Search Tips: 1) Click "Find on This Page" button to activate page search box. 2) When searching for a name (e.g. a songwriter), enter last name only. 3) When searching for a song title on the catalog page, omit an initial "The" or "A". 4) more search tips.
Portions of this page have not yet been completed. Thank you for your patience.
(Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Cyrille Aimée
performing
"Let's Get Lost" at WNYC/WQXR Green Space
for a CD release party celebrating her new Mack Avenue Records album,"Let's Get Lost."
New York City (2016)
"Let's Get Lost" is the title track for Aimee's album released in 2016. Album personnel include: Cyrille Aimee: vocals; Adrien Moignard, guitar; Michael Valean, guitar; Sam Anning, bass; Rajiv Jayaweera, drums; Matt Simons. vocals.
sheet mucic for
"Let's Get Lost" on the cover l.-r. : Dick Powell, Betty Hutton, Mary Martin, Eddie Bracken,
and
Rudy Vallee --
from the 1943 movie Happy Go Lucky
"Let's Get Lost," the song, was recorded by jazz trumpeter and singer Chet Baker only once, for his album Chet Baker Sings and Plays, released in 1955. (Listen to that recording below in the Record/Video Cabinet, this page.) The song is, nevertheless, associated with Baker more often than with any other artist. This association came about only after filmmaker and photographer Bruce Weber borrowed the song's title and used it for the title of his 1988 documentary film on the life of Baker. Only after that did the song become so powerfully identified with Baker and elements of his life. The connection was so powerfully, in fact, that many assumed the song's origins were connected to Baker. Some have even thought Baker wrote the song and/or that the song was a key work in his repertoire. Neither of these assumptions is true. In fact, the song "Let's Get Lost" itself is barely heard in Weber's film (as a few seconds of background music during the film's opening sequence) and was not a particularly important performance piece for Baker. Apparently when the powerful images of Baker losing himself in jazz as well as in his drug addiction were taken in by viewers of the documentary together with the film's title being the same as the song's, these misconceptions and exaggerations took root. That the song's lyric begins with the title line "Let's Get Lost" has also helped to facilitate the mistaken notion that the song is about what the film Let's Get Lost is largely about; however, if one is paying attention to the lyric as it unfolds beyond the first line, it quickly becomes clear the song is a proposal by one lover to another to get lost in an all encompassing world of romance not in music or drugs.
Let's get lost
Lost in each others arms.
There are other lines in the lyric that could be construed as connected to a drug induced high or other related state, lines such as "Let's tell the world we're in a crazy mood" along with a proposal to "defrost" in a mist, but the inferences that can be drawn from passages such as these to support connections with Baker's (or anyones) use of drugs are less convincing when we hear it is a "romantic mist." Lyricist Frank Loesser was writing the words for a romantic ballad in a romantic comedy and he was nothing if not a very careful wordsmith. That Baker himself ever saw the lyric as being related to drug use is at best speculative.
No doubt filmmaker Weber was attracted to the title because Baker and his quartet recorded the song on their first album and the song's title, taken by itself, fits the image of Baker as a pied piper figure leading himself and perhaps others into a state of being lost through the use of drugs, an inescapable theme at the heart of Weber's film.
"Let's Get Lost," (the song) was, in fact, written for a film but not one connected in any way to Baker or his life style. The song began its life as a romantic ballad written for the score of the 1942/43 Hollywood movie, Happy Go Lucky, a romantic comedy about characters who find themselves not so much lost but rather as far from home trying to have a good time on a Caribbean island. "Let's Get Lost" (the song) was written by Jimmy McHugh (music) and Frank Loesser (words) some twenty years before Chet Baker ever recorded it and over forty years before Bruce Weber made his film. It was sung in the 1942/3 movie by none other than Mary Martin who shared top acting credit in the movie with Betty Hutton, Dick Powell, and Rudy Vallee.
During the last few months of 1942, just before Frank Loesser joined the army to serve in WWII, he joined his frequent writing partner, composer Jimmy McHugh, to collaborate on the
score for the Paramount Pictures movie Happy
Go Lucky. During the years just before U.S. involvement in WWII, McHugh and Loesser were successful songwriters for a number of Hollywood movie musicals. Loesser at this point in his songwriting career was primarily a lyricist who had seldom written both words and music as he did later when he joined the ranks of such songwriters as Irving Berlin and Cole Porter doing both, most notably for such magnificent Broadway scores as Guys and Dolls. Eventually he became far more well known for his Broadway work than for his movie lyrics -- even though many of the movie songs had become standards. One notable exception for which he did words and music during this early portion of his career was the sad and lonely almost down and out "Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" for one of the few noirish Christmas movies, Christmas Holiday of 1944, where it is sung by Deanna Durbin. (See the lists of song titles written, both together but mostly separately, by Loesser and Mchugh, included in the Cafe Songbook Catalog of The Great American Songbook.)
