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Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester
July 10, 2007
Concert review: Relaxed Krall sticks with standards
by Jeff Spevak
There are no holes in Diana Krall's game. In baseball, the scouts would call her a five-tool player: She sings, plays piano, arranges, looks good and, ahh ..., well, for all we know, runs the bases well.
She and trumpeter Chris Botti drew 4,500 people Monday to the Constellation Brands-Marvin Sands Performing Arts Center, a very nice crowd for a high-priced jazz show. Fortunately for them, by the time Krall hit the stage, the day's stifling heat had cooled a few degrees, maybe to the level of that scene where Bambi is trapped in the forest fire.
As a singer, Krall is not a jaw-dropping technician. She's relaxed and easy, more Peggy Lee than anything else in the jazz galaxy. Nat King Cole is her standard, and with the backing of an outstanding trio, songs like "Exactly Like You" fit her well. She didn't have to reach far to reach "Let's Fall in Love" and was properly upbeat for "I Was Doing Alright," huskily dramatic for "Boulevard of Broken Dreams," swinging for "'Deed I Do."
Krall has recorded a few contemporary pop tunes, but right now she's sticking with traditional songs dating back to "when the Earth cooled," as she said while introducing Irving Berlin's "Let's Face the Music and Dance."
But it's all very cool. And here's that fifth tool: Krall is pretty funny, joking about swallowing a fly on a buggy evening while singing a Lee number. She draws much of her material these days from the birth of twin sons seven months ago. The promised weight loss hasn't come with breast feeding, she pointed out.
Ruing that her clothes were sometimes victims of their vomit, she noted, "They've started eating carrots now; I'd better change my wardrobe." And as a musician steeped in standards, she hoped that in a few years her rock-star husband, Elvis Costello, would have a stronger influence on them musically, since schoolboys singing show tunes would probably be asking for trouble.
Botti appears to have many sides, and on Monday he was the melodic, romantic jazzman, opening his show with the gorgeous melodies of "Ave Maria," "When I Fall in Love" and "Someone to Watch Over Me." He and his band turned "Cinema Paradiso" into an epic.
This foreplay beats his show a couple of years ago with Madeleine Peyroux at the Eastman Theatre and the Rochester International Jazz Festival, when in his first 50 seconds Botti whipped through every jazz-show cliché this side of Ted Lewis' grave — neglecting only to solo while standing on his head — leaving just one question: OK, now what?
Monday, he took his time. The result? It was more interesting jazz, particularly from his great band, with the late-arriving dynamics of Botti's pop instincts telling a better story. And Botti does speak from pop experience. Early in his 40-minute set, he warned the parents of fledgling musicians to keep their children away from red guitars or they might find themselves "playing in the David Hasselhoff Band for the rest of your life," ignoring the conventional wisdom that contemporary-jazz musicians playing in glass Performing Arts Centers shouldn't throw stones.
Yet Botti's own experiences have been considerably more elevated, playing with luminaries such as Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin and Thomas Dolby. The guy is talented, for sure: Backstage at a Sting concert a few years ago, I even spotted Botti standing on his head.
JSPEVAK@DemocratandChronicle.com





