Kandace Springs, The Women Who Raised Me, Blue Note

In a few brief years Kandace Springs has become the female singer to turn to for her fresh way with classic jazz material and this surpasses all that has gone before. There is the quality and the sheer quantity. Opening with 'Devil May Care' …

Published: 28 Mar 2020. Updated: 3 years.

In a few brief years Kandace Springs has become the female singer to turn to for her fresh way with classic jazz material and this surpasses all that has gone before.

There is the quality and the sheer quantity. Opening with 'Devil May Care' featuring Christian McBride there is a frisson, a lifeforce and that continues through in the personality she brings throughout to her loosely constructed tribute to female singers from Ella Fitzgerald to Sade to Billie Holiday.

Guests include a heroine of hers, Norah Jones, on a well caught treatment of 'Angel Eyes' although you don't turn at least yet to Springs for a distillation of darkness, yet it's lightning in a bottle because whatever the song she will find a way to make it work even if against the odds.

David Sanborn is on 'I Put a Spell on You' begun by Kandace on piano leaning in to the 'Moonlight Sonata' and using it as a counter melody against the Screamin' Jay Hawkins melody before Sanborn comes in with a superb crash and burns the place down. While Kandace is not like Nina Simone as a singer at all, there is much less of a shout and a violence in her sound, but there is a lot of range and a lot of passion that speaks to the listener as if it is their song.

'Pearls' is beautiful, a world away from the designer lounge sound Sade cultivated. Among the guests it's encouraging that flautist Elena Pinderhughes gets some new profile here and yet 'Ex-Factor' isn't such a stop the traffic track, but she adds an extra dimension to 'Killing Me Softly' a big highlight too for the vocal treatment. Pinderhughes I think needs more of a Bobbi Humphrey-type production in the future to make her big statement when someone gives her a big deal if that in the end comes. Trumpeter Avishai Cohen makes some telling contributions, you won't have heard him on any record the way he comes over here. It is staggering how much content there is on the album with multiple points of entry. Chris Potter is used well on the samba 'Gentle Rain' and keeping 'Strange Fruit' to last for impact was a good idea, the most serious song after all that Kandace navigates fairly well in its chilling indictment of raw racism. With her slight country lilt and the sheer joy she summons up from within her she has become one of the new greats on this evidence. Best jazz-vocals record since Liquid Spirit. Stephen Graham

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Reuben James: all positivity on 'My Line'

Ahead of the summertime release of pianist-singer Reuben James EP Slow Down here's the so very positive Pharrell-esque 'My Line' featuring Col3trane, Jay Prince, Vula and Soweto Kinch. “Slow Down is a short body of work that can hopefully allow an …

Published: 27 Mar 2020. Updated: 4 years.

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Ahead of the summertime release of pianist-singer Reuben James EP Slow Down here's the so very positive Pharrell-esque 'My Line' featuring Col3trane, Jay Prince, Vula and Soweto Kinch.

“Slow Down is a short body of work that can hopefully allow an escape into a sonic world”, Reuben, the pianist who surfaced some years ago first with singer Ruby Turner and then with Sam Smith now reinvented and presenting his own ideas as leader, explains his thinking: “It’s a collection of jazz inspired R&B, love songs and other sounds to relax the mind.”