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All About Jazz.Com
Jazz Reviews
by David Nathan
August 3, 2002
If the course of time is a major factor in determining
the success and long term popularity of an entertainer,
then vocalist Meredith d'Ambrosio has graduated
Summa Cum Laude. "Love Is For The Birds"
is the singer's 14th CD [15th album]. Yet her first
recording was for an outfit called Spring, cut in
1978, more than 24 years ago. She is at a point
of her career when she can be exceedingly discerning
in picking the contents of her play list (even in
her teeth-cutting days, she did not engage in that
knee jerk reaction of relying solely on standards
for her material). With each succeeding release,
the play list becomes more varied in style and content,
more cosmopolitan and perhaps more obscure in the
sense of being secluded. With her latest, she makes
a major shift going from songs written by others
to an agenda of her works written by herself, with
others, or her lyrics added to classics written
by consumate artists such as Harold Land and Kenny
Dorham. Dorham, always undervalued as a writer,
is responsible for one of the most engaging tracks
on the album "Rhyme Of Spring" ("Poetic
Spring") with words added and airily sung by
d'Ambrosio. This track also features outstanding
trading of ideas between Don Sickler and Bob Kindred
on trumpet and tenor respectively with bass interlude
by the ubiquitous Jay Leonhart. Another feature
of d'Ambrosio's albums is the close rapport between
her and her band and how the latter sustains the
mood of the former. . . The session is not all melancholy
by any means. d'Ambrosio puts on her swinging shoes
for such cuts as "Cup Of Life" ("Cup
Bearers"), again with some outstanding ensemble
and solo work by the members of the band. The critical
task of piano accompanist has been assigned to Lee
Musiker and with excellent results. Musiker, who
has backed Barbara Cook, Susannah McCorkle and Mark
Murphy, is right at home here. Another very good
effort by a true artist of the vocal craft. Recommended.
. .
Jazzreview.com
by Donna Kimura
August 2002
After [14] albums to her name, Meredith d'Ambrosio
has released her first CD made up entirely of her
own material. She wrote all the lyrics as well as
music for more than half of the 13 songs on "Love
Is For The Birds". On the numbers that don't
feature her music, she penned stories for songs
by Clifford Brown, Kenny Dorham, Harold Land and
others. The result is a warm, captivation CD filled
with meditations of love. For the most part, the
songs swing gently with the musicians setting the
pace and d'Ambrosio's soft, lullaby voice setting
the mood. She, however, doesn't dominate. Instead,
she uses her voice as one instrument in an ensemble.
The other musicians all have opportunities to shine.
They skillfully create a rich texture behind d'Ambrosio's
shy, thoughtful vocals. A Renaissance woman, d'Ambrosio
is also a talented painter. Check out the cover
art. In some ways, "Love Is For The Birds"
is a painting with the musicians, particularly pianist
Lee Musiker, contributing splashes of color where
needed to create an overall impression. . . Clifford
Brown fans will be interested in the light touches
she gives to his "Daahoud". "Love
Is For The Birds" is recommended.
All Music Guide
by Judith Schlesinger
June 16, 2002
In a sea of sound-alike female vocalists, Meredith
d'Ambrosio has always stood alone. Soft-voiced and
understated, a writer of literate, thoughtful lyrics,
she seems more interested in the overall mood of
the music than in showcasing her own emotions or
technique. Recording steadily since 1978, primarily
for Sunnyside, d'Ambrosio always assembles top-flight
musicians to help create her signature feel of meditative
intimacy. This new release continues that tradition,
with the difference that d'Ambrosio supplies the
words and/or music for every track. Six are her
originals - "Steppenwolf" and "Valentine"
being highlights - and she glides her subtle sentiments
over melodies by Harold Land, Clifford Brown, Kenny
Dorham, Tom McIntosh, and Eddie Higgins. The band
is stellar: many tracks feature a trio setting with
the underfamous pianist Lee Musiker, who's constantly
wonderful here, the elegant bassist Jay Leonhart
and the brilliant Joe Ascione on drums, who, given
the calm pace throughout, only gets to break out
on the opener and "Daahoud", where d'Ambrosio's
ability to swing is also most evident. There are
splendid solos by Bob Kindred on sax, John Allred
on trombone, and Don Sickler on trumpet and flugelhorn.
Sickler also did the fine sextet arrangements. The
set ends with a gentle tribute to the peerless singer/composer/pianists
Dave Frishberg and Bob Dorough. Overall, a dreamy
and relaxing CD.
All Music Guide
by Ken Dryden
August 2002
Singer Meredith d'Ambrosio alternates between trio
arrangements (whichch she co-arranged with pianist
Lee Musiker) and a sextet scored by trumpeter and
flugelhornist Don Sickler, while also writing lyrics
for all 13 songs which are centered around the challenge
of achieving and maintaining love. Her soft, cool-toned
vocals are captivation, as is her ability to write
intelligent lyrics that originate from songs by
composers like Kenny Dorham, Harold Land, Tom McIntosh,
and Clifford Brown. d'Ambrosio also wrote the music
and lyrics to seven of the selections, including
a haunting ballad "I May Be The One".
She collaborated with Eddie Higgins on the richly
textured samba "Just A Dream" and Ray
Passman on the whimsical but understated "Frishberg
And Dorough", a fine tribute to two very entertaining
singing pianists which intermixes excerpts of lyrics
[and melodies, ed.]from each of the songs. Highly
recommended. Four stars
JazzTimes
VOX
by Christopher Loudon
October 2002
I've always considered Meredith d'Ambrosio an acquired
taste. . . But once you fall, you fall hard, and
I've long since been enchanted by the particular
brand of vodoo that she does so well. Love Is For
The Birds is a deftly shaded examination of love's
ephemerality. . .
Among the entirely self-penned selections, "Valentine"
is particularly cunning. Created by d'Ambrosio as
a musical response to audiences' endless requests
for "My Funny Valentine", it is a Daliesque
kaleidoscope of emotions that is spookily sublime.
As always, the multi-talented d'Ambrosio is also
responsible for the eminently apt watercolor that
graces the album's cover - a lonely country road
caught, like fading love, between the warmth of
summer and the chill of early autumn.
Jazzscene (Portland, OR)
by George Fendel
September 2002
Each new Meredith CD gives reason to celebrate,
and this one's certainly no exception. Meredith
finds herself in the company of some genuine New
York phenoms in Don Sickler, trumpet and flugelhorn;
John Allred, trombone; Bob Kindred, tenor sax and
drums; Lee Musiker, piano; Jay Leonhart, bass; and
Joe Ascione, drums. The tunes are primarily those
of the singer herself, and she writes haunting melodies
and literate, often romantic lyrics. Most of the
tunes deal in one way or another with love and/or
relationships, and Meredith never falters in telling
the stories spun by these lovely songs. In addition
to her well-woven originals, she puts thoughtful
lyrics to melodies by such luminaries as Tom McIntosh,
Harold Land, Kenny Dorham, Ralph Moore, Clifford
Brown and even hubby pianist Eddie Higgins. An extra
special treat is Meredith's homage to two of her
favorites, Dave Frishberg and Bob Dorough. It's
simply entitled Frishberg and Dorough. Listen to
it. You'll hear lots of love. And nobody sings of
that timele ss emotion better than Meredith d'Ambrosio.
