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Modern Antique | 
enlarge | Artist: Robin Mc Kelle Label: CHEAP LULLABY Category: Music
List Price: $13.98 Buy Used: $3.48 You Save: $10.50 (75%)
New (31) Used (15) from $3.48
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 10342
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 23 UPC: 875929002325 EAN: 0875929002325
Release Date: August 19, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Still factory-sealed, case has lots of cracks/damage; CD guaranteed
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| Tracks:
| • | Abracadabra | | • | Comes Love | | • | I Want To Be Loved | | • | Lover Man | | • | Cheek To Cheek | | • | Day By Day | | • | Save Your Love For Me | | • | Go To Hell | | • | Lullaby Of Birdland | | • | Make Someone Happy | | • | Remember |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Robin McKelle comes out swinging on her second disc of big band jazz, Modern Antique. The bassist plucks some fat, rich chords, the pianist skitters over the keys, and McKelle herself confidently scats over the melody while the horn section eggs her on. The mood is playfully flirtatious, just this side of naughty. The entire combo is having so much fun and so are you that the tune is almost over before you realize it s an ingenious re-arrangement of Steve Miller s seventies classic, Abracadabra. That opening gambit sets the tone for everything that follows: The singer has created a stylistically ambitious follow-up to her debut while still managing to evoke and honor the forties big-band sound she explored on the remarkable Introducing Robin McKelle. There are more rhythm and blues touches, revealing McKelle s torchy side, and she concludes the album with a self-penned ballad ( Remember ) that fits in comfortably with the American Songbook gems that precede it. Modern Antique will impress the ever-growing audience who ve already discovered McKelle -- via National Public Radio, her glowing press notices, or good old word of mouth -- and it should attract the even wider audience in the U.S. she clearly deserves.
Album Description Jazz Performer Robin McKelle performs with her band: Alain Mallet - Piano, Peter Slavov - Bass and Jeremy Clemons - Drums. Her influences are Ella, Sarah, Frank Sinatra, Donny Hathaway, Chaka Khan,Gladys Knight, Aretha Franklin, Nancy Wilson, Stevie Wonder, George Duke, Herbie Hancock, Miles, Coltrane, Dianne Reeves, Nina Simone, Pat Metheny, Jaco, Ledisi, Jill Scott, and so on and so forth.... Sounds Like Robin has her own unique sound influenced by many different musicians in many different styles. Her soul infused alto voice is compared to jazz legend Ella Fitzgerald. Robin's fresh approach to the vintage sound of the american songbook have sparked audiences around the world.
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| Customer Reviews:
Simply Amazing August 31, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I was wandering through a local bookstore the other day and heard this amazing music playing in the background. I immediately stopped in my tracks and asked the first employee that I saw who it was. I was directed towards the music section and was shown this CD of Robin McKelle.
I had never heard of this singer before, but after listening to just a couple of the tracks I was immediately hooked. I remember telling the sales clerk that the "vibe" I was getting was simply intoxicating.
If you're into vocal jazz or big band music, you will not be disappointed!
Jazz Times Review - August 2008! August 19, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Jazz Times, August 2008
She's a Berklee grad and a Thelonius Monk Vocal Jazz Competition finalist. She often sounds a lot like Anita O'Day, except when she sounds eerily like Nancy Wilson. She's blessed with O'Day's indefatigable verve as well as her innate sense of swing, and echoes Wilson's relaxed authority. Two years ago, she delivered a dynamite debut disc, Introducing Robin McKelle, embracing a retro big-band vibe with the ease and intelligence of a softer-edged Bette Midler. Now she's back with a second big-band effort even better than the first. Willie Murillo, who steered much of the previous album, again serves as principal arranger. But Chris Barron, Gordon Goodwin, Randy Waldman, pianist Alain Mallet and McKelle herself also contribute arrangements; and remarkably, considering the number of cooks stirring the pot, the results are not only consistently good but also seamlessly consistent. For fans of gorgeous standards lovingly nestled in ideal settings and sung with impeccable beauty and style, Modern Antique is essential listening. But McKelle and company go a few captivating steps further: first by transforming rocker Steve Miller's '80s chart-toppet "Abracadabra" into three-and-a-half minutes of pure, inventive jazz pleasure; then by doubling the strength of the Nina Simone anthem "Go to Hell" by defusing its anger and replacing it with assured wisdom; and, finally, by exiting on tiptoe (just McKelle on vocals and piano, supported by a gentle wave of strings) with the tenderly reflective, self-penned ballad "Remember."
Great Follow-up May 30, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is a great album and a fantastic follow-up to Robin's 'Introducing...' album. I caught her at the Dubai Jazz festival in 2007 and have been a fan ever since. Personal favourites on this new album are Robin's version of 'Abracadabra' and 'Comes Love'.
Robin if you are reading this please come back to Dubai at some point. Otherwise I shall have to wait until I visit Europe and catch you in France.
With Her It's The Fab Band! October 21, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
It seems to me that with many of the talented 'standards' singers we have now, the songs are about only their voice or sometimes you're left thinking, "Didn't much care for the singing, but the band was very good." With Ms. McKelle who has an outstanding voice and wonderful excitment in her enterpretations, I say no either/or here! It's as close as we're going to get to those great Big Band moments that our grandparents were lucky enough to experience. On both of her CDs, Ms. McKelle shares the space with some outstanding musicians who make these tunes more than a great time. So, it's a two-fer, and a grand listening experience. Swing on!
Another over-rated performance amidst a lot of hype October 21, 2008 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
I'm so tired of singers who possess a certain level of chops but seem incapable of connecting to the lyric that they're singing. It's tiresome. No matter how fine the musicians, arrangements, no matter how good a person looks, it doesn't matter if there's little actual connection to the music. Another disappointment.
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