Chip Jenkins Jazz: News

‘Reviews of Chip’s vocal on Toots
Thieleman’s album’
 |
"On this unusual CD, the remarkable
harmonica player Toots Thielemans explores a variety of mostly French
melodies. The music is often nostalgic and wistful but generally
swinging, with enough different tempos to hold one's interest throughout.
The oddest aspect of the set is that there is an overdubbed vocal
apiece by Diana Krall ('La Vie en Rose' , Dianne Reeves Johnny Mathis
Shirley Horn and a promising newcomer known here only as Chip Krall
Reeves and Chip sing in French. Thielemans plays beautifully throughout
the relaxed date, which includes 'I Wish You Love', 'The Windmills
of Your Mind', 'Once Upon a Summertime', and 'Moulin Rouge'."
Easily recommended. ~ Scott
Yanow, All Music Guide |

Toots Thielemans - Chez Toots
Private Music
Musicians: Toots Thielemans (harmonica),
Bert van den Brink (piano), Hein Van de Geyn (bass), Andre Ceccarelli
(drums), with featured guest artists Diana Krall, Chip Jenkins, Dianne
Reeves, Shirley Horn and Johnny Mathis (vocals) and Philip Catherine
(guitar)
Songs: Sous Le Ciel de Paris, La Vie en Rose, Valse No. 2, Dance for
Victor, Hymne a L'Amour (If You Love Me, Really Love Me), Que Reste-T'il
de Nos Amours (I Wish You Love), Old Friend, Un Jour tu Verras, For
My Lady, Ne Me Quitte Pas, Les Moulins de Mon Couer (The Windmills of
Your Mind), Le Temps des Cerises
Rating: * * * 1/2
Leave it to chromatic harmonica master
Toots Thielemans to stretch the inner (not outer) envelope of jazz with
CHEZ TOOTS. Of course, the 76-year-old Toots did that long ago with
his choice of "horn," an instrument that is usually associated
with blues or country music. In a recent interview with "Jazz Times"
magazine, the Belgian-born Thielemans recounted that his first instrument
was the accordion, which he heard at his parents' sidewalk cafe in Brussels
and on which he started at the age of four. He first heard the harmonica
in a 1930's movie featuring the famous Larry Adler, who had played with
Duke Ellington and Django Reinhart. "Then I bought a harmonica
for fun. I didn't know anything about jazz. I just listened to things
like boogie woogie," Thielemans says. Eventually, he fell in love
with the guitar and Django and Lester Young and bebop, joining the George
Shearing Quintet soon after he arrived in the United States in the early
1950's. Shearing now and then featured Toots on the harmonica, and it
would become his main instrument on movie soundtracks like "Midnight
Cowboy" and on a run of outstanding jazz albums like "Images,"
a rare 1974 date with pianist Joanne Brackeen that was recently reissued
on Candid/Choice.
On jazz anthems like Sonny Rollins' "Airegin"
or Coltrane's "Giant Steps," Toots can hold his own with any
saxophonist. But there are people who can't abide the sound of the "harp."
Toots like to tell this anecdote: "A jazz writer once said, 'We
all know Toots is one of Quincy Jones' favorite living musicians. He
would be mine too, if he didn't play that goddamn harmonica'."
Toots admits, "It's a matter of being allergic to caviar or oysters.
You like or you don't." I like it (caviar, oysters, Toots' harmonica)
and I surely like CHEZ TOOTS. a selection of mostly French songs played
with a European rhythm section and featuring guest American vocalists
Diana Krall, Dianne Reeves, Shirley Horn, Johnny Mathis and the mysterious
"Chip" on five tracks. Highlights include "La Valse des
Lilas" (better known as "The Windmills of Your Mind"
with Shirley Horn; "La Vie en Rose," on which Toots accompanied
Edith Piaf but which is sung here by Diana Krall; and the original "For
My Lady." But who is Chip, the beautiful voice in French on "Hymne
a L'Amour"?
Reviewed By: Les Line
52nd Street Jazz

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