Former
Count Basie trombonist
Dennis Wilson, who has spent many years teaching at the University of Michigan, takes over the reins of the big band as an arranger for this effort that features three appearances by
Manhattan Transfer vocalist
Janis Siegel and two from
Nnenna Freelon. Familiar standards, some lesser-known tunes, and four of
Wilson's originals are tossed together to vary the program.
Siegel and
Freelon sound comfortable in this setting, while given ample opportunity to sing well-known songs in their own way, while
Jamie Cullum and
Jon Hendricks also get spotlight cameos. There are instrumentals as well, and pianist
Geri Allen -- one of several fine guest stars added on -- flies on the piece "Giant Blues Flag Waver," where staccato accents collide head on with hard bop. A natural guest for the
Basie band,
Frank Wess brings his always effervescent flute to top off and play in perfect tandem with the horns on the
Quincy Jones arrangement of his classic and endearing tune "Jessica's Day."
Wilson's "Dark Morning" is a classic ballad/blues with a solo from the rising star of jazz trumpet
Scotty Barnhart, while "Naomi's Blues" is a cool, clean drink of water with slight flavor additives from two criminally underrated jazz veterans -- bassist
James Leary and trombonist
Clarence Banks. Of the vocal tracks,
Cullum's
Mark Murphy light style is unforced and frankly flatly effaced on the ballad "Blame It on My Youth," while
Hendricks shows how to do it up right, in call and response with
Curtis Fuller's trombone and
Wilson's pixie muted trombone during the tick-tock neo-bopper "Blues on Mack Avenue."
Siegel is her reliable self, singing the tale of her hip male friend during "Like Young," running along the rails with bassist
Rufus Reid on "Close Your Eyes," and swooning delicately with pianist
Hank Jones,
Reid, and restrained drummer
Butch Miles on the delicate "I Have Waited So Long."
Freelon really digs in on her take of the spirited swinger "Too Close for Comfort," albeit a half step off, while her scatting with the brushed drumming of
Miles on the intro of "Yesterdays" prompts the horns to slowly creep in, then roar. Though there's nothing remarkably innovative here, what is impressive is the consistency of the group playing together as a whole, and if you like jazz singers, this will appeal to you. It's a fine tribute to masters who are with and not with us, one that Mr.
Basie would certainly approve of.