Jackie Ryan Set To Release Doozy Featuring

Transcrição

Jackie Ryan Set To Release Doozy Featuring
DOOZY- A DOUBLE CD BOUNTY OF
RARITIES, STANDARDS, BOSSA NOVA, BLUES
JACKIE RYAN WITH
CYRUS CHESTNUT, ERIC ALEXANDER
JEREMY PELT, ROMERO LUBAMBO
IMPECCABLE WEST COAST JAZZ SINGER,
PRAISED BY CRITICS AND FANS INTERNATIONALLY,
SINGS HER FAVORITES WITH JAZZ ALL-STARS,
CREATING TWO CLUB SETS FOR A TWO-CD ALBUM
Jackie Ryan -- a note-perfect jazz singer with a naturally dramatic, beguiling and swinging
sense of style and groove -- delivers a sweeping program of original vocalese, freshly
interpreted familiar tunes, bittersweet Brazilian melodies and up-to-date blues in Doozy, her
fourth album. With heartfelt collaboration from some of the most celebrated, urbane and
soulful of current instrumental soloists and rhythm teams, the West Coast-based chanteuse
with an international following captures the freedom, intimacy and excitement she generates
in club and concert performances over the run of two cds in her generous Doozy package.
Ms. Ryan creates a narrative of stages of romance as it's known by mature yet not jaded
adults, bringing energized grace, lovely humor and flashes of urgency to material created by
or associated with jazz greats Benny Carter (in the album's title track and "Summer
Serenade"), Betty Carter (in the sexy romp "Do Something"), Oscar Brown Jr.
("Opportunity Please Knock" and "Dat Dere"), Billie Holiday ("I Must Have That Man"),
Sarah Vaughan ("Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most"), Nat King Cole ("Beautiful
Moons Ago") as well as Kurt Weill and Carmen McRae ("Speak Low"), Antonio Carlos
Jobim and Ellis Regina ("Brigas Nunca Mais/A Felicidade"), Lionel Hampton and Ella
Fitzgerald ("Midnight Sun") and Mexican composer Agustin Lara ("Solamente Una Vez").
With pianist Cyrus Chestnut leading exquisitely sensitive ensembles featuring trumpeter
Jeremy Pelt, Brazilian guitarist Romero Lubambo and tenor saxophonist Eric Alexander plus
bassists Ray Drummond or Dezron Douglas, drummers Carl Allen or Neal Smith, Doozy
was produced almost entirely from two recording sessions, the first held at Tony Bennett's
studio in Englewood, New Jersey, the second at Entourage Studios, Hollywood.
"The first gave us about 90 minutes of music, which could have been two cds right there,"
the singer says, "and the second was booked for a time when Cyrus was on the West Coast.
We loved what we came up with, and thought, 'Why not put it out as a double album?' And
the label felt, given the economy, people might appreciate getting two cds for the price of
one. Also, this represents the variety of material I usually do in a performance of two shows
in the course of a single night. I'm very much a live performer -- I love doing it, for fun, for
meeting people. These are songs I have sung many times before on gigs and people have
often asked me if they could get these songs on an album. So, we finally decided to record
them!"
The breadth of material reflects Ryan's impressive span of taste and her unusual ability to
express a rainbow of moods and nuances at a variety of tempos, with arrangements ranging
from spare to lush. At the center of each of song is her voice, which album annotator Don
Heckman writes has a "pliant capacity to move with deceptive ease across every manner of
interval leap and elegant melisma . . . embracing whisper-in-your-ear warmth and . . . swing
that sometimes surface(s) in the accent of a single note."
Ryan has honed her voice -- her instrument -- throughout an enviable career, which has
included such formidable runs as eight years of annual two-week visits to Ronnie Scott's
famed London club, tours of Japan with Chestnut, Bay Area concerts with vocalese master
Jon Hendricks, gigs with Red Holloway (who she calls "the wild sax bluesman") and the Jeff
Hamilton Trio. As such diversity suggests, she has flexibility and scope. It flows from her
personal experience.
Jackie Ryan sang rhythm and blues when in her teens; earlier, she'd heard her mother, who
was Mexican, sing operettas and folks songs in Spanish and her father, Irish and classically
trained, perform pieces by Brahms, Shubert and Tchaikovsky. She says she has always been
fervent about music, for example devoting three years to the study of Portuguese so as to be
able to deliver bossa novas with authenticity.
Influential as such background has been, Ms. Ryan has come a long way from her roots as
audiences at venues including Yoshi's in San Francisco, Christofori's in Amsterdam and
Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York can attest. As a believer that
"People need music. It's like food, providing special nourishment," Jackie Ryan strives for
contact with her listeners, and succeeds on her recording, too.
"Jazz singers and musicians are ambassadors," she continues, "bringing people together
through a real love connection. It's a great thing to do this kind of work in life, and I am
grateful for the privilege." As for future projects, "I've got ideas for at least three upcoming
cds, all very different. It's important to me that each new project is special and not just a
repeat of what I've done before. I feel very fortunate to be able to do what I do."
Those who hear her are the fortunate ones. "Extravagantly gifted," one Down Beat critic
calls her. "Deftly assured," enthuses Variety. "Superb! The bell-like resonance of her smokey
voice coupled with her heartfelt emotion . . . puts Jackie at the top of her game," according
to Latin Beat. Following up on her prior releases This Heart of Mine (with Toots
Thielemans, Amina Figarova, and Jon Mayer, among others), For Heaven's Sake with pianist
Mike Wofford's trio at a San Diego Club, and You and the Night and the Music, with
saxophonist Holloway and Hamilton's band -- which took the #1 spot on JazzWeek's radio
chart, spent eight and a half months on the chart, and earned four star reviews in both
Down Beat and the AllMusicGuide -- Jackie Ryan seems poised on the brink of a
breakthrough, ready for even wider listenership and farther-reaching appreciation. Wise bets
are on her new release from OpenArt Productions, which truly is a Doozy.
"ONE OF THE OUTSTANDING JAZZ VOCALISTS OF HER GENERATION AND,
QUITE POSSIBLY, OF ALL TIME...rivaling the dexterous sass of Sarah Vaughan, the instinctive
smarts of Carmen McRae and the scintillating verve of Diana Krall."
- Christopher Louden, JAZZ TIMES
CLICK TO READ NPR STORY ON JACKIE RYAN
For more information, please visit Jackie Ryan on MySpace at
www.myspace.com/jackieryanjazz or Jackie's website at www.jackieryan.com
For additional information, please contact:
Don Lucoff at DL Media; (p) 610.667.0501 (e) [email protected]
###

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