Five stars
WDNA 88 Jazz Place
Mel's Picks
"Melodious Mel Loves Meredith. Love may be
for the birds, but the latest from Meredith d'Ambrosio
is for the jazz lover in all."
by Mel Lipton
September 16, 2002
This is Meredith d'Ambrosio's 14th CD. The multitalented
jazz vocalist, arranger and composer wrote all the
love song lyrics, and music on half of them. . .
"Josephine", the Ralph Moore classic,
is transformed into an explicit love ballad entitled
"Don't Go". . . Creative is the word for
this hip master of the genre. She has sung in front
of the best musicians, and this group is no exception.
Lee Musiker on piano, Jay Leonhart on bass, and
Joe Ascione on drums make up the great rhythm section.
To round out this great sextet we have Don Sickler
on trumpet and flugelhorn, John Allred on trombone,
and Bob Kindred on tenor sax and flute. And talk
about talent! All of Meredith's CD covers are her
paintings, and this one depicts the road to her
summer home on Cape Cod which she shares with her
husband Eddie Higgins and a chocolate labrador retriever
named Clifford Brown. Quite the jazz family. Don't
miss this one.
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It's
Your Dance
(SSC 1011)
|
Washington Post (DC)
"Sounds"
by Mike Joyce
October 4, 1985
Meredith d'Ambrosio can always be counted
on to pack her albums with splendid song,
and her new release, "It's Your Dance"
is no exception. The album is bursting at
the seams with warm, wonderful, intelligent
songs from the likes of Jerome Kern, Vernon
Duke, Bob Dorough and Dave Frishberg. The
list goes on to include d'Ambrosio herself,
which have a gentle, persuasive charm and
clearly rank among the album's highlights.
. .
Cash Box
December 14, 1985
The wonderful Meredith d'Ambrosio's singing
is personal, intimate, and oh so poignant,
and she has the knack for picking out the
right songs. This is a mixture of rarely
heard pieces by the great American songwriters,
contemporary pieces that fit the menu, and
originals. Fine backing, too, by the cozy
pairing of Harold Danko and Kevin Eubanks
on half the LP, and the singer on piano
the rest of the way.
Chicago Weekend
"Consumer Guide To Jazz"
by Lofton Emenari
March 3 - 8, 1987
Where has this absolutely brilliant jazz
singer been? . . . d'Ambrosio is a songstress
with striking ability and an unforced beauty.
Obscure songs like "The Underdog"
and "Humpty Dumpty Heart" are
rendered with a smooth edge and grace. Her
distinctive manner - a cool, suave breeziness
and a mellow soulful attitude - makes this
album a heartfelt date of warm honesty.
5 stars
Jazzscene
"Record Reviews"
by Mark Daterman
January 1986
Now here's a very good record indeed: a
tight, sensitive trio that can relax and
breathe as one unit, with all the right
nuances wrung out of them by d'Ambrosio
and her clear voice. . . one of the best
mainstream jazz records I've heard this
year . . .
Cadence Magazine
by Alan Bargebuhr
May 1986
. . . d'Ambrosio's subtle readings of these
excellent songs, the unobtrusive but puissant
support she receives from Danko and Eubanks,
the evidence of her songwriting talents,
all underscore the many delights and surprises
you'll encounter as you audition this LP.
Here is an artist whose honesty of mind
and heart complement one another to produce
something far greater than the sum of its
parts. This one shouldn't be overlooked.
It's a beauty.
Willamette Week
"Music"
by Lyn Darroch
May 15-21, 1986
There's an ironic edge to this Eugene-based
singer's sweet, subdued voice. Coupled with
her original tunes and some well-chosen,
offbeat classics, the effect is an intimately
poignant and
very musical commentary on life and love.
. .
The Register-Guard, Eugene, OR
"Singer goes for wry, romantic jazz"
by Karen DuPriest
May 8, 1986
. . . Her favorite songs by famous composers
are the ones hardly anyone knows. d'Ambrosio
has found and revived fine songs by G. Gershwin,
J. Kern, A. Wilder and others. In "Humpty
Dumpty Heart", just such a song by
Van Heusen and Burke , d'Ambrosio with her
piano seems to play for a single person;
you can almost feel the eye contact as she
asks, "Who's giving that line to you?
You think it's divine, don't you?"
Yes, Meredith, it's divine.
Minnesota Monthly
(Author unknown)
April 1986
Meredith d'Ambrosio is a very different
kind of singer - understated, conversational,
sultry. Her smoky, knowing voice and adept
piano stylings are heard to great advantage
on "It's Your Dance". . . You
get seven songs a side, and none of them
are fragments. Many are diamonds. The lady's
taste in tunes is exquisite. She covers
dry, urbane wits like Bob Dorough and Dave
Frishberg, adds lyrics to classic compositions
of John Coltrane and Dave Brubeck, and forages
for neglected gems from the Great American
Songbok about as well as anyone working
a club or concert hall. . . The mood is
bittersweet throughout. d'Ambrosio presents
a collection of badly bent yet hopeful characters
in her songs, people with gleams in their
eyes and one foot in mud puddles: frustrated
sports fans, dismissed lovers, long-in-the-tooth
models, and - in the Kern oddity "Nobody
Else But Me" - a couple who are drawn
together when they realize they're both
dull. "It's Your Dance" steers
clear of the usual chamber jazz and cabaret
fare - no standards, no Sondheim - and the
LP is all the better for the omission.
Arts & Entertainment Journal
"A Songwriter's Singer"
by Larry Etscovitz
March 21-27. 1986
. . . Now I've found someone new to cut
through the noise in my life. I spent last
Sunday afternoon listening to all four of
her albums and reflecting on her artistry.
Her name is Meredith d'Ambrosio. . .For
me, the most important quality of her singing
is the tremendous significance she conveys
with the lyrics. I found myself getting
up frequently to look at the record label
to see who wrote that song, and that other
one, and I began to reflect upon the treasure-trove
of art contained in the American popular
songs of this century; not only those by
famous names, but also lesser-known but
equally great names. The fact that I was
thinking about the music and lyrics of these
songwriters made me realize that Meredith
d'Ambrosio's artistry was making them important
to me. Her way with these songs is intimate,
personal, as if she was singing just to
you. . .
Grammy Pulse
"Looking for a few good discs?"
by Mike Farrace
May 1986
d'Ambrosio couldn't have been named more
appropriately. This record is Ambrosia.
It's a soft, cool, flowing record oozing
with Coltrane and breathy Miles. Pianist
Harold Danko and guitarist Kevin Eubanks
have combined with d'Ambrosio's fluid pipes
for a result that I can ony ineptly describe
by saying it's soothing and challenging,
vigorous and relaxing. There are a lot of
mellow vocal records out there that could
easily be recommended, but this one is a
must-have.
Billboard
"Recommended"
by Sam Sutherland
December 28. 1985
Fine jazz vocalist with a light, warm touch
. . .
Jazz Journal International (UK)
by Simon Adams
January 1986
d'Ambrosio's voice is well suited to the
material on this album. . . her statements
are necessarily precise and unadorned. She
eschews the usual scat traits of most jazz
singers and concentrates on clean enunciation
of words and notes, her voice clear in the
middle register, huskier at the extremes
and never forced. Many of the lyrics are
her own, love and disillusionment the usual
topic, . . . hers is an individual voice
of great charm and interesting tonal coloration.