McHugh's biographer Alyn Shipton considers McHugh's and Loesser's "Let's Get Lost" as one of the two best songs from the very good overall score for Happy Go Lucky. (The other one was "He Says, 'Murder,' He Says," sung in the movie by Betty Hutton in a skit that like the song itself plays around with the hipster slang of the day.) "Let's Get Lost," though, was according to Shipton, "the finest, as well as one of the last, of all the numbers McHugh and Loesser wrote together" (Alyn Shipton, I Feel a Song Coming On: The Life of Jimmy McHugh p. 170, hardcover Ed.).
"Let's Get Lost" was created for the movie as a seduction song. Mary Martin sings it as part of her character Marjorie's attempt to lure an eligible millionaire, played by Rudy Vallee, into marriage. It's difficult, however, to experience Martin's performance because she never recorded "Let's Get Lost" and the movie itself is not easy to find. (Amazon lists it as "currently unavailable.")* The film is set on what appears to be a Caribbean Island, an island apparently untouched by the war. During 1942, of course, World War II was devastating many less fortunate islands around the globe, especially American ones in the South Pacific. But on the island in the movie the only troubles are romantic and financial, in other words troubles in paradise more or less. The story develops as Marjorie runs into an acquaintance, the smooth talking Pete Hamilton (Dick Powell), who concocts a plan for her to convince millionaire Alfred Monroe (Vallee) to marry her, and in the process make some money for himself. As part of the seduction plan, Marjorie and Alfred find themselves alone in an isolated grove with only a radio and each other for company -- a radio that is evidently plugged in somewhere and tuned somehow to an English language station quite conveniently playing an orchestra-only vocal accompaniment arrangement of "Let's Get Lost." The music is performed, as the radio announcer informs us, by The McHugh-Loesser Orchestra -- no doubt an in-joke among those making the movie. Also conveniently, Marjorie knows the lyric and uses the so-called "McHugh-Loesser" ensemble as back-up for her performance. Such was the "official" debut of "Let's Get Lost," courtesy of the magic of Hollywood.
In fact, Martin's performance of "Let's Get Lost" in the movie is not quite its first. Happy Go Lucky was released on Jan. 1, 1943, notably after several other versions of the song had been recorded and released during 1942. It was not unusual, for PR purposes, that movie companies made sheet music for songs featured in their films available to generate advance interest both for the films and for the songs in them. The Kay Kyser and Jimmy Dorsey orchestras with their respective vocalists had not only already released recordings of "Let's Get Lost" but their records wound up making the charts before Happy Go Lucky itself even opened. (Listen to those recordings in the Cafe Songbook Record Video Cabinet, this page). So no doubt "Let's Get Lost" was already familiar to many of the moviegoers in the audience by the time they heard Martin give the song its official "debut." About the same time the movie opened, Vaughn Monroe's recording was released, and it quickly rose to number one on the charts suggesting the movie was helping sales of the record as well as vise versa. (Listen to Monroe's recording in the Record Video Cabinet, this page). The PR ploy had worked like a charm.
Martin's rendition is a lovely one completely appropriate for a relatively innocent romantic ballad performed in a romantic comedy. It was not, like Baker's 1955 recording, a jazz version or even a jazz inflected one. It did, however, fit a subtext of Happy Go Lucky that could be related to Bruce Weber's movie: Escape. In Happy Go Lucky it is an escape for the audience from the constant pain and turmoil associated with the war with Japan raging across the American islands of the South Pacific. It wouldn't have been easy for an American audience contemporaneous with the first run of the movie to miss the contrast between what was going on in the very serious even tragic context of the broader world of their lives and the make-believe world of the island in the film. And it would have been easy and no doubt a profound relief for that same audience to get lost in the world they were viewing up on the screen.
Similarly, in Weber's documentary, Let's Get Lost, it is equally difficult to miss the escape theme in his account of Baker's life. Indeed the story of "Let's Get Lost," at least in this story, is a tale of two movies.
