Ballads Blues And Bey

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 69:29

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Solo piano jazz

MrE

The vibe here is like you walked into some pub, off an alley somewhere. It's too early or too late. There's no one drinking. But there's this cat at the piano, singing his heart out on a set of sentimental ballads. You feel kind of uncomfortable. Are you watching a rehearsal? But you can't look away. What an interesting take on the standards. What an amazing voice. What is *this* cat doing in a dive like this?

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They Say All Media Guide

Andy Bey was 56 when he recorded Ballads, Blues & Bey in 1995, and despite the fact that his voice had more rough edges than it did in the ’60s and ’70s, he still had an impressive range and was among jazz’s most expressive male singers. For this project, the Newark, NJ native didn’t employ a band — his only accompaniment is his own acoustic piano, and this spare, intimate approach really makes Bey’s heartfelt vocals stand out on such chestnuts as “Someone to Watch Over Me,” “Embraceable You,” and “You’d Be So Nice to Come Home To.” This time, the Duke Ellington songbook is a high priority for Bey, who demonstrates how marvelous an interpreter of lyrics he is on “In a Sentimental Mood,” “Day Dream,” and other Ellington gems. Unfortunately, Bey still wasn’t nearly as well known in jazz circles as he deserved to be, and he continued to be one of the great unsung heroes of jazz singing. – Alex Henderson

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