JUNE CHRISTY
Ballads For Night People
Capitol
Following the success of her signature recording
Something Cool, originally recorded in 1953 as
a ten inch and supplemented in ’55 with additional
tracks for LP release, June Christy cut a number of long-playing
albums with a loosely-based concept. The LP was still in
its infancy, and many singers and musicians were experimenting
with the form, creating new and interesting settings for
the songs they performed and allowing the listener a more
atmospheric listening experience. 1955 saw the release of
Duet, recorded with Christy’s former boss
Stan Kenton at the piano, and The Misty Miss Christy,
another Pete Rugolo-arranged album that, while not quite
as great as Something Cool, is absolutely classic
Christy. In 1956 and 1957 came This is June Christy!
and Fair And Warmer, both decent but not essential
recordings.
In 1958 Christy recorded the first of two
exceptional albums with her husband, saxophonist Bob Cooper,
who also penned the arrangements for them. The first, June’s
Got Rhythm, is probably her most unabashedly upbeat
recording, featuring swinging tunes arranged for a small
group that allowed Christy’s jazz side to come to
the fore as it never had previously. 1959’s Ballads
for Night People returned to the tried and true formula
of featuring Christy singing primarily sophisticated ballads
with much more lyrical complexity than the average popular
singer was able to manage. It’s true that Christy
doesn’t swing as hard as Anita O’Day, nor does
she have the outgoing nature of an Ella Fitzgerald or the
bluesy quality of a Dinah Washington, but her ability to
perform complex songs with sophistication and confidence
kept the focus on her singing, even though she worked with
some of the most innovative arrangers around at the time.
On Ballads for Night People, Cooper
arranges for two different groups which back Christy on
various tracks. The first is a septet featuring trombonist
Frank Rosolino, alto sax/flute player Bud Shank, Cooper
on tenor, pianist Joe Castro, bassist Red Callender, drummer
Mel Lewis, and harp player Kathryn Julye. The other group
features the same group (with Stan Levey replacing Lewis
on drums) augmented by Jim Decker (French horn), Buddy Collette
(clarinet), Norman Benno (English horn, bassoon), and Chuck
Gentry (bass clarinet and contrabass clarinet). Both groups
provide Christy with sensitive support that demands listening
to all by itself. In fact, one of the great things about
June Christy’s albums is that the music is just as
good as the singing rather than being just as good as it
needs to be.
As for the song selection, it is noted, quite
rightly, in Will Friedwald’s liner notes that while
Fitzgerald and Sinatra defined mainstream American popular
song, artists like June Christy and Peggy Lee explored its
outer fringes. For Christy that meant recording a series
of songs that were generally not so well known by songwriters
who were not necessarily as well known as Irving Berlin,
Rogers/Hart, etc. The best known tracks here are the opener,
“Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered” two Duke
Ellington numbers, “Do Nothing ‘Til You Hear
From Me” and “Don’t Get Around Much Anymore”
and the Weill/Gershwin number “My Ship.” All
of these get superior readings from Christy, but more interesting
still are songs like the title track by Fran Landesman and
Tommy Wolf. The song seeks to capture the restless urban
underworld of the beat poet and the sophisticated martini-drinking
lounge lizard, somewhat in the tradition of Frank Loesser’s
classic “My Time of Day” from Guys and Dolls.
Or check out “I Had a Little Sorrow,” Cooper’s
setting of lyrics by Edna St. Vincent Millay, on which Christy
is accompanied only by harp. Certainly not your normal 1950s
songbird material.
Christy throws off the swingy “I’m
In Love” and “Kissing Bug” with a great
deal of verve, and tackles “Shadow Woman,” an
‘other woman’ song penned by Arthur Hamilton,
composer of “Cry Me a River,” which sounds like
it could easily have been an outtake from Something Cool.
This reissue tacks on five tracks from a third Christy/Cooper
album, Do Re Mi. A less-than-successful show by
Jule Styne, Betty Comden, and Adolf Green featuring Phil
Silver and Nancy Walker, Do Re Mi provides Christy
with some worthy vehicles, particularly the upbeat “Make
Someone Happy” and the ballad “Cry Like the
Wind.”