
Diana
Krall - Live In Paris
Verve/Universal
Jazz legend Charlie Parker once
said "Master your instrument, master the music, and then
forget all that shit you just learned and just play" On Live
in Paris Diana
Krall does just
that her playing is carefree but tight and her voice joyful and
sultry. The album kicks off appropriately with Peggy Lee's 'I
Love Being Here With You" It's a reminder of why Krall has
been compared to the late singer. She manipulates Jazz vocal phrasing
much like Lee did in her time inflecting differently on a line
just to tell the tale her way. It's one of the reasons Diana
Krall can sing
the standards and almost make it seem like she wrote them giving
the tunes a new shine. Her take on the Bacharach/David classic
'The Love Of Love' is a great example on first listen it's easy
to think the coolness of the the track is simply conveyed through
slick production - sure that helps but listen to the the vulnerability
in her voice, how she almost talks the words. Her strength is
not in her range but her understanding and interpretation. Having
said that it did take a few listens to warm up to her take of
Joni Mitchell's "A Case of You" again Krall's phrasing
stretched the classic but Mitchell's a hard act to follow especially
with this raw hurtin' tune. The track is also representative of
Joni
Mitchell at her
prime and that's a steep mountain to tackle. Another interesting
choice is Billy
Joel's "Just
the Way You Are" on print this might sound like another bad
idea but Krall pulls it off - the production is simpler than the
original and trademark Sax solo is brought up a notch by Michael
Brecker. As great as her backup band is on this superb live album
it's Krall that really hypnotizes the audience on this one. -
by John
Beaudin
Diana Krall-The
Look Of Love
Verve/Universal Music
It's easy to understand why some
just don't get Diana
Krall. She's
like a lover who fails the checklist test but quickly becomes
something you can't live without. Here's a lady without a multi-octave
range and though she knows her way around the ivories is usually
drowned out by orchestration but time and again releases albums
that lead her Jazz genre. Krall is an artist who's strength shines
on a whole album not a particular song and on the whole package
not just her voice or piano chops. When I first heard her debut
album in 1992 I thought 'maybe in a few years she'll knock my
socks off' only to be surprised on phoning a radio station to
find out the singer I was grooving to was in fact Diana
Krall and worse
the same debut disc that originally didn't impress me. So I warn
you she grows on you and fast. This new CD is much smoother and
even more intimate than her groundbreaking 'When I Look In Your
Eyes' from 1999. Opening with Gershwin's S'Wonderful is never
a bad idea featuring Brazil's Dori Caymmi on guitar and layered
to symphonic perfection by the Los Angeles Session Orchestra.
The London Symphony takes over on the timeless 'Love Letters'
a subtle masterpiece in the hands of producer Tommy Lipuma who
worked on her last one and produced some big albums for George
Benson in the
70's. Krall stretches with Latin flavour on Consuelo Velasquez
Besame Mucho (Kiss Me Much) a romantic ballad sung in Spanish.
Krall seems to own Hoagy Carmichael's 'I Get Along Without You
Very Well' adding subtle passion to a already melancholy lyric
about turning a corner and being reminded once again how much
you miss the one that got away. Unlike her last album this one
features only very slow ballads. How Krall can make releasing
a Jazz standards Cd an event is pretty amazing in itself considering
this is not exactly re-inventing the wheel for Jazz fans, it's
been done too many times but this local phenomenon proves it's
all in the execution. If your Cd collection is lacking Some Diana
Krall this new
one is a great place to start. By
John Beaudin
October 2001