Last week, we focused on the Best Theater/Show Albums of 2003. Now it's
time to focus on the Best Vocal Albums of 2003, a genre that is
significantly more difficult to whittle down to a 'top ten' format. Once
again, the same rules and regulations apply, which makes the selection
process all the more difficult as some of my favorite albums of the year
were actually produced in 2002 (or even earlier). As two of them would
most assuredly have appeared on the 2002 list if I had received them in
time, I do want to mention them: Steven Lutvak's The Time it Takes
and Karen Oberlin's Secret Love: The Music of Doris Day.
If the number of times a CD was played either on my CD player at home
or on my I-Pod in the subway were to be the determining factor for 'Best
Album of 2003,' Stacy Sullivan's West on 40th would be the
hands-down winner. The album is a radical departure for Sullivan in terms
of style of vocals and material chosen, and one has the feeling that in it,
Sullivan has discovered her true voice. While a lot of the material on the
album does not fall into the traditional cabaret or theatrical realm of
music, it is all spun into lyric-driven gold thanks to Sullivan's
emotional honesty and smoldering vocal intensity.
One of the most sensual albums of the year is Christine Andreas's The
Carlyle Set
, in which Andreas wraps her smoky soprano and passionate
vibrato around a collection of comfortable songs set to a lush jazz score.
With Valentine's Day just around the corner, those seeking the perfect
'mood' album would be wise to check it out, if only for the pairing of
"How Insensitive" and "I'm a Fool to Want You."
Ute Lemper is one of the few performers who not only inhabits a lyric,
but performs a full-scale remodel on it to make it fit her sensibilities.
She is also one of the most visceral and mercurial of performers, tackling
everything from Weimar Republic political cabaret tunes to Jacques Brel
ballads to Elvis Costello numbers with equal aplomb and ferocity. Her
latest album, But One Day, is the perfect synthesis of her tastes
and is one of the most engaging albums of the year.
If anyone had told me last year that a spot on this list would
belong to Michael Feinstein, I probably would have arched an eyebrow or
two. While I am a fan of his older albums, the spark of delightful
discovery that made them such a joy to listen to has been fading in direct
contrast to the strengthening of his voice. However, in Only One Life:
The Songs of Jimmy Webb
, Feinstein has rekindled the sense of joy and
abandon from his early works and paired it up beautifully with his more
confidant and lush vocals.
Last year, Jessica Molaskey's debut CD, Pentimento, nearly
topped the Best of 2002 Vocals list. Her follow-up album, A Good
Day, repeats that honor, as it is a warm, sensual album perfect for
the lazy weekend or romantic interlude. Let's see if next year she pulls a
hat trick.
Lauren Kennedy and Jason Robert Brown joined forces to remarkable
effect on Lauren's first solo album, Lauren Kennedy: Songs of Jason Robert Brown. The pairing of Kennedy's clear, effervescent vocals
and Brown's arrangements and accompaniment is a treat.
The inclusion of four premier recordings, including my favorite number on
the disk (the haunting "If I Told You Now") make for a must-have album.
One of the most surprising discoveries of 2003 for me was Marieann
Meringolo, as her vocals and stage presence simply blew me away during her
CD release show at The Duplex. If K.D. Lang and Karen Carpenter were to
have a love child, the result might sound like Meringolo, whose voice
possesses a phenomenal belt that never overwhelms and a plaintive throb
that makes every lyric tug at the heartstrings. Her album Imagine ... If
We Only Have Love is equally thrilling and expressive.
Jazz/cabaret performer Joyce Breach has crafted an incredibly low-key
album, Joyce Breach: Remembering Mabel Mercer, that is refreshingly
simple and no-frills. Trusting that her voice, with its dark tenderness
and emotional honesty, will be enough to captivate a listener, Breach
performs a warm, comfortable collection of jazz-infused numbers containing
great lyrics and melodies.
Another delightfully pulled back album is Tom Michael's beautiful CD,
Written in the Stars. Taking the adage 'less is more' to perfectly
realized heart, the CD is tender, spare and delicate. Carole Bayer Sager
and Melissa Manchester's "Home to Myself," with its simple pairing of
piano and guitar, is simply magical when combined with Michael's delicate
phrasing and vocals.
A decidedly different approach is taken by Michael Holland in his
latest album, Beach Toys Won't Save You, an incredibly produced
album that inhabits the pop realm but manages to retain a sense of
theatricality and lyrical sensitivity. Quite frankly, the album was
released in the wrong season, as its musical hooks and thematic songs call
to mind summer months lying on the beach (although, given the frigid
temperatures of late, we definitely need a little August versus Christmas
now).
Stylistically, the songs run the pop gamut from Billy Joel ("Beatrice's
Boyfriend," a number that could be in a musical adaptation of Psycho
Beach Party) to 'Uncle Bonsai meets the Beach Boys' ("Boys Say Go," a
driving number on rebellion and cross dressing), to Fire Island dance
numbers, ("It's Too Late (For a Summer Love)"), to ABBA (the bonus track,
"Arriana Circus Girl"). The album does contain some tender ballads, "Wish
You Were Here" and "More," which illustrate that Holland knows his way
among the shoals of the heart as well.
-- Jonathan Frank
Make sure you check our list of Upcoming Releases.
|
|