Songwriter: Alex Bird and Ewen Farncombe prove that the jazz vocal duet isn’t dead.

Ever since the beginnings of the “album,” some of the finest and most enduring jazz vocal albums have been those that unite the voice with just a single instrument, normally piano or guitar. 

Perhaps the first really notable LP of this type was a 10-inch album that paired Ella Fitzgerald with pianist Ellis Larkins for eight songs by George Gershwin.  1950’s Ella sings Gershwin stands out among her late Decca output not just because it’s an exquisite disc of quality material at a time when she was often lumbered with poor songs, but also because it foreshadows the songbook albums that she would begin work on in 1956.  Not only that, but Ella would return to the vocal and single instrument format time and again throughout her career.  There was a second album with Larkins in 1954, and a reunion with him on stage in 1973 at the Newport Jazz Festival.  In 1960, she would team up with the under-rated Paul Smith for a series of ballads that were heard in the film Let No Man Write My Epitaph (the disc is also known as The Intimate Ella).  She would also record an album with Oscar Peterson in the mid-1970s, and, perhaps most importantly, she would work with guitarist Joe Pass on a series of four studio albums between 1973 and 1986, as well as numerous live shows together.  Ella is perhaps best-known today for the songbook albums (although the first two of which are surprisingly unexciting) and her virtuosic scat-singing, most often heard in concert rather than in the studio.  And yet many of her best studio performances are during the quiet, intimate albums I have just mentioned, in which she sings perhaps more purely than elsewhere, but also with much more depth and emotion than she is generally credited with. 

Ella wasn’t the only singer to have embarked on these projects, and sometimes those involved seem rather unlikely.  Sammy Davis Jr, known these days for his showmanship more than the quality of his singing (and this is such a shame, for he was a brilliant singer) paired up with a guitarist on two occasions for albums of reflective ballads, first with Mundell Lowe in the late 1950s, and then with Laurindo Almeida in the mid-1960s for what may well be Davis’s masterpiece.  Davis is accused so often of simply trying to be Frank Sinatra, and yet nothing could be further from the truth.  Sinatra never recorded duet albums.  The nearest he got was both sides of a single with pianist Bill Miller in 1976, and the beautiful It’s Sunday with guitarist Tony Mottola, although he did duets in concerts in the 1970s and 1980s on a regular basis.

Elsewhere, there’s Doris Day’s wonderful album with Andre Previn, without doubt her finest work.  And there are the duet albums by Tony Bennett and Bill Evans – albums which have become classics but which, I confess, I don’t actually like all that much.  But what is important to point out in all of these albums I have mentioned (and many more besides) is that the format isn’t that of singer and accompanist, but of two musicians collaborating together as equals. 

That brings me to Songwriter, a new album by Alex Bird (vocals) and Ewen Farncombe (piano).  Alex has mentioned in comments about the album that it is in the spirit of the Bennett and Evans LPs, but Bird and Farncombe actually do something more than those vocal/piano duets of the past in that all of the songs here are originals.  There’s also a great deal of variety, from the dramatic to the intimate, and from ballads through to salsa.   These two men have worked together for several years now, having composed two previous albums together, on which Farncombe has also acted as arranger and pianist, and Bird as vocalist. 

Songwriter opens with The Song is Ours, a song which demonstrates so well how Bird and Farncombe operate, with the entire four minutes or so performed rubato, and yet there is no false move here, with neither men thrown by the timing of the other.   Bird’s vocal has become richer and slightly darker since Whisky Kisses, two years ago, and Farncombe’s touch is truly beautiful – and I should add here that the entire album sounds great.  The mix and production really is very good indeed.

I’ve Seen the Sun follows, with its salsa rhythms that shouldn’t work in this kind of arrangement, but does.    Perhaps my favourite song of the new disc is The Soul I Left Behind, a solemn, brooding ballad, which has echoes of Where the Blackbird Sings from the album You Are the Light and the Way.    Meanwhile there is some wonderful work on Raindrops (Falling Down), particular from Ewen Farncombe, who has a ball creating pianistic raindrops, and demonstrates the range of his playing in doing so.  If You’re Not Laughin’ (You’re Crying) changes the mood to something bluesier in a song with a Fats Waller vibe, and there is something of a more traditional blues on the title track, Songwriter

This might be the third album of originals from these two songwriters in three years, but there is no sign that the well is drying up with regards to material – and it’s refreshing that each of the three albums so far are distinctive from the others.   Despite my mentioning all of those great duet albums of the past, the albums that this effort most reminds me of aren’t duet albums at all, but the solo albums 20, 25, and 30 by Harry Connick Jr.   These, too, are vocal and piano discs, but Connick carries out both duties.  Perhaps these albums come to mind as a comparison because the chemistry and interaction between Alex and Ewen feels like they are just one performer.   Without prior knowledge, you would assume that there is one person here, playing the piano and singing into the microphone in front of him.  There is no battle of wills going on, no fighting for the spotlight, just some really excellent, utterly selfless, music that shows that, in a world of gimmicks and big production, there is still room for an intimate disc such as this. 

