"Birnbaum's
playing is exquisite, and David's lyric voice caresses the
music. You feel when you listen to him that he's lived the
stories...The great songwriters were poets; in order to interpret
what they were saying, you have to sing it as poetry. David takes
the opportunities he has to do that - he knows how to phrase.
This album captures loneliness beautifully."
Ron Della Chiesa
Host, "The Jazz Songbook," WGBH Boston
Album Description:
For his debut recording, Boston vocalist JoJo David teams up with
extraordinary pianist Adam Birnbaum to create an intimate and
timeless collection of classic and destined-to-be-classic ballads.
David gets to the heart of every lyric, delivering each emotion
and vulnerability as if experienced in real time. The context
is masterfully set with Birnbaum's playing, always tasteful, and
in captivating dialogue with the melody.
From its title, "Small
Hours" shares the same fabric of Frank Sinatra's innovative
concept album "In the Wee Small Hours." The first track
wraps the listener up in those "small" moments from
the beginning of the CD and takes the listener on a tour of sublime
throughout the album. David and Birnbaum take meticulous care
with their arrangements and performances to get to the heart of
the messages. In the standards "Imagination," "But
Beautiful", and "In the Wee Small Hours", the oft
discarded and rarely heard verses to theses standards are resurrected
and made essential to the matter here. Birnbaum takes a fresh
interpretation of the Beatles' "Golden Slumbers," stretching
its time while David indulges his beautiful tone in the soaring
melody. They take John Hiatt's "Have A Little Faith"
to an inspired turn with the blues. Birnbaum presents a haunting
rendition of "Here's That Rainy Day", and with the hidden
gems "Colors" and "Little Prayer", David reveals
his wide-open heart and musical grace.
Sit back and indulge in
"Small Hours". Paying homage to the lineage of Frank
Sinatra with Nelson Riddle, Ella Fitzgerald with Joe Pass, Tony
Bennett with Bill Evans, and Johnny Hartman with John Coltrane,
JoJo David and Adam Birnbaum bring us up to date with this exquisitely
crafted recording. This is as moving a ballad album as there is.
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