Search - Helen Merrill :: Dream of You

Dream of You
Helen Merrill
Dream of You
Genres: Jazz, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (22) - Disc #1

Helen Merrill Sings with Orchestras Arranged and Conducted by GIL EVANS and HAL MOONEY — PERSONNEL Art Farmer (tp), Jimmy Buffington (frh), Joe Bennett, Jimmy Cleveland, Frank Rehak (tb), Tom Mitchell (btb), John LaPorta (c...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Helen Merrill
Title: Dream of You
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Fresh Sounds Spain
Release Date: 6/10/2008
Album Type: Deluxe Edition
Genres: Jazz, Pop
Styles: Cool Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Vocal Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 8427328604895

Synopsis

Product Description
Helen Merrill Sings with Orchestras Arranged and Conducted by GIL EVANS and HAL MOONEY
PERSONNEL Art Farmer (tp), Jimmy Buffington (frh), Joe Bennett, Jimmy Cleveland, Frank Rehak (tb), Tom Mitchell (btb), John LaPorta (cl, as), Jerome Richardson (fl, ts), Danny Bank (fl, bcl, bars), Romeo Penque (fl, cl, oboe), Phil Bodner (fl, oboe), Hank Jones (p, cel), Buddy Weed, Marian McPartland (p), Barry Galbraith, Billy Mure (g), Oscar Pettiford (b, fl, oboe), Milt Hinton (b), Joe Morello, Sol Gubin (d)
RECORDED New York,1956-1957
Helen Merrill's vocal tone was always warm and husky. She developed from an apprehensive, untried singer, wanting to be accepted, into a calm and competent performer who could use her voice as an instrument of mood.
Dream of You (#1-12) was one of her best albums and an arranging triumph for Gil Evans, who did all the scoring and conducting. Evans, an extraordinarily sensitive and supple colorist, wrote with particular care for the contours (linear and emotional) of each song, as well as a measured understanding of Helen's texture and phrasing.
The second album included here, At Midnight (#13-22), was recorded six months after the first one, and was another smash hit for Helen. This time the backgrounds were tailored to her own approach by Harold "Hal" Mooney. For this collection, she harvested some of the better bits of romantic poetry that existed in wisps among the voluminous Tin Pan Alley melodies.
People Will Say We're In Love / By Myself / Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home / I've Never Seen / He Was Too Good To Me / A New Town Is A Blue Town / You're Lucky To Me / Where Flamingos Fly / Dream Of You / I'm Fool To Want You / I'm Just A Lucky So And So / Troubled Waters / Soft As Spring / Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair / Lazy Afternoon / The Things We Did Last Summer / After You, Who? / If You Go / If I Forget You / If Love Were All / Easy Come Easy Go / I'll Be Around
 

CD Reviews

Another dream come true thanks to Fresh Sounds recordings.
Samuel Chell | Kenosha,, WI United States | 08/26/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"In the department of female vocalists jazz has been blessed with some of the most undeniably virtuoso singers of the past and present century--from Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughan to Diane Shuur and Roberta Gamberini. But the music has also allowed for the inclusion of sensitive artists who, while not possessing the most formidable instruments and technique, were compelling if not hypnotic story-tellers, capable of getting to the essence of the best songs from that treasure trove known as "The Great American Songbook" and of bringing them to vibrant life, frequently exceeding the readings of the performers for whom the songs were originally written.



Helen Merrill is in the same league as Billie Holiday, someone who tells the song's emotional story and does so without the least trace of exhibitionism or, simply, the need to "impress." American popular song is, above all, the art of artlessness, the elevation of the "common individual" in the democratic American dream quilt over the elite and aristocratic, the privileging of the "natural" over anything overtly artificial in terms of diction, elocution, or projection. Those qualities may be present in the performer's consciousness, but rarely can they afford to call attention to themselves. With a range at one point of less than an octave, and with failing breath reserves, Billie Holiday could still tap profound emotions by making music that seemed as effortless, unforced, natural as the ripening of fruit on the vine.



Helen Merrill has many of the same traits, though in some respects hers is the purest aesthetic of them all. Listening to her, I'm not reminded of a personal biography or of personal circumstances extraneous to the music itself. There's only the song, the arrangement, and the chemistry of remarkable musicians. If you can judge musicians by the company they keep, Merrill is among the greats simply because of the giants she has been able to enlist on her projects--from Gil Evans and Clifford Brown to Thad Jones and Ron Carter.



A song like "Lazy Afternoon" is a signature piece, tailor-made for her aesthetic--the breathy, diffused sound, slightly delayed diction, strains that come across like musical sighs--practically the onomatopoeic equivalent of a lazy afternoon, with clouds of cumulus floating overhead in timeless summer ether. The songs are pleasant, relaxing, quiet--but don't be deceived. Hers is the art of the minimalist: everything is about scale. Once you have the measure of her dynamics, each song becomes like a moment's monument--a scintillating, crystalline, many-faceted jewel capable of provoking new discoveries with each listening.



Once again, Spain's Fresh Sounds deserves this country's appreciation (not to mention support) for compiling this package of choice Merrill performances. The company would be a bastion against cultural mediocrity and vulgarity if only for last year's assembling and release of the indispensable Curtis Counce recordings. The continued selectivity and productivity of Fresh Sounds (along with quality pressings, complete and new liner notes, attention to production values) should place in the Spanish company's debt anyone who cares about some of the best recorded music since the release of the first jazz recording not that long ago (1917--within the lifetime of numerous Americans)."