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Jazz Times Review

August 3rd, 2010 | By admin

08/02/10  •  By Christopher Loudon

Sylvia Brooks: Dangerous Liaisons

Christopher Loudon on new album from actress/singer Sylvia Brooks

Sylvia Brooks has the look of a classic Hollywood femme fatale, suggesting an auburn-haired variation on Veronica Lake with a hint of Rita Hayworth. And Brooks sings precisely the way she looks – a dark, smoky sound with impressive firepower that seems tailor-made for the sort of plush, palm-treed nightclubs that dotted L.A. in the 1940s and ’50s. Those intimate boîtes — spots like Ciro’s, The Tally-Ho, The Encore and the richly historied Cocoanut Grove — are gone now, but Brooks is rapidly emerging as an SRO favorite at the chic venues that have replaced them, including Catalina’s, the Jazz Bakery and Vitello’s Jazz and Supper Club. Now, with the release of Brooks’ debut CD, the aptly titled Dangerous Liaisons, the wider world can share Los Angelinos’ discovery of her alluring sultriness. Brooks can swing hot and hard, as illustrated by a blistering “Never Dance” and an equally scorching “Sway.” She can also swing brightly, taking “Come Rain or Come Shine” at mid-tempo to ably capture the depth of the Arlen/Mercer gem’s ardor, and holding her torch high on a sweltering “When the Sun Comes Out.”
But Brooks is perhaps best at examining love’s murkier corners. That she was an accomplished actress before she set her focus on singing is evident in her tackling of four of the most challenging numbers in the entire American songbook — “Sophisticated Lady,” “Lush Life,” “One for My Baby” and “The Man That Got Away” (the latter mistakenly credited to Harold Arlen and George Gershwin, when it was Ira Gershwin who crafted the lyric, 16 years after his brother’s demise). They are the Mount Rushmore of 3 a.m. tunes, and many a capable vocalist has failed at scaling even one of them. That Brooks ably captures the near-maddening disillusionment and bourbon-fueled bitterness that pervade all four is testament to her estimable storytelling skills. But significant credit is also due Brooks’ arrangers. Top of the list is Tom Gavin, whose masterful touch adorns seven of the album’s ten tracks. Kudos, too, to saxophonist/flautist Kim Richmond who teamed with Gavin to shape “The Man That Got Away” and single-handedly put the dizzying swirl in “Sway,” and to pianist Jeff Colella, who painted the film noir backdrop for Brooks’ exquisite, indigo-hued “Harlem Nocturne” and placed “One for My Baby” in an unexpectedly dreamy setting that is stunningly effective.

If you’d like to share your comments about Sylvia Brooks or have suggestions for future installments of Hearing Voices, please direct your email to jtvocaljazz@gmail.com.

Take Five With Sylvia Brooks

April 26th, 2010 | By admin

Meet Sylvia Brooks:
Recording artist Sylvia Brooks has starred on the stages of many of the country’s most respected theatres, performing the gamut from Shakespeare to American drama, to music theatre, to sold out performances. Now Ms. Brooks is taking an entirely different direction, and has just released her first album. For the last two years, she has been involved in a serious collaboration with some of Los Angeles’ best musicians. Together, they are bringing new and original arrangements to the Great American Songbook and timeless jazz classics. “This album is filled with the music and songs I grew up hearing as a child,” says Brooks. “But it is only now that I finally feel that I can do justice to this great music. It has taken time, and now life has led me to this place. We have developed this project in rehearsal and in a number of performances at The Jazz Bakery, The Catalina Bar & Grill and M Bar.” Those performances garnered Brooks and her musicians six Critic’s Choice picks in the Los Angeles Times Calendar under Jazz and World Artists.

No stranger to jazz, Brooks was born and raised in Miami and grew up in a musical family. Her father, a well-known jazz pianist, arranged, composed and played for such luminaries as Peggy Lee, Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, Sarah Vaughan and Harry James. Her mother sang at the Eden Roc, the Fountainebleau and the Playboy Club Circuit opening for Jimmy Durante, Rodney Dangerfield and others. She went on to become artistic director of a major opera company, and produced many seasons of opera.

At a young age, Brooks was invited to study classical theatre at the prestigious American Conservatory Theatre (ACT) in San Francisco, which led to her invitation to join the Company, followed by a growing career of performances with numerous companies. Her experience as a serious actor can be found in her singing, bringing new insights into every song. “This music speaks to me,” she says. “It is timeless, yet it is so fresh and new there is always something to discover in it. The great singers of the past didn’t just sing—they took you on a journey. They embodied each song with passion and brought their lives to the music. Sadly, it has become a lost art form; I want to bring it back to life.”

As one critic said, “It’s as if Brooks has lived this music; she and her musicians share an understanding of just what it is saying. I felt that I was actually hearing many of these songs for the first time. They take you on a journey, and bring something innovative and alive to the stage. Sylvia Brooks is definitely here, and that is a great thing.”

