We orignal diehard Beatles fans – those of us who came of age during and just after the '64 British
Invasion – tend to cringe at the mention of Beatles jazz albums. There's a certain sanctity
associated with the music of the Fab Four; and who among us hasn't encountered an uninspired
and blandly arranged Beatles knock-off?
Certainly there have been some successes: trumpeter Wallace Roney – with Tony Williams'
band and on his own – seems to have an affinity for Lennon/McCartney tunes; and the
Either/Orchestra just last year recorded a rollicking Latinized verison of George Harrison's
"Don't Bother Me (No Me Molesta)." But these are single offerings on otherwise
mainstream jazz CDs.
An entire set of Beatles tunes, jazzified?
My cringe was premature; vocalist Connie Evingson's Let it Be Jazz is an inspired,
facinating, fresh take on thirteen Lennon/McCartney classics. The songs are rendered in
Beatle-esque fashion, not in sound or pop sensibilities, but in the individual treatments given each
tune in
terms of arrangement – sort of the way John, George, Paul and Ringo were recording albums back
in '66.
It's obvious that a great deal of thought and care went into each arrangement, with some
interesting Beatle-isms showing up on unexpected tunes: a George Harrison-like sitar behind
Evingson's scat chant that opens McCartney's "Blackbird"; a "Come
Together" flutter drum on "Can't Buy Me Love."
"The Night Before" from the overlooked Help album is given a reggae
treatment and Evingson transforms "Can't Buy Me Love" from the boys' in-you-face
statement to a slinky groove. If you don't fall in love with Connie E. when she purrs "I'll
give you all I've got to give, if you say you'll love me too," there's no Help for you.
"I'm Looking Through You" features wonderfully laid-back trombone work (by Mike
Nelson), like soft thunder rolling around Dave Singley's crackling guitar work.
Evingson's intonation throughout is rich and mellifluous, a counterpoint to Mary Louise
Knutson's crisp piano accompaniment. Knutson is a constant in shifting mix of musicians, a perfect
percussive glue to hold the sound together.
And a bonus: a great cover photo, Evingson looking sassy and sixty-ish (the decade, not her
age) in basic black, holding a polkadot umbrella and wearing Beatles boots. Oh Darlin!
There's a Beatles song (not on this CD) entitled "Don't Let Me Down." Connie
Evingson doesn't. In fact, you could say – paraphrasing that song's lyric – she done it good.
Actually, she done it excellent.
Visit Connie Evingson on the web at
www.connieevingson.com and
Summit Records at
www.summitrecords.com.
~ Dan McClenaghan