Here are the two movies in full:
*1. The movie Happy Go Lucky (starring Mary Martin, Betty Hutton, Dick Powell and Rudy Vallee) runs 2 hrs. As mentioned above, it is currently hard to find. We came across it at the address below. The URL is for the Russian social media site, ok.ru. about which we know little except what's in the Wikipedia article for it. We were able to watch the movie without experiencing any problems.
In the the liner notes for the 2007 anthology album Chet Baker Too Cool, Ricky Wright comments on the "Let's Get Lost" track, a track that appeared originally on the album Chet Baker Sings and Plays, 1955). Wright makes a fascinating comparison between Frank Loesser's rhymes in his lyric for "Let's Get Lost" and Baker's singing and horn playing in his recording of the song:
Broadway and Hollywood kingpin Frank Loesser could rhyme to comic effect like few other musical wordsmiths. "Let's Get Lost" is beyond clever, his giddily deployed rhymes (defrost/mist/crossed/list) capturing the state of wanting to be with only a new flame. It's a great pick for the insouciant Baker who matches his singing with two assured trumpet solos. Bruce Weber's 1988 film documentary portrait of Baker (a tragic figure in the most basic sense) borrowed the song's title, giving it a mordant twist. That portrayal was seemingly another lifetime after these giddy minutes [i.e. Baker's recording of "Let's Get Lost"] were captured. --Ricky Wright
Fran Loesser in Hollywood
album includes Betty Hutton
performance of
"Murder, He Says"
along with 47 more
Loesser songs written for the movies.
(2 CDs).
"After Guys and Dolls hit Broadway in 1950, there was a lot of talk about Frank Loesser being the new Irving Berlin or Cole Porter, the songwriter who was spectacularly good at both words and music, but it was as if everybody forgot he was already "the best or second best lyricist in Hollywood depending on how you rate Johnny Mercer" (Wilfred Sheed, The House that George Built, p.276 hardcover ED.).
Sheed continues, Loesser's "words were not just clever but musical. They made the tunes they were with sound their absolute best. Songs like Burton Lane's 'The Lady's in Love with You,' Victor Schertzinger's 'Sand in My Shoes,' and almost everything he wrote with Jimmy McHugh--'Let's Get Lost,' and 'Say it (Over and Over Again)' -- are good songs that sound like great ones because of Loesser's touch. . . . A Loesser lyric is a poem that you forget is a poem because there's so much else going on. Not even Mercer could sound so natural while being so literary. 'I've Got Spurs That Jingle Jangle jingle.' Who else on Tin Pan Alley ever wrote a song about his spurs or packed so much music into a verbal phrase?'
"The other thing that [Loesser's] Hollywood years revealed was that Loesser didn't turn his ears off when he crossed the Hudson. He continued to pick up phrases from all over, including places he'd never been. 'Small Fry' (music: [Hoagy] Carmichael) is so all-American that people assume it must be one of Mercer's and 'Murder, He Says' (music: McHugh [like 'Let's Get Lost' also from Happy Go Lucky in which it is sung by Betty Hutton] remains the best guide we have to the slang the kids were using in World War II. . . ."
Betty Hutton, introduced by Bob Hope, sings the
Jimmy McHugh / Frank Loesser song"He says, 'Murder,' He Says" (originally from the 1943 movie, Happy Go Lucky)
on the Armed Forces Radio program "Command Performance"
(November 13, 1943)
The songs that Loesser wrote in those pre-World War II Hollywood years are remarkable for their strength. The ordinary idea, the shortcut, the triumph of technique to cover the absence of an idea -- none of that for Loesser. He was on the prowl for a brighter notion, a stronger line. Certainly he could turn out an "I've Got Spurs that Jingle, Jangle Jingle" -- that was part of the job. For Betty Hutton he could turn out dynamite material, "Poppa, Don't Preach To Me" and "He Says, 'Murder,' He Says." And he was already coming up with gems such as "I'd like to Get You on a Slow Boat to China."
Although Jimmy McHugh (music) and Frank Loesser (words) created a
verse for "Let's Get Lost," it was not sung by Mary Martin (or anyone else) nor played by "The Loesser-McHugh Orchestra" (as the accompanying ensemble is billed during the film Happy Go Lucky). Quite a few independent recordings, however, do include the verse. Listen, for example, to the version below by Lina Romay for a 1943 "Soundie,"
Lina Romay performs "Let's Get Lost"
including the verse) for a 1943 "Soundie," filmed in the same year as the movie Happy Go Lucky in which Mary Martin premiered the song without the verse -- but Martin never recorded it .
