Read My Singing Teachers by Mel Tormé Online

Read [Mel Tormé Book] # My Singing Teachers Online * PDF eBook or Kindle ePUB free. My Singing Teachers Tormé also pays homage to many lesser known figures, such as composer Harry Warren--whose songs include "I Only Have Eyes for You," "The More I See You," "We're in the Money," and "Down Argentine Way"--and singer Connee Boswell, who was an important model for Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, and Torme himself. Tormé has drawn inspiration from virtually every corner of the entertainment world, so the book has an enormous range--covering jazz, big band singers (such as Helen Forrest o

My Singing Teachers

Title : My Singing Teachers
Author :
Rating : 4.77 (976 Votes)
Asin : 0195090950
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 256 Pages
Publish Date : 2015-11-18
Language : English

. Photos not seen by PW. Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Publishers Weekly A jazz vocalist since the 1940s, Torme has encountered many legendary figures in his field. This approach is both asset and liability, providing a rich and complex view of the fabric of American music but tersely giving these memoirs a sometimes dry, encyclopedic feel. His analysis of the contributions to American music of such greats as Jerome Kern, Ella Fitzgerald, Judy Garland and Bing Crosby, to name just a few, is astute and articulate. Although loosely organized around the influence other music makers have had on Torme's career, the book is less an autobiography than a series of vignettes about the lives and the musical innov

Mellow said Enjoyable read!. Interesting and informative bookenjoyable reading.. "MEL TORMEa great singer/intellect discusses singers" according to Linda M. Moyer. This may not be Mel's best book, but as a former professional singer I found its observations fascinating. Mel's knowledge and taste make this de rigeur reading for anyone who sings, or wants to! Mel always projects a warm, regular-guy feeling in his writing, and doesn't lecture. How wonderful that he left behind these volumes(he has written 6 books) for posterity.Mel Torme himself the singer is the ultimate voiceabsolutely music at its best.. "Velvety" according to HH. The Jazz Age -- the 1920s -- was in full swing when Tormé, a.k.a. the Velvet Fog, made his debut. Bing Crosby was an early model. Ella Fitzgerald inspired Tormé’s switch from pop to jazz singing. Ethel Waters called him the only white man who could sing with a black man’s soul. He perfected his vocal improv techniques listening to jazz favorites like saxophonist Ben Webster and trumpeter Roy Eldridge. It’s a pity Tormé can’t write like h

Tormé also pays homage to many lesser known figures, such as composer Harry Warren--whose songs include "I Only Have Eyes for You," "The More I See You," "We're in the Money," and "Down Argentine Way"--and singer Connee Boswell, who was an important model for Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, and Torme himself. Tormé has drawn inspiration from virtually every corner of the entertainment world, so the book has an enormous range--covering jazz, big band singers (such as Helen Forrest or Bob Eberly), Hollywood musical singers (such as Judy Garland and Deanna Durbin), even cowboy singers (Gene Autry and Roy Rogers, among others), not to mention lyricists, composers, and arrangers. Here is a pantheon of popular music and jazz, a sweeping look at American song from the perspective of one of its great practitioners. And most surprisingly, he shows how listening to instrumentalists such as Ben Webster on tenor sax and Roy Eldridge on trumpet shaped his scat singing--even more than listening to the great scat singers. It brims with personal anecdotes and astute obs

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