Debut albums often feel like introductions. The Sweetest Sounds, the first full-length release from vocalist, pianist, and actor Isabella Isherwood, feels more like an arrival.
At just 23 years old, the Chicago-born artist steps confidently into the national jazz conversation with a record that balances technical sophistication, emotional intelligence, and deep reverence for songcraft. Drawing from the Great American Songbook, modern jazz repertoire, Broadway standards, and even contemporary material, The Sweetest Sounds reveals an artist who already understands one of jazz’s hardest lessons: great singing is not about showing off a voice — it’s about telling the truth of a song.
Released April 3, 2026 on Sabrina Records and produced by acclaimed vocalist and pianist Champian Fulton, the album presents Isherwood as both a traditionalist and an interpreter willing to reshape familiar material through her own perspective. Her warm alto, precise phrasing, and actor’s instinct for language give the record a striking sense of intimacy from the opening track onward.
That theatrical sensitivity is a major part of what separates Isherwood from many emerging jazz vocalists. Alongside her music career, she is also an accomplished actor and co-founder of a theater company, and that dramatic awareness permeates every performance here. Lyrics are never treated casually. Each song unfolds like a scene, with Isherwood carefully navigating emotional tension, subtext, and narrative pacing in ways that feel unusually mature for a debut recording.
Her musical foundation runs equally deep.
Isherwood began studying classical piano at age four and was raised around jazz through her grandfather, Detroit pianist and club owner Jerry Libby, whose independent label Sabrina Records dates back to 1964. Today, Isherwood helps carry forward that legacy herself, even honoring Libby through the album’s catalog number — 063, a tribute to his June 3 birthday. That connection to jazz history gives The Sweetest Sounds a strong sense of continuity without making the project feel nostalgic or museum-like.
Instead, the album sounds refreshingly alive.
The title track serves as the emotional center of the record, embodying Isherwood’s broader philosophy about music and creativity. She has described the songs not simply as explorations of romantic love, but as reflections on artistic imagination itself — the fragile space where emotions and ideas exist before becoming fully realized. That perspective gives the album an introspective quality that quietly ties the diverse repertoire together.
Musically, the record thrives on collaboration and restraint.
Backing Isherwood is an exceptional trio of Chicago musicians: guitarist Mike Allemana, bassist Joe Policastro, and drummer Alejandro Salazar. Rather than overpowering the vocalist, the ensemble creates spacious, conversational arrangements that allow every lyric and melodic shift to breathe naturally.
The album’s quieter moments are especially effective. Three intimate duets with individual band members highlight Isherwood’s emphasis on musical dialogue over grandstanding. Her interpretation of 'Round Midnight strips the classic ballad down to its emotional core, while “My Buddy,” performed with only piano and voice, reveals remarkable control and vulnerability. Elsewhere, her haunting take on Love Is a Losing Game bridges classic jazz phrasing with modern melancholy in a way that feels completely natural.
The album also avoids the trap of excessive reverence toward standards. Isherwood approaches familiar material with confidence and curiosity rather than caution. A 5/4 arrangement of “Devil May Care” opens the record with rhythmic boldness, while Bob Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” is reframed not simply as a breakup song, but as a meditation on forgiveness and emotional release.
Her admiration for Nancy Wilson becomes especially apparent during a vibrant performance of “The Song Is You,” where Isherwood channels Wilson’s elegance and emotional clarity without drifting into imitation. Meanwhile, “Teach Me Tonight” captures her lighter, more playful side, revealing a natural ease with swing and audience connection.
The album closes with “I Love Being Here with You,” which Isherwood describes as a love letter to Chicago itself — its jazz clubs, musicians, and audiences. It’s a fitting ending for a debut rooted so deeply in place, mentorship, and artistic community.
What makes The Sweetest Sounds so compelling is not simply that Isabella Isherwood can sing standards well. Many young vocalists can do that. What’s rare is hearing an emerging artist approach classic material with this level of emotional clarity, narrative discipline, and personal identity. The album never feels like a student exercise in jazz tradition. It feels like the beginning of a serious artistic voice discovering how much it already has to say.
For listeners drawn to vocal jazz that values storytelling as much as technique, The Sweetest Sounds is a debut worth spending time with. Isabella Isherwood may be introducing herself to a wider audience here, but she already sounds like an artist with a fully formed point of view.