. .
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Another
Time
(SSC 1017) |
The News
and Observer, Raleigh, N. C.
by Owen Cordle
August 30, 1981
. . . Meredith is an intimate charmer. .
. Her low-pitched voice has the airy grace
of Stan Getz's tenor sax, her sparse piano
shadows Bill Evans, and her repertoire celebrates
the well-turned phrase. . .
Stereo Review
by Chris Albertson
October 1981
. . .Meredith's new Shiah release, "Another
Time" is her second album. Like her
first, it appears on a small, private label
of the kind whose releases usually end up,
for lack of adequate promotion and distribution,
stacked in somebody's closet or basement.
That would be a real shame in this case,
for "Another Time" offers connoisseurs
fine versions of 18 songs by 23 writers.
. . I can enthusiastically recommend both
[albums] to anyone interested in the arts
of songwriting and song delivery.
Newport This Week
by Charles Drago
November 13, 1981
. . .There never has been a warmer singer
than Meredith d'Ambrosio, one who can so
selectively conjure the good memories, the
grey and yellow light of an autumn shower,
the musty smell of Christmas ornaments resurrected
for another seasonal go-round. "Another
Time" is a masteriece of romance and
resolution, a collection of 18 gems spread
across the darkly hued velvet of Meredith's
vision. . . this set offers thematically
and emotionally direct statements, as pristine
in their conciseness as a short story by
Barthelme. . . Indeed, she retains an unwillingness
to waste time, a need for immediate verities
as she effortlessly reaches the very heart
of each song. Alec Wilder, to whom "Another
Time" is dedicated, must have written
"While We're Young" for Meredith.
She administers the tender admonition of
its lyric while illuminating a subtext both
subtle and profound. . . Throughout "Another
Time", Meredith is buoyed by her own
piano accompaniment. Always jazz-true, open
neither to the repetitive-but-swinging n
or inventive-but-flat canards, her playing
remains subtlely propulsive, harmonically
sure and, especially in those short and
sweet introductions, melodically uplifting.
. .
Jazzletter
by Gene Lees
November 15, 1981
. . . Meredith is a startling singer, not
because of spectacular fort high notes or
ingenious explorations of the harmony, but
for her utter self-efacing simplicity, her
devotion to the honest presentation of the
song. Miss d'Ambrosio is a pianist, and
a good one. She is her sole accompanist
on the record, and she is (like Blossom
Dearie) perfect for herself, with a lovely
touch and tone and voicings (which occasionally
hint atone of her heroes, Bill Evans) that
are inelligent, discreet, and pretty. And
she is always the servant of the song. Her
intonation and enunciation are impeccable.
. . She uses vibrato only occasionally,
and then it is very controlled in speed
and width. Her way of aroaching intervals
is a delight. Down-up, bing! Right on the
note. No sliding into place, no uncertainty
about the center of the tone. It's like
watching a bird as it alights on t fragile
branch without even shaking it. There is
an immediate temptation to compare her to
Jackie Cain and the late Irene Kral, but
in point of fact she has only one quality
in common with them: perfection. Otherwise,
she is - as they are - her own woman. .
. there is a quality to this album (whose
reputation is gradually spreading, by the
way, entirely on its merits) that I can
only describe as...serenity. . .
Crescendo International, London
by Jimmy Staples
January 1982
. . . Meredith d'Ambrosio is that rarity
- a sincere and completely uncommercial
singer. . . has an intimate voice, full
of feeling, and her choice of titles is
exquisite! . . .
American Federation of Music "On
the Leval"
by George Leval.
March 10, 1982
. . .The great philosophers of our day are
those singer-pianists who see truth through
the haze of cigarette smoke and lost dreams.
Miss d'Ambrosio approaches her material
with great affection. Her pacing, attention
to detail and clarity never falter. She
is a jazz-oriented singer and a skilled
piianist who never allows the piano to intrude
on her conversation with her listener. Her
voice is a warm, husky, fully-textured instrument;
remarkable for its breath control. . . Meredith
is an original. One is impressed by the
repeated surprises, the joys she evokes
by repeated listening. There is always subtlety
and nuance in her work. . . a remarkable
second album.
Washington Post
by Mike Joyce
November 12, 1982
Meredith d'Ambrosio, long a familiar name
in Boston, is no ordinary B-flat singer,
as Dave Frishberg might have said. Her husky,
low-keyed singing complements a taste for
songs both lierate and lasting. . .
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Lost
In His Arms
(SSC 1018) |
New
England Today
by Fred Bouchard
1980 Nov./Dec.
Meredith d'Ambrosio has been skimming
as gracefully as a tern between careers
as a singer/pianist and eggshell-mosaicist
for many years; she is finally coming
home to roost with the former art, and
lovers of American song can rejoice. .
.M. brings the same fine-etched, delicate
emphasis and pastel shading to the songs
as she does to her land- and city-scapes.
. . Every tune Meredith sings sounds fresh
and new each time she sings it because
she makes herself the vehicle of the message,
the Sibyl of the composer and lyricist.
. .
Cadence (Point-Counterpoint)
by Bob Rusch
1981 March
. . . Tune collectors will welcome this
for its fine choice of first line, but obscure
gems: when was the last time you heard George
Handy's, "Rip Van Winkle" sung?
Ms. d'Ambrosio also shows a talent as a
lyricist as she naturally integrates her
own original lyrics to Freddie Hubbard's
"Up Jumped Spring". . . Best of
all, the spirit and performance of the record
holds up very well. It remains fresh and
inviting after dozens of listenings over
dozens of days. . . A secret worth publicizing
and worth your attention. A very fine record,
strongly recommended.
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The
Cove
(SSC 1028) |
The Charlotte
Observer
"Meredith d'Ambrosio album worth looking
for"
by Jerry Shinn
. . .the star is d'Ambrosio, a graphic as
well as musical artist. (One of her watercolors
graces the album cover). . . she's a fine
singer with a distinctive voice and a sexy,
sophisticated style. In addition to painting
the cover and singing, she accompanies herself
on piano on three of the selections and,
along with Hersch, provided the arrangements.
She also wrote two of the songs: "Thunderstruck",
with clever words and unpredictable music,
and "Time To Say Goodbye", with
poignant sentiments matched to an equally
poignant melody. . .
Cash Box
October 15, 1988
One of the tastiest vocalists going in a
purring, romantic album of standards and
should-be-standards with Lee Konitz on hand.
The Dallas Morning News
"A Surge Of Jazz Releases"
by Doug Ramsey
January 15, 1989
Possibly the least famous great singer alive,
d'Ambrosio implies more in a phrase than
a pop-jazz sensation like Diane Schurr shouts
in an entire album. Here, with a perfect
rhythm section headed by pianist Fred Hersch
and occasional obligatos and solos by alto
saxophonist Lee Konitz, she uses her musicianship,
jazz sensibility and sensuous dusky voice
to recast 15 songs. . . All are explored
for depths and levels of meaning that can
be discovered only by a major artist.