Other recordings that include the verse and which are featured in the Cafe Songbook Performer/Recording Index (on this page) are Vaughan Monroe (1943); Chet Baker, who omits the verse in his 1954-5 vocal but it can nevertheless be heard in Russ Freeman's piano line; Wesla Whitfield includes it in her recording from 2000; Aaron Weinstein alludes to the verse on his violin as he opens his 2005 recording on which he is accompanied by a John Pizzarelli vocal that itself does not include the verse; In 2008 Rebecca Kilgore and Dave Frishberg sing and play the verse as Loesser and McHugh wrote it; Cyrille Aimée emphasizes the verse by slowing down its tempo in both her live and studio versions of 2016. The remainder of the recordings in our Index simply drop the verse as so many performers, both live and in the studio, do.
The
refrain carries forward the idea that the party a couple finds themselves at is "rather dull" so they need not concern themselves about telling anybody they are going to "steal away." The only excitement that the party might in fact generate are the "alarms" that will be sent out when it is discovered they are missing. They may be thought "rude" but they are in too much of a "crazy mood" to worry about not being invited to any more parties because of their lack of manners; in fact, they like the idea of being "crossed off everybody's list." It is no matter to them because on "this night we found each other, [so] mmm, let's get lost." Their solution to the problem of being stuck at a dull party (perhaps read "dull and phony life" for "party") is to"get lost in each other arms." 'The delicious irony created by the tension between "found" and "lost," between having found something that yields the desire to get lost, and coming at the very end of the refrain produces the cool, laid back energy on which the song rides. And it t is this laid back energy out of which a musician and singer like Chet Baker made his reputation -- which, incidentally, is quite a way from the reputation of the song's first singer, Mary Martin, which was more on the hot and sassy side. The song through the use of its title by filmmaker Weber has gotten tied to a theme of getting lost in a world of drugs, a substitute for love in Baker's world.
Submit comments on songs, songwriters, performers, etc.
Feel free to suggest an addition or correction.
Please read our Comments Guidelines before making a submission. (Posting of comments is subject to the guidelines.
Not all comments will be posted.)
Borrowed material (text): The sources of all quoted and paraphrased text are cited. Such content is used under the rules of fair use to further the educational objectives of CafeSongbook.com. CafeSongbook.com makes no claims to rights of any kind in this content or the sources from which it comes.
Borrowed material (images): Images of CD, DVD, book and similar product covers are used courtesy of either Amazon.com or iTunes/LinkShare with which CafeSongbook.com maintains an affiliate status. All such images are linked to the source from which they came (i.e. either iTunes/LinkShare or Amazon.com).
Any other images that appear on CafeSongbook.com pages are either in the public domain or appear through the specific permission of their owners. Such permission will be acknowledged in this space on the page where the image is used.
For further information on Cafe Songbook policies with regard to the above matters, see our "About Cafe Songbook" page (link at top and bottom of every page).
The Cafe Songbook
Record/Video Cabinet: Selected Recordings of
"Let's Get Lost"
(All Record/Video Cabinet entries
below
include a music-video
of this page's featured song.
The year given is for when the studio
track was originally laid down
or when the live performance was given.)
Performer/Recording Index
Kay Kyser and Orchestra with vocal by Harold Babbitt (1942)
Jimmy Dorsey and His Orchestra with vocal by Bob Eberly (1942).
