Showing posts with label Burt Bacharach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Burt Bacharach. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2024

Diana Panton's new album Soft Winds and Roses out October 25

Jazz singer Diana Panton cut versions of modern pop classics with longtime pals Don Thompson & Reg Schwager. Pre-order it here. 



JAZZ VOCALIST DIANA PANTON 
SHOWCASES MODERN CLASSICS FROM THE '60s ONWARD
WITH HER ELEVENTH ALBUM

Soft Winds and Roses (out October 25)

“What makes Panton special is that she’s herself. You feel her relaxed personality throughout, and the quality of her voice is remarkable … a voice that’s as gentle as a doe but smart as a fox. Bravo!”Marc Myers, JazzWax 

“Her vocal style combines a light, buoyant lilt with immaculate phrasing, an authoritative delivery, and a convincing ability to portray the emotions of the lyrics’ protagonists.”Bobby Reed, DownBeat


HAMILTON, ONTARIO – With a career spanning nearly two decades, two-time JUNO Award winner Diana Panton has established herself as one of the brightest lights on the international jazz scene, praised by listeners, musicians, and critics alike for her ethereal vocals, exceptional song selection, and emotive nuance. Diana is pleased to announce the October 25 release of her eleventh album, soft winds and roses.

A departure from Diana Panton’s more recent albums, soft winds and roses features modern classics composed from the 1960s onward, including songs by Lennon and McCartney, Burt Bacharach, Gordon Lightfoot, Don McLean, Ron Sexsmith, Leonard Cohen, Randy Newman, Joni Mitchell, and more. Diana’s signature sound, which Jazz Times called “arrestingly beautiful,” makes every song her own, and the feather-light intimacy of each track is so direct that the lyrics feel like a secret passed between Diana and her listener. The album’s arc follows a relationship, beginning shyly with hard-to-declare feelings, continuing through a deeply emotional connection, and finally separating, with lingering traces of love. 

Why songs from the ‘60s onward?  Diana Panton explains, “Through the years, I have recorded several compilations for the Asian market, and I was often asked to include a bonus track that was a bit more contemporary and well-known in that market than some of my more obscure song choices. Fast forward to the present: I decided to assemble a selection of modern standards composed from the 1960s onward. It was a fun challenge to bring our trio’s distinctive sound to these modern classics, mixing well-known songs, like Elton John's 'This is Your Song' alongside some new jazz standards such as Fred Hersch's 'A Wish (Valentine).'"

On soft winds and roses, Diana Panton’s evocative vocals are backed by the artistry of two longtime musical colleagues – both former members of George Shearing’s ensemble – who have made significant contributions to the beauty and passion of Diana’s previous albums: pianist/vibraphonist/bassist/arranger Don Thompson (Officer of the Order of Canada) and guitarist Reg Schwager (Member of the Order of Canada). The minimalist instrumentation on soft winds and roses enhances the raw emotion of Diana's vocals. Thompson plays as though he is in conversation with Diana, hanging on her every word, sensing her every breath, and responding in kind. Schwager dazzles with shimmering runs, yet is always understated, playing in full support of the lyric.



ABOUT DIANA PANTON
In command of a keen aesthetic sense, Diana Panton has attracted the attention of some of the jazz world’s most respected masters.  When legendary multi-instrumentalist Don Thompson first heard the nineteen-year-old Diana sing, he enthusiastically urged her to audition for the renowned Banff Centre for the Arts Jazz Workshop. It was there that she studied under Norma Winstone, and, in subsequent visits, with Sheila Jordan and Jay Clayton.  When the time arrived for her to go into the recording studio, award-winning guitarist Reg Schwager was invited to join Don Thompson in laying down a collaborative sound that has proved to be, on all of her albums, the perfect setting for the delicate nuance of Diana’s pure vocals. The late, great jazz critic Len Dobin called the product of that first session, …yesterday perhaps, one of the finest debut albums he had heard in years. 

Since the release of that first album in 2005, Diana Panton’s career has gathered astounding momentum, drawing international acclaim for her ten albums and the impressive variety and consistent quality of her catalogue of songs. The numerous honours garnered include JUNO Awards for RED in 2015 and I Believe in Little Things in 2017, three Silver Disc Awards in Japan, eight JUNO nominations, nine Hamilton Music Awards, and a host of National Jazz Award nominations and Canadian and American independent music award nominations. I Believe in Little Things charted simultaneously on Billboard’s Jazz and Children’s Music charts and went to #1 on Amazon’s “Movers and Shakers” chart, following an interview on NPR. The album received a four-star review in DownBeat magazine and was one of their Best Albums of 2016. Diana’s albums have also made the year-end lists of ICI Musique, NOW Magazine, Jazz Critique Magazine, The Montreal Mirror, The Ottawa Citizen, HiFi Trends, and DownBeat, among others, and, in addition to reaching #1 on Amazon and iTunes in Canada and the US, have made bestseller lists in Hong Kong, Japan, and Taiwan.

