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Listen. What grabs you about Jennifer Lee's artistic approach is her self-assured genuineness. The
vocalist's debut CD, J-Walkin' leaves a strong impression of lack of pretense--what you're
hearing is the real Jennifer Lee. And in a female jazz vocalist in a field packed with talent, Ms. Lee
is the real thing.
Her complete vocal control is part of her appeal; a control that doesn't lend a constrainted or stiff
feeling to her music, but rather gives it the firm clarity of someone who knows exactly what they're
doing.
Lee's take on the under-recorded classic "I'm Old Fashioned" is a perfect example,
and is perhaps the set's loveliest offering. Lee gives it a spare arrangement and slows the melody
down, turns the tune towards deep introspection, with a sound that is remarkable for the crystalline
clarity of her vocals juxtaposed with the sweet wheezing sighs of Rich Kuhn's accordion.
The rhythm section remains the same throughout--Peter Sprague on guitar, Bob Magnussen,
bass, Tommy Aros, percussion. Sprague is a San Diego area jazz mainstay who has played with
Chick Corea, Billy Mays and Al Jarreau; and Magnusson, with his big, resonant, rubbery sound, has
done bass chores for the likes of Sarah Vaughn, Bud Shank, Hank Jones, and Art Pepper. The
arrangements on J-Walkin' are credited to Lee and gutarist Sprague, but considering this is
the vocalist's debut, one has to suspect the veteran Sprague's contribution is considerable--he also
recorded and mixed the CD.
Hoagy Carmichael's "Baltimore Oriole" is reportedly Jennifer Lee's show stopper in
live performances. Her rendition here has a smoky room, wee hours feel--a bluesy brooder in
the mode of Peggy Lee's (no relation, we can safely assume) "Fever," fingerpops
deleted, with Tripp Sprague blowing a slow smolder on tenor sax.
The title tune, written by Peter Sprague, has a measured, jaunty spring in its step; and on
Jobim's "Chega de Saudade" Jennifer Lee shows us she can handle a Portuguese lyric
with aplomb. Throw in the classics "Blue Skies" (sounding very danceable with the
bounce Magnusson and Aros give it) and "Night and Day," a poignant Lee-penned
tribute, "Note to My Niece," and even a spoken word "Inchworm Rap" tacked
on to the classic "The Inchworm."
In addition you have superb sound quality (like they're in the room with you), top notch
accompanists, and ultimately, the finest vocal debut of the year thus far, big label or small.
Visit Jennifer Lee on the web at
www.jennifer-lee.net
~ Dan McClenaghan
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Track Listing: Blue Skies, Night and Day, I'm Old Fashioned, Jaywalkin', Note to My Niece, The Inchworm/
Inchworm Rap, Rosa/Clare de Lune, Baltimore Oriole, November in the Snow, Chega de Saudade,
Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone, Cathy's Song
Personnel: Jennifer Lee, vocals, piano on "Cathy's Song; Peter Sprague, guitar; Bob Magnusson, bass; Tommy
Aros, percussion; Trip Sprague, tenor sax; Rich Kuhns, accordion; Jason Lewis, drums
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