Claire Martin - The Early Years Anthology

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Linn AKD 317 | ****Claire Martin (v) plus various personnel including Jonathan Gee, Gareth Williams (p), Jim Mullen (g), Arnie Somogyi, Peter Washington (b), Clark Tracey and Gregory Hutchinson (d). Rec. 1991-1996Perfect AlibiLinn AKD 316 | ****Claire Martin (v) plus various personnel including Paul Stacey (ky, g, b), Arnie Somogyi (b), Jeremy Stacey (d) and strings. Rec. 1999-2000


As far as its jazz catalogue is concerned, Claire Martin is the artist who has defined the Linn sound. Released at budget price and collecting together the singer’s first four studio albums for the label – The Waiting Game (1992), Devil May Care (1993), Old Boyfriends (1994) and Make This City Ours (1997) The Early Years Anthology raises an interesting question. Has any UK jazz singer ever arrived quite as fully formed? Chosen by The Times as one of its ‘Records of the Year’, there’s nothing abecedarian about the debut album. Including ‘You Hit The Spot’ and ‘Some Cats’, it announces the arrival of a bona fide jazz singer.

Kicking off with a superior reading of Bob Dorough’s title track, the follow-up Devil May Care brings Martin’s lyrical and compositional talents to the fore. Released in the year that the singer received the ‘Rising Star’ award at the British Jazz Awards, Old Boyfriends boasts a typically eclectic song list ranging from the Tom Waits title track to the Burt Bacharach rarity ‘Out Of My Continental Mind’. Featuring new pianist Gareth Williams and recorded in NYC with a top-flight band, Make This City Ours exudes an even greater confidence and zip.

Heard back to back, what’s most striking is the singer’s ability to limn any number of emotional states, from the lugubrious reflection of ‘The People That You Never Get To Love’ and ardent pleading of ‘Save Your Love For Me’, to the quiet exultation of ‘Gentleman Friend’ and carpe diem sentiments of ‘Make This City Ours Tonight’. There’s nothing remotely ersatz or candy coated about Martin. Every line is sung with a dramatic credibility. The anthology shows her to be that rarest of things: a singer who actually lives up to the extravagant claims made on their behalf. Now newly remastered, to rediscover her bestselling album

Perfect Alibi
(2000) is to marvel once again at its freshness. The singer brings subtlety and insight to a diverse collection that runs the gamut from the large-cast sumptuousness of ‘How Can I Be Sure?’ and ‘People Make The World Go Round’ to the stripped down duets of ‘Shadowville’ and ‘More Than I Can Bear’, featuring multi-instrumentalist and producer Paul Stacey. Peter Quinn


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