Written by Jim Eigo:
jim@jazzpromoservices.com
Cristina Morrison
"I Love"
CD Release Party
Tues., June 12th 7PM
The Jazz Beat of Galapagos
@ Somethin' Jazz Club
212 E. 52nd St. 3Fl. (b/2nd & 3rd Ave.)
New York, NY 10022
E/M train to 53rd St./ Lexington,
6 train to 51st St. TEL:(212) 371-7657
15$
featuring
Cristina Morrison: Lyrics & Vocals
Misha Piatigorsky: Piano
Marcus McLaurine: Bass
Willard Dyson: Drums
Walter Symanzski; Trumpet
Sammy Torres: Percussion
Peter Brainin: Sax
http://www.cristinamorrisonilove.com/
Vocalist Cristina Morrison is as worldly and
well-traveled as they come. She was born in Miami and spent time living in Rome,
Quito, the Galapagos Islands and Los Angeles before landing in the Big Apple,
from whence she recorded this fine debut. Morrison possesses a voice that's
alternately soothing, sassy, straightforward or sly, and she brings it to bear
on a diverse array of original and oft-covered offerings. Morrison possesses a
voice that's alternately soothing, sassy, straightforward or sly, and she brings
it to bear on a diverse array of original and oft-covered offerings. it's
Morrison's vocals that carry the music. While she sounds best in intimate
environments, where her purity of tone or bluesy bona fides are on display, she
knows how to sell songs in any style and setting, making her worthy of attention.
DAN BILAWSKY- allaboutjazz.com
Cristina Morrison is also quite the lyricist as she demonstrates in spades on I
Love. Original compositions are beautifully carnal while the title track is a
celebration of art and free spirits. This is bright and contemporary jazz
singing in the best sense of the word. C. MICHAEL BAILEY- allaboutjazz.com
For fans of vocal jazz with a nice pop and soulful touch, Morrison is a vocalist
who sounds like she has a lot to love, and in return a lot to give back. she
gets into singing in a bebop fashion or something that might make Natalie Cole
proud, I Love is one vocal jazz album that is worth a listen or two, and worth
suggestion to any and all.
Review By John Book
Morrison is the real deal bringing together a nice package with musical chops to
spare. An incredibly entertaining and adventurous tour de force that gives up a
little something new with each subsequent spin of the disc. A real winner that
leaves the listener longing for more!
By Brent Black @Critical Jazz
One sample of this album will be sufficient to confirm the feeling for Cristina
Morrison sings like a natural. Gifted with a beautiful voice, this new lady of
jazz makes quite a splash on I Love, a debut recording capturing a graceful
performance stylishly announcing her entrance into the world of jazz music.
By: Edward Blanco Ejazznews
This beautiful musical project is the perfect image of what Ms. Morrison is, a
poetic and chameleonic figure in the art field. Exceptional musicians are part
of this interesting and loving project, creating a profound mix of rhythms where
the interpretation of each band member contributes to the making of this high
quality musical album.
4 STARS Oscar Montagut latinjazznet.com
Available Now From
AMAZON, SPOTIFY &
About The New CD I Love
The debut solo jazz effort from singer/songwriter Cristina Morrison, I Love,
introduces one of the most distinctively original vocal artists on the scene
today. An accomplished actress, a graduate of the prestigious American Academy
of Dramatic Arts, Ms. Morison’s talent has been hailed as “chameleonic and
versatile ” and she brings these same qualities to her music on an album that
melds jazz, blues, folk and pop sensibilities of the U.S. with samba, bossa nova
and other South American influences, in a unique mélange that is all her own.
Born of mixed American and Ecuadorian parentage in Miami, Morrison has resided
in Rome, Quito, the Galapagos Islands, Los Angeles and now New York City,
resulting in a multicultural world view that is reflected in her music, which is
informed by her myriad life experiences and keen observations into the nature of
the human character.
