Live at Jazz Standard | ||||
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Live album by | ||||
Released | May 9, 2006 | |||
Recorded | October 23, 2004 | |||
Venue | Jazz Standard, New York City | |||
Genre | Jazz | |||
Length | 1:13:21 | |||
Label | Maxjazz | |||
Producer | Fred Hersch | |||
Nancy King chronology | ||||
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Fred Hersch chronology | ||||
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Live at Jazz Standard is 2006 live album by the jazz singer Nancy King accompanied by the pianist Fred Hersch.[1]
The album was recorded without King's knowledge by Hersch; and the pair had never met before making the album. Live at the Jazz Standard was part of a series of duo performances between Hersch and various performers.[1]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Ken Dryden reviewed the album for Allmusic and wrote that "King and Hersch put together a wide-ranging program...frequently extending their interpretations well beyond the expectations for a vocal/piano duo" and that Hersch was "never less than brilliant throughout the evening, though the singer is equally impressive, an adventurous spirit who is unafraid of taking chances". Dryden felt that King's version of "Four" "clearly steals the show". This beautifully recorded set is a tribute to the musicianship of both artists".[1]
Reviewing the album for the Jazz Times, Harvey Siders wrote that "There aren't enough adjectives in Roget's Thesaurus to do this album justice. It embodies everything that’s right, healthy and fun about jazz". Siders commented that King's "...amazing ability to scat covers her freakish range from alto to infinity". Siders highlighted "Ain't Misbehavin" and "Four" as featuring Hersch and King trading "unforgettable swinging choruses".[2]
Andrew Velez reviewed Live at Jazz Standard for All About Jazz and wrote that "King's voice at times can sound like a newly created instrument, maybe a trumpsaxtrombone? On "I Fall in Love Too Easily, she spotlighted each word in "I've been well schooled in the past differently, sometimes suddenly going deep and then shifting with nary a pause to a high, light sound. The impressive thing was the rightness of her choices, those separate enunciations as emotional and musical illuminations, whether a foghorn blast on "too fast or a trombone boom on "I fall in love...." Velez highlighted the "masterful bit of give and take as Hersch responded keys in hand to each nuance of King's vocal twists and turns" on "We'll Be Together Again".[3]
Musicians
Production