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"Dreamsville"
Strictly in terms of recognizable standards,
Stacey Kent's 2001 album, Dreamsville, might be hard-pressed
to measure up to her 2000 NPR smash Let Yourself Go, a snappy,
swinging tribute to the great dancer-singer-actor Fred Astaire,
but it's still a sterling example of the girlish charm of London's
top jazz vocalist. This collection of ballads ranges from the
Gershwins ("I've Got a Crush on You," the underrated
"Isn't It a Pity") to Henry Mancini (the dreamy title
tune) all the way to Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman
("Hushabye Mountain" from the 1968 film Chitty Chitty
Bang Bang). That it works seamlessly is a tribute to the singer's
relaxed way with a lyric, excellent support and solos from a
band featuring reedman Jim Tomlinson (Kent's husband), guitarist
Colin Oxley, and pianist David Newton, and solid arrangements
by Kent and Tomlinson. --David Horiuchi |