If, like me, you can never have too much Sarah Vaughan,
you’re in for a treat. Due for a March 25th release from Resonance
Records is a two-CD set of the jazz diva’s previously unreleased 1978 live
session recorded at Rosy’s Jazz Club in New Orleans for the National Public
Radio program Jazz Alive! She is
accompanied on the gig by Carl Schroeder on piano, Walter Booker on bass and
Jimmy Cobb on drums.
Sarah Vaughan Live at
Rosy’s has the singer at the top of her game. A consummate musician, she
plays her voice like the magnificent instrument it is. Her song readings are
excitingly inventive. She takes a classic up-tempo piece like “Fascinating
Rhythm” and playfully finds a variety of multiple fascinating rhythms. It is an
interpretive tour de force, while a classic ballad like “My Funny Valentine” is
vocally rich like fine cognac.
But you don’t need me
to tell you that Sarah Vaughan can sing, this is one of the truly greats. And
on two CD’s with 20 songs, each and every track is a winner. Beginning with
“I’ll Remember April,” and running through tunes like “East of the Sun (and
West of the Moon),” “Somebody Loves Me,” “Poor Butterfly,” and “Send in the
Clowns”—and that’s only from Disc one—she takes these standards and not only
makes them her own, but stamps them indelibly with her name. Meanwhile highlights
of the second disc include “The Man I Love,” ”I Got It Bad and That Ain’t
Good,” and a stellar version of “If You Went Away.”
Jazz singing doesn’t come any better than Sarah Vaughan.
What she does with a song is magic, and pro that she is, she makes it sound
effortless. In an essay by James Gavin included in the 36 page booklet that
serves as the liner notes for the set, he quotes the singer: “’I don’t know
what I’m doin’!’ she said ‘I just get onstage and sing. I don’t think about how
I’m going to do it—it’s too complicated.’” Modesty aside, this is a singer who
knows how to make the most out of her natural talent: the proof, as they say,
is in the pudding.
Not only does she sing, but the set includes some of her
banter with the audience. There is some
of her standard patter with the introduction of her trio. But perhaps the most
interesting bit comes when someone shouts out a request for the Ella Fitzgerald
classic “A-tisket, A-tasket,” and after joking that they have mistaken her for
another singer, Vaughan treats it as a challenge and has some fun with it.
Sassy is a pro. She knew how to work an audience, a skill singers today might
want to emulate.
Soon after the release of the album the U. S. Post Office
will be issuing a commemorative forever stamp honoring the singer. A ceremony will take place
at the Sarah Vaughan Concert Hall at Newark Symphony Hall, 1020 Broad Street,
Newark, N.J., at 11:00am, March
29th, 2016th.
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