A Modern Art Jazz Times review
She ranks among the four or five finest female jazz vocalists on the planet (it wouldn’t be overstatement to ere cognize her as Anita O’Day’s rightful heiress), and on the rare occasion she performs stateside, the crowds are invariably SRO. So it’s hard to fathom why Claire Martin, a household name in her native U.K. and a perennial British poll winner, remains so under appreciated on this side of the Atlantic. Maybe it’s because those visits are so rare, or perharps because her albums aren’t always easy to find. Well, with the advent of iTunes, almost her entire output is just a click away. As a starting point, you’ll be hard pressed to do better than her latest release.
Though Richard Rodgers, notoriously finicky about re-interpretations of his songs would surely be enraged by the Everything I’ve Got Belongs to You which opens A Modern Art, Martin’s impishly funkified treatment is marvelous. The rest of the play list bows to more contemporary compositions, most notably Mark Winkler’s tenderly distressing lowercase and Cy Coleman’s delightfully wry Everybody Today Is Turning On. Lauren Kinhan’s affecting As We Live and Breathe is ideally mated with a sharp, Bossa reinvention of Steely Dan’s Things I Miss the Most.
Equally superb are two self- penned additions. Edge Ways provides brilliant, backhanded condemnation of the chronically self absorbed, while the title track offers delicious appraisal of modern society’s celebrity obsession and the corresponding devaluation of genuine artistry.















