Chris Connor - Sings Ballads of the Sad Cafe

S



Album Details

Title: Sings Ballads of the Sad Cafe
Artist: Chris Connor
Release Date: 1959
Re-Released On: 2/26/2007
Label: Atlantic, WEA/Warner
Album Type(s): Instrumental
UPCs: 4943674069859, 081227634667
Genre: Vocal Music
Styles: Cool, Traditional Pop
Moods: Elegant, Lively, Sophisticated, Autumnal, Boisterous, Dramatic, Freewheeling, Wistful, Intimate, Lush, Playful, Refined/Mannered, Rousing, Stylish, Energetic, Romantic, Sensual, Amiable/Good-Natured, Sentimental
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Bargain Day
  2. One for My Baby (And One More for the Road)
  3. Good Morning Heartache
  4. Glad to Be Unhappy
  5. These Foolish Things
  6. The End of a Love Affair
  7. Something I Dreamed Last Night
  8. Ballad of the Sad Café
  9. Lilac Wine

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2007CDWEA/Warner25167
2005CDAtlantic

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

Similar CDs

Album Review

Chris Connor uses several different musical settings for this album of torch songs, but the main distinction is between the arrangements that employ strings, such as "The End of a Love Affair," and those that use horns, such as "Bargain Day." The backgrounds color Connor's vocal interpretations, and she often interacts with the musicians, notably with flautist Eddy Jaspar in "These Foolish Things," a virtual duet. But her primary goal is to render the lyrics with a combination of precision and emotional distance. In this sense, the heart of the album is "Glad to Be Unhappy," which Connor begins by singing the rarely heard introductory verse, then gives musical coloration to by varying the notes at the end of each line. The listener is not meant to believe the emotions the lyrics describe, but rather to savor them along with the singer. Charles DeForest's "Ballad of the Sad Café," which takes nothing but its title from Carson McCullers' popular 1951 novella, is nevertheless literary in its descriptions of lonely people, and Connor, again through note alteration, gives it a reading that puts it at a further emotional remove. The trick, of course, is that the singer's posture puts her in an even darker position than that of the songwriters; at least they are still feeling something, while she seems to be so far from love that she is denying all feeling. And in that denial, her torch burns all the brighter. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Al GreyTrombone
Charlie FowlkesSax (Baritone)
Chris ConnorVocals
Ed JonesBass
Eddie BertTrombone
Ernie RoyalTrumpet
Frank FosterSax (Tenor)
Frank RehakTrombone
Freddie GreenGuitar
Harry "Sweets" EdisonTrumpet
Joe NewmanTrumpet
Marshall RoyalSax (Alto)
Phil WoodsSax (Alto)
Ralph SharonArranger, Conductor
Seldon PowellSax (Tenor)
Snooky YoungTrumpet
Sonny PayneDrums
Stan FreePiano