Elisabeth Kontomanou

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sunny 00:00 Tools
Fever 00:00 Tools
I Put a Spell On You (Screamin’ Jay Hawkins) 00:00 Tools
A Time for Love (Johnny Mandel) 00:00 Tools
A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing (Billy Strayhorn) 00:00 Tools
At Last (Marck Gordon & Harry Warren) 00:00 Tools
Summer (Elisabeth Kontomanou) 00:00 Tools
Siren Song (Gustav Karlström) 00:00 Tools
The Good Life 00:00 Tools
Dreams of Gold (are Dreams for You) (Gustav Karlström) 00:00 Tools
Come Sunday (Duke Ellington) 00:00 Tools
Farewell (Gustav Karlström) 00:00 Tools
I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free 00:00 Tools
Waitin' for Spring 00:00 Tools
Back To My Groove 00:00 Tools
I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues 00:00 Tools
Moanin' Low 00:00 Tools
The Bird In Me 00:00 Tools
L.O.V.E. 00:00 Tools
You're My Thrill 00:00 Tools
Ayanna Left New Orleans and went to Mexico 00:00 Tools
I'll Never Be The Same 00:00 Tools
Will Love Stay In My Heart 00:00 Tools
Travelin' Light 00:00 Tools
Nature Boy 00:00 Tools
Duke Ellington Sound Of Love 00:00 Tools
We'll Be Together Again 00:00 Tools
Crazy He Calls Me 00:00 Tools
Deep Song 00:00 Tools
What A Life 00:00 Tools
Everything I Have Is Yours 00:00 Tools
Summer 00:00 Tools
The Abuse 00:00 Tools
More Than You Know 00:00 Tools
Somebody's On My Mind 00:00 Tools
God Is Love 00:00 Tools
L.O.V.E 00:00 Tools
Rosebud 00:00 Tools
The Blues Are Brewin' 00:00 Tools
Where I'm Coming From 00:00 Tools
Black Angel 00:00 Tools
No More 00:00 Tools
People Get Ready 00:00 Tools
You've Changed My World 00:00 Tools
If I Ruled the World 00:00 Tools
Secret of the Wind 00:00 Tools
I'm A Fool To Want You 00:00 Tools
My Love 00:00 Tools
I've got the world on a string 00:00 Tools
Don't explain 00:00 Tools
Tell Me More & More & Then Some 00:00 Tools
Late Cold Night 00:00 Tools
I Hadn't Anyone 'Till You 00:00 Tools
Good morning heartache 00:00 Tools
Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child 00:00 Tools
Every Body Was Born Free 00:00 Tools
Farewell (Live At Arsenal) 00:00 Tools
Trouble of the World 00:00 Tools
For All We Know 00:00 Tools
Peace On Earth 00:00 Tools
Sack Full of Dreams 00:00 Tools
What’s New 00:00 Tools
Every time we say goodbye 00:00 Tools
Were You There 00:00 Tools
Yesterdays 00:00 Tools
Time on my hands 00:00 Tools
The Midnight Sun 00:00 Tools
Amoureuse 00:00 Tools
The very thought of you 00:00 Tools
A Quiet Place 00:00 Tools
Il est mort le soleil 00:00 Tools
I Put a Spell On You (Live) 00:00 Tools
Lush Life 00:00 Tools
Et Maintenant 00:00 Tools
Dreams Of Gold 00:00 Tools
Waitin´ for Spring 00:00 Tools
Fever - Elisabeth Kontomanou 00:00 Tools
All alone 00:00 Tools
Le Temps 00:00 Tools
Siren Song 00:00 Tools
I Put A Spell On You 00:00 Tools
Sur ma vie 00:00 Tools
Chantez ! 00:00 Tools
A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing 00:00 Tools
Sur un air de Navajo 00:00 Tools
Milord 00:00 Tools
Come Sunday 00:00 Tools
Duke Ellington´s Sound Of Love 00:00 Tools
Les Anges de la nuit 00:00 Tools
Pickwick: If I Ruled the World 00:00 Tools
At Last 00:00 Tools
We´ll Be Together Again 00:00 Tools
I´ll Never Be The Same 00:00 Tools
What's new 00:00 Tools
Dreams of Gold (Are Dreams Of You) 00:00 Tools
A Time For Love 00:00 Tools
Everybody Was Born Free 00:00 Tools
Siren Song (Live) 00:00 Tools
Ou sont tous mes amants ? 00:00 Tools
A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing (Live) 00:00 Tools
Farewell 00:00 Tools
What's Knew 00:00 Tools
La Valse a mille temps 00:00 Tools
Dreams Of Gold (Are Dreams For You) 00:00 Tools
A Time for Love (Live) 00:00 Tools
Tell me more and more and then some 00:00 Tools
Come Sunday (Live) 00:00 Tools
At Last (Live) 00:00 Tools
Aliki 00:00 Tools
What's New? 00:00 Tools
I hadn't anyone till you 00:00 Tools
Where I Wanna Be 00:00 Tools
Summer (Live) 00:00 Tools
Farewell (Live) 00:00 Tools
Duke Ellington's Sound of Love 00:00 Tools
Dreams of Gold (Are Dreams for You) [Live] 00:00 Tools
The Story Teller 00:00 Tools
Clear Blue Skies 00:00 Tools
Will Love Stay In My Heart (Theme Of Orpheo Negro) 00:00 Tools
La Valse à mille temps 00:00 Tools
Embrace 00:00 Tools
What a Difference a Day Makes 00:00 Tools
Will Love Stay In My Heart (Originally Titled Manha de Carnaval) 00:00 Tools
What's Knew? 00:00 Tools
Were You There When They Crusified My Lord? 00:00 Tools
What's Knew ? 00:00 Tools
Spring 00:00 Tools
Où sont tous mes amants ? 00:00 Tools
Lost Letter to a Nomad 00:00 Tools
I'm Fool To Want You 00:00 Tools
I Hadn't Anything 'till You 00:00 Tools
Dream of gold (are dreams of you) 00:00 Tools
Don't Explaine 00:00 Tools
Sunny (Bobby Hebb Cover) 00:00 Tools
The Light of You 00:00 Tools
Pace on earth 00:00 Tools
All Music Kinds 00:00 Tools
Tell Me More and More (and Then Some) 00:00 Tools
Incantation 00:00 Tools
Youre My Thrill 00:00 Tools
Ne me quitte pas I 00:00 Tools
Colors 00:00 Tools
Body and soul 00:00 Tools
What's new ? 00:00 Tools
Sunnyland 00:00 Tools
Wainting For Spring 00:00 Tools
Hands 00:00 Tools
Round midnight 00:00 Tools
