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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Look What "I've" Got,
By
This review is from: Look What I Got (Audio CD)
I will be the first to admit that Betty Carter will not be everyone's "cup-of-tea". She's a jazz singer in the traditional sense that she likes to weave in and out of a song, with, at times, no apparent direction. I once compared her singing style to listening to Charlie Parker play....and like that jazz great there is a method to her madness. She is a remarkable woman who when releasing this disc had lead a full and eventfull life and it certainly comes out in her music. No, this is not a disc for someone who considers Diana Krall to be a "jazz singer". Betty is well past the point of just pouring out a melody....her voice is an instrument in itself (cliche...but true!) and she practically reinvents these songs. And what a wonderful selection of songs are chosen. "That Sunday,That Summer" is a amazing offering and Betty is apparently having so much fun singing it...and you'll have an equally good time listening! "The Good Life", one of my favorites, but when she sings "tackles" it (and tackles is an appropriate metaphor) it almost makes me forget Tony Bennett's version. And of course the title track "Look What I've Got" a song as playful and daring as the rest of this disc. I won't forget "Imagination" which, in her capable hands, is at once winsome,nostalgic and utterly heartbreaking. Being sung by a singer of Betty's background and experience the song takes on a whole new meaning....and I love her for that! Now, I am aware that there are many fine, young jazz singers out there. Singers such as Carla Cook and Laverne Butler are helping to keep this wonderful music alive and I am grateful for their talents. But, when a singer such as Betty Carter, who truly sings from a lifetime of experience, comes around it is obviously to "our" benefit to sit up and take notice. She deserves that respect....and if we're wise we'll all benefit from her remarkable talent.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Look what I got,
By Monchie (Georgia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Look What I Got (Audio CD)
The first time I heard this song I was a child watching the Cosby Show. Betty Carter was a voice coach and Vanessa and her friends wanted to start a singing group. At the end Betty Carter was wearing a gold dress and she sang Look what I got by piano and candle light. It was the best Cosby Show. I never forgot that voice. I was so pleased to hear that song again!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Okay, you know why you're here...,
By thejazzcritic "thejazzcritic" (Denver, CO United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Look What I Got (Audio CD)
Nobody comes to this album by accident. This is Betty Carter's first album with Verve - having produced most of her own material under her Bet-Car label for the preceeding 20 years. I believe Verve helped get her the production she needed - this was and is an acclaimed album and deservedly so. Carter toured pretty heavily behind this album and one may easily credit this effort with reviving her flagging career and paving the way for later performances which I can't imagine being deprived of.
Why is that important? Time isn't on our side! The eighties brought a great deal of analysis to jazz, which was in many ways unhealthy for developing artists. This and other albums of the time seemed to counter much of the jazz criticism of the times: there will be many flavors of jazz, they seemed to say. Moreover, Look What I Got marked a treatment of standards which was influential on a conservative audience and a group of conservative young players. As Carter's own Jazz Ahead program sought to tutor the young as soon as five years after the debut of this album, it's easy to imagine her bringing them to focus on jazz as a shared event in much the same way she seems to bring the young group of players together on these sides. To speak briefly about their contributions, their work is excellent whether on Carter's original compositions or on the highly innovative standards (an up-tempo Imagination which wrestles the traces of optimism from the song from the deadened and helpless version by Chet Baker, and an almost rhythmless The Man I Love and a Bossa version of The Good Life). Of the instrumental work on the album, Don Braden's tenor saxophone is worth singling out, as he manages several call-and-response sections with Carter which evokes many of the forms heard in the legeneary Coltrane-Hartman collaboration. While his solos are good too, his vocal fills are some of the best I've heard. But the obvious triumph of the album is Carter's. She obviously finds her stride as an ensemble leader on this album, and her mentorship of the individual players was evident and on display on her tour dates. As far as the album structure goes, this is perhaps the best balance of up-tempo and ballad work Carter produced. The best cut of the album is Look What I Got, which is an original composition to rival the best standards. Perhaps you might see Look What I Got as one bookend to Carter's late career, with the middle consisting of such gems as Droppin' Things, the heartbreaking 30 Years. The other bookend could be September Song. If you find yourself inclined toward Ms. Carter's voice and her ability to convey the heart of a song without even the use of words, you will find much to enjoy in this essential recording. Enjoy it.
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