TESTIMONIALS
/ PRESS
Steph
and I are on our honeymoon but I wanted to take the time to thank
you for a wonderful performance you and the band gave us...everyone
had a great time and everyone made it a point to tell us how amazing
you and the band were...
The mix of
R and B and old school classics made the wedding exactly what we
wanted, classy and cool and of course sexy...
Thanks for everything....
Danny
Oct 2005
After spotting
exciting newcomer Rosalyn McClore at this years’ Cabaret Convention,
I felt compelled to see more. So I raced down to the Hideaway Room@
Helen’s in time to catch her cabaret debut. From her two numbers
on stage at Lincoln Center, it was obvious she knew her way around
a hot keyboard and a song. Her show, featuring the songs of Stephen
Sondheim and Nina Simone and backed by a three-piece band, proved
a serious step towards gaining recognition. She is sassy, dramatic,
sensual, and fully committed to her material. And not only can she
sing well, she can interpret with style and bring new meaning to
familiar tunes.
This happened right at the top with a sizzling reading of Sondheim’s
“Back in Business,” from the film Dick Tracy. Switching
gears, she gave his “Anyone Can Whistle” a full-tilt
blues treatment fusing jazz with R&B. Her interpretation sounded
more like something one might expect from Aretha Franklin. After
she finished, she admitted, I have never seen a Sondheim show,”
and noted, “He writes lots and lots of lyrics.” Then
she made the bizarre comparison of Sondheim’s lyrics to those
of Nina Simone, noting “Sondheim is very dark and Nina Simone
is very dark,”
This led to her taking expansive musical liberties on the way to
reinventing “Marry Me a Little.(Sondheim), combining it with
a cynical take on Simone’s already cynical “Marriage
is For Old Folks.” To her credit, it worked in spades. She
brought a combination of warmth and inner peace to “Not While
I’m Around” (Sondheim). Taking even more liberties,
she turned “Losing My Mind” (Sondheim) into a guttural,
lusty blues aria, demonstrating how soul techniques can be used
selectively to illuminate a line.
I don’t recommend tackling a fusion of Sondheim and Simone
in anybody’s show-ever. Yet McClore’s musicianship,
interpretive intelligence, and smoky alto mark her as a unique talent,
an emotionally chafed hybrid of the late jazz empress Carmen McRae
and the stylishly silky Nancy Wilson.
John
Hoglund, Backstage Magazine Nov 2005
Dear Roslyn,
Our most sincere
gratitude extends to you for all you did for our special day. Needless
to say, the band was absolutely amazing, but your genuine thoughtfullness
in the weeks preceeding is greatly appreciated. We are so glad we
got to know you & we look forward to hanging out with you more
in the future!
Thanks
so much,
Dave & Shannon
Rosalyn
McClore made quite an impression when she debuted just nine months
ago at Helen’s, with Feeling Good -- A Tribute to Nina Simone,
in which she both sang and accompanied herself on the piano. As
a cabaret neophyte, she displayed an energy and enthusiasm that
was captivating, and a way with jazz that instantly established
her as a performer to keep an eye on.
Sure enough, writing about the recent week-long New York Cabaret
Convention, Jazz Critic Will Friedland at the New York Sun exclaimed,
“For me, this year's find is Rosalyn McClore, an exceptional
singer-pianist from Memphis.” So, it was with much anticipation
that we went to catch McClore’s new show at Helen’s
Hideaway Room. There she was, as elegant as ever, and now with a
three-piece jazz group to support her. The musicians—Tony
Reedus on drums, Greg Ryan on bass, and Aaron Swinnerton on the
piano—were excellent, and yet, when McClore performed as a
singer, leaving her piano to someone else, something failed to jell.
Perhaps the arrangements for the foursome weren’t tailored
to McClore’s special sound. Or possibly the group had insufficient
time to come together as one. Whatever, the reason, only when McClore
took over the piano and, once again, accompanied herself as she
sang, did the flower blossom and the kudos she earned become perfectly
justified
McClore is an engaging singer, a driving jazz pianist, and an affable
performer. Perhaps she knows best how to accompany Rosalyn McClore.
When she does, she scintillates.
Peter Leavy
Cabaret Scenes
October 26, 2005
www.cabaretscenes.com
"She appears to have everything going for her. With no frills
or artistic pretensions, she makes wonderful music with unassuming
confidence and easy grace. Add to that her ingratiating stage presence
and clearly genuine personal charm."
Roy Sander
Critic and Columnist
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