Bev Kelly In Person

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Bev Kelly In Person album cover
Album Information
LIVE

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 39:24

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Ditto

Jacked Up Jazz

Any great album starts with great song selection. It's hard to produce a bad album when you get the tunes right. I am still trying to figure out how she "missed" hitting it big. Maybe she can start a club for shoulda beens with [url=http://www.emusic.com/album/10592/10592071.html]Jimmy Witherspoon.[/url] I guess I will assign her obscurity to the over abundance of great Jazz Divas during her era. In the present day dearth of good singers (there are actually quite a few good ones around today but nothing like in the 50's & 60's). I guess it was just easy to get lost in the shuffle back then. Kind of like that pizza crust you tossed in the garbage last night, starting to look like a tasty breakfast when there is not much else from which to choose. 50 years later it's breakfast time and Bev Kelly's reissue has time shifted some tasty morsels for us to gnaw on. Now I don't feel so bad about missing the 50's & 60's because, apparently, everybody missed Bev Kelly.

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Bev Kelly In Person

IowaJazz

Dat's 4.5, maybe 4.75 stars. A thoroughly delightful album by a very talented singer heretofore totally unknown to me. A bit remindful of Nancy Wilson at times, but by no means an imitator. Many influences are at work here, from Billie Holiday to Cleo Laine. I just love surprises like Bev Kelly! With the exception of Pony Poindexter (as), the guys in the band are unfamiliar to me, but they're good. Flip Nunez (p), Johnny Allen (b), Tony Johnson (d).

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They Say All Music Guide

The history of jazz is full of talented singers who, for whatever reason, never became as well-known as they should have been. That is certainly true of Bev Kelly, an obscure Bay Area-based vocalist whose influences ranged from Anita O’Day to Billie Holiday and Dinah Washington. It’s safe to say that the vast majority of jazz lovers have never even heard of Kelly, but the singer did have an enthusiastic supporter in Orrin Keepnews, who produced this live date for Riverside. Recorded at the Coffee Gallery in San Francisco in 1960, In Person was out of print for a long time but finally became available on CD when Fantasy reissued it for Original Jazz Classics in 1999. Kelly had a raspy yet sweetly vulnerable delivery, and that approach serves her well on tasteful, introspective performances of well-known standards like “My Funny Valentine,” “Long Ago and Far Away,” and “Body and Soul.” Kelly swings, but she does so in a subtle fashion. Thankfully, the singer has sympathetic accompaniment in alto saxman Pony Poindexter, pianist Flip Nunez, bassist Johnny Allen, and drummer Tony Johnson. Some bop-oriented instrumentalists have a hard time backing singers, but these Bay Area jazzmen enjoy a strong rapport with Kelly. So why was a singer as expressive as Kelly so obscure? One can only speculate. The music business is incredibly competitive as well as extremely political, and a lot of talented, deserving people inevitably fall through the cracks. In Person makes one wish that Kelly wasn’t one of them. – Alex Henderson

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