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A
great singer
CD REVIEW / Makes everything old startling & new
story by Martin Roebuck / Xtra! Mar 3 2005
Andy Bey has been around for a long time and he sounds as if he
intends to be around for a lot longer. A critically celebrated
jazz singer with five decades of professional history, Bey is
an out gay man comfortable discussing his HIV status. The New
Jersey native even has a Canadian connection: His sister is Salome
Bey, the well-known and much loved musical star and Toronto resident.
Andy Bey was born in 1939 and became an entertainer early on,
appearing as a vocalist and playing piano at Harlem’s legendary
Apollo Theatre. He toured and recorded in the 1950s and into the
’60s with family members Salome and Geraldine as Andy Bey
And The Bey Sisters. Many recording dates with the likes of Horace
Silver and others took him through the ’70s and ’80s.
As too often happens, he had to be “discovered” again
in the ’90s, when producer Herb Jordan instigated a fruitful
collaboration that has so far yielded four highly rated albums.
The latest of these appeared in 2004, with “American Song”.
Bey and his arrangers and musicians examine with sensitive insight
an interesting and provocative collection of popular songs.
Anyone watching the sales charts or the Grammys is probably aware
that Rod Stewart has recently released two albums featuring the
standard popular song repertoire. While Stewart has essentially
had to speak his versions, with backup singers and accompaniments
arranged to hide the fact of his broken voice, Bey — some
four years older than the aging Brit rocker — is still able
to use his powerful and highly expressive voice to illuminate
the great songs chosen for American Song. No fear of vocal failure
here.
There are a number of highlights on this insightful collection
that employs the piano and arranging talents of Geri Allan and
some other fine jazz musicians. A great deal of careful thought
has been given to the nature and history of each song performed.
As an example, the relatively unused bass clarinet is featured
in an arrangement of Duke Ellington’s “Prelude To
A Kiss,” surely in homage to the great bass sax and clarinet
player Harry Carney, a 40-year stalwart of the Ellington orchestra.
Ellington’s gay co-composer Billie Strayhorn’s work
is well represented on this album. The wonderfully sophisticated
gay lyrics of Strayhorn’s masterpiece “Lush Life”
have rarely been heard to such effect as they are in Bey’s
version. Bey’s piano playing on the Ellington/ Strayhorn
melody “Satin Doll” invokes respectful echoes of the
Duke’s own piano stylings.
Of Bey’s vocal and interpretive talents, writer David Ritz
includes him in an explanation of what it means to be a great
vocalist: “By personalizing every song, by infusing both
words and music with their idiosyncratic character, the great
singers become great composers. They rewrite the standards, casting
themselves in the lead roles of startling new dramas. Few singers
have that gift. Bey has it in abundance.”
AMERICAN SONG.
Andy Bey
Savoy Jazz
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