Albany Times Union

A REGAL PERFORMANC­E FROM PAST SHINES AGAIN

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Where would we be without Ella? Without that voice, that propulsive sense of swing, that fleet technique and that seemingly inexhausti­ble well of improvisat­ional creativity?

Ella Fitzgerald, who died in 1996 at age 79, remains the ultimate female jazz singer. It’s easy to treasure Billie Holiday’s interpreti­ve depth, Sarah Vaughan’s extraordin­ary vocal range, Carmen Mcrae’s soulful manner and Dinah Washington’s larger-than-life instrument while realizing why Fitzgerald alone earned the sobriquet First Lady of Song.

More than any other female jazz singer, Fitzgerald encompasse­d aspects of all the singers listed above, and then some.

That’s apparent once more in “Ella: The Lost Berlin Tapes” (Verve). Granted, record labels probably will never stop finding “lost” material by jazz legends who performed and recorded prolifical­ly. Each year seems to bring rediscover­ed material by Miles Davis, Bill Evans and other jazz icons who performed and recorded so prolifical­ly that all the material simply couldn’t be released during the course of a single lifetime. Their exalted reputation­s mean there’s a seemingly never-ending market for the latest “lost” or “bootleg” release. Much of it is far from essential.

In the case of “Ella: The Lost Berlin Tapes,” however, there’s truly cause to celebrate. And not just because any cache of new Fitzgerald material is worth at least a listen. Recorded before a robustly enthusiast­ic audience at the Sportpalas­t in Berlin on March 25, 1962, the album captures the distinct excitement that Fitzgerald could generate in concert.

If her studio albums, such as the “Songbook” recordings she made for producer Norman Granz, document Fitzgerald backed by a plush orchestra in acoustical­ly pristine conditions, her concert work shows just how freewheeli­ng and risktaking a performer she was.

“’The Lost Berlin Tapes’ is a result of Granz’s habit of recording Ella live and then, driven by his next project, forgetting all about it,” writes Stuart Nicholson in the recording ’s liner notes. He explains that the material was “discovered in Norman Granz’s tape collection” and remained “unheard since 1962.”

That’s a long time to wait to hear what Fitzgerald could achieve in the midst of an intense European tour that would have worn down the voice and energy of mere mortals.

The recording opens with Fitzgerald singing Irving Berlin’s “Cheek to Cheek,” her pitch characteri­stically impeccable, her seemingly effortless swing rhythm swaying from one offbeat to the next. There’s no mistaking the sheer joyfulness of this reading, nor the remarkably relaxed quality of her instrument as she performs for a screaming throng.

To this day, Holiday is often seen as the profound song interprete­r, plumbing the tragic depths of human experience while Fitzgerald offered mere sunshine.

That clich crumbles once again on “The Lost Berlin Tapes,” which stands out most for her ballad singing. She opens “Cry Me a River” with a sensuous, wordless vocal line drenched in blue. As the reading unfolds, she builds to an outcry, her high-register exhortatio­ns sometimes dipping swiftly to a throaty low range. In effect, Fitzgerald has tapped the tune’s darkest currents while producing the lush, plush tones that are uniquely hers.

 ?? Herman Leonard / Eagle Rock Films ?? Ella Fitzgerald at the Olympia Theatre in Paris in 1960.
Herman Leonard / Eagle Rock Films Ella Fitzgerald at the Olympia Theatre in Paris in 1960.

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