Don Was' involvement with the seminal Blue Note label seems to be taking some strange directions. I've been staggered to learn that Annie Lennox has now signed to the label and her new album covers a range of standards and songs with a huge degree of social clout. The results actually don't sound bad at all as she clearly has a brilliant voice. She may have disappeared from the scene as a relevant pop artist but I don't think he musicianship and vocal skills have ever been in doubt.
The material is pretty impressive but it is a bit depressing seeing a so called "jazz label" with such credentials pulling the stops out to promote the work of a pop artist. It may sound pretty curmudgeonly to criticise what appears like a perfectly good album and one that is clearly more successful from the brief snippets available than the efforts of others to cover the same or similar material. Blue Note has also hosted albums by Nigel Kennedy and Suzanne Vega whilst a number of jazz artists like Dianne Reeves have been moved on, it does seem like the owners of EMI have little respect for the heritage. Shame that EMI (or however owns Blue Note now) doesn't seem to be quite on the button as far as what the labels represents to so many jazz fans.
The material is pretty impressive but it is a bit depressing seeing a so called "jazz label" with such credentials pulling the stops out to promote the work of a pop artist. It may sound pretty curmudgeonly to criticise what appears like a perfectly good album and one that is clearly more successful from the brief snippets available than the efforts of others to cover the same or similar material. Blue Note has also hosted albums by Nigel Kennedy and Suzanne Vega whilst a number of jazz artists like Dianne Reeves have been moved on, it does seem like the owners of EMI have little respect for the heritage. Shame that EMI (or however owns Blue Note now) doesn't seem to be quite on the button as far as what the labels represents to so many jazz fans.
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