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South
To A Warmer Place
(SSC 1039) |
Jazz
Times
by Doug Ramsey
May 1990
Through its use by record industry flacks
to describe every new rapper, three-chord
guitarist or teenager screaming descriptions
of the sex act, the word "artist"
as applied to music has been, shall we say,
devalued. In an earlier phase of its evolution
it meant a person who used aesthetic principles
to produce something beautiful, appealing
and extraordinary. Meredith dAmbrosio is
an artist in the pre-merchandising sense.
Intelligence. Taste. Restraint. Subtlety.
Insinuation. Harmonic sensibility. Voice
production that seems effortless. Purity
of intonation. Flawless diction, timing
and phrasing. These are the aesthetic principles
employed by Ms. d'Ambrosio in her wizardry
of interpretation. When she merely sings
the melody, which is often the case, she
finds depths of meaning that can be discovered
only by a true artist. . . This singer's
work is full of small, brilliant joys and
surprises. . . At the end of "More
Than You Know", she invents a harmonic
sequence worthy of Dizzy at his slyest.
Ms. d'Ambrosio's vibrato is used as sparingly
as her harmonic knowledge, never for show,
only when it somehow advances the music,
as in her phrase endings in Clare Fischer's
"Morning". There are, in this
album, dozens of such examples of her musicianship.
But what will strike the unanalytical listener
is the sheer, natural beauty of the singing...
Downbeat
by Fred Bouchard
July 1990
Meredith d'Ambrosio is like lavender: traditional,
fragrant, and durable. Her constant affection
for America's more subtle and unsung pop
tunes os finally paying off: this could
be the cool, clear-eyed semi-discovered
singer's best yet . . . Five stars
Journal Of The International Assoc.
of Jazz Record Collectors
by Art Hilgart
Summer 1994
This review is personal dues. When we get
a new record, we play it a few times, maybe
make a tape for the car, enter it in our
computer files, and shelve it in alphabetical
order. But "South To A Warmer Place"
just can't make it off our new record shelf.
To pick it up is to play it one more time.
d'Ambrosio and Higgins bring perfect jazz
chops to songs, but wonder of wonders, the
meaning of the lyric is redered flawlessly
as well. . . And now, if you'll excuse me,
I have to go play it again.
Wire (London, Eng.)
by Graham Lock
November 1990
The new "South To A Warmer Place"
is the minor masterpiece Meredith d'Ambrosio
has been promising for a decade. At last,
all the elements fall into place: she's
picked a set of five-star standards, with
barely a too-cute line in earshot, and assembled
a sensitive small group of accompanists,
among whom Eddie Higgins stands out as the
perfect foil for d'Ambrosio's low, lugubriously-swinging
vocals. The results are enchanting: a display
of top-class jazz singing, intimate in style,
subtle in execution, and with no unwanted
distractions to make you cringe. . .
The Ottawa Citizen (Canada)
"Jazz"
by Lois Moody
July 13, 1991
Don't let the soft, low-pitched voice and
deceptively simple delivery of the singer
keep you from paying close attention to
what is really happening in this performance.
d'Ambrosio is a subtle, thoughtful interpreter,
a creative lyricist and improviser and a
wel-rounded musician. She is one of those
rare individuals who can make you focus
totally on a song and perhaps change your
way of listening. . . Highly recommended.
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Little
Jazz Bird
(SSC 1040) |
Newport: This Week
"The Little Jazz Bird Soars"
by Charles Drago
December 23, 1982
. . .STOP THE PRESSES! "Little Jazz
Bird" is not merely a showcase for
the considerable talents of singer/pianist
Meredith d'Ambrosio, in its celebration
of the standard repertoire, presentation
of new songwriting talent, redefining of
the state-of-the-art of vocal/jazz insrumental
interaction, and reintroduction of one of
American music's most gifted arrangers,
this recording sets a host of standards
that serious practitioners of these arts
will be hard pressed to meet. . . Darkly
humorous, intentionally chilling and ultimately
this record's crowning glory, "When
The End Comes" is haunting the way
no other song in the history of this music
can be . . . This in a soft ballad tempo
as Phil Woods's alto rumbles faintly, faintly
and is gone. So we have come to this, our
imaginations bowed under that terrible weight.
If for a moment I believed that "When
The End Comes" was a document of surrender,
an acquiescence to the evil that would deny
the love and sadness and life of which Meredith
so beautifully s ings, then I would damn
this record and all it represents. But Deborah
Henson-conant, in that ultimate melancholy
she so outrageously understates, make as
significant and eloquent a statement on
behalf of humanity as those of Jonathan
Schell and E.P. Thompson and Alec Wilder
and Horace Silver. And Meredith d'Ambrosio
whom I love.
Philadelphia Daily News
JAZZ
"Sarah Vaughan/Meredith d'Ambrosio"
by Nels Nelson
January 7, 1983
. . . I simply can't say enough about her.
Here is a singer and musician who knows
her own voice in a way that the best solists
in jazz know their instruments . . .
San Francisco Bay Guardian
"'83's Hot Discs"
by Derk Richardson
March 23, 1983
. . . Everything about this delicious little
album is graced by a lightness of touch.
. . Above it all wafts d'Ambrosio's exquisitely
warm, sincere and focused voice, one of
the most inviting and comforting new sounds
in jazz. . . Without ever resorting to pathos,
she touches deeply. And the entire production
fits like a down comforter.
Jazz Times Record Reviews
by W. Royal Stokes
August 1983
. . . This is an album deserving wide listening
by both those who love a lyric lightly handled
as well as those for whom jazz singing only
means reviving up the tempo until the radiator
boils over. d'Ambrosio may be described
as the alter ego to her vocal hot breath
of her intimate way with the poetry of jazz.
. . she accompanies herself on two numbers
with a pianistic identy that can only be
described as the alter ego to her vocal
attributes. This could be the sleeper vocal
album of the year.
IAJRC (International
Assoc. of Jazz Record Collectors)
London, England "Record Talk"
by John Lindner
January 1984
. . .none of the overworked standards here.
There is a special magic in Meredith's voice,
and how often can you say that about anybody?
Her's is the kind of voice that you might
find in a small, intimate, smoke filled
night club, while you sit at the piano bar
savoring every little nuance and note, thinking
perhaps of old love affairs, while you consume
innumerable glasses of your favorite libation.
Jazz Journal International London, Eng.
"Record Reviews"
by Derrick Stewart-Baxter
March 1984
This is a delightful record full of god
songs, good playing and of course, excellent
singing . . . All the songs are delightful
and many will be unknown to most readers.
To sum up - a record containing fine songs,
good arranging and a sensitive singer. Who
dares ask for more?!
The Singles Forum Denver, CO
"For The Record"
by Dawn Heather Simmons
September 1984
Up until about two weeks ago, there were
two jazz artists I felt were deserving of
far more recognition than they were getting
in the Denver area . . . Bob Dorough and
Blossom Dearie . . . Now there are three
. . . I welcome into those ranks Meredith
d'Ambrosio, whose latest release, "Little
Jazz Bird", is destined for excessive
playing on my turntable for as long as the
grooves hold out. . . Her phrasing is without
fault, her pitch is perfect, her tonal quality
is rich and warm, but most of all, her voice
is intimate. . . In the last couple of years,
she has won great critical acclaim. . .