This is Not a Review! Alex Bird: You are the Light and the Way

Regular readers of this blog may well know already that Alex Bird is my friend, and for that reason I cannot call this a review.  So, this non-review is more of a personal introduction to Alex’s second album, You are the Light and the Way, which is due out on November 5th.

Since I published my “non-review” of Alex’s first album, Whisky Kisses, nearly a year ago, the album and the compositions on it have garnered much attention, and Alex himself even has his own weekly radio show now.  I confess that I’m envious.  I always wanted a radio show, too!  And, this week, Where the Blackbird Sings, the first single from the forthcoming album, topped the iTunes jazz charts. The rest of the top five in that chart were Louis Armstrong, Dave Brubeck, Ray Charles, and Nina Simone.  Pretty good company that Mr. Bird is keeping these days. 

So, let’s start with Where the Blackbird Sings, which is probably the most intriguing of the songs on the new album.  When I first heard it, I described it as a rhumba with Yiddish influences in the arrangement and instrumentations – and the climax sounds like it could be from a James Bond film.  In many ways, it aptly demonstrates the similarities and differences between this and the Whisky Kisses album.   The funding for the album by the Canada Council for the Arts has allowed Alex and his musicians, The Jazz Mavericks, to expand their sound.  Added to the trio this time around are Jacob Gorzhaltsan on saxophone and clarinet, and, on some tracks, a string quartet and/or a quartet of wind instruments.   However, these extra instruments haven’t been shoehorned into every song.  They are used sparingly, and are more effective for this.  The string quartet are used to great effect on Where the Blackbird Sings.  But the song also expands on the previous album in a different way.  Alex and co-writer Ewen Farncombe are still wearing their influences on their sleeve, but this time around they have taken those influences and run with them, forging more individual songs and sounds. 

But there is a great deal of variety here. Way Back Home is completely different to Where the Blackbird Sings.  If Blackbird is the most dramatic number on the new album, Way Back Home is one of the most intimate.  Musically, it’s a relatively simple song in waltz time, and rather sentimental in its lyrics.  But the simplicity is a strength.  This is a charming number, that could quite easily find its way into the repertoire of late-night singers everywhere. 

Bird has been compared with another Canadian, Michael Bublé, but the comparison doesn’t really work.  Bird is much more rooted in jazz than straight-ahead big band music, and Bublé has yet to do an album of original songs – although I’m sure Alex doesn’t mind the comparison!   But, in many ways, this new set of songs reminds me of a Harry Connick Jr album from nearly twenty-five years ago, To See You.  That was an album of all-original ballads, often augmented by a lush orchestra and/or a string quartet.  You Are the Light and the Way isn’t an all-ballad affair, but songs like I Held You in My Arms and Thinkin’ Bout You Tonight certainly sound as if they could have come from that Connick project.

There are more influences on display on the likes Tell Me It’s You, whose first phrase unapologetically makes one think of More Than You Know before the melody goes off on its own course.  Elsewhere, My Cutie Pie is a song reminiscent of Fats Waller.  And it’s interesting how differently the extra instruments are used on certain songs.  On My Cutie Pie, the horns take us off in a New Orleans direction, but during Old Soul, the same horns sound like they have been arranged by Marty Paich for his Dek-tette.  The string and horns arrangements are actually the fine work of pianist and co-writer Ewen Farncombe. 

The aforementioned Old Soul could quite easily have been the title of the album, and would have worked well as the opening track.  Instead, the opening/title track is You Are the Light and the Way.  It makes for an attention-grabbing start to the CD, with Bird’s dramatic vocal being the only thing we hear for close to thirty seconds, before the instruments join in for what turns out to be one of the jazziest of all the tracks.  The album closes out in a very different way, with just vocal and piano on Honey Bee Lullaby, which almost sounds like a coda to the Whisky Kisses album. 

If Whisky Kisses was a warm, quintessential love album, then You are the Light and the Way has a different personality. It is less safe in many ways, with Alex and his musicians feeling more confident and trying out a variety of new ideas in the compositions and new arrangements.  This most definitely isn’t Whisky Kisses 2. Most of these songs would never have fitted on that album. It’s going to be intriguing to see what musical direction Alex & co. are going to take during the years to come. 

