Patricia Barber: Nightclub & Modern CoolNightclub
Premonition 90763-1 (2 LPs). Patricia Barber, prod.; Michael Friedman, exec. prod.; Jim Anderson, eng.; Bob Ludwig, mastering; Doug Sax, mastering (LP). AAA? TT: 51:20
Performance ****
Sonics ***** Modern Cool
Premonition 90761-4 (BD-A). Patricia Barber, prod.; Michael Friedman, exec. & surround prod.; Jim Anderson, eng. & surround eng. Robert Gatley, asst. surround eng. ADD? TT: 67:49
Performance ****
Sonics ***** Much as the music world at large supremely values so-called original compositions (as if . . . but then that's a discussion for another day), it takes a special talent to make a song written by someone else—in common parlance, a cover—your very own. Take Burt Bacharach and Hal David's "Alfie," from the 1966 film with Michael Caine in the title role. Recorded for the soundtrack by Cilla Black, and later cut by everyone from Babs and Bill Evans to the Delfonics and Sarah Vaughan—not to mention a pair of laughably bad versions from Cher—the song is nothing if not overexposed. Bacharach's own soaring arrangement for the film sticks in the world's collective head. For lesser performers, that alone would be more than enough to keep them well clear of trying to cover it. Yet Chicago's Patricia Barber, at least in her late-'90s/early-'00s heyday, wasn't just any singer. With her leathery alto, her stealth piano playing, and her unique ability to emote without being emotional, she has a way with covers that puts her among the very greatest interpretive artists in jazz. On her sixth album, Nightclub, recorded and mixed by the great engineer and producer Jim Anderson, Barber re-creates in the studio the kind of smoky, downbeat set that, by 2000, she'd been playing for years at Chicago's Green Mill Cocktail Lounge. The album is dedicated to the Green Mill and to Barber's other regular Chicago venue, the Gold Star Sardine Bar.
Patricia Barber's Modern Cool is an audiophile staple. Its enduring ubiquity is testament to its sound quality and general musical appeal, and I easily immersed myself in comparisons of the two-channel (24-bit/192kHz PCM) and 5.1-channel (24/96 dts-HD Master Audio) tracks of this completely remastered Blu-ray Audio edition with the stereo-only SACD/CD (Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab UDSACD 2003). All were played in an Oppo BDP-95 universal Blu-ray player, which let me switch between the BD's stereo and surround tracks on the fly, with minimal interruption.
The good news is that, in two channels, the Blu-ray is superior to the SACD: more open and detailed, with stabler imaging and a more believable soundstage. The BD-A's low end is equally weighty but better defined—and, remarkably, Barber's voice sounds even more realistic in timbre and presence.
With the 5.1 tracks, I was struck by how much the already superb stereo soundstage opened up, with each of the instruments more clearly delineated. Striking, too, was the increased spaciousness and power in the bass, a well-known attribute of the original. There was some spill of percussion instruments into the rear channels, but, at least in "Constantinople," this was intentional.















