1955 studio album by Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown
Sarah Vaughan
, reissued in 1991 as
Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown
, is a 1955
jazz
album featuring singer
Sarah Vaughan
and trumpeter
Clifford Brown
, released on the
EmArcy
label. It was the only collaboration between the two musicians. Well received, though not without some criticism, the album was Vaughan's own favorite among her works through 1980.
[1]
The album was inducted into the
Grammy Hall of Fame
in 1999.
[2]
The album has been re-released on CD and LP many times, with its original nine-track listing and with an additional track.
Critical reception
[
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]
Sarah Vaughan
was overwhelmingly a critical success. Contemporary critics were enthusiastic, with
Billboard
opining, "Here are nine examples of Sarah Vaughan's vocal gifts. Her individual phrasing, her highly distinctive mannerisms are in the grooves. [...] For the dealer with any jazz trade at all, this package is virtually a must."
[5]
The record's reputation has grown since its release. In
Bebop: The Best Musicians and Recordings
, jazz commentator
Scott Yanow
notes simply of the album that "[e]verything works," making of it an "essential acquisition."
[6]
Ink Blot Magazine
, characterizing this as one of Vaughan's "jazziest" albums, describes it also as one of her greatest.
[7]
In its review,
AllMusic
states that "Vaughan is arguably in the best voice of her career here" and praises Brown for "displaying his incredible bop virtuosity," indicating that "[i]n whichever incarnation it's reissued,
Sarah Vaughan With Clifford Brown
is one of the most important jazz-meets-vocal sessions ever recorded."
[8]
The Blackwell Guide to Recorded Jazz
, also praising Brown's "brilliant" trumpeting, delves into Vaughan's vocal stylings in detail, encouraging listeners of the album to note how "sometimes she stretches out a song so deliberately and so reconfigures its melody, that the lyrics lose sense, linguistic phrasing having been replaced by
musical phrasing
."
[9]
Blackwell
author
Barry Dean Kernfeld
opines that "[i]t is perhaps this pure devotion to the exploration of sound that has made her such a favourite of jazz listeners."
[9]
In
Jazz: A Critic's Guide to the 100 Most Important Recordings
,
New York Times
jazz commentator
Ben Ratliff
placed the album as among Vaughan's best, indicating that the recording session seemed among those blessed sessions where "even middle-level musicians can sound like gods."
[10]
The Penguin Guide to Jazz
selected this album as part of its suggested "Core Collection," stating "it is very difficult to find any flaw in what should be recognized as one of the great jazz vocal records," and awarded it "crown" status.
[11]
But even while praising the album, some critics found elements of fault. Ratliff expresses distaste for the album's "shizy moments, when...[Vaughan] rockets between hoity-toity...and so blues-singer earthy, in certain low-register moments, that she approaches vulgarity."
[12]
A review in the music magazine
Metronome
at the time of its first release lamented: "Sarah sounds like an imitation of herself, sloppy, affected and so concerned with sound that she forgets that she is a singer, forgets the lyric of the song itself to indulge in sounds that are meaningless."
[13]
Kernfeld suggests that
Herbie Mann
is a weak element amongst the otherwise strong ensemble, "completely overmatched,"
[9]
although
The Penguin Guide to Jazz
disagrees with this assessment.
[11]
Track listing
[
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]
- "
Lullaby of Birdland
" (
George Shearing
,
George David Weiss
) ? 4:06
[14]
- "
April in Paris
" (
Vernon Duke
,
E.Y. "Yip" Harburg
) ? 6:26
- "He's My Guy" (
Gene de Paul
,
Don Raye
) ? 4:17
- "
Jim
" (
Caesar Petrillo
, Edward Ross, Nelson Shawn) ? 5:56
- "You're Not the Kind" (Will Hudson,
Irving Mills
) ? 4:48
- "
Embraceable You
" (
George Gershwin
,
Ira Gershwin
) ? 4:54
- "I'm Glad There Is You" (
Jimmy Dorsey
, Paul Mertz) ? 5:14
- "
September Song
" (
Maxwell Anderson
,
Kurt Weill
) ? 5:50
- "It's Crazy" (
Al Fields
,
Timmie Rogers
) ? 5:01
Personnel
[
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]
Performance
[
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]
Production
[
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]
References
[
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]
- ^
Gourse, Leslie (1994).
Sassy: The Life of Sarah Vaughan
. DeCapo Press. p. 78.
ISBN
0-306-80578-2
.
- ^
Grammy Hall of Fame Award, Past Recipients
grammy.com. Retrieved on 2008-05-31.
- ^
Allmusic review
- ^
"Penguin Guide to Jazz: 4-Star Records in 8th Edition"
.
Tom Hull
. Retrieved
9 July
2020
.
- ^
"Reviews and Ratings of New Popular Albums"
.
Billboard
. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 16 April 1955. p. 24.
- ^
Yanow, Scott (2000).
Bebop: The Best Musicians and Recordings
. Backbeat Books. pp. 182?183.
ISBN
0-87930-608-4
.
- ^
Greilsamer, Marc.
Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown
inkblotmagazine.com Retrieved on 2008-05-31.
- ^
Sarah Vaughan
at
AllMusic
- ^
a
b
c
Kernfeld, Barry Dean (1995).
The Blackwell Guide to Recorded Jazz
. Blackwell Publishing. p. 334.
ISBN
0-631-19552-1
.
- ^
Ratliff, Ben (2000).
Jazz: A Critic's Guide to the 100 Most Important Recordings
. New York Times Essential Library. MacMillan. pp.
90
.
ISBN
0-8050-7068-0
.
- ^
a
b
Cook, Richard
;
Brian Morton
(2006) [1992].
"Sarah Vaughan"
.
The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings
.
The Penguin Guide to Jazz
(8th. ed.). New York: Penguin. pp.
1325
.
ISBN
0-14-102327-9
.
- ^
Ratliff, 91.
- ^
Coss, Bill (June 1955). "Sarah Vaughan".
Metronome Magazine
.
71
(6): 32.
- ^
Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown (original)
at
AllMusic
External links
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Studio albums
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Live albums
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Compilation albums
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Other album appearances
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Extended plays
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Songs
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Related topics
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Years given are for the recording(s), years in square brackets refer to the listed 12" LP/CD release.
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Albums as
leader
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Co-led/with
Max Roach
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Sideman
with others
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Compilations
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Years given are for the recording(s), not first release.
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As
leader or
co-leader
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With
Count
Basie
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With
others
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