This CD is hard to find in the States. It is Ms. Parlato's 2nd album under her own name (I'd really like to find the first). I've only listened to it once so far, but it showcases more of her latin tinged vocal sounds and stylings. While I don't think it is quite as good as her last album (The Lost and Found), she is still head and shoulders above most current jazz vocalists.
C. Michael Bailey - 11/09/2010
Vocalist Gretchen Parlato is part Bobby McFerrin, part Theo Bleckmann, and David Binney. All men, yes. Parlato's voice is light as an apparition, ethe...
Ken Dryden - 14/01/2010
Gretchen Parlato grew up in a musical household, the daughter of bassist/guitarist Dave Parlato (who worked with Don Ellis, Warne Marsh, Gil Melle and...
Kevin Le Gendre - 24/09/2009
As far as clichés go, there is the jazz singer who scats, and the one what don’t. That said, there doesn’t have to be a never-the-t...
John Bungey 4 - 04/09/2009
Over the summer The Wall Street Journal kicked off a minor rumpus with a piece entitled Can Jazz Be Saved, which gave a warning that the audience was...
Bunneh3000 - 03/09/2009
Gretchen Parlato’s voice is the wispy lingerie upon a statuesque woman skipping towards her lover. As she sings throughout the selections on her...
Michel Contat - 27/01/2010
Pour lutter contre l'inflation, on pourrait limiter cette chronique à quinze chanteuses par an, alors qu'il en surgit bien deux ou trois par se...