John Pizzarelli

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With A Song In My Heart 83676

John Pizzarelli

With A Song In My Heart

CD $18.98 $13.98

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RELEASE DATE: 19 Aug 2008

83676

GENRE: JAZZ

John Pizzarelli Sings From the Heart on New Telarc CD

With a Song in My Heart explores the catalog of Richard Rodgers

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MORE RELEASES FROM JOHN PIZZARELLI

John Pizzarelli, one of the most celebrated performers bringing popular standards to a new generation, releases a very special recording on Telarc… MORE

John Pizzarelli

Knowing You

CD $18.98 $13.98

For over twenty-five years, John Pizzarelli has traveled the world, making records and performing for all types of audiences. He celebrates this… MORE

John Pizzarelli

Bossa Nova

CD $18.98 $13.98

Brazilian vocalist and guitarist João Gilberto, bossa nova’s premier interpreter, helped launch a musical revolution in the 1950s by… MORE
Jazz vocalist and guitarist John Pizzarelli's cool and classy live performances have earned him an army of fans who can't get enough of his hip… MORE
"I set out to make an album that was a spontaneous expression of what it feels like to be 'in love,' from wedding day, to everyday, to the… MORE
Expressive ease marks John Pizzarelli's Telarc debut—Kisses in the Rain is his most solid recording to date.Now available in… MORE

ABOUT JOHN PIZZARELLI

John Pizzarelli

 

John Pizzarelli has cultivated a winning international career by singing classic standards and late-night ballads, and by playing sublime and inventive guitar. Using greats like Nat “King” Cole and Frank Sinatra and the songs of writers like Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen as touchstones, Pizzarelli is among the prime revivalists of the great American songbook, bringing to his work the cool jazz flavor of his brilliant guitar playing.

Born on April 6, 1960, in Paterson, New Jersey, Pizzarelli has been playing guitar since age six, following in the tradition of his father, guitar legend Bucky Pizzarelli. Hanging out with his father, John was exposed to all the great jazz music of the era, from Erroll Garner and Les Paul to Django Reinhardt. He began playing with his father at age 20, then went out on his own. Since 1992, the John Pizzarelli Trio has toured extensively. In 1993, they were honored to open for Frank Sinatra's international tour and then joined in the celebration for his 80th birthday at Carnegie Hall.

John Pizzarelli’s voice has continued to develop with time, displaying both charm and humor. He has recorded as a bandleader for RCA, Chesky, Stash and Novus, and in 1997 appeared in the Broadway musical Dream, a revue of Johnny Mercer songs. Along the way, Pizzarelli has earned rave reviews. “The John Pizzarelli Trio has never been tighter, and Pizzarelli himself has never been looser,” the Village Voice said of a recent New York show. “We can say we’re as lucky to listen to (Pizzarelli) as Nat Cole fans were in the years before he became a legend.” Pizzarelli was also named “Jazz Vocalist of the Year” by Swing Journal in their Readers Poll.

For Pizzarelli, the comparison to the Nat “King” Cole Trio is the highest of compliments. “I’ve always said in my concerts that Nat ‘King’ Cole is why I do what I do.” But Pizzarelli quickly adds, “We aren’t trying to copy him. That sound was so singular and inspired. I’ve always said we’re an extension, a new version of what that group was.” In fact, Pizzarelli devoted his Dear Mr. Cole album to music made famous by the beloved song stylist. Pizzarelli’s catalogue of albums also includes a touching cycle of torch ballads (After Hours), an album featuring originals along with classic jazz and swing (Our Love is Here to Stay), and a Christmas collection (Let’s Share Christmas). In 1999, Pizzarelli’s trio was featured in the Goldie Hawn/ Steve Martin comedy film The Out of Towners, performing “That Old Black Magic.

Pizzarelli signed with the GRAMMY Award winning label Telarc International at the end of 1999 and in February 2000 debuted Kisses in the Rain, a diverse set of standards and original tunes that showcases the spontaneity of his live performances within a studio setting. His trio, with Ray Kennedy on piano and younger brother Martin Pizzarelli on bass, performs George Gershwin’s “I Got Rhythm,” Dorothy Fields’ “I’m In The Mood For Love” and Jimmy Van Heusen’s “I Thought About You.” Pizzarelli’s familiarity with the American songbook is so complete that even his own songs – “I Wouldn’t Trade You” and the title ballad – sound at home beside the classics.

His second Telarc recording, the intimate and unabashedly romantic Let There Be Love, was released in November 2000 and features Kennedy, Martin Pizzarelli and percussionist Tony Tedesco, along with saxophonist Harry Allen, clarinetist Ken Peplowski, accordionist Dominic Cortese, cellist Jesse Levy and guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli.

On his 2002 album, The Rare Delight of You, Pizzarelli teamed up with veteran pianist George Shearing. In the tradition of classic quintet-and-vocalist recordings, they lay down great standards (including “Be Careful, It’s My Heart,” “If Dreams Come True” and “Lost April”) as well as a couple originals, all in vibrant arrangements.

In 2004, Pizzarelli introduced a new generation to bossa nova. Produced by Russ Titleman, Bossa Nova features several Brazilian musicians including Paulo Braga, who played drums with Antonio Carlos Jobim for many years, vocalist Daniel Jobim (Jobim’s grandson) and Cesar Camargo Mariano, who produced, composed and played on many great Brazilian records, most notably with Elis Regina.

Knowing You, his 2005 release, pays homage to the many talented musicians and songwriters he’s met throughout his career. The disc features material from noted pop and Broadway songwriters Jimmy McHugh, Sammy Cahn, Jimmy Van Heusen, Frank Loesser, Alan Bergman and Johnny Mandel, among others.

In July 2006, Telarc released Dear Mr. Sinatra, John's tribute CD to “Ol’ Blue Eyes,” featuring the Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra. The CD features classic standards like “I’ve Got You Under My Skin” and “Nice And Easy,” as well as rarely-recorded songs like “Ring A Ding Ding” and “The Last Dance.” In 2007, Pizzarelli was featured in the PBS series “Legends of Jazz.”

The guitarist-vocalist’s 2008 release, With a Song in My Heart: John Pizzarelli Sings the Music of Richard Rodgers, is a tip of the Pizzarelli hat to Rodgers’ musical legacy and includes such well-known tunes as “It’s Easy To Remember” (a Rodgers & Hart collaboration from the 1935 film, Mississippi), “Happy Talk” (from the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical, South Pacific), “The Lady is a Tramp” (from the 1937 Rodgers & Hart musical, Babes in Arms), and many more.

In addition to being a bandleader and solo performer, John has been a special guest on recordings for major pop names such as James Taylor, Natalie Cole, Tom Wopat, Rickie Lee Jones and Dave Von Ronk, as well as leading jazz artists like Rosemary Clooney, Ruby Braff, Johnny Frigo, Buddy DeFranco, Harry Allen and, of course, Bucky Pizzarelli. He was recently featured opposite Donna Summer, Jon Secada and Roberta Flack on the GRAMMY Award winning CD, Songs From The Neighborhood: The Music of Mr. Rogers.

John has performed numerous times on the country’s most popular national television shows such as “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno,” “The Late Show with David Letterman,” “Live With Regis & Kelly,” “The Tony Danza Show,” “The CBS Early Show,” Fox News Channel and Jerry Lewis’s Labor Day Telethon.

Pizzarelli continues to tour throughout the United States, Europe and Japan, performing classic pop, jazz and swing, while setting the standard for stylish modern jazz.