McFarlane’s
fitness to provide a tribute to Sarah Vaughan is evident from the opening of Tenderly, a lush ballad that displays her
range as she rises from a low purr, soaring up, clean and pure and scats up and
down the scales, floating along the vocal line. Mean To Me follows with more scatting through a long section that
lights a fire under the tune and into a section where she breaks up the line
into single words that bounce along with zest and humour. A Great Day brings joyful gospel, as she wordlessly duets with the
pianist. A sudden stop leads into a swinging groove and she whoops and sings up
and down the register. Tadd Dameron’s ballad, If You Could See Me Now, slows down the pace. It’s a tragic, torch
song tale of lost love during which McFarlane’s voice blossoms from bathetic
weakness to a full force before the bassist takes over with a solo full of tragedy
and yearning before McFarlane returns and her voice rises up to plaintiff and
beseeching and then drops to a purr. She has inhabited this song and played the
saddened lover beautifully.
She tells us tales
of Sarah Vaughan’s poor romantic and managerial choices as her introduction to A Song In Your Heart. It’s a sixties
lounge soul sound a la Dionne Warwick, a song of short bright lines, about,
ironically, a woman who believes her man is cheating. It builds to a climax of
long, held notes and tumultuous drums.
The Junior Murvin
reggae classic Police And Thieves about
police brutality opens with a bowed bass; sombre and full of resignation that
the themes of this 1976 song are still true nearly 50 years later. McFarlane
develops a hope for the next generation, her light and airy vocals develop a
strength that reinforces her message. She comes back in after the piano solo,
demanding “Hear what I say.”
Marvin Gaye’s Inner City Blues opens with electric
piano as if to place it back in the early-seventies time of the original. Rather
than shouting out, McFarlane whispers the “Makes me wanna holler” line. She
closes with a vocal excursion across the scales adding a few blue notes into
the mixture. Her voice swells to a full force rage and falls away.
And that’s yer lot. I could have done with more of this and it shows the downside of everybody doing festival, hour and a quarter sets. We saw some acts over the weekend where an hour and a quarter was about half an hour too long. This was not one of them. Dave Sayer
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