The album is exquisite. . . Just lsten to
this music and wrap it around yourself like
a warm blanket on the first chill evening
of fall. And if you're still not convinced,
you might take this to heart: Recorded music
is nice, but nothing compares to live performance.
Meredith will be performing live at El Chapultepec
on Sept. 2 and 3. Don't miss her!
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Love
Is Not A Game
(SSC 1051) |
Lawrence
Journal World
"Jazz"
by Chuck Berg
September 8, 1991
Meredith d'Ambrosio, a consummate storyteller,
is a true musician whose graceful phrasing,
rhythmic subtlety and impeccable taste put
her in company with the best of improvising
instrumentalists. For a taste of her skills
in spontaneous composition, try her uptempo
romp through the medley of the Cole Porter
classic "I Love You" and d'Ambrosio's
own clever spin-off "You I Love".
Indeed, it's not surprising that the singer
is herself a fine pianist whose sensitive
playing is displayed here on the title track,
a brooding lament called "Love Is Not
A Game". . . d'Ambrosio, in addition
to her own compositions, is a talented wordsmith
who's penned attractive lyrics for such
well-known jazz lines as J.J.Johnson's "Lament".
. . In all, an impressive date from one
of jazzdom's most exotic larks.
Jazz Times
by Fred Bouchard
November 1991
And finally - aah - Meredith. What a breath
of fresh air she breathes into this subtle
and sumptuous set! . . . Ms. d' sounds sunnier,
younger, and more smiling that she has in
her last two albums - a warm quaver with
a thrill in it, Blossom Dearie down an octave.
And with her watercolor self-portrait picking
daisies on the cover, you say to yourself:
"Sunnyside, indeed!" She never
ever forces, either her dusky voice or an
idea. She knows the limits of her range
and her emotions, and squeezes us their
first pressings. . .
Washington Post/Weekend
"On The Town"
by Mike Joyce
September 20, 1991
A watercolor self-portrait adorns the cover
of singer (and artist) Meredith d'Ambrosio's
new album "Love Is Not A Game",
a fitting touch for a recording as intimate
and revealing as this one. Intimate, because
d'Ambrosio and her trio takes great care
in arranging her material sensitively to
underscore the emotion implicit in each
lyric. Revealing, because as both a singer
and a composer, d'Ambrosio continues to
interpret and write songs that have a distinctly
personal, sometimes even confessional slant.
A singer, after all, should make you a believer,
and here, whether unveiling her own often
contemplative songs, or adding wonderful
lyrics to tunes by J.J.Johnson, or interpreting
Bill Evans's lovely ballad "In April",
d'Ambrosio makes it all look easy and effortless,
despite the often challenging arrangements.
In short, she's part poet, part improviser
and wholly convincing on this recording
. . .
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Shadowland
(SSC 1060) |
Durham Morning
Herald, N.C.
by R.C. Smith
May 21, 1993
. . . Her CD for Sunnyside, "Shadowland",
may actually be a watershed album for jazz
singing, as it contains several "paraphrase"
songs, which involve her creating jazz variations
on the lyrics as well as the melodies. .
. as usual this singer's song selection
is splendid. . .
JazzTimes
by Fred Bouchard
July/August 1994
Meredith d'Ambrosio - a steadily evolving
singer with a pure voice and a gentle heart
- has done something nobody else has done
before: she's combined her (initially) improvised
melody and written new lyrics to fit her
improvisation, gently extending the standards.
She calls them "paraphrase songs"
and she works them seamlessly and respectfully
into the fabric of the originals. . . These
feats of selfless, cautious craftsmanship
all expatiate - in witty. winning, beatifically
beboppish melodizing - on Meredith's patented
little-girl-with-stars-in-her-eyes-view
of Love. . . High marks for Meredith's elegant,
understated performances; higher still for
her precious brain children.
IAJRC Journal
by Art Hilgart
Fall 1993
Admirers of fine songs who have an equal
taste for jazz usually have to settle for
one or the other - a good jazz treatment
or a sensitive interpretation of the song
as written. No such compromise is required
by the singing of Meredith d'Ambrosio. Her
delivery of the words and music are such
that the song reaches our ears directly
from the composer's intention. . . "Shadowland"
is an excellent inroduction to Ms. d'Ambrosio.
Her selection of standards - some not widely
heard - is always exquisite. Her own compositions
are of a piece with them and her lyrics
are those of a master craftsman. The title
song is a haunting combination of her words
and Dave McKenna's music. The arrangements
and piano on the disc are by her husband,
the protean Eddie Higgins, and violinist
John Frigo is an inspired addition to the
pair. Woodwinds bring an unobrusive ambience
to several of the songs. . .
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Sleep
Warm
(SSC
1063) |
France Inter (radio)
after playing "Lullaby Of The Leaves"
by jazz announcer Julien Delli Fiori
2006
"Do you know a more delicate vocalist-pianist? She wears a crown made of stars and falling asleep at her side must be heaven."
Boston Globe
"Subtlety and taste: a rare jazz genre"
by Bob Blumenthal
June 23, 1994
Jazz vocalists need not shout when they
swing, or scat like mad hatters, or immerse
themselves in the no-good-lover blues. There
are also singers of subtlety and introspection,
of tasteful musicianship and quiet wit.
Shirley Horn is perhaps the ranking member
of this group, and Meredith d'Ambrosio,
who plays piano as well as sings, is another
most worthy representative of the genre.
The Sunnyside label, which has extensively
chronicled d'Ambrosio's work, just released
one of her best, Sleep Warm, a solo project
accurately described as "lullabies
for small and bigger children". d'Ambrosio
can also sing for grownups, as she will
demonstrate at Scullers tonight, where the
piano duty will be turned over to her husband,
the estimable Eddie Higgins, and where the
musical guest list includes trumpeter Lou
Columbo, bassist Peter Kontrimas and drummer
Alan Dawson.
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Beware
Of Spring!
(SSC 1069) |
Jazzscene (Portland, Or)
"d'Ambrosio is a true jazz artist"
by George Fendel
May 1996
Meredith d'Ambrosio should be employed in
a thousand music clinics all over the country
to demonstrate to screechy pop singers just
what real singing is all about. She just
does it all: sings, plays piano, writes
attractive melodies and lyrics for adults,
and rewrites standards with new lyrics in
a most creative manner. On this CD, she
weaves her impeccable magic, trading piano
chores with her husband Eddie Higgins and
the rest of his trio, George Mraz, bass,
and Jeff Hirschfirld, drums. Instead of
going through a long list of tunes, let's
just say that this is a literate album of
the familiar and the stirringly new. In
particular, Beware Of Spring and No One
Knows, both written by Meredith, are poetic
and powerful. Some singers are best termed
entertainers. I say with conviction that
Meredith d'Ambrosio is best termed artist.
Five stars
The Music Advocate
by JSP
February 1996
I fell for Meredith d'Ambrosio's sublime
voice when I first heard Little Jazz Bird
. By the time she released Shadowland I
was a fool madly in love with her understated
elegance and uncanny sense of material.
. . Not one to dazzle listeners with vocal
gymnastics, Ms. d'Ambrosio tenderly unveils
the heart of each lyric. Two coments culled
from the liner notes that I feel need repeating:
first, if this woman sang the phone book
I'd buy it and so would anyone familiar
with her remarkable melodic insight and
pure voice, and perhaps more important,
this is a songwriter's singer. . . For fans
of that wondrous jazz instrument we call
the voice this phenomenally recorded disc
is a must own. . .
