Showing posts with label jazz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jazz. Show all posts
#58 - Billie Holiday's "Lady in Satin" (1958)
I am fascinated by the beauty of decay. On four separate occasions I was privileged to visit a college professor of mine at her summer home in Belturbet, Ireland. It is a country house on a working dairy farm with all the dust, dung, and cobwebs you could want in such a rustic setting. Sometimes it feels like the earth is slowly reclaiming the whole structure as the trees and creeping vines seem as if they are playing a long game with an eye to devouring it. But each year it presses on, an eventual ruin, in all its spectacular and decrepit glory. When it comes to music, I have an epicurean taste for the various stages of Bob Dylan's vocals, as they, too, have lapsed into irredeemable disrepair. Much of the music he has produced in the twilight of his career has a timeless quality that is well-complemented by his ancient-sounding rasp. "Not Dark Yet," "High Water (for Charley Patton)," and "Nettie Moore" from three of his most recent studio albums are exemplary specimens all. Sadly, with his most recent album, Together Through Life, those spooky vocal cords of his finally gave up the ghost. Johnny Cash, too, experienced a late-period revival and managed to get much of his physical decline committed to tape throughout all those Rick Rubin-helmed LPs for the American Recordings imprint. At their best, his performances on those albums are hypnotic. In many cases it is the eerie, wizened sound of a man singing about death as if he's already met his own. What makes Dylan and Cash successful, of course, is the perfect pairing of sound with subject. Who can better bellow "We'll Meet Again" than the man for whom the afterlife is closer than that distant shore? Now, the consummate singer can adapt any song to her style or adapt her style to any song. In her prime, this was certainly the case with Billie Holiday. On Lady in Satin, she is not in her prime. Recorded about a year and a half before she died, much of her range is gone and there is an audible strain when she tries for the higher and lower notes. Her voice does invest these torch songs with an emotional vulnerability that is fitting for many of the lyrics, but not all of them. Again, it's all about how well you marry what you're singing with how you're singing it. The trick with these lover's laments is to sound wounded, but not defeated. Unfortunately, after being ransacked by decades of disease and drug abuse, Holiday was out of tricks. Grade: C
#54 - Louis Armstrong & His All Stars' "Louis Armstrong Plays W.C. Handy" (1954)
"I have made an important discovery," Oscar Wilde is said to have mused, "...alcohol, taken in sufficient quantities, produces all the effects of intoxication." This has always been my favorite quote from that eminently quotable Victorian. For starters, it's not funny. Not by itself. The statement's humor is utterly contingent on the personality of its author. Spoken by almost anyone else (except maybe Winston Churchill) it becomes a banal and uptight truism. But, because you're expecting Wilde to say the perfect thing - the kind of thing you always wish you'd have said in the moment as opposed to thinking up on the ride home from wherever - it is made profound by virtue of its non-profundity. That is the power of reputation. It can imbue its owner with special properties and coax goodwill from an audience ready to meet him more than halfway. My only personal experience of this type of charisma came in 2001, when I had the good fortune to see a taping of Late Night with Conan O'Brien. After waiting in various hallways for the hours before the show began, we were all primed to receive the man we'd come to see. When he finally made his entrance, we laughed at everything he did. Everything. We were putty in his hands. Similarly, even before pressing "play" on my iPod, I feel as if liking Louis Armstrong Plays W.C. Handy was almost predetermined. This is an album featuring one legend performing the songs of another. Louis Armstrong, the ambassador of jazz, and W.C. Handy, a composer who helped legitimize the blues. With the help of a crack ensemble (the All Stars) - and especially the vocals of Velma Middleton - Armstrong shows what world-class musicians can do when they have material worthy of their talents. The interplay between the instruments is exciting and though Satchmo's trumpet leads the way, everyone is given a chance to shine. The frisky back-and-forth between Middleton and Armstrong (who is full of mischief here) as they trade barbs, flirtations, wisecracks, and punchlines is a wonderful showcase for the joyous humor that this music stirs up in people. Many of the song titles highlight the various locales from which the blues hail: "St. Louis Blues," "Long Gone (from Bowling Green)," "The Memphis Blues (Or Mister Krump)," "Beale Street Blues," Ole Miss Blues," "Atlanta Blues (Make Me One Pallet On Your Floor)," and - via Armstrong's own New Orleans - "Chantez La Bas (Sing 'Em Low)." You really couldn't ask for better tour guides. Like Wilde, Armstrong's reputation is not only well-earned, but it was well-honed. Scholars insist that many of the witticisms attributed to Wilde were likely developed through hours of preening. Only by primping himself in private was he able to summon the charm he commanded in public. So, too, Armstrong's music has an improvisational feel, though by 1954 he had been playing for so long that for him spontaneity was second nature. As a listener, I'm not certain whether the group's genius lies in making well-rehearsed moments sound so loose or in making organic music in such an expert fashion, but I am certain it doesn't matter. Grade: A+
Subjects:
1950s,
Grade "A+",
jazz,
Louis Armstrong,
W.C. Handy
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