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You Are There | 
enlarge | Artists: Roberta Gambarini, Hank Jones Label: Emarcy / Pgd Category: Music
List Price: $16.98 Buy New: $10.97 You Save: $6.01 (35%)
New (15) Used (4) from $10.97
Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 2053
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 001062202 UPC: 602517497276 EAN: 0602517497276 ASIN: B00128O2S0
Release Date: February 12, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW Factory Sealed - Ready to be shipped within 24 hrs from California - Average 5 workdays delivery time - Excellent customer service - Buy with confidence!
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| Tracks:
| • | You Are There (Frishberg/Mandel) | | • | Then I ll Be Tired of You (Harburg/Schwartz) | | • | People Time (B. Carter) | | • | When Lights Are Low (B. Carter/S. Williams) | | • | Deep Purple (Parish/de Rose) | | • | Reminiscing (Gryce/Hendricks) | | • | Suppertime (Berlin) | | • | Just Squeeze Me (Ellington/Gaines) | | • | Something to Live For (Ellington/Strayhorn) | | • | Stardust (Carmichael/Parish) | | • | Lush Life (Strayhorn) | | • | You re Getting to Be a Habit With Me (Warren/Dubin) | | • | Come Sunday (Ellington) | | • | How Are Things in Glocca Morra? (Lane/Harburg) |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Grammy-nominated jazz vocalist Roberta Gambarini is one of the most heralded talents of her generation. Following her impressive debut, Easy to Love, Gambarini finds herself in her ideal environment as a duet partner with the legendary pianist, Hank Jones singing songs which help to define the jazz cannon.
Album Details Gambarini Moved to the United States from her Native Italy in 1998 after Having Established an Impressive Cv in her Homeland with Mulitiple Competition Awards and Touring Europe with Many Jazz Musicians. She Surprised Many and Finished with a Third Place Berth in the 1998 Thelonious Monk International Jazz Vocal Competition. Since Then, She Has Performed with the Late Michael Brecker, Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock, Slide Hampton, Roy Hargrove, Jimmy Heath, Hank Jones, Christian Mcbride, and Toots Thielemans, Among Many Others. In 2004, She Started Touring with the Dizzy Gillespie All-star Big Band and Performed with James Moody, Frank Wess, Jimmy Heath, Paquito De Rivera, Roy Hargrove and Others. In 2006 and 2007, She Toured with her Own Trio as Well as the Hank Jones Trio, who Joins her for this Formal Album.
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| Customer Reviews:
The best recording of 2008 (and possibly 2009, 2010, 2011, etc.) August 14, 2008 Samuel Chell (Kenosha,, WI United States) Start with a phenomenally gifted, rapidly ascending vocalist of the same heritage as Caruso and Sinatra, add as the sole pianist the musician who is the current reigning patriarch in jazz, and finally select a few sterling examples from the Great American Songbook. The results are predictably spectacular but not "showy" or "exhibitionistic." This is not an album simply to be impressed by. Gambarini is sufficiently mature, and in command musically, that she can afford to use her virtually unlimited technique to one end: bringing the song to realization for all concerned--the composer, the performer, and the listener. Indeed, "You are there." Anyone who finds this music "boring" hasn't learned how to listen. If you have yet to discover the "sound of surprise" that is the hallmark of Sinatra's "suicide-song," "saloon-song" albums--Riddle-Jenkins' masterpieces like "Only the Lonely," "No One Cares," "In the Wee Small Hours," "September of My Years," "Close to You"--or, for that matter, of Shirley Horn's "Here's to Life" or of Jack Jones' "Paints a Tribute to Tony Bennett," a collection of ballads such as "You Are There" is apt to be out of reach, regardless of the performer. To those who understand the American ballad, take notice. To the virtuoso, coloratura, Ella and Sarah credentials that Gambarini evidenced on her prior album ("Easy to Love"), she brings the crystalline elocution, the ear for narrative-dramatic-poetic meaning, the professional's attention to diction and phrasing that were the strong suits of Lady Day, Carmen McRae, and not least of all Old Blue. Some of the songs are more than familiar: "Body and Soul" is the most recorded song of all time, and "Stardust" not far behind. She revitalizes both, outfitting them in resplendent new clothes without changing the essential character of either. Other tunes are less familiar because singers either avoid them due to their difficulty or attempt them but get lost while trying to navigate the tunes' hazardous