Stephanie Blythe,
mezzo-soprano; Craig Terry, piano. Meyer Sound/Innova 875.
Most readers probably know that mezzo-soprano Stephanie
Blythe is an opera star who has favored audiences worldwide with her voice on
stage and in recordings for the past several decades. What some readers may not
know is that she also sings popular music, with a voice that combines the best
qualities of Ethel Merman and Kate Smith. Indeed, her fondness for Kate Smith
led Ms. Blythe to perform in 2013 works made famous by Ms. Smith on the PBS
television show Live from Lincoln Center
- Celebration: Stephanie Blythe Meets Kate.
On the present album, As
Long as There Are Songs, Ms. Blythe sings fourteen popular tunes from The Great American Songbook, with one
exception mostly songs from the 1920’s through the 1950’s. She demonstrates
throughout the program that she is more than just a good opera singer but a
good pop singer as well. She doesn’t sound like a typical opera singer trying
to do pop material but a serious pop entertainer who could easily carry a
Broadway show. She is, in fact, quite versatile and appears able to handle any
tune from any genre, new or old, with ease.
One of my favorites on the program is "White Cliffs
of Dover" (1941), the famous World War II song by Nat Burton and Walter
Kent. Ms. Blythe sings it with heartfelt sentiment and waves of rhapsodic
notes. It's quite moving.
And so it goes, through "Look for the Silver
Lining," "Always," "Love," "How Deep Is the
Ocean," "The Man That Got Away," “When You Wish Upon a Star,”
and "Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams." Show tunes, jazz, torch songs,
Ms. Blythe does it all with equal success. And I would be remiss not to applaud
Craig Terry on his sensitive and agreeable piano accompaniment.
Then there's also the bluesy and poignant medley of
"Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home" and "One for My Baby" by
Johnny Mercer and Harold Arlen. Sinatra's got nothing on Ms. Blythe.
The program ends with the most-recent number, Gordon
Jenkens's "This Is All I Ask" (1965), a wonderful throwback to those
earlier songs, and one with which Ms. Blythe practically knocks down the house.
She puts most of today’s pop divas to shame.
Probably the only thing I didn't like about the product
was the booklet insert. Not the content of the booklet, which is quite
informative, but the shape. It's a single piece of paper folded in thirds; but
it's not folded to stretch horizontally but up and down. For the life of me, I
couldn't find my way around, further complicated by having the back printed in
the opposite direction from the front. I dunno. It’s certainly a minor quibble.
Producer Evans Mirageas and engineers John Pellowe and
Miles Rogers recorded the album for Meyer Sound Laboratories in 2013 at Meyer
Sound Lab’s Pearson Theatre, Berkeley, California. The location greatly
impressed Ms. Blythe when earlier she sang there live; it’s a relatively small
hall that provides an ideal acoustic for both intimate and grand vocal
gestures. Moreover, Meyer Sound Laboratories captured the sonics using no
filtering, spatial enhancements, or compression, providing a most lifelike
presentation. Perhaps what many readers may not realize is that most recordings
these days use a good deal of compression in order to minimize the dynamic
range--the differences between softest and loudest notes--making musical
recordings easier for some listeners to enjoy on car radios and iPods. However,
such recordings are not always the most natural-sounding affairs. Meyer Sound’s
recordings are, therefore, more realistic than most.
How does all this translate to what we actually hear on
the disc? Obviously, it translates pretty well. We do hear the venue, and it
does affect what we hear of Ms. Blythe’s voice. The hall appears slightly dry,
meaning it doesn’t have the billowy resonance of some venues. This means we
hear Ms. Blythe’s voice more nearly as it probably sounds rather than
embellished by the ambient acoustic of the concert hall. What we get instead is
an ultraclean, ultra-clear voice, with a truly astonishing dynamic range. I’m
not sure everyone recognizes how much of a range the human voice can produce,
from the gentlest whisper to the most earsplitting crescendo, and here we find
it all.
Whether everyone will appreciate the sound is another
story, though; it is different from what one usually hears on a vocal album,
less smooth, less warm, and more real. The sound may not complement all
loudspeakers, either, especially not brighter speakers that could aggravate the
delicate balance of the high end. In any case, if you have a good playback
system, you should appreciate the sound. The voice glistens with clarity, and
the piano accompaniment remains natural and unobtrusive. Both benefit from a
quick transient response, too, although, as I say, it could be a bit jarring if
you’ve been listening to more compressed sound all these years.
To listen to an excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
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