Yours

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (68 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 50:58

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New singers are always welcome...

BFlat

You gotta start somewhere, and while I agree with Alex Henderson in tone, I would never want to hear a young singer avoid the "warhorses" as Henderson advises. The warhorses are warhorses for reasons that include their indelible beauty and straight fun to sing. Sara Gazarek sounds like she's having a good time with them, and thus so are we. It's great she added in the Joni Mitchell tune. Finding contemporary writers working at the level of the warhorses is damned hard. Hopefully Sara will try out one songwriting couple in England who are working at just that: Fran Landesman and Simon Wall.

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WHAT A FUTURE!

RickZee

Sara is one of the young vocalists that has an exciting future. As she continues to develop her own style...we will have output from her to enjoy for years.

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Simply Fresh

dantelm

Sara is an amazing vocalist. She is clean and fresh. Any fan of vocal jazz will enjoy her. If you ever have the chance to see her perform live, you must take the opportunity! She's a complete entertainer.

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Brilliant!!

Cheeezefries

This young woman can flat out sing. The voice reminds me of Susanna McCorkle. Every track is fantastic. Very clever how she blends Lennon/McCartney's Blackbird with Bye Bye Blackbird. I loved "Amazing" would like to know if it is an original composition. Cheek to Cheek gets airplay on my local Jazz station. Try it you will love her. Can't wait forf more!

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They Say All Media Guide

When an older jazz singer warns a younger jazz singer that vocal jazz is an extremely crowded, brutally competitive field, it isn’t just rhetoric — vocal jazz (like just about any other area of music) has a lot more applicants than openings or opportunities. Therefore, aspiring young jazz singers need to do everything possible to stand out and make a personal statement — and on the more memorable parts of her debut album, Yours, Sara Gazarek stands out. While the West Coast singer (who was in her early twenties when bassist John Clayton produced this album in April 2005) still has some growing and developing to do, she definitely has potential. Gazarek’s approach is best described as vocal jazz by way of a singer/songwriter aesthetic; one hears influences like Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday, and Abbey Lincoln in her vocals, but a healthy appreciation of Carole King and Joni Mitchell asserts itself as well. In fact, one of the best things on the album is an interpretation of Mitchell’s “The Circle Game.” Unfortunately, the warhorse factor is much too strong on this 51-minute disc; do listeners really need to hear a singer who was born after the ’70s embracing “Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye,” “My Shining Hour,” “Cheek to Cheek,” and other Tin Pan Alley warhorses that have been totally beaten to death over the years? There is so much jazz history attached to those songs that younger, newer jazz singers are better off avoiding them and turning their interpretive powers to gems that haven’t been beaten to death — “The Circle Game,” for example. But an excess of warhorses doesn’t erase the fact that Gazarek has an appealing vocal style; although subtle and understated, she projects a lot of warmth and gets her emotional points across. All things considered, Yours is a noteworthy, if inconsistent, debut — and Gazarek is certainly worth keeping an eye on. – Alex Henderson

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