One mark of a great jazz vocalist is the material she picks.
Jeri Southern was one of the great students of jazz-era song, and the material she chose for
Southern Breeze is strong in two ways -- they're not only great songs, but they're great for her. Never blessed with a strong voice,
Southern instead realized the artistic advantages those qualities brought, and often chose torch songs or unlucky-in-love songs that accentuated her seeming weaknesses and everywoman qualities. With charts from arranger genius
Marty Paich,
Southern opens on a high note, the glib "Down with Love." Yet to come are happy yet forlorn choices "Who Wants to Fall in Love" and "Because He Reminds Me of You" --
Southern even finds the catch in "Crazy He Calls Me." And in true West Coast fashion, the music features brass that swings lightly and a dynamic range that frequently plumbs the depths (including tuba and baritone sax), all possible thanks to
Paich's charts and able musicians including
Georgie Auld,
Don Fagerquist, and
Bob Enevoldsen. Upbeat standards get their chance to shine as well -- "Ridin' High," "I Like the Likes of You" -- but most of
Southern Breeze is gloriously melancholy.