits, but I must say that I much prefer instrumental jazz...
this said, the main exception I'd make is Norma Winstone.... her works in the late 60's and early 70's wxas incredible
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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1966 |
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I also prefer instrumental jazz. However I enjoy the little Ella Fitzgerald I've heard. Louis 'Satchmo' Armstrong has his place of course, made some classics of music; not just jazz. What A Wonderful World has been a favorite since I was a child.
Richard Bona's stuff kinda makes me laugh (in a good way), only because I have no idea what he's singing; it's in some African (?) language. The music is somewhat jazz-funk, with some World Music influence. Edited by darkshade - 16 Aug 2011 at 5:42pm |
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Kazuhiro
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Yes. I think that the Black Coffee of Peggy Lee is a wonderful tune. Or, Ann Burton is recommended.
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idlero
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Louis Armstrong at any time of day and night, Billie Holiday, Nina Simone and Nat King Cole from the old guard.
Diana Krall, Madeleine Peyroux, Lizz Wright, Malia from the 'young' generation |
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I think the problem with a lot of the fusion music is that it's extremely predictable, it's a rock rhythm and the solos all play the same stuff and they play it over and over again ...
Ken Burns |
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idlero
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I forgot Abbey Lincoln
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I think the problem with a lot of the fusion music is that it's extremely predictable, it's a rock rhythm and the solos all play the same stuff and they play it over and over again ...
Ken Burns |
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dwill123
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Joe Williams
. .
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Moshkito
Forum Groupie Joined: 15 Aug 2011 Location: Vancouver, WA Status: Offline Points: 42 |
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Hi,
Sadly, for my ears, most of the singing in jazz is done to add melody to the music ... and I'm not sure I have found, or heard a single singer, male or female, that could be said to really be singing "jazz" per definition ... since that would mean it is all improvised and free form, and in general, you would only find it in performance ... since in "pure" and "true" jazz, you can't really duplicate what you just did ... might get near it, but what was done, is done and gone, and this minute is different than the next minute.
While I can appreciate Ella and Flora and so many others, in many ways, they added "pop" to the definition of jazz in my book, and while they were very good, the music behind them was not really jazz.
Although the music is hardly "jazz", one can even check out Lisa Garrard doing her thing with Klaus Schulze, and in many ways that free form-ness is much more "jazz" flavored, even though it is rock/electronic done, than a lot of the jazz singers out there, that again, to my ear, are simply adding melody to the counter melody part of the music. Edited by Moshkito - 25 Aug 2011 at 5:01pm |
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Cannonball With Hat
Forum Senior Member VIP Joined: 10 Apr 2011 Location: The Opium Den Status: Offline Points: 1212 |
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Don't mean to sully the thread, but I too perfer my jazz without vocals. In fact, of all genres and types of music jazz (and jazz related things) is my least favorite type of music to contain vocals, and IMVHO it rarely works out well, espeically for the music. Now I'm sure in the vast world of jazz somewhere it does, but I'm not wading through it all to find it. |
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Hit it on Five.
Saxophone Scatterbrain Blitzberg Stab them in the ears. |
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1966 |
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Try Ella Fitzgerald. She uses her voice as another instrument, and does some pretty complex stuff sometimes (not to mention her band(s) are phenomenal). |
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Abraxas
JMA Collaborator Joined: 10 Mar 2011 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 1251 |
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I know very few jazz with vocals, but someday I will start to listen some of the already mentioned classics.
In the less "popular" jazz field, you got Leon Thomas who also uses his voice as another instrument with his superb yodelling. I love his album Spirits Unknown and Known. Tania Maria has a fine voice. Jobim's voice is heaven-like.
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darkshade
Forum Senior Member Joined: 09 Mar 2011 Location: New Jersey Status: Offline Points: 1966 |
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yea I gotta say, of the jazz with vocals that I know, it is like .001% of my collection. I'm not expert on the subject.
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Sean Trane
Forum Senior Member Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Location: Brussels Status: Offline Points: 789 |
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sung jazz like Cab Calloway, Bing Crosby, Satchmo Armstrong, Elle, Billie, Bessie, or even that Sinatra mafia twit work wonders for the music and the type of music it is... I mean it's made for for it... It's mainlu big-band music written with vocals
But it's definitely not my cup of tea, that's all.
Where I find it (vocals) really doesn't do justice to the music is in post-65 jazz and JR/F
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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....
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idlero
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I think the problem with a lot of the fusion music is that it's extremely predictable, it's a rock rhythm and the solos all play the same stuff and they play it over and over again ...
Ken Burns |
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dwill123
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Matt
Forum Admin Group Jazz Reviewer Joined: 16 Jan 2011 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 2525 |
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Frank Sinatra Jimmy Rushing
Kurt Elling
Billie Holiday
Chet Baker........actually prefer his vocals to his playing
Cassandra Wilson
Ella Fitzgerald
Sarah Vaughan
Nat King Cole
And although technically not a Jazz vocalist......Sam Cooke
Louis Armstrong....His trumpet playing though has the edge over his vocals. First recorded scat was done by Pops if I remember right.'Heebie Jeebies" but there is previous stuff. Al Jolson in 1911 is one example but psst its not the same as Pops
Who saw the singing bullfrog from Merrie Melody's cartoons. He was singing Al Jolson
"Hello my Baby
Hello my Honey
Hello my Ragtime girl"
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Matt
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js
Forum Admin Group Site admin Joined: 22 Dec 2010 Location: Memphis Status: Offline Points: 35206 |
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When I was very young, if you got up really early on Saturday morning they would have really early cartoons on the TV with music that sounded like Fletcher Henderson etc.
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Matt
Forum Admin Group Jazz Reviewer Joined: 16 Jan 2011 Location: Australia Status: Offline Points: 2525 |
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Matt
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Cannonball With Hat
Forum Senior Member VIP Joined: 10 Apr 2011 Location: The Opium Den Status: Offline Points: 1212 |
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Ok, I admit. I spoke hastily. You are right. If it is big band music written with vocals tham that can be good. I probably should have narrowed my critique to the forms of jazz I"m much more familar with (which especially isn't the early stuff). To me, it can just sound forced sometimes or not place the focus where I want it to be. This is especially true in the JR/F field, which it's hard for me to name one example where I like that mix.
In any case, I do prefer the instrument jazz more.
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Hit it on Five.
Saxophone Scatterbrain Blitzberg Stab them in the ears. |
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