(MacDee Music, 2008)

Before the audience at Unison Arts Center in New Paltz for this live 2006 recording, Woodstock vocalist and violinist Betty MacDonald delivers a well-strung set of some of jazz vocalist Billie Holidayโ€™s most venerable trademark tunes. Lady Dayโ€™s history and heartache become inspirational rainwater to โ€œI Cover the Waterfront,โ€ โ€œLover Man,โ€ and โ€œGod Bless the Child.โ€ On this, her third self-produced release, MacDonald as griot doesnโ€™t sweeten Holidayโ€™s life story. It wasnโ€™t easy for an outspoken and sensible African-American woman to create and survive in the music business in the 1930s, โ€™40s, and โ€™50s. But those attributes were the warp and woof of Holidayโ€™s endurance.

MacDonaldโ€™s rendition of โ€œBody and Soul,โ€ unlike Holidayโ€™s, which haunts and drags at the soul, has a wistful feel to it. But, more in synch and swing with Holiday, MacDonald, along with keyboardist Peter Tomlinson and bassist Jim Curtin, do up a medley that includes โ€œNice Work If You Can Get It,โ€ โ€œCome Rain or Come Shine,โ€ and โ€œPlease Donโ€™t Talk About Me When Iโ€™m Goneโ€ (MacDonald brings out her violin for a sweet solo on the last). With every song, MacDonald bends with Billie, shading the difficulties of her time on Earth (1915-1959) with supple notes, notably in Holidayโ€™s composition โ€œDonโ€™t Explain.โ€

MacDonald, who had performed Holidayโ€™s music prior to this concert, elevates Tribute by never focusing on sounding like her, just sounding for her. www.macdeemusic.com.

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