Diapason (Paris, FR)
by Alain Gerber
March 1996
( translated from French)
Meredith d'Ambrosio perhaps would not have
had the curiosity, the ambition, or the
nerve to work to the full extent of her
capabilities if not for her producer, François
Zalacain, making her feel that while he
was completely satisfied with everything
she had already done, he did not doubt that
she was capable of even more. Nothing succeeds
better with an artist than the hopes that
we place upon her. One never surpasses anything
except when one feels invited (not incited)
to do so. Meredith surpasses herself here
in several interpretations, to the point
where she occupies the place left vacant
by Maxine Sullivan, that of the most subtle,
the most modest, and the most touching of
singers without vibrato. Economic in her
ways, playing with a consummate virtuosity
of interiorization and perspective, she
expresses herself with a justice of tone
and delivery exceptional enough to give,
paradoxically, a feeling of amazement. And
a shiver on top of it all.
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Silent
Passion
(SSC
1075) |
New York Sheet Music Society
Dan Singer's Singers
By Dan Singer
May 1997
Pianist singer Meredith is almost all alone
here. Naked like a tightrope walker, except
for guitarist Gene Bertoncini. Each and
every feeling and emotion is there for your
ears to pick up on just as the microphone
did. There is a tinge of Jeri Southern throughout
and it's painstakingly so personal, with
her unique one of a kind phrasing. Jerome
Kern's "Long Ago And Far Away"
contains the long ago forgotten verse. Meredith
makes you forget all the other versions
you've ever heard before. There is a tempo
change which chills and mesmerizes the lucky
listener. "I Got Lost In His Arms"
by Irving Berlin is so complex in it's simplicity.
It's another devine experience you will
receive when you listen to this CD. Meredith
takes a great piano solo here. "All
Through The Day" by Kern again is so
downright honest in performance. There are
wonderful piano and guitar solos. On "The
Thrill Is Gone" by Ray Henderson and
Lew Brown, there is a hip, lilting , off
the beat scatt ending which is yet another
joy to behold. For reminders of depression
and loneliness, there is "Where Are
You" by Jimmy McHugh and Harold Adamson
with its verse. Peggy Lee's words for Johnny
Mandel's "The Shining Sea" is
still ringing in my ears. You are actually
placed right there beside her (I hope you
can all swim). It's as close as you would
ever want to get - a three D effect. This
is certainly not a CD you should listen
to as background. It is for special ears
and just as fine as classic wine to be savored
forever. Meredith's superb watercolor graces
the cover of this important release.
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Echo
Of A Kiss
(SSC 1078) |
Jazzscene
"Platter Chatter"
by George Fendel
March 1999
Meredith d'Ambrosio will never try to dazzle
you with decibels. She most assuredly will,
however, seduce you with subtleties and
shadings. Her very intimate and personal
style is once again documented herein with
perfection. With Mike Renzi, piano; Jay
Leonhart, bass; and Terry Clarke, drums,
Meredith brings us a recital of well chosen
standards, jazz gems and originals. She
rewrites the melody lines on the chord changes
of Beautiful Love and Ghost Of A Chance.
She then adds original lyrics, thus, in
effect, creating brand new songs. . . And
don't miss Ms. d's sensitive renditions
of her own material as well. Every M d'A
album is something special, artistic and
heartfelt. Five stars
Jazzman (Paris, FR)
by Alex Dutilh
March 1999
(translated from French)
Faithful to her producer, François
Zalacain; unfaithful to her former accompanists...
After an unfaithful period of time where
she accompanied herself on piano, the twelfth
CD of Meredith d'Ambrosio is well-conceived
and well-played. Well-conceived regarding
the care in the construction of an album
versus the often-forced artifices of the
so-called "concept album". Meredith
devotes "Echo Of A Kiss" to a
simple theme: lost love. In some way it
is like hearing the late Paul Desmond playing
"Glad To Be Unhappy". But it is
the care taken in the creation of this album,
in one blow, that causes admiration. It
is a movement that glides imperceptively
and inexorably from the innocence and youth
sung in "When Lights Are Low"
toward the pain of the memory buried by
time lost. Therefore, as another sign of
intelligence, Meredith wisely alternates
rhythm and harmonic colors in order not
to be darkened by the monochrome of the
evaporation of feelings. And, as always,
along with "complete" versions,
she chooses some original tunes, along with
some paraphrase songs based on standards,
with her own musical lines and lyrics as
in "Beautiful Love" which becomes
"Gorgeous Creature". The musical
skill can be well-defined by the perfect
interplay between her and the piano of Mike
Renzi, the acoustic bass of Jay Leonhart,
and the drums of Terry Clarke. Those three
should really have a long-term association
with this singer-lyricist-composer-painter.
Here is nothing but nuances, discrete peeking
and love-whispers.
Our Town (Portland, OR)
"Jazzmatters"
JAZZ CDs OF THE WEEK
by George Fendel
November 9, 1998
Singer Meredith d'Ambrosio's new CD on Sunnyside,
Echo Of A Kiss is another outstanding example
of pure, intimate jazz singing at its finest.
Meredith explores standards, jazz classics
and a few original compositions in her warm,
personal, undersated and highly musical
style. Don't miss this one.
Jazziz
"Voices"
Essential eccentrics and buried treasures
by Lee Jeske
January 1999
About 20 years ago, the jazz magazine for
which I was then writing sent me a stack
of LPs by obscure female singers:"Would
you review these en masse?" I would.
I did. I don't remember most of the singers,
but there were two that I fell instantly
in love with: Shirley Horn and Meredith,
a one-named singer . . .Nearly 20 years
later both record regularly. . . Meredith
d'Ambrosio has also been churning out an
album every year or so, all of them available
on Sunnyside Records. . . if you don't know
her, and you like singers who cozy up to
you and nestle into your arms, Echo Of A
Kiss is a fine place to get acquainted.
JazzTimes
by Doug Ramsey
March 1999
Despite her 12 superb Sunnyside CDs, the
wider audience for singers may be unprepared
for Ms. d'Ambrosio's musicality and understatement.
. . Here is the serious listener's latest
opportunity to be drawn into the art of
a woman who puts emotion, literacy, and
wit into vocal collections of substance
and long-term value. The selections in Echo
Of A Kiss are typical of her interests,
which send her ranging through many eras,
many styles and her own creativity. . .
She does those songs in tune, in time and
intelligently. She interprets them in her
lovely bel canto way, achieving the difficult
balance between jazz values and the intentions
of the songwriters. When Ms. d'Ambrosio
is at her best, . . . she is a singer not
to be missed.
Jazz Hot
(translation from French)
by Serge Baudot
October 2000
To listen to Meredith d'Ambrosio is to abandon
oneself to her charm. Here she does not
accompany herself on piano, but leaves this
task to a group of mainstream jazz musicians
who support her and allow her to give the
best of herself. She puts you under a spell
with her unreproachable diction in the manner
of the great crooners, with a great sense
of phrasing, intonation and quiet swing.
All the themes, including her own song "I
Will Follow Spring" are love songs.
