Vocalist
Jacqui Dankworth is as radiant as ever on As the Sun Shines Down on Me, an album of recorded in 2002 and 2003 but seeing American release in 2004 through Candid Records. Joined by virtuosic guitarist Mike Outram, her bassist brother
Alec Dankworth, and percussionist
Roy Dodds,
Dankworth interprets 15 old faves, keeping the mood light and tasteful throughout. Opening with a reading of "Blue Moon" could be a risk -- it's a well-known, perhaps even overplayed song. But the version here is so perfectly rendered, so gentle from the folky guitar line through the light brush work, that the song is reborn. While she's an astute jazz vocalist with perfect phrasing, one of the nice things about Sun Shines Down is how it integrates
Dankworth and her band's training with the accessibility of pop. There's an easygoing universality about the album that's brought out in the slight bossa nova tinges on a reading of
James Taylor's "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight," a traditional take on "In a Sentimental Mood," or a unique, brief but beautiful "Hi Lili Hi Lo" that finds
Dankworth dueting with Outram's thumb piano work. Other standout moments include a shimmering "Man From Mars" (originally by
Joni Mitchell), more stellar percussion work from
Dodds on "Teach Me Tonight," and versions of both
Stevie Wonder's "Knocks Me off My Feet" and
Bob Dylan's "I Threw It All Away" that find a peaceful, inviting voice inside the originals' established frames. ~ Johnny Loftus