Instrument(s):
vocals

Teachers and/or influences?
I studied acting at the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco. I loved Lena Horne. Also I love Nancy Wilson and Dione Warwick.

I knew I wanted to be a musician when…
I was born into a musical family, so I didn’t really have much choice. I think in my rebellion, I decided to be a classical actress. However several years ago I started understanding the place my life had been leading me too. Which is what I’m doing now.

Your sound and approach to music:
I believe in emotion. I think I gravitate towards songs in the 30′s-40′s and 50′s because the melodies and lyrics are so rich. I love working in a collaborative way. Tom Garvin and I started working together several years ago. He use to joke that he doesn’t collaborate, but the truth is we did. And I learned a lot from him. He did most of the arrangements on this album. And I’ve been fortunate that I’ve been able to work regularly with the guys on my Dangerous Liaisons album. They influenced this project and are a big part of what is on this CD.

Your teaching approach:
I don’t teach. I believe teachers need to be masters. And I’m still learning. I guess I will always be learning. When you stop growing, you might as well quit.

Your dream band:
I would love to add more pieces, a guitar, more horns. I have worked with full orchestras and really love that.

Road story: Your best or worst experience:
Once I was performing in a 1,700 seat theater, and there was a mentally challenged person in the front of the audience. And every time I sang the chorus of the song, he’d let out this big reverberating sound. It was quite a lesson.

Favorite venue:
The 5th Avenue Theater in Seattle. I loved the theater, the producer, the crew. And, it was the same stage that Lena Horne performed on.

Your favorite recording in your discography and why?
My dad’s big band.

The first Jazz album I bought was:
Immortal Concerts: Oscar Peterson Trio with Ray Brown and Ed Thigpen.

What do you think is the most important thing you are contributing musically?
An understanding of what these great songs are saying.

Did you know…
People don’t realize how sensitive and vulnerable I am because I’m strong.

How would you describe the state of jazz today?
I wouldn’t consider myself a jazz purist. I grew up in a household that loved more traditional jazz, which is really where my sensibilities are. I think that the popularity of Jazz when it entered the main stream should be reconsidered as viable. I think it’s become too intellectual, and lost its emotionality.

What are some of the essential requirements to keep jazz alive and growing?
Making it connect more to the audience.

What is in the near future?
I am currently listening to new material for my next CD.

If I weren’t a jazz musician, I would be a:
Who knows? An actor?

Original Article: www.allaboutjazz.com

LA Jazz Scene Reviews Sylvia Brooks

December 19th, 2009 | By admin

Sylvia Brooks
By Veronica Dawn

Jazz is certainly no stranger to Sylvia Brooks, a fact extraordinary evident throughout the duration of her encore performance at Catalina Bar and Grill. Brooks returned to Catalina stage on July 16, 2008, where she performed songs from The Great American Songbook masterfully arranged by Tom Garvin.

Sylvia Brooks comes from a solid musical background, growing up with her father a popular jazz pianist and her mother a nightclub performer. “Sitting in the crib and hearing that music, it has to do something to you”, says Brooks. It was inevitable that melodies and harmonies would course rapidly through her veins from a very young age. Through Garvin’s innovative arrangements, this music possesses the ability to convey complex emotions while telling a unique and vivid story through the utilization of refreshing and diverse sounds performed by Brooks and her dynamic sextet. (more…)

Los Angeles Times Critic’s Choice

December 19th, 2009 | By admin

Six Time Best Bet Critic’s Pick – “The Guide” For Jazz And World Artists

“The jazz singer is a respected performer of the Catalina/Jazz Bakery circuit and national theater, and plays a six-night stand with a cracking live band featuring arranger Tom Garvin.”

Dangerous Liaisons Album Review

December 19th, 2009 | By admin

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Buy Now | iTunes | CDBaby

A fine singer with a very attractive voice, Sylvia Brooks has a glamorous image that is a bit nostalgic of the 1940s and 50s. Her style falls between jazz and cabaret and she emphasizes dramatic renditions of vintage standards.

On Dangerous Liaisons, Ms. Brooks is accompanied by up to eight pieces including pianist Jeff Colella, altoist Kim Richmond, bassist Chris Colangelo and drummer Kendall Kay, performing arrangements by Tom Garvin, Colella and Richmond. Although there are some brief solos, the spotlight is on the singer throughout and she comes through. (more…)

LA Weekly Reviews Sylvia Brooks

December 14th, 2009 | By admin

martiniSylvia Brooks, directed by Tom Garvin on piano, and backed by Chris Colangello on bass, Kendall Kay on drums, Kim Richmond on sax and flute, and Jamie Havorka on trumpet, performed not so much a concert as dramatic musical monologues of some tasteful 20th Century standards, laced with pop-Latin pieces that may never have been lent such authority before. In the hands of this singer and this group, each song is part of a series of musical vignettes on the theme of the uneven playing field of love. (more…)