January 1, 2010Featured Release: Madeleine Peyroux: Somethin Grand
Rounder-11661-3282-9
Format: DVD
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When I heard Madeleine Peyrouxs first CD, Dreamland
(1996), I wondered if the world needed another Billie Holiday. That now seems like an
unfair assessment, given Peyrouxs own interpretive skills and her growing talents as
a songwriter. In the documentary that accompanies Somethin Grand, Yves
Beauvais, who signed Peyroux to her first recording contract, says the singer "seemed
to be singing from another era, from another life." Peyrouxs music is, indeed,
solidly based in tradition, combining a bit of 70s singer/songwriter with the jazz
phrasing of an earlier time, a combination that should in theory give her the kind of
broad appeal that Norah Jones enjoys.
Somethin Grand features a performance by
Peyroux and her band in Los Angeles in January 2009. Although the emphasis is on tunes
from her latest release, Bare Bones, Peyroux also does a healthy selection
of songs from her previous three CDs. Two compositions she co-wrote, "Our Lady of
Pigalle" and "Love and Treachery," both from the recent disc, are lyrically
and musically sophisticated, and Peyroux sings them in an engaging voice thats
enjoyable on its own terms, without referencing Holiday or any other singer. Her versions
of songs she covers, such as Leonard Cohens "Dance Me to the End of Love,"
highlight her deep feeling for a lyric. Her exquisite readings of Serge Gainsbourgs
"La Javanaise" and Edith Piafs "La Vie en Rose" are reasons
enough to watch the DVD.
Peyroux is a skillful acoustic guitarist, and the musicians
who accompany her, including Larry Klein on bass, Dean Parks on guitar, and Jim Beard on
keyboards, offer her beautifully subtle support. Director George Scott maintains the
intimate feel of a club setting, shooting her up close while including shots of the other
musicians at the right moments. The lighting, by Adam Biggs, is perfect for a small-club
setting and enhances the warm atmosphere of the performance. The intelligent choices Scott
and Biggs made in preparing this DVD underscore the understated beauty of her music.
For once, the bonuses on a music DVD are worth viewing. The
documentary, also titled Somethin Grand tells the story of Peyrouxs
career, beginning with her years as a teenager in Paris -- she moved there from the U.S.
at age 13 -- and her experience as a street singer there. It goes on to look at the
interesting career choices shes made since then. Five bonus performances feature
Peyroux accompanying herself on acoustic guitar, and shes as compelling in that
simple setting as she is with a band.
The sound for the main concert is in DTS 5.1 or Dolby
Digital 2.0, and while I preferred the DTS mix, the instruments in two-channel had a bit
more focus, especially during solos. The two-channel sound in the documentary is a bit
muddy in spots, but not in a distracting way. I already liked Madeleine Peyroux when I
watched Somethin Grand, but I came away from the DVD with even
more admiration and affection for her.
. . . Joseph Taylor
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