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Nightlife
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Nightlife
Current price: $17.99
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Barnes and Noble
Nightlife
Current price: $17.99
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After the triumph that was 2008's
A Song for You
,
Ernestine Anderson
returns with a live collection compiled from three dates at Dizzy's Club Coca Cola and Jazz at Lincoln Center, recorded between that year and 2010. The mix is a healthy helping of jazz and swinging blues with a top-shelf band. The constants are saxophonist
Houston Person
, and pianist
Lafayette Harris, Jr.
, with new drummer
Jerome Jennings
(
Willie Jones III
plays on the stellar
"All Blues"
), and alternating bassists
Lonnie Plaxico
and
Chip Jackson
. Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of this date is that
Anderson
, who was 80 at the time of the earliest of these recordings, is captured at her dusky, sultry, swinging best. It's there in the fingerpopping
"I Love Being Here with You,"
the deeply emotive title track (a fine showcase for
Harris
), the shimmering backbeat groove in
"Only Trust Your Heart,"
and the jaunty reading of
"Falling in Love with Love"
-- where she meets meets
Person
in a call-and-response interchange that is delightful.
lets her deep well of experience, phrasing, and expression compensate handsomely for what age has taken from her range. This set doesn't have the sense of controlled elegance that
did, but it isn't supposed to. It's a party record, a collection of jazz tunes done with pure blues feeling by an artist who obviously relishes engaging with her band in front of an audience. ~ Thom Jurek
A Song for You
,
Ernestine Anderson
returns with a live collection compiled from three dates at Dizzy's Club Coca Cola and Jazz at Lincoln Center, recorded between that year and 2010. The mix is a healthy helping of jazz and swinging blues with a top-shelf band. The constants are saxophonist
Houston Person
, and pianist
Lafayette Harris, Jr.
, with new drummer
Jerome Jennings
(
Willie Jones III
plays on the stellar
"All Blues"
), and alternating bassists
Lonnie Plaxico
and
Chip Jackson
. Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of this date is that
Anderson
, who was 80 at the time of the earliest of these recordings, is captured at her dusky, sultry, swinging best. It's there in the fingerpopping
"I Love Being Here with You,"
the deeply emotive title track (a fine showcase for
Harris
), the shimmering backbeat groove in
"Only Trust Your Heart,"
and the jaunty reading of
"Falling in Love with Love"
-- where she meets meets
Person
in a call-and-response interchange that is delightful.
lets her deep well of experience, phrasing, and expression compensate handsomely for what age has taken from her range. This set doesn't have the sense of controlled elegance that
did, but it isn't supposed to. It's a party record, a collection of jazz tunes done with pure blues feeling by an artist who obviously relishes engaging with her band in front of an audience. ~ Thom Jurek