London Calling: A Toast To Julie London
A.T. Music LLC
Song stylist Lyn Stanley follows up her two volumes of "Moonlight Sessions," with this tribute to the sultry songstress, Julie London. Most of the songs of this tribute were recorded by the great singer and actress, although Stanley includes a couple that she feels would have been perfect for London, It's Impossible," and "I Heard It Through the Grapevine." On this she has brought in a stellar group of musicians including guitarist John Chiodini; pianists Mike Garson and Christian Jacob; bassists Chuck Berghofer and Michael Valerio; percussionists Luis Conte, Brad Dutz, and Aaron Serfaty, and drummer Paul Kreibich for interpretations of songs that are mostly from the Great American Songbook. I was not aware that Berghofer, who played the bass line for Nancy Sinatra's "These Boots Are Made For Walking," was London's bassist for a period or guitarist Chiodini was Peggy Lee's guitarist for seven years.
Like London, Stanley does not employ a broad vocal range, and her attack is usually understated and melodic. She is backed by a terrific ensemble starting with "Goody Goody," launched by Valerio's Arco bass opening and a chorus shared guitarist between Chiodini (who is superb throughout with his taste and imagination). Chiodini and percussionist Dutz provide a percolating groove to "Call Me Irresponsible," with Garson's sympathetic comping. The rendition of "Bye Bye Blackbird" is an intimate duet between Stanley and bassist Berghofer. "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" is one of the two performances that imagine songs in a manner London might have performed than with an atmospheric backing that allows Stanley to place the focus on the lyrics,
Of course, any salute to Julie London would be incomplete without a rendition of "Cry Me a River," and Stanley's wonderful, plaintive vocal is wonderfully supported by just Chiodini's exquisite guitar (including a marvelous solo) and Berghofer's bass. In a similar vein is her rendition of the classic Cole Porter ballad, "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye," with Chiodini and Berghofer equally superb. There are also two appealing, heartfelt renditions of Gershwin's classic "Summertime" with an understated quintet on one and just pianist Garson on the other. Then there is a sublime interpretation of "It's Impossible," (another song London never recorded) with Chiodini's sublime on his Spanish guitar. Chiodini's superb flamenco-tinged guitar and the band's accompaniment provides on "Light My Fire," a version more akin to Jose Feliciano than The Doors, although Lyn's understated sensuality contrasts with the more explicit feel of Jim Morrison on the original.
This is only a sampling of the marvelous music herd on this. There is also a booklet with Scott Yanow's observations on Lyn and each of the 17 performances (which include Lyn's comments). The sound is wonderful, and the productions, with diverse musical settings, and performances imbued with Lyn Stanley's musical personality result in this superb tribute. This is also available in Limited Edition 33RPM 180g two-disc vinyl and Super-audio CDs.
I received my review copy from a publicist. This review originally appeared in the May-June 2010 Jazz & Blues Report (Issue 384). Here is the official video for this release.
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