Search - Sheila Jordan, Cameron Brown :: I've Grown Accustomed to the Bass

I've Grown Accustomed to the Bass
Sheila Jordan, Cameron Brown
I've Grown Accustomed to the Bass
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Broadway & Vocalists
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Sheila Jordan has had years of experience singing with just bass accompaniment, and she's done it with some of the best, from an impromptu beginning with Charles Mingus in 1955 through work with Steve Swallow and Arild ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Sheila Jordan, Cameron Brown
Title: I've Grown Accustomed to the Bass
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: HighNote Records
Original Release Date: 6/26/2000
Re-Release Date: 6/27/2000
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Broadway & Vocalists
Styles: Modern Postbebop, Vocal Jazz, Bebop, Vocal Pop, Cabaret
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 632375704223

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Sheila Jordan has had years of experience singing with just bass accompaniment, and she's done it with some of the best, from an impromptu beginning with Charles Mingus in 1955 through work with Steve Swallow and Arild Andersen to a 15-year association with Harvie Swartz. She first approached Cameron Brown as a possible collaborator in the 1970s (a fact she manages to sing on "The Very Thought of You"), but they never performed in duet until this set, recorded in Bruges, Belgium, in 1997, when Jordan was touring with Brown's group. Jordan is the bravest--and likely the most musically creative--of jazz singers, not just for singing with minimal accompaniment, but for her incredible spontaneity, sometimes improvising rhyming lyrics as well as musical lines, testing musical boundaries as well as her own range. Here the spontaneity extends to autobiographical lyrics about "my ex-husband Duke Jordan" and bemused efforts to engage the audience in a sing-along on Charlie Parker's "Quasimodo." The centerpiece is a half-hour medley that pays tribute to Bird, Mingus, Monk, Lester Young, and Billie Holiday, and Brown is with Jordan all the way. He has all the cardinal virtues--solid time and intonation, a big sound, the ability to pick just the right note--and he manages to define the formal essence of this music. This is a performance rich in reference to a long life lived in jazz, animated by equal parts wit and love, by a vocalist who has never stopped testing just what being a jazz singer might really mean. --Stuart Broomer

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CD Reviews

Not Shiela at her best
Aaron B. | 01/31/2001
(1 out of 5 stars)

"Ms. Jordan is capable of making some really wonderful music. This is not evident in this album, unfortunatly. She constantly pushes to be "cute" or "hip" instead of singing this material in a straight ahead serious manner. This is too bad. The bass playing is wonderful, but the vocals are self-indulgent and inane. When one measures this against some of her earlier albums, the result is not good. When measured against some of the other minamalist outings out there (like Michael Moores duets) it suffers even more. I am selling my copy to the local used CD store and rethinking whether I wish to buy any more of her more current material."
Jazz diva
Rhett Cook | englewood, co United States | 08/07/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Sheila Jordon is most underrated. And this album is such a deviation from standard vocal jazz that we will hopefully be blessed with many talented imitators, perhaps even a new genre. But in the end, Sheila will have been the first. This is a minimalist approach where the deep resonance of the double-bass augments and enables Miss Sheila's vocal stylings. Rather than musicians creating a painting merely highlighted by the vocalist, on this album the vocals and Bass are figure and ground. Each so elegantly complements the other. Rather than playing stock fills, Mister Brown allows each note to sustain, allows each nuance to attian its full potential. One wonders who is the rider and who is the wave. I can only hope that every listener derives as much enjoyment as I have."
Very strong set by Jordan and Brown!
Aaron B. | u.s.a. | 04/10/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Sheila Jordan has an instantly recognizable voice, and she improvises and scats like nobody's business, as a matter of fact Jordan's costant improvisations allow hher to make each song truly her own(for instance when you hear her sing "The Very Thoght Of You", you forget the fact that Nat king Cole ever sang it) This cd recorded live, in Belgium, finds Sheila Jordan in PRIME form, it's hard to believe that after all these years she's retained that sensual youthful and playful voice that made her so popular in the 60's. Here Jordan really gets to stretch out on some great tunes accompanied only by Cameron Brown's bass(no relation to Ray Brown). Sheila sounds particularly inspired on "The Bird", "The Very Thought Of You" and "Mourning Song", however there's not a dud on the disc, in fact every track is a gem, Jordan still has that childlike enthuseasm when she sings, which really shows on "Dat Dere", may this timeless jazz singer keep on making many more great cd's like this, it's also interesting to hear her interacting with a different bassist other than her regular Harvie Shwartz. A true gem, worth checking out."