Singer Hale Baskin, DownBeat Magazine Youth Winner, at Jazz at Pearl's
Jazz at Pearl's (256 Columbus Ave. San Francisco, CA 94133)
- Full Price:
- $10.00 - $100.00
- Our Price:
- $5.00 - $50.00*
* Additional fees apply.
All offers for Hale Baskin in Concert have expired.
The last date listed for Hale Baskin in Concert was Wednesday March 5, 2008 / 10:00pm.
More Information About Hale Baskin in Concert
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Quotes & Highlights
- "It looks like we have a rising star in our midst. Remember Baskin's name. You'll be hearing it again soon." --Oakland Tribune
- "Hale Baskin has all the tools. She sings with admirable taste and control, rhythmic and harmonic sense, and clear insight into the jazz tradition. So dig!" --Dr. Herb Wong
Description
Jazz lovers who have been following the career of San Francisco Bay Area singer Hale Baskin since she began winning local and national awards early in her high school career will certainly not be surprised by the mature, assured and, most importantly, eminently delightful Hale Baskin on display on Hale’s second as a leader, her brand new recording “Classic.”
Those just learning about Hale are still in plenty of time to get in on experiencing the rapid-fire growth of this impressively talented and swinging young chanteuse. After all, with two CDs as a leader to her credit, plus a basketful of performance awards and even a pair of European tours, Hale Baskin is just heading off to college this fall!
Hale certainly wrapped up her high school career in fine style. Most prominently, perhaps, there’s the recording and release of “Classic,” featuring outstanding Bay Area jazz stars like pianists Larry Dunlap and Dee Spencer, trombonist Wayne Wallace and trumpeter John Worley, Jr. Hale’s mature musical presence is on full display on this CD. Listen to her dynamic, heartfelt reading of “God Bless the Child,” her joyfully swinging take on “Sitting in Limbo,” a song Hale first sang as a thirteen-year-old, and the sassy romp through “Summertime” that ends with a joyous vocal duet with singer Nate Pruitt, who just happens to be Hale’s voice coach. Longtime fans will especially savor the leaps Hale has made in both the maturity and imaginative quality of her phrasing.
But Hale was getting national recognition even before releasing “Classic.” For example, she won the 2007 Down Beat Magazine Student Music Award for ‘Best Jazz Vocalist’ in the high school division. That’s a strong call out from a pretty authoritative source, to put it mildly! And it’s not the first time Down Beat called Hale’s name. Her first prize in the 2002 Junior High School Division of Down Beat’s Music Awards earned Hale a scholarship to Berklee College of Music's Summer Program, and she’s placed in the 2006 awards for “Outstanding Performance.”
Honors aside, this young dynamo also added to her impressive performing credentials over the past year. She toured Europe this summer with her school-mates in the Menlo-Atherton High School Advanced Jazz Band, including dates in Italy, France, Germany, Switzerland (two performances at Montreux!) and Austria. With Hale on vocals this group of talented students also won the student competition at last year’s Anaheim Jazz Festival and placed at the Reno Jazz Festival. In addition, Hale was named to the San Francisco Jazz Festival’s prestigious SFJAZZ All-Star High School Ensemble, a band that draws the best high school jazz players from around the entire San Francisco Bay Area.
Hale has, in fact, been an active performer for years. She's already sung with both the Count Basie and Mike Vax big bands, jammed with singer Kim Nalley at the prestigious San Francisco hot spot, Jazz at Pearl's, and headlined at Pearl’s as part of the club’s "Future of Jazz: Youth Series."
Hale’s first CD, “The Forecast Calls for Hale, was recorded in 2003 to happy reviews for one so young. The eminent producer and writer Dr. Herb Wong said of “Forecast,” "Hale Baskin has all the tools. She sings with admirable taste and control, rhythmic and harmonic sense, and clear insight into the jazz tradition. So dig!"
On the merits of her first recording, Hale was invited to appear onstage with Arturo Sandoval at the famed Oakland jazz club, Yoshi’s. That performance inspired Jim Harrington of the Oakland Tribune to write, “[I]t looks like we have a rising star in our midst. Remember Baskin's name. You'll be hearing it again soon.”
And now, thanks to “Classic,” we are hearing Hale Baskin’s name, and her music, again. Get ready for more. You’re going to like it.