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Natasha Miller, Don't Move CD cover artwork

Natasha Miller, Don't Move

Audio CD

Disk ID: 256700

Disk length: 47m 30s (11 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 2006

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Natasha Miller...

Tracks & Durations

1. Don't Move 3:22
2. You Don't Have to Learn (How To Sing the Blues) 4:44
3. Stolen Love (on Highway 99) 4:06
4. Snow Covers the Valley 5:10
5. Once More 6:33
6. Prisoner of the Blues 4:40
7. Don't Set Me Free 3:46
8. Bye Bye Bayou 4:41
9. At Midnight 5:19
10. As the Years Come and Go 2:48
11. Doin't the Impossible 2:14

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

Once again, spunky vocalist Natasha Miller teams up with 81-year-old songwriter Bobby Sharp (Unchain My Heart, Don't Set Me Free), and this time, she’s got an album of destined-to-be jazz standards that outdoes everything she's produced to date. The new CD—Don't Move—(scheduled for a February 21 release) features 11 songs written by Sharp, most of which have never been recorded before. That makes this album something of an historic event in its own right. What makes it a musical event—of the first order—is Sharp’s songwriting, Natasha’s gift for flawless phrasing, and stunning arrangements penned by a group of musicians whose roots go deep and whose talents run to the top of their class—pianists Bill Bell (Duke Ellington, Carmen McRae, Nancy Wilson), Larry Dunlap (Cleo Lane, Mark Murphy), Ellen Hoffman (Oakland East Bay Symphony, Linda Ronstadt), and Josh Nelson (Peter Erskine, Ernie Watts). Some of the arrangements call for a 3-piece horn section and a string ensemble to augment Natasha’s jazz trio. “It’s only a 9-piece band, Miller says, “but the arrangements are so full and the band so tight, I sometimes think I’ve got The Stan Kenton Orchestra or Nelson Riddle and his strings behind me.” Sharp’s songwriting, as always, demonstrates his impeccable talent. He possesses an uncanny ability to unify the elements of his songs so they tell moving stories with a profound simplicity—always with style and grace (and sometimes, with a good bit of humor). Those elements, along with the energy Natasha brings to each song, make music you just can’t get enough of. In fact, the title of the album—Don’t Move—is not just lifted from one of the tracks; you’ll find it personally compelling. When you listen to it, you simply won’t want to—move, that is. “Bobby’s a genius, a one-man Mercer-and-Arlen team,” Natasha says. “His work will go down in the songbook of great American classics.” As she has in all her previous work, both live and recorded, Miller again demonstrates she can sing anything put in front of her (possibly even the phone book). Her voice harbors a rich palette of colors, sometimes sassy and insistent (“Don’t Set Me Free,” “Don’t Move”), sometimes sultry and ironic (”At Midnight,” “You Don’t Have to Learn How to Sing the Blues”), and sometimes wistful and longing, as in the haunting “Snow Covers the Valley,” with its hint of the tragic realities found in old Irish ballads. But even when she’s “A Prisoner of the Blues,” there’s no crying in her beer here. These are songs for grown-ups rendered by a 34-year-old artist who knows that even though fate may often deprive us from what we want, we keep on going anyway. What Natasha does is to bring these qualities together with finesse and power, delivering each song to the listener’s doorstep, where they don’t beg for entry, they come as familiar guests. Put all this together—vocal color, a tone that runs from hushed to fills-up-your-heart, a touch of attitude, range and power—with Natasha’s natural gift for just the right lyrical timing and you wonder how these songs could be sung any other way. As if that’s not enough, there’s the remarkable “sound” of the recording itself, due in large measure to the fact the album was produced at Skywalker Studios (George Lucas) in Northern California and engineered by the highly-respected Leslie Ann Jones. When you get that much talent under one roof, both in front of the mikes and behind the board, wonderful things happen. The group recorded all 11 tracks in a day and a half. Most were “down” on the first take. Natasha produced this—her fourth album—and is funding it through her independent record label Poignant Records based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her previous release I Had a Feelin' (also a collection of Bobby Sharp tunes) was well received by jazz radio (charting in JazzWeek), and played by jazz programmers around the world. I Had a Feelin' has garnered local and national media attention and has sparked a movie pro

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