Joining Morrison is a roster of first class New York players, headed by the
singer’s “partner in crime” saxophonist/composer Christian Hidrobo, a longtime
colleague from her jazz band The Baroness & Her Lovers, who contributed the
appealing melodies that accompany the singer’s own engaging lyrics, which are
utterly cinematic in their vivid imagery. Accompanied by pianist Steve Einerson,
bassists Marcus McLaurine (acoustic) and Alex Alvear (electric), drummer Willard
Dyson and percussionist Sammy Torres in the stellar rhythm section, with saxist
Hidrobo, trumpeter Walter Szymanski, guitarist Vinny Valentino and harmonica
virtuoso Gregoire Maret supplying multihued backgrounds and compelling solos,
Morrison embarks on an episodic musical journey that runs the gamut of emotions,
joyous, sorrowful, exuberant and meditative. Pristinely recorded, the nine songs
on I Love reach out and touch listeners’ minds, hearts and souls with messages
that are simultaneously personal and universal.
The disc opens dramatically with Summer In New York, Szymanski blowing ominous
muted trumpet over McLaurine’s slow bass ostinato conjuring nocturnal images of
the city hearkened to in Morrison’s singing of her lyric, which begins “Corners,
streets and alleys meet” and goes on to speak of “Lust and sex and human heat.”
Vulnerability slowly swells to strength in Crisitina’s intoning of her story as
the music moves from bluesy melancholy to joyous swing, propelled by Valentino’s
soulful guitar on the spirited bridge that celebrates “Summer In New York/Summer’s
sexy breeze/ Dancing on the river.” Einerson solos straight ahead over walking
bass and riding cymbals before the singer slows the mood to take things out with
a plaintive plea to “Make my lonely nights seem right.”
The soulful alto saxophone of Christian Hidrobo, reminiscent of David Sanborn’s
Saturday Night Live days, introduces Fifteen Day Affair, recently written by
Morrison in Galapagos after a shipwreck during a chilly winded winter night.
Hidrobo’s powerfully cadenced melody calls to mind Aretha Franklin’s Natural
Woman and Cristina sings with appropriate power. Gregoire Maret’s stirring
harmonica solo contributes mightily to the mood of the piece, which concludes
with an achingly beautiful sax statement by Hidrobo.
Einerson’s piano intro to Morrison and Hidrobo’s I Love, the date’s title track,
sets the mood that evokes the sound and style of a standard from the Great
American Songbook and Cristina sings and swings in the tradition as she recites
a lengthy list of her many favorite things – including, to dance, to sing … to
jam and drink all night …the wisdom in an old man eyes, and then most
emphatically, “making love to you.” She rides along the with the trio’s
pulsating rhythm, affecting various tones that rise to the song’s surprise
ending.
Stand Still, begins rather deceptively with Maret’s somewhat melancholy
harmonica played over a slow bass triplet reminiscent of A Love Supreme, before
the band seamlessly segues into a swinging samba. Cristina breezes along
brightly, singing her unabashedly romantic lyric that proclaims, “Dare to tell
me/ that we’re not meant to be/in a state of love,” buoyed by the band’s
vivacious rhythms and Maret’s virtuoso soloing.
Morrison returns What A Difference A Day Makes to its roots, singing the Stanley
Adams English lyric to Mexican composer María Grever’s well known melody, titled
Cuando Vuelva a Tu Lado, in its original bolero form. The singer’s own Latin
heritage is evident in her mastery of the slow South American rhythm. Navijio
Cevallos’ harp like requinto solo accentuates the authentic feel set by Sammy
Torres’ bongo.
Red Mafia & Jassis adapted from something Morrison first wrote after Hurricane
Katrina struck New Orleans. The raucous outing features Szymanski’s roaring
Memphis Horns styled brass arrangement screaming over the electric piano powered
rhythm section with Cristina paying homage to the Crescent City’s “Creoles,
cotton and swamps/And the smell of sex.” Valentino rocks out with an
electrifying guitar solo and Alex Harding joins the fray with a boisterous
baritone sax statement that forcefully adds to the excitement.
Szymanski opens East of the Sun with an ascendant trumpet cadenza over a legato
underpinning that slyly glides into a bossa rhythm as Cristina enters singing
the popular lyric in a seductively sultry tone. Szymanski returns with a clarion
open belled solo and melodiously supportive obbligati that prove him to be truly
lyrical master of his horn, as Morrison navigates the lyrics with an understated
rhythmic force that displays a confident mastery of her own instrument.