She makes us swoon with "Smoke Gets
In Your Eyes". Meredith is in the tradition
of Helen Merrill - without affectation,
showing a natural simplicity and inner lyricism
that expresses more than all the high-soaring
of scat singers. She is fundamentally a
jazz club singer. Her musicians always captivate
you with their interpretations and absolute
pertinency. We share their joy in their
playing. We must allow ourselves to be wrapped
up in her deep tender voice like a sweet
breeze of a summer evening by the sea, gazing
at stars and dreaming of love st ories that
will never happen.
Spotlight, Seacoast Arts & Entertainment
(Portsmouth, NH)
by Alan Chase
September 21, 1999
Meredith d'Ambrosio is a gem. A jazz vocalist
who is a master of simplicity and understatement.
A jazz artist who explores the beauty of
the lyrics to a song and renders them in
a story-like fashion. She infuses the proper
emotion into a song whether it be sadness,
humor, or joy, yet she does it in such a
wonderfully casual way, almost as if she
is an observer, a person on the outside
looking in. Her style is very much her own,
drawing on the influences of jazz artists
like Bill Evans or Miles Davis in terms
of how she renders her art. On this recording,
d'Ambrosio places her subtle vocal work
within the context of the trio of Mike Renzi,
Jay Leonhart, and Terry Clkarke. Together,
this group performs a mix of originals by
d'Ambrosio and some choice standards with
stellar results. . . All throughout, her
phrasing, time, and feel are impeccable.
As is the work of Renzi, Leonhart, and especially
Terry Clarke. They all interact wonderfully
with Meredith d'Ambrosio as if they have
all performed together for year s. Then
again, it has been said that great minds
think alike. In the case of d'Ambrosio and
her colleagues on this recording, that's
very true. With terrific results.
Jazz Journal International (UK)
by Bruce Crowther
May 1999
It is quite a while since I heard this delightful
singer and I confess I had forgotten just
how good she is. Phrasing well and bringing
to lyrics care, wit and understanding, she
sings with casual, understated charm and
elegantly laid-back swing. Her arrangements
are simple and designed to showcase the
song, not herself, yet somehow this calculated
self-effacement does also reveal the artist
in all her considerable skill. The songs
are a nicely balanced mix; some unhackneyed
standards and five originals by the singer,
either music or lyrics or both, plus two
paraphrases which add to their inspirations.
There are also some songs with jazz pedigrees,
including Bill Evans's Blue In Green and
Time Remembered, Ellington's Black Butterfly,
Carter's opener and Thornhill's Snowfall.
All these songs are given excellent readings
by all concerned because the accompaniment
is first rate, the three instrumentalists
involved being in-demand session musicians
with very respectable jazz chops. . Excellent
sound quality, a good note by Lora Rosner
and a gatefold pack in the shatterproof
plastic I hope will soon become standard
round out a nice package the front of which
is illustrated, as usual, with d'Ambrosio's
work, by one of her own exceptionally attractive
watercolours. Recommended.
So What (Paris, FR)
by Bertrand Revalard
December 2000
(Translated from French)
. . . Almost at the end of my mandate in
the midst of So What, the secretary brings
me a package, not knowing what treasure
is inside: The new album of Meredith d'Ambrosio.
As usual, the cover is a painting by the
diva herself. As usual, she has concocted
a judicious mixture of 14 standards, known
or completely forgotten, some of her paraphrases
and, of course, two or three of her own
compositions. As usual, she has written
all, or most, of the arrangements, supported
by a drummer whose playing is not too invasive.
And she has included one or two Bill Evans
tunes, accompanied by her new pianist, Mike
Renzi, . . . As usual, to avoid the noise
next to me of my collegue, Bregeras, who
is listening full blast to the last Nils
Landgren, I would have to listen to this
precious disc with headphones to feel myself
close to Meredith's discreet perfume so
that nothing will interfere with the power
of her delicate voice, and the expressive
subtleties which make up her marvelous art.
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Out
Of Nowhere
(SSC
1085) |
Down Beat
by Fred Bouchard
September 2000
Blessed with an exquisitely shaded contralto
[ed. tenor], droll humors, perpetual youth
and an amazingly rich repertoire, d'Ambrosio
has carved her niche caressing smart originals
("I Will Follow Spring"), rare
Tin Pan Alley gems ("Easy Come Easy
Go") and reworked bebop, She brings
oodles more experience, yet no less innocence
and vulnerability, than Monheit to "My
Foolish Heart." She affords each tune
a refreshing rethink: Humor surfaces on
"On The Bumpy Road To Love" and
"Stopping The Clock" with brisk
turnarounds and wise support from pianist
Lee Musiker. Five stars
Jazzscene (Portland, OR)
Platter Chatter
"d'Ambrosio CD sizzles"
by George Fendel
If we weren't so fortunate to have Meredith
d'Ambrosio as one of our premier singers,
we'd have to invent her. It's because she
brings us such a delicious combination of
goodies. Her voice is ideally suited to
her material. It's relaxed, understated
and hip-as-can-be. But Meredith's secret,
one shared by very few singers, is her ability
to deliver the meaning of a lyric. And thankfully,
she chooses material from the highest tier
of what I like to call the Great American
Songbook. She mixes the cherished (My Foolish
Heart, Smoke Gets In Your Eyes) with lesser
known gems (On The Bumpy Road To Love, Easy
Come Easy Go, Dance Only with Me, All In
Fun). A few tunes merit specific comments.
Isn't Thnt The Thing To Do is a gentle Blossom
Dearie composition with an endearing lyric.
Stoppin' The Clock is a jazzy little number
that I haven't heard since Jackie and Roy's
version way back on ABC-Paramount Records!
Finally, there's I Will Follow Spring, Meredith's
own airy and beautiful ballad. Accompaniment
here is provided by the under-recognized
but brilliant pianist, Lee Musiker, along
with Jay Leonhart, bass; Terry Clarke, drums;
and, on two tunes, Michael Leonhart, trumpet.
And then there's Meredith. To borrow a line
from the Wizard Of Oz, "There's only
one of 'er and she's it!
Five stars
So What
by Bertrand Ravalard
May 2000
(translated from French)
Don't believe, dear friends, the propaganda
by our fellow journalists. The most important
jazz singer of today is Meredith d'Ambrosio.
Some people have the guts to say it (for
example Jean- Pierre Moussaron, know as
her staunch admirer for many years). And
François Zalacain is our idol, because
he has allowed the American singer to record
her treasures for the last fifteen years.
But we're not concerned by the fact that
other people may prefer Diana Krall. (It
doesn't matter that her pianist, Lee Musiker,
is not as famous as Eddie Higgins or Fred
Hersch, her previous accompanists.) Madame
d'Ambrosio, with this CD, comes to announce
the arrival of spring (by acknowledging
the arrival of spring with her marvelous
"I Will Follow Spring" superbly
poetic and delicately swung). Let's not
kid ourselves. You cannot place "Out
Of Nowhere" in May 2000. It is out
of time. More precisely between the forties
and spring.
JazzTimes
Before & After
by Doug Ramsey
(interviewing Dee Dee Bridgewater
about the song, "All In Fun")
April 2001
BEFORE: Nice piano intro. Oh, she's telling
a story. I'm all into this story that she's
telling. That's the difference between a
young singer and a mature singer. She improved
on the song. She kind of has that Chet Baker
phrasing. I don't know who it is.
