Amazingly, this early-'00s CD is only
Tom Lellis' fourth album; by that time, a jazz veteran as talented and expressive as
Lellis should have had a much larger catalog. But then, the music world can be a mind-boggling, frustrating place, and talent isn't always rewarded the way it should be.
Lellis sounds like he is making up for lost recording time on this ambitious disc, which finds him being backed by Holland's
Metropole Orchestra (conducted by American jazzman
John Clayton). Being an orchestral project,
Skylark is more arranged than
Lellis' small-group efforts. But the musicians still get in some meaningful solos, including trombonist
Bart Van Lier and tenor saxophonist
Leo Janssen. Of course,
Lellis' vocals are the main attraction, and the singer really shines on a variety of material.
Lellis, much to his credit, isn't the sort of jazz vocalist who is content to sing overdone Tin Pan Alley warhorses exclusively and do them the same old way -- he is much too ambitious for that type of knee-jerk approach.
Lellis won't exclude a song just because it was written in the '30s or '40s, but unlike a lot of the derivative
Sarah Vaughan and
Ella Fitzgerald wannabes who labels are so quick to record, he looks for great songs from the '60s, '70s, '80s, and '90s. On this CD (which has been sold on
the Metropole Orchestra's website),
Lellis turns his attention to songs that range from
Hoagy Carmichael's "Skylark" to
Chick Corea's "Straight Up and Down" (which he wrote lyrics for) to
Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Falando de Amor." Brazilian music is a priority on this CD, and the singer revisits "Milton's Moment" (
Lellis' ode to Brazilian great
Milton Nascimento) and
Toninho Horta's "Mountain Flight."
Skylark is enthusiastically recommended to fans of post-bop vocal jazz.