Feel the Blues with all that Jazz
English (United Kingdom)Polish (Poland)
Home Jazz Diana Krall Diana Krall - The Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles (2012)

Diana Krall - The Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles (2012)

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

Diana Krall - The Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles (2012)

Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility.


1.  Banter
2.  Where is Love (Lionel Bart)
3.  Children of Lima (Alan Broadbent)
4.  Milestones (Miles Davis)
5.  I Just Found Out About Love (Harold Adamson, Jimmy McHugh)
6.  Do It Again (George Gershwin, Buddy DeSylva)
7.  Let's Fall in Love (Cole Porter)
8.  Banter
9.  I've Grown Accustomerd to His Face (Frederick Loewe, Alan Jay Lerner)*
10. Banter
11. Lets Face the Music and Dance (Irving Berlin)
12. Fly Me To The Moon (Bart Howard) (For Neil Armstrong R.I.P)+
13. I Was Doing Alright (Barrington Somers Pheloung, George Gershwin)
14. Simple Twist of Fate (Bob Dylan)+
15. Quiet Night of Quiet Stars (Antonio Carlos Jobim)*
16. Pick Your Self Up (Jerome Kern, Dorothy Fields)
17. Banter
18. Love Letters (Edward Heyman, Victor Young)
19. Banter
20. Cheek to Cheek (Irving Berlin) > Come Together (Lennon & McCartney)
21. Goodbye (Gordon Jenkins)

Line up:
Diana Krall - Piano, vocals
Anthony Wilson -, Guitar
Robert Hurst -, Stand Up  Bass
Kareem Riggins - Drums
Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestera
Alan Broadbent – conductor

Live at the Hollywood Bowl
Los Angeles, CA
2012 08-25

 

Having played Hollywood Bowl many times since the late 1990s, Diana Krall knew exactly what to do Friday night. She slipped cooly and neatly into her niche - mostly standards and a few bossa novas - mixing it up a bit with her expert jazz quartet and sailing over the smooth surface of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, satisfying the affluent, wining, dining customers who have made her a popular returning attraction here.

Business as usual? Yes, for the most part, although there were a handful of diversions in her 85-minute set that helped relieve the sameness of the glossy surface. Krall roamed throughout her catalog of Verve recordings for material while curiously not mentioning, nor previewing any material from, her upcoming album of `20s and `30s songs, "Glad Rag Doll" (to be released Oct. 2). She is a much more confident performer now than when she started to hit the big time, her voice still low-pitched and grainy in texture yet freer in phrasing, her piano work sure-footed and quote-filled.

Featured most prominently were songs from Krall's latest release, "Quiet Nights" (2009), a collection of bossa novas and standards translated into bossa nova a la the Sinatra-Jobim collaborations of the 1960s. To my ears, Krall's vocal renditions of "Corcovado" and "So Nice" sounded rather perfunctory, but her piano work was appropriately succinct and to-the-point as her conductor and onetime mentor Alan Broadbent presided over Claus Ogerman's sleek charts.

Krall indulged in some autobiography - her childhood in Nanaimo, British Columbia growing up with her father's hoard of 78 RPM records, with a bit of campy silent-movie piano thrown in. She then parlayed that into some passable Fats Waller-style stride which led to a mainstream-styled "`Deed I Do" and a dandy bop turn from her regular guitarist Anthony Wilson.

Interestingly, the song that seemed most suited to Krall's timbre and phrasing was a nice, dirge-like solo rendition of Bob Dylan's "Simple Twist Of Fate" (her contribution to an Amnesty International album of Dylan songs released in January). Toward the end of the set, a rapid-fire "Cheek To Cheek" passed through several phases until it unexpectedly arrived upon a pounding, faithful cover of the Beatles' "Come Together." "Just havin' a little fun," Krall shrugged - yet it got the most enthusiastic response of the night, an indication that Krall should lead her loyal audience into more stream-of consciousness fun like that.

As a prelude, Broadbent led the Philharmonic in a short set of arrangements of his early piece, "The Children of Lima," and jazz standards like "Milestones" and "My Little Suede Shoes." He called the latter, "Charlie Parker meets Leroy Anderson," but the style was more like that of those gimmicky "Persuasive (or Provocative) Percussion" albums circa 1960. ---Richard Ginnell, variety.com

download (mp3 @320 kbs):

uploaded yandex 4shared mediafire mega depositfiles solidfiles zalivalka cloudmailru filecloudio anonfiles oboom

 

Last Updated (Sunday, 07 September 2014 10:16)

 

Before downloading any file you are required to read and accept the
Terms and Conditions.

If you are an artist or agent, and would like your music removed from this site,
please e-mail us on
abuse@theblues-thatjazz.com
and we will remove them as soon as possible.


Polls
What music genre would you like to find here the most?
 
Now onsite:
  • 247 guests
Content View Hits : 251433927