Alex has said that he was keen not to release his debut album and then wait several years for a follow-up.  Bearing that in mind, this sophomore effort arrives just a year after the first.  And it’s clear why Alex felt that way:  the artists who influenced him were recording three or more albums a year during the peak of their careers.  One of his biggest influences, Bobby Darin, recorded six LPs in twelve months. The days of that happening in the music industry are long gone, but here’s hoping we don’t have to wait too long for a third album.

This is Not a Review: “Whisky Kisses” by Alex Bird and the Jazz Mavericks

This is not a review. It would perhaps be somewhat misleading if I called it one as I am friends with Alex Bird (well, online, at least), and so it could be seen as somewhat biased.   A biased review on the web, you ask?  As if such a thing could happen! 

Alex has been around online for a while.  It must have been ten years or so ago, when I first heard him on YouTube, and now he has released his first album, Whisky Kisses, with his trio, the Jazz Mavericks.  All of the songs here are originals, written by Alex with his pianist, Ewen Farncombe, and/or with Charlie Angus, who co-produced the album.

This is what would have been called in the old days a “love album.” There are ten ballads here and one mid-tempo number (Gotta Run), and it’s fair to say that the ten ballads are very much a new take on the Great American Songbook tradition.  Bearing that in mind, the album as a concept reminds me a little of a Harry Connick Jr album from 1997 called To See You, which also featured ten new ballads.  But To See You was a rather leaden affair, with most of the songs lacking a singable melodic hook, the tempos were often too slow, and half of the arrangements weighed down with heavy strings.  There was never any real hope that the songs would catch on. None of that is an issue here. 

Throughout the 47 minutes of the album, Alex wears both his heart and his influences on his sleeve, but he likes to have fun with those influences.  The bass intro to the first number, Fire Not Warmth, is reminiscent of Fever, but, like some of the other songs, it doesn’t quite go where you expect as the verse leads into a catchy, melodic chorus with great use of organ to give it a funky feel. 

Later, Now is the Night takes us into How Insensitive territory, and is something of a homage to the Jobim classic.  There is also another nod to a classic on the back of the booklet, with a photograph that gets close to recreating the front cover of the Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan – not that there is much of Dylan’s influence in the music itself.

Back on the disc, the title of 3.52 (in the morning) may well remind people of “it’s a quarter to three” in One For My Baby, but that’s about the only thing the two songs have in common.  3.52 isn’t really a torch song, even if it starts out as if it’s going to head in that direction.  The song opens up after a couple of minutes as it goes into the bridge.  Alex sings here of writing “just one killer line,” but the truth is that he and Charlie Angus have written a killer bridge – and you don’t say that very often.  Both Alex and his musicians know it’s a killer bridge section, that much is clear, and they sing and play the hell out of it each time it appears.   If other singers don’t pick the song up in the coming months and years, I shall be very surprised.

Another highlight is I Almost Remembered – undoubtedly the best song that Peter Cincotti never wrote.   There is some great work by Ewen Farncombe here – the song is almost a duet between him and Alex – and it may well be the best vocal on the whole album, singing with power at the beginning of each chorus and yet so delicately just a couple of lines later.  And, like 3.52, it’s a beautiful song, both musically and lyrically, and deserves to be heard.

If 3.52 and I Almost Remembered are the most substantial, deepest songs on the album, then perhaps I should also highlight the cute Lemon Drop Stars as a contrast.  It is perhaps the most straightforward song from both a lyrical and musical point of view, but it works remarkably well, especially in its place on the album – which is sequenced very well, I might add.

The title song is the perfect closer for the disc, and is a great showcase for Alex’s smoky vocals – confident and yet tender, and beautifully navigating the long phrases.  But perhaps we shouldn’t surprised, for Alex has been listening to, and learning from, the best – Sinatra, Dean Martin, Bobby Darin, Sammy Davis Jr, Ella, Rosemary Clooney, Elvis, Nat King Cole and beyond.  And let’s not forget the great work of the trio (Ewen Francombe, Eric West and Scott Hunter) who certainly do not act as accompanists here, but on equal with the vocals. They all get their chance to shine – and make the most of it.

If my comments about Alex Bird wearing the influences on his sleeve have sounded like the album is lacking in originality, then let me correct that.  Those influences have clearly been absorbed like a sponge by a young man who loves their music, but the compositions and performances on Whisky Kisses are not a regurgitation of everything they (and the classic songwriters) have done.  The compositions don’t sound like Cole Porter songs, and the vocals certainly don’t sound like Sinatra (or any of the singers I have listed in the previous paragraph).  This is most definitely a young singer acknowledging how much he loves (and has learned from) the past, but looking to the future.  Considering the amount of positive reviews that have appeared on various websites and in jazz publications over the last few weeks, that future is going to bright.  But, as I said earlier, this is not a review. 

Whisky Kisses is available to stream on Spotify and Amazon Music, and the CD is available from https://alexbird007.bandcamp.com/track/whisky-kisses.