Showing posts with label Regency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Regency. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Nina does Nina and More at Regency Bar

The counterpoint garland in her hair(going against her flowing back outfit) suggested Billie Holliday, but lounge singer Nina Karle delivered a sprightly cover of Nina Simone's "My Baby Just Cares" in addition to the obligatory Bob Marley numbers (it's February, after all)  during her stint at the Jazz Thursdays at the Regency Bar and Lounge at Terra Nova




Joining the vocalist in her exploits were Dwayne Livingston on  bass
pianist Anders Lopez and James Ferguson* on  drums

The repertoire, delivered with consummate skill, and with an Airy sound and  languid intervals also encompassed Andy Williams' trademark "Moon River"

the mood was extended with "The Way You Look Tonight" and completed with the bossa nova classic "girl from Ipanema", delivered vocally as the "boy from Ipanema" as well as Randy Crawford's sultry classic "Almaz" which got the bass-heavy treatment with a neatly ascending piano solo from Lopez to boot.

Then Norah Jones' "Come Away With Me"

Of course, one good "Jones" deserves another, so "Don't Know Why" followed.

For the Reggae King Tribute to Bob Marley, the group did "Is This Love" interspersed with freestyle quotes from "Jammin'"

And capped with "Redemption Song"

After the interval, they returned with a booming, funky yet swinging "Fly Me To The Moon"

"Summertime" followed in similar mode, if at a slower tempo

Killing Me Softly

Ska-inflected "My Baby Just Cares For Me"

Back to Marley, via Lauryn Hill, with "Turn Your Lights Down Low"

Monday, January 27, 2014

Dennis Rushton Group @ Regency bar & Lounge....Serious Musical Fun

its a most rewarding scene for an audience, whether composed of aficionados or musical neophytes, to hear musicians who not only have ability, but are clearly enjoying themselves.

Such was the scene last Thursday evening at the tony Regency bar & lounge, the Terra Nova's category-defining upgrade of its former El Dorado Room. Dennis Rushton on piano, Paul Madden on bass, Obed Davis on drums and Ian Hird on alto sax and flute treated a very receptive gathering to a night of rumbling resonance, sharp stick work, sonorous keyboard runs and plangent horns.

No surprises on the set list, of course. Starting with the Joe Zawinul-Cannonball Adderly classic Mercy Mercy Mercy and encompassing Nat King Cole's "L-O-v-E" Spyro Gyra's "morning Dancer" and "Blue Monk" among others. It is part of the commercial aspirations of the project, after all, to set a familiar and refreshing scene for the executive, professional and self-made types who gradually brought the room to near capacity over the course of the 3-set show.Conversations of all types were conducted in the chic lounge and on the adjoining terrace. A multi-screen plasma composite, mounted on the far wall facing the entrance showed muted hip-hop/r n'b videos, and ironic counterpoint to the music on the floor.

That said, musical aspirations were undoubtedly met, and the interplay between the four - all longtime fellow travelers on the city's cocktail music circuit - was palpable and made for a hugely enjoyable evening. Madden and Davis have grown beyond even their considerable talents of a few years ago - Madden coaxing deep resonance from the irridiscent strings of his instrument. Davis meanwhile continues to show the fruits of continuous application and study of the trapset - offering bursts of speed and power without sacrificing musicality nor slipping too far from his bandmates. His work on the high-hat was particularly distinguished on the night.

While working the flute on a couple selections, Hird reeled off some tart alto sax runs, including one extended solo that literally brought all other proceedings to a halt and elicited cheers from even the white-jacketed bartenders behind the counter. Leader Rushton smartly worked a modulated version of  his more outre show mode - offering tasteful fills punctuated, rather than obliterated, by appropriate flourishes.

This show was the third since the inauguration of the weekly series, the prior ones sadly missed by this writer. Not that it was even needed, but the night's performance provided ample incentive for more consistent attendance going forward.