Weaver of Dreams

Jazzbird Records, June, 2002

ALBUM DETAILS

Blue Chip Jazz CD Award for Top Vocals of 2002

Herb Wong, IAJE Journal

The Players

Kris Adams, vocals
Tim Ray/Steve Prosser*, piano
Paul Del Nero, bass
Bob Tamagni, drums
Greg Hopkins, trumpet
Dino Govoni, saxophone
Matt Marvuglio, flute

THE SONGS

1. Watch What Happens*
2. Sno Peas*
3. Living Room
4. The Peacocks (A Timeless Place)*
5. It Could Happen To You
6. The More I See You
7. Ladies in Mercedes*
8. Falling In Love With Love
9. Weaver of Dreams
10. The In Crowd

LINER NOTES

by Multiple Grammy® winning jazz critic Bob Blumenthal

Kris Adams has something that is the goal of all jazz singers, and will make her the envy of most. That something is a personal sound, which emerges in the opening bars of “Watch What Happens” and sustains her musical vision through the close of “The In Crowd.” You will remember Adams’ voice once you hear it, recognize it immediately, and savor what you hear. Her vocal instrument is ideal for the creative terrain she chooses to inhabit, with a character that is rich but not florid and clear-headed without being cold. It marries warmth and intelligence in a most distinctive manner, with the same disdain for both technical display and emotional qualification that is at the core of her conception. The words Adams sings retain the weight of their narrative meaning, and inspire a play of shadings and shadows that amplify a lyric’s content.

The Adams sound is a potent tool at the service of her elevated musicianship. With such basics as time and intonation covered (hardly a given among vocalists, we must note), she is free to apply a truly adventurous imagination and fully inhabit her material. Again there is a reassuring balance of respect for the composed song and willingness to reshape it in the manner of an instrumental improviser, which results in the quiet daring of her interpretations. The harmonic notions she investigates are daring, yet delivered with sure-footed certainty, charging hip blowing tunes and more intimate stores alike with a jolt of contemporary relevance.

If all of this were not enough evidence that Adams is one jazz singer who can wear the often-debatable mantle without argument, her song choices reinforce the point. Not one to waste a superior vocal instrument on inferior material, she has chosen a program that balances unexhausted standards from the Tin Pan Alley side of the street with melodic gems from the jazz wing of America’s songbook. Seeing the names Phil Markowitz, Max Roach, Jimmy Rowles and Steve Swallow alongside Legrand and Warren and Rodgers and the others in the composer credits confirms that Adams has both ears and taste to match her sound. And while her homage to Chet Baker’s memorable 1958 recording of “It Could Happen to You” displays Adams’ gift of feeling her material like a soloist most overtly, the tack she chose in crafting original lyrics for “Sno’ Peas” before learning that Markowitz was himself an avid organic gardener attests to an even more intuitive sense of melodic meaning that verges on the clairvoyant.

The program also tells us where Adams is coming from as a jazz singer – which happens to be a sensibility that is actively redefining both the repertoire and the pantheon of inspirational elders. Note in this regard that Roach’s “Living Room” has lyrics by Abbey Lincoln, one of the definitive voices for nearly a half-century who has only begun to receive her due (thanks in part to the dissemination of her work by younger vocalists) in the past decade; and that both the haunting standard-in-the-making “The Peacocks” and the knowing social commentary of “Ladies in Mercedes” represent the verbal acumen of another great veteran jazz singer, Britain’s Norma Winstone. A less obvious yet equally telling presence is Sheila Jordan, whose version of “Falling in Love with Love” on her classic Portrait of Sheila remains definitive, and whose sensibility suffuses Adams’ ad-lib on automotive downsizing at the close of “Mercedes.”

Speaking of vehicles, Adams has an ensemble to ride in these performances that is definitely luxury-class. While each member of the band deserves a nod, special kudos should go to pianists Prosser (whose playing and arranging make him sound like the soulmate he is) and Ray, and to Marvuglio, whose flute creates an especially memorable blend with the Adams sound. As the supporting group ranges from trio to sextet, and as the grooves shift from wistful to mysterious to witty to the liberating groove of “The In Crowd” (an even more jazz-friendly version than Ramsey Lewis’ old hit record), the sense of fit between voice and band never wavers. Which is only what a dream weaver with the gifts of Kris Adams deserves.

PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: MAY 28, 2002

JAZZ VOCALIST KRIS ADAMS RELEASES WEAVER OF DREAMS
BOSTON, MA—On Tuesday, June 18th, Jazzbird Records will release Weaver of Dreams, the sophomore solo effort by jazz vocalist, Kris Adams. The follow-up to her well-received 1999 debut, This Thing Called Love (Jazzbird), Weaver of Dreams documents the versatility of her working group of the last few years with ten original arrangements of jazz standards for quartet, quintet and sextet by Adams and husband/pianist, Steve Prosser. Adams will celebrate the release of her new disc, which includes liner notes by multiple Grammy® Award winning jazz critic Bob Blumenthal, with a CD Release Party at Boston’s Regattabar on Wednesday, July 19th.

“Kris Adams has something that is the goal of all jazz singers, and it will make her the envy of most,” writes Blumenthal in the liner notes. “That something is a personal sound. You will remember Adams’ voice once you hear it, recognize it immediately and savor what you hear. The harmonic notions she investigates are daring, yet delivered with sure-footed certainty, charging hip blowing tunes and more intimate stories alike with a jolt of contemporary relevance.”

Her expanded creative role on Weaver of Dreams is a change from her first record where singing was her main responsibility. Drawing on her experience teaching harmony at Berklee College of Music, Adams used more of her own inventive reharmonizations and personalized arrangements to provide a familiar, yet non-mainstream backdrop to display her breadth of abilities. Along with Prosser, Adams is joined on the CD by flutist Matt Marvuglio, trumpeter Greg Hopkins, saxophonist Dino Giovani, pianist Tim Ray, bassist Paul Del Nero, and drummer Bob Tamagni. ”

The material developed from playing it,” Adams says, “so I was able to take more chances this time. There’s more improvising and I stretch out more because I did the arranging and the material was naturally suited for me. I’m really into Chet Baker, and I arranged his famous solo on ‘It Could Happen To You’ for three voices and sang all the parts to pay homage to him. I also did a horn arrangement of ‘Weaver of Dreams’ for flute, trumpet, and saxophone. There are all kinds of different combinations on this record.”

CONTACT:
Scott Menhinick, Media Relations
Improvised Communications
(781) 893-9424
scott@improvisedcommunications.com