Perfect Little Stormsis Morrison’s touching dedication to her two young sons,
Alex and Joaquin. Her words are elegiac in their simple beauty, while her
vocalizing, ably accompanied by Einerson’s piano, demonstrates the rare talent
to make poetry out of prose. Hidrobo’s alto also rises to emotional heights,
with a poignant coda fitting for the song’s subject matter of maternal love.
Morrison brings it all back home to close with Billie Holiday’s Fine and Mellow.
Singing the first chorus over McLaurine’s solitary slow walking bass, she exudes
a powerful tone that can easily stand alone. Szymanski answers her call with
understated muted trumpet retorts before the ensemble joins the pair, digging
deep into the bluesy groove. Valentino has once last say with a down home guitar
solo, before Cristina takes things out with the archetypal reminder “Love is
like the faucet, it turns off and on/Sometimes when you think it’s on baby, it’s
turned off and gone.”
A bonus video track The Making Of I Love offers an intimate look at Cristina
Morrison and her colleagues at work in the studio. The spirit of camaraderie
that is heard so clearly in the music is seen close up as the singer and her
musicians collaborate to make the music come alive. She confesses to the camera,
“Singing is more an instinct to me. It’s more personal. It’s more intimate of
who Cristina Morrison is. I want to write what I think and what I feel and what
inspires me. I just write it as it is.” What it is, to Cristina Morrison, are
many things from many places. Her music takes the listener on a magical journey
as she shares the world of wonderful experiences that have made her the
insightful singer who she is today. One who sings her life and loves doing it.
I Love Features:
Cristina Morrison: lyrics & vocals, Christian Hidrobo- composer, arranger, and
alto saxophone, Walter Szymanski- trumpet, Steve Einerson- piano, Marcus
McLaurine- upright bass, Alex Alvear- electric bass, Willard Dyson- drums,
Gregoire Maret- harmonica, Sammy Torres- percussion, Vinny Valentino- guitar,
Alex Harding- baritone saxophone
(Baronesa Records)
Street Date May 1, 2012
Artist Website:
www.cristinamorrison.com
Cristina Morrison was born in Miami, Florida. She's a multi- cultural
woman not only because of her background that is a mix between Latin America and
the United States but also from her "gypsy" life experiences. She has lived in
Quito, Miami, Rome, Los Angeles, the Galapagos Islands and currently she’s based
in New York City. Cristina was the lead singer of her jazz band “The Baroness
and her Lovers” for many years in Ecuador as well as in Miami where she
performed in venues such as Jazid, Bouganvilla’s Tavern, and Tobacco Road. She
graduated from the “American Academy of Dramatic Arts” and is constantly working
in the theatre & on TV. In repertoire at the moment she has “The Aging of the
Plum”, a play in which she portrays five women roles throughout three
generations. This production currently has been invited to theatre festivals in
Mexico and Brasil.
Cristina will bring to her night at the “Metropolitan Room” original songs as
well as standards from her new debut album titled, “I LOVE”. Here her talent as
a singer-songwriter is expressed by bringing together her Latin feeling with her
love for jazz. In I LOVE she merges different genres which navigate across bossa
nova, funk, samba, Latin ballad, and straight-ahead. Cristina’s repertoire is a
compilation of songs written and dedicated to the people, the places and all
things she loves in life: her two sons, past love tales, the Galapagos Islands,
New York, Storyville, and much more.
Her album had the honor of being recently chosen by JAZZ at LINCOLN CENTER to be
given out as a gift at the “Young Benefactors Event Concert”. In her Bennett
Studios recording she’s accompanied by a group of fine musicians like Steve
Einerson, Willard Dyson, Marcus Mc. Laurine, Walter Szymanski, Gregoire Maret,
Sammy Torres, Alex Alvear, Alex Harding, Vinny Valentino and Christian Hidrobo
who’s in charge of the music & arrangements. The album will be officially
released in the coming months by her indie label Baronesa Records.
The Press has defined Morrison as an analytical, charismatic, creative, and a
free spirited woman and as a chameleonic and versatile actress who works her
characters at depth being able to reach her audience.
El Debate- Mexico: "The Aging of the Plum" delivered an emotional performance at
the Angela Peralta Theatre. Cristina Morrison and Rossana Iturralde gave a
master class in acting through their portrayal of various characters.
http://www.cristinamorrisonilove.com
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