Andy Bey's bass-baritone voice has aged over the last thirty-odd years,
but it's aged well; he now sings in a husky drawl that sounds all the
more warm and intimate for being a bit ragged around the edges. When he
goes into falsetto, as on "Midnight Blue," athe sound is so
dark that you don't recognize it as falsetto at first. This album peaks
early on with "Like a Lover," a wistful love song with only
the gentlest, sparest guitar accompaniment. But there are many other beautiful
moments, the best of which always come on the slow numbers: the Billy
Strayhorn classic "Pretty Girl," on which Bey sounds like Billy
Eckstine with a weathered patina to his voice, and the surprising Nick
Drake cover, the moody and intense "River Man." His vocal version
of Thelonious Monk's "Straight, No Chaser" is fun, but it tends
to expose the limitations of his range; however, he makes the uptempo
"Believin' It" work beautifully -- Geri Allen's edgy, modernist
piano contrasts nicely with Bey's effusive, bop-inflected delivery.
(by Rick Anderson, All
Music Guide)
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