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Whatcha Gonna Swing Tonight?
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Whatcha Gonna Swing Tonight?
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
Whatcha Gonna Swing Tonight?
Current price: $17.99
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Unlike such
folk
-circuit peers as
the Roches
and
the 4 Bitchin' Babes
,
the Chenille Sisters
have always shown an affinity for pre-1950 American popular music, calling upon such predecessors as
the Boswell Sisters
the Andrews Sisters
to form their style and including songs from the interwar period in their repertoire. They used pianist/bandleader
James Dapogny
and a small
jazz
group on their version of the 1944 song
"Low Gravy"
on
At Home with the Chenille Sisters
(repeated here) and brought the same musicians back for
"Hummin' to Myself"
and the title song from
Mama, I Wanna Make Rhythm
. So, it's no surprise that they should team up with
Dapogny's Chicago Jazz Band
for a full-length album of material from the 1924-1944 era of
swing
. Unfortunately, while they clearly enjoy this music, they don't really have much of a feel for it. Or maybe they are content to try to recreate arrangements without digging in and performing with conviction. When
Connee Boswell
sang
"Bob White (Whatcha Gonna Swing Tonight?)"
with
Bing Crosby
, it was a tour de force of rhythmic vocal interplay; to
, it's just a nice song. And that's they way they seem to see all these tunes. Where their predecessors brought a sense of enthusiasm to this music,
are content to perform competently. At its best,
can be, as it was often called, hot, but this trio is deliberately cool. It's as if they are trying to show listeners what
' and
Andrews Sisters
' repertoires would sound like as sung by a '50s act like
the McGuire Sisters
.
Dapogny
's band does break through here and there for some good soloing, particularly on
"Bye Bye Blues,"
which it has all to itself. But then the homogenized singers return, and all the excitement goes out of the music. ~ William Ruhlmann
folk
-circuit peers as
the Roches
and
the 4 Bitchin' Babes
,
the Chenille Sisters
have always shown an affinity for pre-1950 American popular music, calling upon such predecessors as
the Boswell Sisters
the Andrews Sisters
to form their style and including songs from the interwar period in their repertoire. They used pianist/bandleader
James Dapogny
and a small
jazz
group on their version of the 1944 song
"Low Gravy"
on
At Home with the Chenille Sisters
(repeated here) and brought the same musicians back for
"Hummin' to Myself"
and the title song from
Mama, I Wanna Make Rhythm
. So, it's no surprise that they should team up with
Dapogny's Chicago Jazz Band
for a full-length album of material from the 1924-1944 era of
swing
. Unfortunately, while they clearly enjoy this music, they don't really have much of a feel for it. Or maybe they are content to try to recreate arrangements without digging in and performing with conviction. When
Connee Boswell
sang
"Bob White (Whatcha Gonna Swing Tonight?)"
with
Bing Crosby
, it was a tour de force of rhythmic vocal interplay; to
, it's just a nice song. And that's they way they seem to see all these tunes. Where their predecessors brought a sense of enthusiasm to this music,
are content to perform competently. At its best,
can be, as it was often called, hot, but this trio is deliberately cool. It's as if they are trying to show listeners what
' and
Andrews Sisters
' repertoires would sound like as sung by a '50s act like
the McGuire Sisters
.
Dapogny
's band does break through here and there for some good soloing, particularly on
"Bye Bye Blues,"
which it has all to itself. But then the homogenized singers return, and all the excitement goes out of the music. ~ William Ruhlmann