Beegie Adair - Dream Dancing (2001)
BAND/ARTIST: Beegie Adair
- Title: Dream Dancing
- Year Of Release: 2001
- Label: Green Hill Productions
- Genre: Jazz
- Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 01:04:40
- Total Size: 351 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
02. You're The Top
03. I Love Paris
04. So In Love
05. I Concentrate On You
06. Dream Dancing
07. I Love You
08. What Is This Thing Called Love?
09. Easy To Love
10. Every Time We Say Goodbye
11. It's All Right With Me
12. Why Shouldn't I?
13. From This Moment On
14. Begin The Beguine
This straight-ahead Cole Porter tribute was one of the first three releases from Hillsboro, a Nashville-based label that got off the ground in early 2001. (The other two were Antoine Silverman's Blue Moods and Jack Jezzro's Jazz Elegance.) Pianist Beegie Adair certainly knows her way around these songs, and she's aided expertly by bassist Roger Spencer and drummer Chris Brown. On track after track she hits the nail on the head, supplying just the right harmonic nuances, rhythmic twists, and expressive shades. She manages to slip some "Giant Steps" changes into "You're the Top." She takes "So in Love" as a ballad and "I Concentrate on You" at a brisk Latin bounce. She tackles the not-so-famous "Why Shouldn't I" and closes with a solo piano "Begin the Beguine." On "Every Time We Say Goodbye" she cadences deceptively to end her solo intro, pivoting into a new key when the trio enters. These are just some of the personal touches that make Adair's approach to Cole Porter anything but ordinary.
01. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
02. You're The Top
03. I Love Paris
04. So In Love
05. I Concentrate On You
06. Dream Dancing
07. I Love You
08. What Is This Thing Called Love?
09. Easy To Love
10. Every Time We Say Goodbye
11. It's All Right With Me
12. Why Shouldn't I?
13. From This Moment On
14. Begin The Beguine
This straight-ahead Cole Porter tribute was one of the first three releases from Hillsboro, a Nashville-based label that got off the ground in early 2001. (The other two were Antoine Silverman's Blue Moods and Jack Jezzro's Jazz Elegance.) Pianist Beegie Adair certainly knows her way around these songs, and she's aided expertly by bassist Roger Spencer and drummer Chris Brown. On track after track she hits the nail on the head, supplying just the right harmonic nuances, rhythmic twists, and expressive shades. She manages to slip some "Giant Steps" changes into "You're the Top." She takes "So in Love" as a ballad and "I Concentrate on You" at a brisk Latin bounce. She tackles the not-so-famous "Why Shouldn't I" and closes with a solo piano "Begin the Beguine." On "Every Time We Say Goodbye" she cadences deceptively to end her solo intro, pivoting into a new key when the trio enters. These are just some of the personal touches that make Adair's approach to Cole Porter anything but ordinary.
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