
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
Paula West
Come What May
There are quite a few guests on Come What May, but none of them feel tacked-on.
This is not an album particularly aimed at jazz radio. Its intended as a cohesive
work of musical art, and its quite clearly been structured that way. The core piano
trio could quite easily work on its ownbassist Peter Washington and drummer Victor
Lewis are seasoned players who keep the songs moving without ever seeming rushed, or
abandoning the kind of casual swing that the best jazz vocal music always possesses. The
addition of star players like Bobby Hutcherson on vibes (Caravan, Bye
Bye Blackbird), Don Byron on clarinet (Blues In The Night) or Ryan Kisor
on trumpet (Caravan, Blues In The Night) only serves to adorn the
already impressive melodic frameworks the basic group sets up.
One of the most interesting things
about this disc is the opportunity it provides to hear relatively unknown, or forgotten,
material. Some songs, like Laura or Bye Bye Blackbird, are
standard standards, songs most jazz listeners can identify with ease, and probably pick a
favorite version from decades past. Many of the other twelve cuts, thoughsongs like
You Fascinate Me So or The Snakeare largely unfamiliar. This
provides West with the ideal opportunity to put a highly personal stamp on a tune without
having to labor in the shadow of a long-dead legend. She meets this challenge admirably;
there are really no points at which this disc flags, or becomes tedious. Wests
continuously energetic delivery keeps the listener paying attention, and locks the
material into memory. This is an extremely self-assured, unobtrusively beautiful album
from a performer who deserves the acclaim other, lesser vocalists are currently receiving.
- Phil
Freeman