AFTER: I've never heard her. She's fantastic.
I was grooving. I love the timbre of her
voice. It's kind of like a flugelhorn. She
takes her time. It was swinging. Very good
arrangement. She's got a nice style. I'll
have to get her album. Five stars
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General Reviews
GRAND HOTEL #101
(Radio broadcast from Argentina)
by Pablo Avelluto
June 18, 2000
(translation)
. . . Today I want to present Meredith d'Ambrosio.
I have been listening to her for one month,
and my fascination with her is total and absolute.
And, to date, there is no one to equal her.
Meredith is an exceptional singer, pianist,
writer, composer, and if this isn't enough,
a great painter. Her paintings have been exhibited
in important galleries and museums in the USA
[and abroad]. Some say that she is a Renaissance
woman of the times. I believe this is true.
I have recently discovered her, and I dedicate
myself to compulsively seeking her discs. With
this enthusiasm I want to share them from the
Grand Hotel. We begin with a classic disc, South
To A Warmer Place : "More Than You Know"
and "The Touch Of Your Lips" with
a giant, Eddie Higgins on piano. From Another
Time 1981: "Aren't You Glad You're You"
and "Some Day My Prince Will Come"
(remember Blancanieves? [(Snow White)]) with
Meredith alone on piano. Coltrane was fascinated
with her voice and asked her to come to Japan
to sing with his group in 1963. Hence the album
It's Your Dance (1985): "Giant Steps"
is on this disc [d'Ambrosio's lyric]. Then comes
"Nobody Else But Me", with Harold
Danko on piano and Kevin Eubanks on guitar,
Meredith on piano also. From the album Silent
Passion (1996) comes "The Thrill Is Gone"
and "Where Are You" (one of my favorite
songs) with Meredith on piano and Gene Beronncini
on acoustic guitar. On Shadowland, a formation
of shadows with Eddie Higgins arranger and pianist,
with bass, drums, cello, violin, English horn,
bass clarienet, flute and oboe: "A Rainy
Afternoon", an incomparable "Fools
Rush In" by Johnny Mercer/Rube Bloom, and
Meredith's paraphrase song based on this song
"This Rushin' Fool" (1992). Sleep
Warm (1991) is a disc of lullabies for adults:
"Hit The Road To Dreamland", "Lullaby
Of The Leaves" and "Sleep Warm"
one of my favorites on a cold night.
Jazz Magazine
Paris, France
1998
Meredith d'Ambrosio: Une passion Silencieuse
by Bertrand Ravalard
translated from French by Eddy Pay
For those who, like me, consider music, regardless
of its color or origin, as something one must
cherish and never give up in capturing its joys
and pains, it is difficult to consider the current
multitude of jazz singers and their likes as
truly assimilated, jovial, and without culture
(nor a desire for culture). The fact that certain
jazz women take advantage of this speaks for
itself.
Little does it matter and I'm not suggesting
that even So What (magazine) which still has
not made a war machine of a cold dynamic monster.
Meredith d'Ambrosio, as you may have noted,
is not a star which an adjective in a form of
an accepted lie can propel to Mt. Olympus.
Her faults are innumerable: she is not young,
modern nor outrageously vulgar and she sports
no slogan, nor plays the modesty card but is
truly passionate, generous and strangely aloof.
No way to make her sell a car, or much less
a cell phone. . . Indeed, her albums seem not
to be in step with the present time. For the
short term, it is highly unlikely that they
will do a (about face) 180 degree revolution
in jazz styles.
Besides, Ms d'Ambrosio does not look at things
for the short term. She refuses to follow the
rules of noise. And I have not even mentioned
her anti-publicity tendencies primarily because
her work is often moving. And because you've
been so patient, dear readers, you're perhaps
surprised by the absence of positive logical/musical
facts . . . well, let's see what we can do about
that . . . no big thing.
Meredith d'Ambrosio, white singer with no [hardly]
vibrato or scat, was born on March 20th, 1941
in Boston to a family of musicians. In her early
twenties, she meets John Coltrane who invites
her to sing with him on a tour in Japan. She
declines because her daughter is too young to
be left behind and perhaps also due to her lack
of confidence in her vocal technique. Nevertheless,
Ms. d'Ambrosio is known to have made the great
saxophonist laugh (or at least smile).
Fifteen years later, she records Lost In His
Arms. Thanks to the unrelenting enthusiasm of
her producer François Zalacain, she is
able to premier a true record production, and,
in her case, a true work of art starting in
1985. Since then, her repertoire has comprised
of close to 3500 songs, most of which were composed
between 1910 and 1950 - aside from her personal
compositions in which she accompanies herself
on the piano. In her eleven albums, she is accompanied
by musicians such as Phil Woods, Lee Konitz,
Hank Jones, Harold Danko, Fred Hersh, Eddie
Higgins [Mike Renzi], as well as bassists Steve
Gilmore, George Mraz [and Jay Leonhart]. What
does one make of these facts? That the caliber
of her musicians is a reflection of her impeccable
taste? That she appreciates pianists with the
light and clear classical touch? That her exigencies
are on a par with that of other great musicians?
One must remember that the only singer who has
ever worked with John Coltrane (little did it
matter that it was dictated by commercial reasons)
was the deep and subtle Johnny Hartman. It may
be evident to listeners that these two qualifiers
summarized (excuse the use of such a simple
verb) with wonder the extraordinary art of Meredith
d'Ambrosio, a melancholic star lost in the beauty
of a thunderous sky and yet so worthy, proud
and straight ahead. With an affirmative "YES",
she tries to hide her anguish with an exterior
of a calm epic poem. A loving epic poem of sensuality
and unforgettable despair that my masculine
writing is totally incapable of evoking. Whoever
listens to the playback of "Estate"
by Bruno Martino in Beware Of Spring will understand.
This voice [a tenor], neither voluble nor virtuoso,
is indirectly at times powerful (in expression)
and fragile, proud and anxious, determined and
timid, passionate and spiritual, courageous
and sedentary. . . totally feminine - the author
of this article very prudently accepts all dissensions
concerning the last affirmation on the complex
but intriguing nature of feminine charm.
It should be noted that the references coming
from the journalist who encourages readers to
buy all of Meredith's albums are two men (two
singers): Scott Walker, who has in common with
her the song "Through A Long And Sleepless
Night", as well as the supreme elegance
and a crazed desire to express a certain solitude;
Chet Baker for the self-assured technique, the
introspective nature and the melancholic interpretations.
The three musicians have the will of a storyteller
as well as that of an idealist.
Take for example Irving Berlin's "How Deep
Is The Ocean" by Baker and d'Ambrosio:
the two interpretations excel in being concise
and musically precise and both strongly reject
pretentiousness and vulgarity - so much so that
the appearance of total relaxation contradicts
the original intent of the singer, particularly
Meredith. However, if one stands out to be morbidly
touching and brutally evident in a song of longing,
the other distinguishes in being more lyrical,
more classically perfect and consequently more
secretive. At first glance, the art of Meredith
d'Ambrosio may seem cold and distant. But it
is too modest to display its despair and too
sensual to be available to listeners in a rush.
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