You've changed 00:00 Tools
Love that never ends 00:00 Tools
Very Thought Of You (The) 00:00 Tools
Midnight Sun (The) 00:00 Tools
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"All the great singers I've been listening to, got so familiar and so close to me through the power of their art.I feel I know each one of them personaly.They are family.These wonderful spirits were able to fill the emptiness of my heart and soul and gave a meaning to my life." When people ask where I come from, I say I’m a child of the universe. I normally feel at home anywhere so long as I’m free to move around and explore! —Elisabeth Kontomanou Back To My Groove is a major albeit hard won breakthrough for vocalist/composer Elisabeth Kontomanou. Born in France to a father from Guinea (West Africa) and a mother from Greece, Elisabeth has put it all on the line on this album. Nothing she has done before this equals what she has achieved here. This is more than a great singer singing great songs. This is literally life. My new album revolves around personal things like my suffering in the past and my hopes for the future. There are old songs on it as well as more recent material. I’d say that unlike the last two albums I did, which featured covers of jazz classics, this album is simply a lot more personal. The songs I wrote for it tell the story of my life and while the episodes it touches on aren’t always funny, I think there’s an optimistic feel to things overall. —Elisabeth Kontomanou Everything comes together wonderfully. The songs are more than head tunes. These are full compositions with sections and deep harmonies that move beyond one or two chord vamps. And the lyrics: so honest, so bold, so real. Autobiographical to the bone, on “What A Life” Elisabeth recalls a difficult childhood because she was different. That little vocal vamp at the end of the song giving evidence that she is past the pain and can talk about her scars without bitterness. Listen to “Where I’m coming From.” It’s an essay. When she asks “was this on earth or some other planet / I haven’t figured this out yet,” man, I said: goddamn, this sister is going all the way there—“there” being the state of self identification of alienation and the realization that just maybe, as Sun Ra always said, just maybe we are not from here; after all here is such an alienating space. When she got to “wait for me out there, turn around to see where I’m coming from” I was utterly convinced: Elisabeth has crafted an seminal statement at a time when most female vocalists are just trying to get a pop hit. And then the band takes off, exploring all the textures of fearlessly soaring into inner space. It’s collective improvisation at a level smooth jazz can never fathom. That’s a significant part of the total package; the band plays full out. They are not backing Elisabeth. They are accompanying her. Step for step. Significant in this regard is the sturdy foundation provided by long time musical cohort Thomas Bramerie on bass. “Black Angel” is another burner but this time there are no lyrics, just sounds. Elisabeth’s voice chanting with a harp in the mix complementing Elisabeth’s opening. This sounds like something Pharoah was doing back in the seventies, especially because Sam Newsome on soprano saxophone is exquisite in both his timing and the texture of his notes counterpointing the beauty of Elisabeth’s gritty improvisations. This is cutting edge jazz, jazz of the rarest sort. Then there is the ghostly “Late Cold Night.” Guitarist Marvin Sewell who has played with oodles of folk including Cassandra Wilson is all up, around and under this tune with those creepy obbligatos that are as sinister as a rattlesnake’s snare. Elisabeth is no petite, cute, girly sounding ingénue. This is a full-voiced, full-bodied woman, fierce in her determination to make it as a jazz singer. On “Late Cold Night” Elisabeth is singing about New York City where she went to hone her craft. It used to be called paying dues. You know, I left with a very negative image of the States, not of jazz. They’re two very different things. I’m planning to go back to New York, in fact, not necessarily to live there again, but to continue studying jazz. New York is where jazz is alive, where the people who inspire me are. New York is also where I experienced real poverty and misery, of course. I had to do all kinds of odd jobs to survive. I used to go and get food hand-outs at church, but I hung on in there and I always did my gigs come what may. I had this group back then, the Fort Green Project named after the local neighbourhood in Brooklyn where I was living at the time. They were a bunch of musician friends from Fort Green. I performed with them until I ran away from home with my kids and ended up living in a hostel for the homeless in Harlem. But no matter all the juggling I had to do - because the hostel closed early in the evening - I still managed to get out there and sing at night! —Elisabeth Kontomanou Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.