Last Call

Last Call

by Jeff Healey
Last Call

Last Call

by Jeff Healey

CD(Digi-Pak)

$16.99 
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Overview

The first two posthumous Jeff Healey albums, Mess of Blues (which appeared only days after his death in 2008) and Songs from the Road (2009), focused on his blues-rock guitar playing, the basis of his renown, even though he had spent much of the last decade of his life performing and recording in the early jazz styles of the first three decades of the 20th century, and often playing the trumpet. Last Call, a studio recording drawn from sessions held in February 2007, returns to the jazz format of previous albums Among Friends, Adventures in Jazzland, and It's Tight Like That. But instead of playing with his band the Jazz Wizards, Healey is accompanied by only two fellow musicians, pianist/clarinetist Ross Wooldridge of that group, and violinist Drew Jurecka. That is, they accompany him when he has any accompaniment at all. Sometimes, Healey is alone, or rather, he is the only musician, even if there are multiple instruments. The closing track, "Some of These Days," features two guitars, trumpet, and vocals, but they're all Healey, overdubbing himself. Annotator Colin Bray, another member of the Jazz Wizards, attests to Healey's love of early jazz, as demonstrated by his extensive collection of 78 rpm records, and, like its predecessors in this vein, Last Call clearly is a labor of love by an aficionado intent on replicating the sound of a musical style he reveres. Nor is it without accomplishment. When Healey and Jurecka dig into the guitar/violin duet "The Wildcat," they sound for all the world like Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli, which is exactly what they are aiming for. Healey is a less impressive trumpet player, although he manages to approximate the '20s style he's after. He is also an adequate vocalist, but not really a stylist capable of putting his own stamp on the songs of, say, Hoagy Carmichael ("Hong Kong Blues"), or Bing Crosby ("Pennies from Heaven"). So, like Healey's other jazz albums, Last Call is something more than a busman's holiday, but something less than a major artistic statement. ~ William Ruhlmann

Product Details

Release Date: 04/06/2010
Label: Stony Plain
UPC: 0772532133524
Rank: 69524

Tracks

  1. Holding My Honey's Hand
  2. Time on My Hands
  3. The Wildcat
  4. You Can't Pull the Wool Over My Eyes
  5. Deep Purple
  6. Hong Kong Blues
  7. Pennies from Heaven
  8. Autumn in New York
  9. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter
  10. Black and Blue Bottom
  11. Guitar Duet Stomp
  12. Laura
  13. Keeping Myself for You
  14. Some of These Days
  15. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter [Bonus Video] [Live]

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Jeff Healey   Primary Artist,Guitar,Vocals,Trumpet
The Jazz Wizards   Primary Artist
Drew Jurecka   Violin
Ross Wooldridge   Piano,Clarinet

Technical Credits

Vernon Duke   Composer
L. Collins   Composer
Eddie Lang   Composer
Charles Newman   Composer
Joe Young   Composer
Jeff Healey   Producer
Shelton Brooks   Composer
Johnny Mercer   Composer
Venuti   Composer
Milton Ager   Composer
Arthur Johnston   Composer
Mitchell Parish   Composer
Alec Fraser   Mixing,Engineer
Harold Adamson   Composer
Vincent Youmans   Composer
Holger Petersen   Photography,Executive Producer
Hoagy Carmichael   Composer
Sidney Clare   Composer
Fred E. Ahlert   Composer
Mack Gordon   Composer
David Raksin   Composer
Peter DeRose   Composer
Murray Mencher   Composer
Goering   Composer
Johnny Burke   Composer
Ted Onyszczak   Authoring
Andy Krehm   Mastering
Colin Bray   Liner Notes
Michael Dangelmaier   Design,Photography
Mark Camilleri   Mixing,Engineer
Mako Funasaka   Editing,Filmmaker
Joe Venuit   Composer
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