Vaughn Monroe, his Orchestra with vocal by Monroe and The Four Lee Sisters (1943)
Notes: Keyser anthology album released 2016 with 26 tracks of Keyser's best work. The Keyser "Let's Get Lost" track (recorded in 1942, released Jan. 1, 1943) reached number 4 on the charts. (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: Recorded on July 14, 1942 but not released until 1943, the recording is the "A" side of the Decca 78 RPM 10" single with the "B" side being another song from the movie Happy Go Lucky (released 1943), "Murder! He Says" with vocal by Helen O'Connell. Both songs are written by Frank Loesser (words) and Jimmy McHugh (music). Mary Martin performed "Lets Get Lost" in the move. Betty Hutton did "'Murder,' He Says." (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: The Monroe version of "Let's Get Lost," which reached number 1 on the charts in 1943, is included on many anthology albums. The collection Racing with the Moon includes 52 tracks with Monroe as leader, vocalist and trumpeter. It includes the version of "Let's Get Lost" (recorded in 1942) that reached number 1 in 1943 .as well as selected recordings from 1940-1956. (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: Sinatra never recorded "Let's Get Lost" but sang it on the radio in an episode of Your Hit Parade during 1943, at a point when the song had reached number six. The recording above both on the video and on the album are from a rehearsal session for the actual show not from the broadcast itself, so you can hear Sinatra asking someone in the studio he addresses as "Darling" (during a vocal break but over the orchestra) in a polite tone "How's that hum?" much as he did throughout his recording career when he felt something needed clarification or correction. As with so many other artists who sang "Let's Get Lost," Sinatra does not sing the
verse. (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: The song "Let's Get Lost' has become, though not because of Baker's recording of it, more associated with Chet Baker than any other musician or vocalist. Baker's first recording of "Let's Get Lost" was made for the
10 track Pacific Jazz mono album (PJ-1202), Chet Baker Sings and Plays with Bud Shank, Russ Freeman and Strings. The track for "Let's Gets Lost" was recorded March 7, 1955, at Capitol Studios, Los Angeles. Personnel on the track includes Baker on vocal and trumpet, Carson Smith on Bass, Bob Neel on drums, and Russ Freeman on piano. Other tracks on the album all feature Baker on vocal and trumpet as well a variety of players, such as Red Mitchell (bass), Bud Shank (flute) and Corky Hale (harp), who do not appear on the "Let's Get Lost" track.
Chet Baker Sings and Plays
with reproduced cover of the original 1955 Pacific Jazz album. The album includes ten original tracks remastered plus an unremastered second take of "Let's Get Lost."
The 1988 film Let's Get Lost, a biographical documentary of Baker's life, music and involvement with drugs (with a strong focus on the last of these three elements) was directed by Bruce Weber who borrowed the song title "Let's Get Lost" for his film's title. (The film is characterized by its trailer in the clip below. For more on the role of the film in relation to the song, see the discussion in the center column, this page. View the complete film below.
Notes: The album was recorded in 1991 and released in January, 1992, McCorkle's third release on the jazz label, Concord . Most of the sidemen who make up the quintet that backs McCorkle including Frank Wess on tenor sax and flute, Allen Farnham on piano, and Howard Alden on guitar take solos giving the entire album even more of a solid jazz presence than the fine jazz singer McCorkle gives it on her own. (McCorkle does not sing the verse.)
Notes:The Sharon Quartet is actually The Ralph Sharon Trio, best known for so often being the back-up group for Tony Bennett, here with the addition of swing-bop guitarist Gray Sargent ("who has worked with Illinois Jacquet, Ruby Braff, and George Wein's Newport All-Stars but gained national recognition for his recordings with Dave McKenna and Scott Hamilton." Also Sargent himself recorded "Let's Get Lost with his own trio on the album Shades of Gray in 1993.). Sharon made a series of songbook albums with this quartet all featuring the works of one songwriter or one pair of songwriters. On the Loesser album Sargent takes some very nice solos.
Even though the CD itself is difficult to find at a reasonable price, Amazon offers the songs as MP3s and streams the album.
(Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: "Each album of Whitfield's shows off the same wonderful, warm, caressing mezzo tones, the same intelligence projecting lyrics and the same common sense to let her husband/accompanist, Mike Greensill, do the arrangements which are always as witty as the songs Whitfield sings.
"Jimmy McHugh was really only a name to me....mostly, I think, from the movies in which his songs were featured. So many of the songs on this album are so satisfying, so simply beautiful and with lyrics by the likes of Johnny Mercer, Frank Loesser, Dorothy Fields, et al, it is an album to play and re-play and play again."
Whitfield is accompanied by the Mike Greensill Quintet: Mike Greensill, piano; Ken Peplowski on clarinet and tenor sax; Gary Foster on sax; Michael Moore on bass; Joe Labarbera on drums. Whitfield includes the verse on "Let's Get Lost" as she does on virtually all of her recordings and performances, a sign of respect for the songwriters and a mark of many jazz singers. (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: "Curtis Stigers (singer/songwriter) has gathered a talented jazz-musician backup...featuring Randy Brecker (trumpet), Christian Minh Doky (bass), Larry Goldings (piano), Dennis Irwin (bass), Adam Nussbaum (drums) and Bill Stewart (drums)...makes his latest release with Concord, destined to be a hit with the jazz enthusiasts.
Of course there are some stand outs ~ 'BUT NOT FOR ME', 'LET'S GET LOST' and 'ALL THE THINGS YOU ARE', these standards are timeless, as Stigers gives his heartfelt renditions...but the highlights are two new songs 'LOVE' and 'BABY PLAYS AROUND', blends soul and jazz into one lingering melody, uniting passion into every lyric.
