Ruth Young - This Is Always (2005) FLAC
BAND/ARTIST: Ruth Young
- Title: This Is Always
- Year Of Release: 2005
- Label: Nagel Heye
- Genre: Jazz, Jazz Vocal, Standards
- Quality: Flac lossless
- Total Time: 56:13
- Total Size: 264 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracks
01. Whatever Possessed Me
02. This Is Always
03. Time After Time
04. The Wind
05. I Fall in Love Too Easily
06. You're My Thrill
07. Deep in a Dream
08. Let's Get Lost
09. My Ideal
10. Thrill Is Gone
11. Look for the Silver Lining
12. But Not for Me
Personnel
Ruth Young - Vocals
Herb Geller - Alto Saxophone
Walter Lang - Piano
Rocky Knauer - Bass
Wolfgang Lackerschmid – Vibraphone
There was a certain sense of nagging familiarity as I listened to the first track of this jazz vocal album. As soon as I heard the first notes of "Whatever Possessed Me," it all fell into place. This is an album of all Chet Baker-associated tunes. Ruth Young was Baker's main squeeze from 1973-1982 and an integral part of the infamous Bruce Weber documentary film Let's Get Lost, released in 1989. Young was also the daughter of Max Youngstein, Vice President of United Artists Company, and as such she was raised in the worlds of Beverly Hills and New York City and became an acquaintance of many high-profile film stars.
When she met the trumpet/vocal legend, Young became immersed in his world of music and drugs for almost a decade before breaking off the relationship. The music chosen for his debut recording is not a tribute recording, but, as she puts it, "my heartfelt dedication to Chet's memory of our own very private and public years together." The liner notes were written by James Gavin, the auther of the very revealing biography Deep In A Dream: The Long Night of Chet Baker, published in 2002.
The dozen selections were recorded in Augsburg, Germany at the studio of Wolfgang Lackerschmid, the vibraphonist with whom Baker had recorded several fine albums in the late 1970s. Young also selected veteran ex-pat saxman Herb Geller, with whom Baker recorded some wonderful 1950s West Coast sessions, as well as pianist Walter Lang and bassist Rocky Knauer. Geller supplies several sinuous alto solos and helps to reconstruct the world of 1955 all over again. Her choice to go without a drummer was a carryover of Chet Baker's own preferences.
To no one's surprise, the presentation and delivery of the songs is a time capsule Chet Baker vocal session with Ruth Young eerily emulating Baker's phrasing and timing. Is this imitation or art? You're not going to get any negatives out of this fan! If you are partial to the Baker vocal mystique, then this recording should do the trick for you. Despite an occasional intonation problem, Ruth Young admirably recreates an era and even includes some previously unheard verses for "This Is Always" and "Let's Get Lost."
01. Whatever Possessed Me
02. This Is Always
03. Time After Time
04. The Wind
05. I Fall in Love Too Easily
06. You're My Thrill
07. Deep in a Dream
08. Let's Get Lost
09. My Ideal
10. Thrill Is Gone
11. Look for the Silver Lining
12. But Not for Me
Personnel
Ruth Young - Vocals
Herb Geller - Alto Saxophone
Walter Lang - Piano
Rocky Knauer - Bass
Wolfgang Lackerschmid – Vibraphone
There was a certain sense of nagging familiarity as I listened to the first track of this jazz vocal album. As soon as I heard the first notes of "Whatever Possessed Me," it all fell into place. This is an album of all Chet Baker-associated tunes. Ruth Young was Baker's main squeeze from 1973-1982 and an integral part of the infamous Bruce Weber documentary film Let's Get Lost, released in 1989. Young was also the daughter of Max Youngstein, Vice President of United Artists Company, and as such she was raised in the worlds of Beverly Hills and New York City and became an acquaintance of many high-profile film stars.
When she met the trumpet/vocal legend, Young became immersed in his world of music and drugs for almost a decade before breaking off the relationship. The music chosen for his debut recording is not a tribute recording, but, as she puts it, "my heartfelt dedication to Chet's memory of our own very private and public years together." The liner notes were written by James Gavin, the auther of the very revealing biography Deep In A Dream: The Long Night of Chet Baker, published in 2002.
The dozen selections were recorded in Augsburg, Germany at the studio of Wolfgang Lackerschmid, the vibraphonist with whom Baker had recorded several fine albums in the late 1970s. Young also selected veteran ex-pat saxman Herb Geller, with whom Baker recorded some wonderful 1950s West Coast sessions, as well as pianist Walter Lang and bassist Rocky Knauer. Geller supplies several sinuous alto solos and helps to reconstruct the world of 1955 all over again. Her choice to go without a drummer was a carryover of Chet Baker's own preferences.
To no one's surprise, the presentation and delivery of the songs is a time capsule Chet Baker vocal session with Ruth Young eerily emulating Baker's phrasing and timing. Is this imitation or art? You're not going to get any negatives out of this fan! If you are partial to the Baker vocal mystique, then this recording should do the trick for you. Despite an occasional intonation problem, Ruth Young admirably recreates an era and even includes some previously unheard verses for "This Is Always" and "Let's Get Lost."
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