http://www.calgaryherald.com/Review+Kra ... story.htmlKrall takes audience through jazz history Calgary show kicks off Canadian tour
A Diana Krall concert is sort of like being home at Christmas drinking with your dad.
At some point, a bottle of fine scotch is pulled out. And then, perhaps, after a drink or two, Dad shows you his records: old LPs (LPs!!) by Frank Sinatra, Peggy Lee, Nat King Cole. Oscar Peterson.
Legends like that.
A Krall concert, like the one she played Tuesday night at the Jubilee Auditorium to kick off her Canadian tour, is the live equivalent of opening the doors under the stereo and stumbling across all those old, weathered records from 50 or 60 years ago, only Diana Krall is very much alive and playing well.
Leading a quartet of talented musicians-- Anthony Wilson on guitar (sounding like the lovechild of Mark Knopfler and Bill Frissell), Jeff Hamilton on drums, and Robert Hurst on bass, with Krall on piano -- the band, backed by a lush-sounding orchestra, revisited the golden era of jazz, and brought dad's records back to haunting, melancholy life.
For the sedentary, but appreciative audience at the Tuesday show(she plays again tonight), the evening was awash in musical virtuosity--( even if Krall's famously musical husband Elvis Costello, who was in attendance, didn't make it onstage to play).
Bookending her show with a pair of Peggy Lee tunes--Love Being Here With You and I
Don't Know Enough About You -- Krall, whose parents originally hail from the Pincher Creek area, took the crowd on a sentimental journey.
The show went back in time, even back to a place: New York City when movies were noir, when 52nd Street was lined with jazz clubs, and the whole city seemed--to those of us who only really know it from Woody Allen movies-- to move from one extraordinary all-night jam session to another.
Of course, Krall, who has lived in New York since 1990, actually grew up in Nanaimo, B. C., with a famously jazz-loving dad who introduced her early on to his collection of golden age jazz records.
If she sounds like an outtake from a Blue Note recording, her actual personna is recognizably Canuck.
Before performing Oscar Peterson's Exactly Like You, she told how, as a 16-year-old, she wrote Peterson a five page letter introducing herself as an aspiring jazz singer.
She never sent it. (But eventually met Peterson and played piano with him in the basement of his home).
She recently had twin boys with Costello, all of whom are accompanying her on her tour across Canada.
"I may not know from the (NHL) playoffs, but I do know how to work a sippy cup in the airport," she said to the audience as a matter of introduction.
And the songs she felt most deeply connected to seemed somehow connected to family ties--I've Grown Accustomed to Your Face, and, most particularly, on a stark, lovely rendition of Joni Mitchell's Case of You, where Krall's emotional life met her musical one, with beautiful results.
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http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/Artists/K/Kra ... 6-sun.htmlStunning set of favourites highlights Krall concertDiana Krall may not be one of jazz music's most cutting edge or interesting artists.
But the Canadian chanteuse is certainly one of the best-selling jazz musicians of all time, having shifted millions of copies of her Verve albums, When I Look in Your Eyes, The Look of Love, The Girl in the Other Room and her most recent release, Quiet Nights.
Krall's mass appeal is partly due to her marshmallow safe song choices, which work well in a variety of settings including, but not limited to, urbane dinner parties, romantic dates, art openings and of course, wine-tastings.
There is no real edge, no excitement when you're talking about a Diana Krall album (although Quiet Nights does feature a very cool collection of Brazilian Bossa Nova covers.)
Even in concert, it's often hard to muster up any enthusiasm for the singer's sleepy delivery. I will admit there have been times when I've found Krall unbearably boring.
I didn't have high hopes for the first of Krall's two concerts at the Jubilee Auditorium. It's not that I have anything against her -- there's no question she's a talented musician and she actually seems like a really cool person (you'd have to be to be married to Elvis Costello.)
It's just that I have never been completely knocked out by any of her recordings or live performances.
So I was pleasantly surprised when I found my eyes and ears transfixed to the stage last night as the 44-year-old B.C. native kicked off her Quiet Nights Canadian Tour, performing a stunning set of old favourites and newer tunes in front of an appreciative audience of almost 1,700.
Tonight's show is sold out.
There was nothing special about the stage, just a simple draped backdrop bathed in different lighting designs. But it was a fitting setup that matched Krall's down-to-earth charm.
Backing the singer was her three-piece band as well as a 45-piece orchestra, which added a completely new dimension to Krall's performance.
Even though she was surrounded by almost 50 people playing instruments of all shapes and sizes, Krall's performance was as intimate as a night at a small jazz club.
Starting the show with a delightful version of I Love Being Here With You, Krall proved that an absence of almost five years has not taken away from her confidence or skill.
It was the more upbeat quartet numbers that really demonstrated what a phenomenal piano player Krall is.
She was complemented by the fantastic musicianship of guitarist Anthony Wilson, drummer Jeff Hamilton and stand-up bass player Robert Hurst.
Since she was last in town, Krall has given birth to twin boys Dexter and Frank, but you'd would never know it by how great she looked when she walked onto the stage wearing a gorgeous little black dress.
Krall's 90-minute concert wasn't exactly invigorating, but it was probably one of the best jazz performances Calgary will see all year.