honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, August 31, 2007

ISLAND SOUNDS
Jazz favorites rendered with grace

By Wayne Harada
Advertiser Entertainment Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
spacer spacer

"For All We Know" by Joy Abbott and Betty Loo Taylor; Sean Swinney Recording

  • Genre: Adult contemporary, jazz.

  • Distinguishing notes: Joy Abbott is a keiki o ka 'aina (Wahiawa-born) who, in Broadway circles, is best known as the widow of the legendary George Abbott, the producer-director-playwright of "The Pajama Game," "Damn Yankees" and others. She's always had a song in her heart and has done numerous concerts on the Mainland. Betty Loo Taylor is the dependable and enduring first lady of the jazz keyboard, who has had a glorious career on the Waikiki circuit.

    Together, Abbott and Taylor render what might be termed a cafe-society session together — the kind of savvy, intimate and exhilarating act commonly served in New York's chic and hot spots: a vocalist and an accompanist sashaying through a song list of endearing favorites, many with show origins — the kind of repertoire a Broadway trouper might assemble for his/her off-night serenades for a discriminating audience. Clearly, these Punahou School classmates engage in an artistic labor of love, the voice caressing the notes, the piano engaged in occasional solo interludes to create sound pictures of romantic evenings.

    This is a niche audience venture — 18 songs dispensed with elegant and classy demeanor; you can envision the smoke-filled (well, maybe not so much today) room hushed in attentive rapture.

    Some cuts are widely popular, such as "Give Me the Simple Life," "Try a Little Tenderness," "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered," "Make Someone Happy," "Secret Love," "Where or When," "For All We Know/I'll Be Seeing You." Others may be lesser known, such as "Close Your Eyes," "Don't Go to Strangers" and "In Love In Vain."

    Too bad Abbott and Taylor did not include liner notes about why these specific tunes were assembled — and how they touched their hearts.

    Maybe revelations will be plentiful when they perform, with Broadway star Davis Gaines (a longtime Abbott pal) and pianist Carol Anderson, in "Broadway Reflections," at 7 p.m. Sept. 22 at the Hawai'i Theatre.

  • Our take: Abbott's precise, personal style is a smart match for Taylor's keyboard eloquence. Together, they bring out the power of delivery.

    Sample song: "Give Me The Simple Life" by Joy Abbott and Betty Loo Taylor

    "Island Rhythms Music Shop" by various artists; Knife Edge

  • Genre: Island rhythms, Jawaiian.

  • Distinguishing notes: This is yet another compilation of Island music targeting the Japanese audience, with English and Japanese text in the liner notes. Fifteen titles, culled from a dozen previously released CDs, help paint a colorful landscape of prevailing musical motifs.

    The fare includes three tracks by Three Plus ("Undercover Lover," "Betcha By Golly Wow," "Do What Lovers Do"), with a smart mix of other acts such as Ho'onu'a ("Sunday, Monday"), Kalaeloa ("Cruise Control"), Ten Feet ("Island Feeling"), Pati ("I Wanna Love You Tonight") and Nuffsed ("Cherry Bomb").

    Covers of earlier CDs, pictured on the liner, invite further exploration and examination of acts that might touch a nerve with the listener.

  • Our take: In jukebox fashion, the vibes of the Islands parade by, one track after another, to render a quickie listen to the haps here.

    Sample song: " Undercover Lover" by Three Plus

    "Metal: Made in Hawaii" by various artists; Hawaiian Express Records

  • Genre: Metal, hard rock.

  • Distinguishing notes: This assembly of 15 titles — vocals, instrumentals — focuses on the underground core of artists devoted to metal rock. While the fare may be an assault on the ears for the queasy, the young and the daring may already be privy to the devices and dogma of such groups (and what descriptive names) as Deadly Influence, Madspirit, Haole Rot, Abusive Process, Zero Tolerance and Magnum Carnage.

  • Our take: Put your CD pedal on the metal — and rock on. The sensitive need not apply.

    Sample song: "Conquistadors From Hell (Instrumental Version)" by Haole Rot

    Reach Wayne Harada at wharada@honoluluadvertiser.com.