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Watch The Bacharach Sound UK special from 1965

After a quick spin through the streets of London, Burt is joined by Dionne Warwick, Chuck Jackson and Dusty Springfield


Monday, February 20, 2023

R.I.P. soul great Chuck Jackson, 1937-2023

Sadly, soul singer Chuck Jackson – who hit big with "Any Day Now" – has passed away at the age of 85. He'll be greatly missed.






Thursday, February 9, 2023

Remembering Burt Bacharach with a documentary and interview

Sadly, composer Burt Bacharach passed away on Wednesday. Here's a documentary, an interview and a couple of performances.







Thursday, February 3, 2022

Greyboy Allstars preview new covers album with an update of "I've Got Reasons"

The Greyboy Allstars' version of "I've Got Reasons" is off their Get A Job album out April 1 on Knowledge Room Recordings.


Here's the scoop...

The Greyboy Allstars have announced the April 1st release of Get a Job: Music from the Original Broadcast Series Soul Dream—the sixth studio recording to date by the quintet comprised by Karl Denson (saxophone, flute), Elgin Park (guitars), Aaron Redfield (drums), Chris Stillwell (bass) and Robert Walter (keys). The album was captured live in the studio during The Greyboy Allstars' 2021 Soul Dream live-stream series and will be issued on the band's own imprint, Knowledge Room Recordings. The set notches up the band's own jazz-funk and boogaloo narrative by spotlighting ten unique, never-before-released covers that have become an integral part of their famed live performances for nearly three decades, including songs by Gil Scott-Heron, Gary Bartz, Dr. Lonnie Smith, Sonny Stitt, Gene Ammons and Burt Bacharach. 

The first single and its accompanying video, "I've Got Reasons," (watch it below), a rendition of the Eddie Bo-penned deep funk gem originally cut by Mary Jane Hooper aka Sena Fletcher, is out now. Additionally, a 21-date "Get A Job" tour in support of the collection beginning this March has been announced. Six of the shows are on-sale now, while the remaining 15 dates go on-sale this Friday, February 4 at greyboyallstars.com

"We keep a running master list of around 70 tunes. From those I picked a mixture of tried-and-true live staples and songs that weren't always in common rotation," says band keyboardist Robert Walter of the Get a Job set. "Usually, for gigs I propose a list and then the other members edit and tweak it. For the taping, we wanted each episode to have a theme: two of them focused on originals and the other two were covers: live favourites, and music that came out on Prestige Records. The tunes on this release are the best of the covers."

"The covers come from the tradition of the artists we love and how they would grab the pop tunes of the day, most likely to broaden their listening base. George Benson, Grant Green, and Kenny Burrell all did Beatles and Bacharach tunes," continues band guitarist Elgin Park, of GBA's tapping of the tradition of savvy jazz legends exploring the then-expanding "fake book" of mid-20th-century pop songs. "Also, everyone is coming with different levels of seriousness to the music at different times."

The resulting album finds The Greyboy Allstars in full flight, in performances both raucous and reverent to the formative music that shaped them, while adding their own funky imprint to each song's arrangement and legacy. There is a generosity of spirit that runs through Get a Job. The band's decision to take the tragedy of Covid-19 lockdown and open their studio space for a kind of digital communion with their fans is evident throughout. Yet even in the delivery of these covers, both classic and obscure, there is an ease of playing that gives service to the song, rare in a band of such heavyweight soloists.

"The more we play together, the more I enjoy listening to the other guys," concludes Park. "It seems like a simple idea but finding a place in the mix is what’s important: not the solo. Weave a thread inside the fabric."

Check out the video for the Greyboy Allstars' version of "I've Got Reasons" followed by the original by Mary Jane Hooper and a 2017 panel discussion with Mary Jane Hooper at Ponderosa Stomp below. 




Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Elvis Costello & The Imposters new album "Look Now" due October 12

Elvis Costello's forthcoming "Look Now" album includes three songs written with Burt Bacharach.