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John Pizzarelli



Last Updated: 11/16/2009

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Status: Single
City: NEW YORK
State: New York
Country: US
Signup Date: 6/16/2006

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Wednesday, February 11, 2009 

On Wednesday, February 11, singer/guitarist John Pizzarelli will perform “Johnny One Note” from his Telarc release With a Song in My  Heart on “Late Night w/Conan O'Brien.” Jimmy Fallon, the new host of  “Late Night,” is scheduled to appear as well. Please check local listings for details.

http://www.nbc.com/Late_Night_with_Conan_O'Brien/index.shtml



Wednesday, July 23, 2008 

Category: Music

With a Song in My Heart explores the catalog of Richard Rodgers in stores August 19, 2008

 

Guitarist-vocalist John Pizzarelli was still in his late teens when composer Richard Rodgers died in December 1979, but the veteran songwriter's creative prowess was not lost on the budding young interpreter of the Great American Songbook. With a Song in My Heart: John Pizzarelli Sings the Music of Richard Rodgers (CD-83676), the latest chapter in a career that spans more than 25 years, is a tip of the Pizzarelli hat to Rodgers' musical legacy.

Rodgers was one of the most prolific and influential figures in 20th century American music. The composer of nearly a thousand songs and forty Broadway musicals, he is best known for his creative partnerships with lyricists Lorenz Hart and Oscar Hammerstein II. In a career that spanned a half century, he won Oscar, GRAMMY, Emmy and Tony awards, as well as a Pulitzer Prize. Thirty years after his death, his music continues to appeal to a broad audience – not just in the ..:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />U.S. but around the world.

"A lot of his musicals are being revived right now," says Pizzarelli. "South Pacific is at Lincoln Center. Pal Joey is coming soon. There's a lot of Rodgers in the air. So it was just a matter of picking songs that I liked – things that would be interesting and make a nice package."

And as always, Pizzarelli was committed to making it swing. "I wanted it to be along the lines of the kinds of records Marty Paitch and Mel Tormé used to make," he explains. "No real rhythm guitar to speak of, not a lot of piano. The horns sort of lead the way over the bass and the drums. That way, the piano and the guitar are more like soloists. The first call that I made was to Don Sebesky. I told him I wanted to use horns on six of the tracks. He just ate that up. He was very excited, because those Tormé records are some of his favorites."

The set opens with the lighthearted and easygoing title track, a song from the 1929 Rodgers & Hart musical, Spring Is Here. Pizzarelli's version is full of brassy punch, thanks to Sebesky's tight horn arrangement. "I have a recording of Chet Baker singing this song," says Pizzarelli. "Don arranged that recording, which is why the song appears on this record. The ensemble section after the piano solo on my record is a harmonization of Chet's first chorus on the version from his record."

Further in, the band takes a break, allowing Pizzarelli and his father – veteran guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli – to craft a poignant and intimate guitar/vocal version of "It's Easy To Remember," a Rodgers & Hart collaboration from the 1935 film, Mississippi. "Benny Goodman used to play this when my father and I opened for him when I was a kid. Benny loved this song. My father has just recently started playing it again in his show, so that's why it's on this record."

"Happy Talk" from the well-known Rodgers & Hammerstein musical, South Pacific (originally staged on Broadway in 1949), fits into a decidedly Latin groove with the help of guest pianist César Camargo Mariano. "I've always thought of this as a bossa nova song, because it mentions the moon and the sky and the lilies on the lake – all of that typical bossa nova imagery. It almost sounds as though Jobim could have written it. I was glad to be able to do it with César, who appeared on my Bossa Nova album in 2004. He and I revisited that guitar and piano arrangement with this song."

On the more familiar side is "The Lady is a Tramp," from the 1937 Rodgers & Hart musical, Babes in Arms. Pizzarelli takes enough room here for some tasty solo work, as does pianist Larry Fuller.

"She Was Too Good To Me," crafted here with the same melancholy vibe as "It's Easy To Remember," is a song with an unusual history. Originally written for a female part as "He Was Too Good To Me" for the 1930 Rodgers & Hart Broadway musical Simple Simon, the number was cut prior to the show's New York opening. Since then, however, it has become a jazz standard. Pizzarelli's rendition is another nod to Chet Baker, whose 1974 album named after the song was an important influence on Pizzarelli in the early years of his career. Kenny Berger's bass clarinet on this track adds an emotional weight that's subtle but powerful.

The stripped-down and simple closer, "You've Got To Be Carefully Taught" – also from South Pacific – takes a bit of a pop ballad turn, thanks in part to Pizzarelli's re-working of the time signature from the original charts. "It was originally written in 3/4 time," he says, "but we did it in 4/4 time. I sort of treated it as a James Taylor song."

With a Song in My Heart combines the timelessness of Richard Rodgers' music with John Pizzarelli's natural intuition about the versatility of the Great American Songbook.

"I know the material is good," says Pizzarelli. "It was just a matter of how I wanted to present the songs. We did all of our homework in a three-week period. We made a decision about the concept, we got the best people we could find and we recorded the album in two days. Everyone was on their game. It couldn't have gone better."

John Pizzarelli's With a Song in My Heart (CD-83676) is due at retail on August 19, 2008.

For more information, contact:

Press:  Mike Wilpizeski (718) 459-2117

Email: mikew@telarc.com

Tour Press:  Kelly Johanns-DiCillo (216) 464-2313 ext. 247

Email:  kjohanns@telarc.com

Radio and Promotions Manager: Marcia Welch (216) 464-2313 x222

Email: mwelch@telarc.com

TELARC International

23307 Commerce Park Road

Cleveland, OH 44122

www.telarc.com

Friday, June 16, 2006 

Catch John Pizarelli appearing on Legends of Jazz, airing on local PBS stations. The 13-week season coincides with National Jazz Appreciation Month and will be featuring intimate conversations and original performances by some of the worlds leading musicians.

Click here for more information and to check local listings:
http://www.legendsofjazz.net

John Pizzarelli, one of the most celebrated performers bringing popular standards to a new generation, will release a very special recording on Telarc International in July. His new album, Dear Mr. Sinatra, pays homage to Frank Sinatra, perhaps the greatest entertainer of all time, by focusing on songs that were specifically written for Ol Blue Eyes. Early in his career, Pizzarelli opened for Sinatra on tour. His father, the jazz guitar legend Bucky Pizzarelli, played on many of Sinatras seminal recordings. This upcoming release is in many ways the most personal of all the Sinatra tributes available.

Dear Mr. Sinatra, featuring The Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra, is available for pre-order at:

http://www.telarc.com/gscripts/title.asp?gsku=3638

Click here for a complete biography and discography on John Pizzarelli:
http://www.telarc.com//biography/bios.asp?aid=119,