Resonance Records discovery
Polly Gibbons, a British-born star on the rise, has a sound and style that give
off sparks. It's raw, raspy, and full of heat; it sputters and growls, carves
out funky grooves, and wails into the skies. All I Can Do, her third Resonance
release, the label's founder George Klabin, places Gibbons in front of an
audience, where she's at her most explosive.
Recorded before an invited crowd at Power Station, the New
York studio where Bruce Springsteen, the Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney,
Madonna, and Sting made renowned albums, All I Can Do teams Gibbons with a
smoldering quintet: pianist and arranger James Pearson (musical director at the
legendary Ronnie Scott's in London); organist Shedrick Mitchell (who played for
nine years with Whitney Houston); guitarist Paul Bollenback; bassist Richie
Goods; and drummer Mark McLean. Guest pianist and arranger Tamir Hendelman is a
first-call musician in Los Angeles, a first-call accompanist in Los Angeles; he
can be heard on the CD and DVD of One Night Only: Barbra Streisand and Quartet
at the Village Vanguard.
On All I Can Do, Gibbons roams the musical map while staying
grounded in jazz, her home base. She finds the common thread in songs by Horace
Silver, Prince, AND Al Jarreau. She borrows tunes from her idols-Nina Simone,
Chet Baker, Donny Hathaway-and makes them her own. As Jon Sobel wrote in the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer: "I hear echoes of Ella, Lena, Aretha, even
Janis. But Gibbons is a full-blown phenomenon of her own."
The performance took place in 2018, an important year for
her. That summer, Birdland, New York's premier jazz club, gave Gibbons a
residency. She opened for Boz Scaggs at the Montreal Jazz Festival and played
the Pittsburgh International Jazz Festival alongside Gregory Porter, Marcus
Miller, and Tootie Heath. Gibbons performed regularly at Ronnie Scott's, her
London headquarters. Her previous album on Resonance, Is It Me ...?, earned
raves. Wrote John Fordham of The Guardian: "Gibbons has proven herself a
versatile artist who can switch from an emotionally subtle Cleo Laine-like purr
to a soul-gospel wail in a blink, and she has a growing authority as a
co-composer with James Pearson ... Polly Gibbons is unmistakably a class act,
getting classier fast."
A farmer's daughter, Gibbons grew up with her six siblings
in Framlingham, a small market town in Suffolk, England. Early on she learned
the meaning of the blues: "I've got super-loving parents, but I was very
bullied at school, and there was quite a lot of illness in my family." At
thirteen she heard her first Billie Holiday record. It led her on a chase to
explore other black American musical greats: Mahalia Jackson, Aretha Franklin,
Marvin Gaye, Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk. The "history and complexity and
pain and anger and joy in that music," she says, "made me very
excited and touched me."
In 2006, before she had released her first album, the BBC
Jazz Awards nominated her in its "Rising Star" category. A few years
later Gibbons was singing at Ronnie's in front of Van Morrison, who lauded her
"great voice." The great arranger/composer Johnny Mandel-who has
written for Peggy Lee, Frank Sinatra, and Shirley Horn-would later comment:
"They don't come along very often, but this one's a star." Gibbons
went on to open for George Benson and Gladys Knight in their U.K. tours, and
(with Pearson) to score first place in the Indie International Songwriting
Contest for their song "Midnight Prayer." Peter Quinn of Jazzwise
proclaimed her "a truly exceptional, once-in-a-generation talent,
possessing a voice of such sizzling intensity and raw emotion you could fry an
egg on it."
Her 2015 debut album on Resonance, Many Faces of Love,
established Polly as one of the freshest jazz voices to hit the U.S. in years.
All I Can Do shows her continued growth. Her version of the Horace Silver
gospel tune "Permit Me to Introduce You to Yourself" mixes funk,
scatting, and churchy organ and piano; Polly sings as fervently as a preacher
in the pulpit. Jazz divas love to emote their way through "Everything Must
Change," but Polly transmits its hard-earned lessons quietly. On a tip
from Klabin, Polly sings a rollicking cover of a Della Reese showstopper,
"Some of My Best Friends Are the Blues." She and Pearson wrote
"All I Can Do Is Sing the Blues" in response to "the bad things
in life," most of them stemming from current political mayhem on both
sides of the pond.
Following the death of Prince, Gibbons was moved to sing
"Nothing Compares 2 U," his great ballad of lost love, in a spare and
mournful setting, "just Shedrick and James laying it down." "I
Want a Little Sugar in My Bowl," the unashamedly naughty Bessie Smith
blues, never fails to thrill Gibbons's audiences. Pearson takes it to church
with an arrangement inspired by Mahalia Jackson records; Tamir Hendelman
channels every style Gibbons loves into a panoramic solo.
All I Can Do reveals a young woman who, musically and
expressively, is wise beyond her years.
TRACKS
1. Permit Me to Introduce You to Yourself (5:08)
2. Good Hands Tonight (6:28)
3. Beautiful Things (4:21)
4. If You Had the Chance (5:21)
5. Some of My Best Friends Are the Blues (6:36)
6. Anything Goes (4:30)
7. This Is Always (5:39)
8. All I Can Do (5:03)
9. Everything Must Change (7:23)
10. I'm Just a Lucky So-and-So (5:48)
11. Nothing Compares 2 U (6:24)
12. I Want a Little Sugar in My Bowl (5:20)
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