Product Description
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Gretchen Parlatos 2009 breakthrough, IN a DREAM, signaled the
arrival of one of this generations most inventive modern jazz
singers. Now with the release of her 2011 follow-up, THE LOST AND
FOUND, Parlato demonstrates that she has staying power.
Co-produced by Parlato and her longtime musical collaborator
Robert Glasper, the 15-track collection arrives with immediate
weight and intensity, exposing a vast dynamic range in the young
singers repertoire.
Review
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"...jazz singing at its best." -- The Boston Phoenix
"A jazz singer of deep musical instincts and an appealingly
effervescent style." -- The New York Times
"Parlato is arguably one of the most original vocal performers of
her generation." -- International Review of Music
"a musician whose instrument happens to be her voice... utterly
captivating...stunning from the outset, Parlato makes everything
her own." -- The Boston Globe
"a singer with ideas enty and the chops to deliver them." --
The Detroit Metro Times
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About the Artist
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Gretchen Parlato
The Lost and Found
Gretchen Parlato's 2009 sopre breakthrough, In a Dream,
signaled the arrival of an incredibly inventive modern jazz
singer. Her follow-up, The Lost and Found, demonstrates that she
has staying power. In a Dream garnered international accl with
Billboard magazine hailing it as "the most alluring jazz vocal
album of 2009"; it also made it onto the top year-end polls for
Jazz Times, the Boston Globe, the Village Voice and NPR. The Lost
and Found shows immediate weight and intensity, exposing a
greater dynamic range. "I feel like I stepped out of my own way
and allowed myself to be more revealing and vulnerable through
the music," reflects Parlato.
Revealing a seamless, crystalline, and more importantly,
personal voice, Parlato says that the overall theme of The Lost
and Found is about accepting sition and embracing the ebbs
and flows of life. "One day we may think we've found all the
answers, and then something suddenly happens that makes us feel
completely lost as though nothing makes sense. This is life.
Accepting that we are always in transition without attaching a
judgment to the experience is freeing. We are always the lost and
found."
An alumni of the Thelonious Monk Institute, Parlato has been
turning heads ever since she won the 2004 Thelonious Monk
Institute International Vocal Competition with which she
displayed a musical individuality loaded with paradoxical powers.
Her sultry, intriguing voice and unique, rhythmically agile
phrasing come with inescapable centripetal force; the more
and understated she sang, the more she drew listeners
in. Since then she has toured worldwide to sold out audiences
with BBC Radio procling, "Star over London...A star is born!"
Her originality captivates musicians as well, prompting
invitations to appear on over 50 s with the likes of
Terence Blanchard, Kenny Barron, Terri Lynn Carrington and
Esperanza Spalding. Her breathtaking performances have been
captured on television in Europe and Japan and she has become a
sought after clinician on vocal styling.
On her third disc, Parlato surrounds herself with a collective
of kindred spirits whose tight knit sound has been cultivated
through years of performing and together. She marshaled
GRAMMY nominated pianist Taylor Eigsti, bassist Derrick Hodge and
drummer Kendrick Scott as her main band mates with guest
appearances from tenor saxophonist Dayna Stephens and bassist,
Alan Hampton, who makes a stellar turn featured as a singer and
guitarist. Leaders in their own right, this band is among the
most heralded of a young, new wave in jazz. "I adore these
musicians, not only for what they do, but also for who they are,"
Parlato says. "We couldn't have had a more supportive, productive
energy this album." That energy allowed her to reach
subliminal musical heights; one that truly engages in delightful,
often adventurous musical conversations that tickle the mind,
warms the heart and moves the body. "They all contributed so much
to the project, in the end it truly felt like a collaborative
effort."
"Collaborative effort" is no overstatement. The Lost and Found
sees Parlato emerging as a thoughtful composer and lyricist. In
fact, she wrote lyrics to several compositions such as Eigsti's
haunting "Without a Sound;" trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire's
plaintive "Henya," and Stephens' suspenseful title track. In a
duet on Hampton's "Still," Gretchen's gentle musing about
compassion and forgiveness is made more poignant by his raw
vocals. "Alan created such a meditative and deceptively simple
groove I wanted to write lyrics that were like a mantra.
Something that in its repetition becomes extremely powerful. What
better theme than love?"
She also composed the music and wrote the lyrics for the
evocative bossa-nova tinged, "Winter Wind," the hopeful "How We
Love," the "Better Than" and the hypnotic "Circling" that
contains verses that typify the entire disc's meditations on
light and darkness. "'Circling' plays with the idea of cycles in
our lives," explains Parlato. "The ones we have no control over
like birth and death as sed to the cycles we do control,
behavior patterns that we get ourselves into."
Pianist and GRAMMY nominated composer Robert Glasper came on
board as associate producer. "I love working with Robert, not
only in composing, but in re-harmonizing and arranging. There is
such an immense love and respect between all of the musicians and
Robert knows exactly what to do and say to keep everyone
inspired."
On The Lost and Found, Parlato further develops her knack for
reinventing intriguing R&B songs with her daring yet delectable
makeover of "All That I Can Say," a Mary J. Blige tune, penned by
Lauryn Hill, and Simply Red's "Holding Back the Years." In both
instances, Parlato and her band retain the soulful essence of the
songs while steering far enough so that they don't delve into
treacle mimicry. "Gretchen doesn't try to be anything she's not.
Every remake is an honest one," Glasper says. "She's always
herself." The disc also features the jaunty "Me and You," from
singer/songwriter Josh Mease and a sterling Glasper/Parlato
rearrangement of Bill Evans' "Blue in Green" with lyrics by
Meredith D'Ambrosio.
Gretchen Parlato is on an exploration, which leads the
conversation among the band and makes for unexpected treasures.
Inspired by Wayne Shorter, one of her mentors, she wrote lyrics
to his classic '60s jazz composition "Juju." The interaction
between Gretchen and saxophonist Stephens showcases her ability
to use her voice as an instrument--blending with the horn while
adding counterpoints. On "Without A Sound," her haunting vocals
seem to add another dimension to the remarkably textured harmony
already created by Hodge layering 3 parts using only his electric
bass. And on one of the disc's most revealing moments, the singer
shows her love for Brazilian music on Paulinho da Viola's "Alo
Alo." A solo rendition, Parlato layers all of the percussion and
sings all the vocals."
With The Lost and Found, Parlato has delivered a powerful
testament to the beauty of space and simplicity. "I've become
more interested in finding not only a higher, but a deeper level
and connection in music. And this seems to be done by shedding
everything, and getting right to the heart and core."
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