Tags
Language
Tags
November 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
27 28 29 30 31 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30

Norma Winstone - Stories Yet To Tell (2010) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Posted By: HDV
Norma Winstone - Stories Yet To Tell (2010) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Norma Winstone - Stories Yet To Tell (2010)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time - 52:13 minutes | 901 MB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Front cover

Norma Ann Winstone is a British jazz singer and lyricist. In a career spanning over forty years she is best known for her wordless improvisations. Norma Winstone's voice melds seamlessly with the bass clarinet and soprano sax of Klaus Gesing and the piano of Glauco Venier. Alongside their own pieces, they play songs from Mexico's Armando Manzanero to Armenia's Komitas, to Wayne Shorter.

Distances (ECM, 2008) wasn't British vocalist Norma Winstone's first release to feature her current trio of reedman Klaus Gesing and pianist Glauco Venier, but with ECM Records' greater exposure and reputation, it was the first to reach a broader international audience. With Distance a largely lyric-based alternative to Winstone's always lovely wordless vocals on Chamber Music (Universal, 2004), Stories Yet to Tell is a worthy successor to both, with even greater emphasis on Winstone the lyricist—she contributes to eight of its twelve songs—making it an even more personal collection than either this trio's past releases or the hushed beauty of her 1987 ECM debut as a leader, Somewhere Called Home.

Like Distances, Stories Yet to Tell doesn't entirely desert Winstone's warm and enticing approach to wordless vocals—a style she's evolved since the mid-'70s and work with Azimuth, the groundbreaking trio with trumpeter Kenny Wheeler. Rather than scatting on top of a group of accompanists, Winstone's less-dominant—and, for that matter, less-is-more— approach integrates more seamlessly; a partner, rather than a leader. Her name may be on the marquee here, but it's clear that this is a trio of equals, with Venier and Gesing providing plenty of compositional support as well as instrumentation as soft and understated as Winstone's own voice and delivery.

Three of the four songs not featuring Wintone's lyrics are instrumentals. Arranged by Venier and recording engineer Amerio Stefano, they range from a buoyant reimagining of the pentatonic Friulian folk song," Lipe Rosiže," where Winstone's voice and Gesing's soprano sax meld effortlessly in its magnetic intro, to a pensive adaptation of a 13th century troubadour song. Their imaginative look at 16th century Italian composer Giorgio Mainerio's memorably melodic "Ballo Furlano"—where Gesing's deep lyricism and rhythmic propulsion underscore Venier's intrinsic classicism and Winstone's weaving economy—feels, somehow, like an early touchstone for Ralph Towner and Oregon.

When Winstone turns to lyrics, her approach is similar: her understatement and refreshingly non-melismatic selflessness all about the essence of the song—and, paradoxically, by doing nothing overt to draw attention to herself, doing exactly so. An influence on more than one generation of singers, Winstone's three songs co-written with Gesing are particularly impressive, especially the dark-hued "Sisyphus," where the trio's interpretive ability to flex time is at its most empathic. Winstone also adds lyrics to instrumental music from jazz icon Wayne Shorter and Armenian composer Komitas, whose gently insistent "Cradle Song (Hoy Nazan)" may be familiar to fans of Kim Kashkashian's Hayran (ECM, 2003); Winstone's voice, however, is considerably more alluring than pianist/composer Tigran Mansurian's rough-edged delivery on the violist's New Series date.

As Winstone moves ever farther from the Great American Songbook—her one nod, an achingly beautiful version of Caymmi/Motta/Bergman's "Like a Lover"— it's certain that, with band mates as sympathetic as Gesing and Venier, there's precious little she can't do. Stories Yet to Tell could be the pithy mission statement for this sublime trio, as it continues to mine a breadth of external sources, filtered through its own softly refracting internal prism.

Tracklist:

01 - Just Sometimes
02 - Sisyphus
03 - Cradle Song (Hoy Nazan)
04 - Like a Lover
05 - Rush
06 - The Titles
07 - Carnera
08 - Lipe Rosiže
09 - Among the Clouds
10 - Ballo Furlano
11 - Goddess
12 - En Mort d'En Joan De Cucanh

Produced by Manfred Eicher. Engineered by Stefano Amerio.
Recorded in December 2009 at Arte Suono Studio, Udine.

Musicians:
Norma Winstone - voice
Klaus Gesing - bass clarinet, soprano saxophone
Glauco Venier - piano

Analyzed: Norma Winstone / Stories Yet to Tell
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR15 -5.46 dB -26.58 dB 6:10 01-Just Sometimes
DR11 -4.58 dB -20.32 dB 5:06 02-Sisyphus
DR12 -3.86 dB -22.00 dB 4:34 03-Cradle Song (Hoy Nazan)
DR13 -5.56 dB -24.78 dB 4:11 04-Like a Lover
DR13 -3.15 dB -21.76 dB 4:48 05-Rush
DR12 -8.78 dB -25.73 dB 4:01 06-The Titles
DR12 -5.23 dB -21.90 dB 4:11 07-Carnera
DR12 -2.02 dB -18.42 dB 4:57 08-Lipe Rosiže
DR11 -5.39 dB -20.44 dB 3:32 09-Among the Clouds
DR11 -6.56 dB -22.25 dB 3:18 10-Ballo Furlano
DR13 -1.99 dB -22.08 dB 5:09 11-Goddess
DR12 -7.03 dB -24.48 dB 2:16 12-En Mort d'En Joan De Cucanh
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 12
Official DR value: DR12

Samplerate: 96000 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 2209 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================


Thanks to the Original customer!