Total Time: 55:59 on 13 Tracks ~ Concord Jazz CCD-4944-2 ~ (2001)" -- Amazon Hall of Fame reviewer J. Lovins (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: Trumpeter Blanchard does instrumental versions of McHugh standards or is joined by a cast of first class jazz vocalists. Krall is with Blanchard for the album's title song; other singers include Jane Monheit, Dianne Reeves, and Cassandra Wilson. Other personnel are Edward Simon, piano; Brice Winston, tenor sax; Eric Harlad, drums; and Derek Nievergelt, bass. One critic called the album "the perfect box of chocolates both commercially and musically." Another praised individual vocal performances but suggested the multiplicity of singers make the album seem "more like a variety show than a sustained creative exercise." We find it hard to complain any time you can have Krall, Monheit, Reeves and Wilson on the same album -- not to mention this fine assemblage of jazz instrumentalists led by Blanchard, and as for sustaining unity, the music of McHugh does the trick very well. If you are satisfied only by progressive jazz, you should listen elsewhere. (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: The vocal on the track for "Let's Get Lost" is by John Pizzarelli who is also one of the top flight jazz musicians (guitar) accompanying Weinstein on Handful of Stars, the young jazz violinist's first album.
The AllMusic.com review of A Handful of Stars says of the album that it is "a startlingly mature and impressively confident debut album from 19-year-old jazz violinist Aaron Weinstein, a young man who plays with a felicitous combination of Stuff Smith's earthy, powerful attack and Stéphane Grappelli's elegant sophistication. Accompanied by a shifting complement of sidemen that includes, at various times, guitarists Bucky Pizzarelli and John Pizzarelli, saxophonist Houston Person, bassist Nicki Parrott, and drummer Joe Ascione." (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
2008 Rebecca Kilgore and Dave Frishberg
album: Why Fight the Feeling?: Songs by Frank Loesser
Amazon
Notes: Later in his career Frank Loesser wrote both words and music for his songs, especially during his Broadway career. Earlier when he was working in Hollywood writing songs for movies he was more likely to write the lyric for music by another songwriter as is the case on "Let's Get Lost" which has words by Loesser and music by Jimmy McHugh.
On this album another duo, vocalist Rebecca Kilgore and pianist Dave Frishberg are a wonderful complement to Loesser.
In the liner notes to this Kilgore-Frischberg-Loesser album, Doug Ramsey writes that Becky Kilgore first came across "Let's Get Lost" on the Chet Baker Sings and Plays album of 1955. Ramsey continues, "In His version, Baker yearns to get lost. In hers, Becky celebrates the prospect." Ramsey also notes that she and Frishberg sing the neglected
verse, "a service they perform for several songs [on the album]." (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: "On Elaine Elias' second Concord release, the sultry Brazilian pianist-vocalist-arranger wraps her jazz and bossa nova style around classic tunes associated with iconic jazz trumpeter Chet Baker: 'I Thought About You', 'You Don't Know What Love Is', 'Let's Get Lost', 'That Old Feeling', and 'I Get Along Without You Very Well'. Elias is supported by top flight Brazilian and American musicians, including her rhythm section of guitarist Steve Cardenas, drummers Rafael Barata and Victor Lewis, percussionist Marivaldo dos Santos and her husband, bassist Marc Johnson. The album also features special guests Randy Brecker on trumpet and Brazilian guitarist Oscar Castro-Neves, considered a founding figure in bossa nova." -- Amazon Editorial Review (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
(Live performance video: On Cafe Songbook Main Stage above)
Notes: "Cyrille mixes her own work with jazz standards and always lets the guitarists contribute to each tune in a thoughtful, upbeat way. We speak French and can attest to her great language skills...She is rising in the jazz world and has an international following. Thank goodness she lives in NYC and has gigs and the prominent jazz spots in town. Do not miss her if you have the chance!" -- Jim Townsend Manchester NH (Amazon reviewer)
(Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)
Notes: "Across Versatile's sixteen tracks, Van Morrison interprets some of the very building blocks of modern music in his own utterly unique style. As well as songs originally made famous by the likes of Chet Baker, Sinatra, the Righteous Brothers, Tony Bennett and Nat King Cole, Versatile features six stunning new Van compositions, including Broken Record a timeless piece of late-night swing." --Amazon Editorial Review (Please complete or pause one
video before starting another.)