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1.
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The Best Is Yet To Come (C.Coleman/C.Leigh)
- Listen
to Full Song |
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2.
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Detour Ahead (B.Holiday/A.Herzog) |
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3.
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I Fall In Love Too Easily (S.Cahn/J.Styne)
- Listen
to Sample |
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4.
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Jim (C.Petrillo/S.Milton/N.Shawn) |
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5.
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Nick of Time (S.Sumter) |
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6.
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Nobody Knows The Trouble
I've Seen (traditional) |
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7.
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Overjoyed (S.Wonder)
- Listen
to Sample |
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8.
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Daydream (W.Strayhorn/E.K.Ellington/J.LaTouche) |
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9.
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Save Your Love For Me
(B.Johnson) |
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10.
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Lonely Woman (H.Silver)
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Postive Feedback:
reviewed by Ric Garnder
Silky sweet, smoky and sexy, Sunny Sumter gives us a modest,
but highly enjoyable disc. Supported by Larry Willis (who also
gets production credits), and other Mapleshade familiars, this
is laid-back acoustic jazz with much that is familiar (songs like
Nobody Knows The Trouble Ive Seen and I
Fall In Love Too Easily). Sunnys voice is expressive
and poignant. This is one of those perfect port and walnuts
by the fire discs. Most pleasing.
Houston Press - Black and White Noise:
reviewed by Paul J. MacArthur
Sunny Sumter is a rare find: a young singer
who understands jazz tradition, but also knows the only way to
succeed in the art form is to be an individual. A former student
of singer/drummer Grady Tate, Sumter has a passionate voice with
hints of Sarah Vaughn and Nancy Wilson, but she isn't derivative.
Tackling nine jazz standards and the Stevie Wonder song, "Overjoyed,"
Sumter gets to the heart of the lyrics and rarely relies on vocal
gymnastics. This is a strong debut... Sumter's maturation over
the next few years should be a pleasure to hear.
April 1999
Houston Press - Black and White Noise:
reviewed by Paul J. MacArthur
Sumpter, Sunny: Sunny (with Larry Willis, Joe
Ford and others). Recorded in 1998, at Mapleshade Studios.
Engineer: Pierre Sprey. 59+ minutes. Mapleshade 05932. The
emphasis on this release is vocal detail and clarity, and
the engineer gets this in quantity. Ms. Sumpter's voice is
out in front of the ensemble more than some might like, but
in a small-listening-room environment and with standard stereo
playback, the perspective is quite workable. The overall soundstage
perspective is quite realistic, but at times the forwardness
of the vocals appears to put the listener in the front and
back rows simultaneously. Interestingly, the fact that an
analog recorder (the same 15 ips model that appears to be
used in most Mapleshade recordings) was used is evident here,
because the background hiss level is greater than what one
would ordinarily find with an all-digital recording, and a
bit more than what I have encountered in some other Mapleshade
releases, too. Dolby Pro Logic decoding works OK, but in order
to keep the soundstage from doing a strong collapse toward
the center, I found that I had to back off the center level
my usual 3dB. The same went for the Classical/Opera
mode of my Yamaha processor. In each of these modes, the somewhat
forward nature of the vocals were moved back into a more workable
size relationship with the rest of the ensemble. Indeed, you
can actually position the vocalist by diddling with the center-level
control. My processor has two jazz-club modes, neither of
which uses the center-channel. The larger room simulation,
Village Gate, just did not get along with this release. The
somewhat forward and emphasized vocals made Ms. Sumpter sound
just too expansive in relation to the rest of the ensemble.
However, the Cellar-Club simulation worked quite well. This
mode simulates a smaller environment, and the vocal-instrumental
balance dovetailed very nice with this surround mode.
June/July 00
Postive Feedback Online:
reviewed by Rick Gardner
Silky sweet, smoky and sexy, Sunny Sumter gives us a modest, but highly enjoyable disc. Supported by Larry Willis (who also gets production credits), and other Mapleshade familiars, this is laid-back acoustic jazz with much that is familiar (songs like, "Nobody knows the trouble I seen" and "I fall in love too easily."). Sunny’s voice is expressive and poignant. This is one of those perfect, "port and walnuts by the fire" discs. Most pleasing.
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