harmonic/melodic progressions. Gambarini takes on notorious "obstacle courses" like Strayhorn's "Lush Life" and "Something to Live For," not to mention Duke's stirring and noble "Come Sunday" and Berlin's poignant, heart-rending "Suppertime," yet makes you forget about the music's difficulty factor. All that matters is the song--its melody and lyrics reassuringly commanding the listener's attention rather than any thoughts about the challenges to the performer. Perhaps "Deep Purple" is as good a track as any for illustrating what this singer is made of. The tune is admittedly a venerable chestnut, one I don't recall hearing except in the context of amateur, nostalgic singalongs. A later artist is apt to pass it by quickly (forgivably so) because its apparently trite lyric, melody and chords don't seem worthy of the performer's time and attention--the amorphous and hazy, abstract and even nonsensical lyric (Cole Porter would shudder), the extended near-moribund whole notes, the "unvocal" melodic leaps--in other words, an invitation at practically every measure for stagnation. No doubt Gambarini was aware of all this in electing to go after the song. A "casual" listening will most likely dismiss the track as a pleasant reading of an old warhorse and little more. But such a response in itself testifies to Gambarini's success at making an awkward old duck sail by the listener's field of vision like an elegant swan. Now do a rewind and subject the performance itself to a close replay. After a verse introduction that's likely to leave even the most knowledgeable "expert" clueless about what's to come, she starts the familiar melody--an incisive, rock-solid E natural below middle C that effortlessly glides to the high note almost two octaves above it before "floating" down to the next resting point and then handing-off to Hank Jones for a chimerical chorus that breathes as though the pianist possessed vocal cords in each of his fingers. But she's not done yet. The last chorus essentially repeats the first but flows even more effortlessly, more reflectively, as the singer brings the meditative reverie to an immensely satisfying closure, connecting the realms of infinite desire and finite vast space that are the subject of this song's singularly abstract lyric. In fact, the alignment of the two realms is so complete the listener is apt to see the vocalist's inserted "cadenza" on the final note--which amounts to, in effect, a reenactment of the song's octave leaps in microcosm--as proceeding naturally and logically from the requirements of the song itself rather than as a performer's need to impress with a grand exit. No more than two minutes in length, this single performance of a sentimental "period piece" is as immeasurably satisfying as any number of CDs and musical programs that this listener has encountered in the present millennium--and, far from a relic, ranks among the truly timeless performances that have been recorded since 1917 (the year of the first jazz recording).
Roberta Gambarinni and Hank Jones You Are There June 16, 2008 Edward A. Holzwarth (Springville,Pa.) Roberta's voice is pure honey. She has class in her singing and is very hip in her style. Teamed with Hank Jones , the old master, you can't have a better combo. Hank's a piano master and together they make music you can listen to forever.
B-O-O-O-R-I-N-G May 29, 2008 J. T. Murphy (Jazz heaven, NJ, USA) 1 out of 7 found this review helpful
After all the hype, where is the emotion, the passion? Where is the spirit of the songs? This album is terrible. Someone should wake this chick up.
Marvelous! April 19, 2008 Howard S. Gay Jr. (San Diego CA USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Yes, You ARE There! It has a cabaret intimacy, and sensuousness. This is a perfect jazz recording with the combo of Roberta and Hank Jones. Roberta's voice has a certain confidence and brightness. And when first hearing her sing i thought Je ne sais Quoi? It felt like the rush and sparkle as from a fine wine. Explanation?....the warm Italian ambiance is apparent. She definitely reminds us of Carmen McCrae---but without the melancholy undertones, and more like bliss instead. Anyway, isn't it a good thing to be compared to the gold standard (Carmen)? Here's a generous CD with 14 tracks and three pages of liner notes all written by Roberta. Sweet.
Beautiful music! April 8, 2008 Tomas (Rockport. MA USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Just got this CD for my commuting time in the car. What a wonderful companion to have, as I try to unwind from the week's work and prepare for a quiet and peaceful weekend.
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