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We Love

Sachal Vasandani

We Love

Price: € 17.95
Format: CD
Label: Mack Avenue
UPC: 0673203104624
Catnr: MAC 1046
Release date: 27 November 2009
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Label
Mack Avenue
UPC
0673203104624
Catalogue number
MAC 1046
Release date
27 November 2009
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
DE

About the album

Gerade wurde er im ?Down Beat Critics Poll 2009? zum 'Rising Star? gekürt. Vor der Presse haben dies schon die Kollegen erkannt: 'Sachal Vasandani's singing reveals emotion and intellect ? consistent and unique.? (Wynton Marsalis). Indem er ganz darauf verzichtet, bemüht auf 'Crooner? zu machen und entsprechende Stilmittel erst gar nicht einsetzt, kommt die Individualität und Ausdruckskraft seiner Stimme wirklich zur Geltung.

Artist(s)

Sachal Vasandani

  With his breakthrough 2007 debut, Eyes Wide Open, vocalist/composer/arranger Sachal Vasandani established himself as one of the most promising voices in modern jazz. A 2010 DownBeat 'Rising Star' poll winner, Vasandani presented his distinctive blend of jazz and pop with the critically acclaimed release, We Move in 2009.     Vasandani’s third Mack Avenue release, Hi-Fly, confirms the high praise showered on its two predecessors and proves the singer is one of the freshest, most versatile artists to emerge onto the scene in recent memory. Produced by renowned Grammy® award winning bassist John Clayton and Grammy nominated Mack Avenue EVP of A&R Al Pryor, both long-time supporters, Hi-Fly is an exciting mix...
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With his breakthrough 2007 debut, Eyes Wide Open, vocalist/composer/arranger Sachal Vasandani established himself as one of the most promising voices in modern jazz. A 2010 DownBeat "Rising Star" poll winner, Vasandani presented his distinctive blend of jazz and pop with the critically acclaimed release, We Move in 2009. Vasandani’s third Mack Avenue release, Hi-Fly, confirms the high praise showered on its two predecessors and proves the singer is one of the freshest, most versatile artists to emerge onto the scene in recent memory. Produced by renowned Grammy® award winning bassist John Clayton and Grammy nominated Mack Avenue EVP of A&R Al Pryor, both long-time supporters, Hi-Fly is an exciting mix of standards, originals and pop covers showcasing Vasandani’s ability to filter a wide range of material through his highly individual vision. Where We Move was characterized by a sense of introspection and longing, Hi-Fly finds Vasandani in upbeat form. “On this record I wanted to share some of the joy of singing this music,” Vasandani says. “I worked through the turbulence that inspired the last record and just tried to have fun. I was thinking less about drawing the listener into my heart and more about celebrating.” Nowhere is that celebratory spirit more pronounced than on “One Mint Julep,” on which Vasandani is joined by the legendary Jon Hendricks, one of the originators of vocalese and a godfather of jazz vocals, whose presence is a ringing endorsement of the younger singer. Hendricks also returns on the title track, a Randy Weston composition for which he penned the lyrics. It seems impossible to imagine anyone listening to the rollicking “One Mint Julep” without a smile on their face, from the obvious joy of the duo’s romp through the gleefully antiquated lyric to their playful vocalese back-and-forth. “As a young singer, anytime I get a chance to hang out with somebody like Jon it’s humbling,” says Vasandani. “Jon has a generous spirit and obviously knows how to collaborate, but he’s going to be in the driver’s seat just because he’s Jon Hendricks. I found myself just enjoying the ride. He was pressing the accelerator and luckily I was sitting shotgun and not stuffed in the trunk.” Despite his modesty, Vasandani more than holds his own while sparring with the 89-year-old master, but he really spotlights his diverse talents on three original pieces he penned for the album. “Babes Blues” is a dedication to the singer’s girlfriend and a chance for all involved to stretch out a bit, from Vasandani’s soaring falsetto to thrilling solos from guests John Ellis (tenor sax) and Ambrose Akinmusire (trumpet). “Flood” is the album’s most heartrending track, inspired by recent natural disasters in Asia, Pakistan and Japan in particular. “That lyric was a personal response,” he explains. “I’d hear about all this devastation in the news and it inspired this personal narrative. As artists, we try to feel and assess the pain of other people and put it out.” From the universal to the extremely personal (which is so often, of course, also universal), “Summer No School” looks back at playground romance. “I wanted to write a love song that was not so much about love now but love when you’re younger. Musicians tend to talk about how we’re feeling now as adults, so ‘Summer No School’ was a good chance to look backwards at my own past, not as a developing artist but as a developing young man.”
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