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Annie Ross

 
Artist: Annie Ross
  • Born: July 25, 1930, Surrey, England
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Vocal Music
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Sings a Song with Mulligan!," "A Gasser!," "Skylark"
  • Representative Songs: "Twisted," "Love for Sale," "Farmer's Market"

Biography

Not just the canary female whose dexterous vocals highlighted recordings by the vocal group Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, Annie Ross recorded more than a dozen albums of solid vocal jazz and appeared in many movies. Though she was the last member to join LH&R, she had been pursuing the same pioneering fusions of vocal music with bop delivery for several years before she joined Dave Lambert and Jon Hendricks.

Born Annabelle Lynch in Surrey, England, she moved to Los Angeles at the age of three, with the musical comedienne Ella Logan (either her mother or her aunt, according to differing accounts). By the age of five, she had begun acting and landed roles in the Our Gang series. She later studied acting in New York, then moved back to England where she began singing in nightclubs. Her recording debut came in Paris, with a quartet including James Moody. By 1952, Ross was back in New York and recording with most of the Modern Jazz Quartet for her first album, Singin' and Swingin'. Later that year, she recorded an album with vocalese pioneer King Pleasure. Though she featured on only four tracks of King Pleasure Sings/Annie Ross Sings, her reprise of tenor Wardell Gray's solo on the song "Twisted" became a vocalese landmark.

During 1953, Annie Ross toured throughout Europe with one of Lionel Hampton's best bands (including Clifford Brown, Art Farmer, Quincy Jones and Gigi Gryce). She stayed there for several years and recorded albums for HMV and Pye before returning to America in 1957 when a New York nightclub engagement beckoned. While there, she did a vocal session with Dave Lambert and Jon Hendricks, who were working on an album of Basie solos transposed for vocals. Realizing they shared much in common, Ross was invited to join the group, naturally christened Lambert, Hendricks & Ross.

An immediate success with their first album, 1957's Sing a Song of Basie, the trio revolutionized vocal music with a set of light-speed scats that treated words as mere tools in the construction of exciting feats of vocal musicianship. Relentless touring and rumors of a falling out with Hendricks finally led to Ross' exit from the band in 1962. (Though LH&R soon became LH&B with the addition of Yolande Bavan, it was quite clear that Ross' role had been an important one, and the group disbanded less than two years later.)

Even while involved with the group, Annie Ross had continued her solo career with few interruptions. In late 1957, she recorded Sings a Song with Mulligan for the World Pacific label, with West Coast stars Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker in support on a set of bright standards that highlighted her interpretive skills as well as a few flights of vocal fancy. Two additional LPs followed for World Pacific, A Gasser! (with Zoot Sims) and a straight rendition of the Broadway hit Gypsy. After LH&R split, she moved back to England and resumed her stage and film career, recording only three more albums during the '60s. A few years back in Los Angeles gained her parts in high-profile movies during the 1980s and '90s, including Superman III, Pump Up the Volume and Robert Altman's Short Cuts. For the latter film, she recorded several numbers for the soundtrack, and re-emerged with a new recording for 1995, Music Is Forever. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
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Actor: Annie Ross
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  • Born: Jul 25, 1930 in Mitcham, Surrey, England
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '60s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Short Cuts, Superman III, Straight on Till Morning
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Party's Over (1966)

Biography

The niece of musical comedy star Ella Logan (Finian's Rainbow), British-born Annie Ross was raised in America, where she secured work as a child actress. Ross was the kilted lassie who sings "Loch Lomond" in the 1937 two-reeler Our Gang Follies of 1938; she was also featured in Judy Garland's Presenting Lily Mars (1943). As a teenager, Ross studied drama in Manhattan, returned to a brief singing career in England, then emerged in the 1950s as a popular jazz singer; for many years she was a member of the influential American vocal group Lambert, Hendricks & Ross. She continued to appear in films as a character actress into the 1990s, including an amusing villainess turn in Superman III. As a solo stage performer, Ross was one of the stars of the Broadway musical revue Side by Side by Sondheim. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Annie Ross
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Annie Ross
Born 25 July 1930 (1930-07-25) (age 79)
Mitcham, Surrey, England, UK

Annie Ross (born 25 July 1930, Mitcham, London, England, UK) is a British jazz singer and actress, best known as a member of the trio Lambert, Hendricks & Ross.

Contents

Early years

Annie Ross was born as Annabelle McCauley Allan Short [1]in Mitcham, London, the daughter of Scottish vaudevillian parents Jack Short and May Dalziel Short (née Allan).[2] She was raised in Los Angeles, California by her aunt, singer Ella Logan. Her brother was Scottish entertainer Jimmy Logan.

Career

Ross is one of the early practitioners of a singing style known as vocalese, which involves the setting of original lyrics to an instrumental jazz solo. Her 1952 treatment of saxophonist Wardell Gray's "Twisted" is a classic example of vocalese. "Twisted" is perhaps her most famous song and has been recorded by Joni Mitchell, Bette Midler and many others. Her first album, Singin' and Swingin' (1952) was recorded in New York with members of the Modern Jazz Quartet. Other albums include Skylark (1956), Sings A Song With Mulligan (1958) with baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker on trumpet, A Gasser! (1959) with Zoot Sims, In Hoagland (1981) with Georgie Fame and Hoagy Carmichael, and Music Is Forever (1995) featuring Tommy Flanagan on piano.

She recorded seven albums with Lambert, Hendricks & Ross between 1957 and 1962. Their first, Sing a Song of Basie (1957), was to have been performed by a group of singers hired by Jon Hendricks and Dave Lambert with Annie brought in only as vocal consultant. When the first two tracks were recorded and deemed unsatisfactory, it was decided that the trio should attempt recording the material and overdub all the additional vocals themselves. The resulting album was a hit and the trio became an international sensation. Over the next five years, Lambert, Hendricks & Ross toured all over the world and recorded such classic albums as Lambert, Hendricks, & Ross! (aka The Hottest New Group In Jazz, 1959), Sing Ellington (1960), High Flying (1962), and The Real Ambassadors (1962), written by Dave Brubeck and featuring Louis Armstrong and Carmen McRae.

Annie left the group in 1962 and in 1964 opened her own nightclub in London. Annie's Room featured performances by such jazz luminaries as Joe Williams, Stuff Smith, Blossom Dearie, Anita O'Day, Jon Hendricks, and Erroll Garner as well as Ross herself. A compilation of Annie's performances from Annie's Room in 1965 was released on CD in 2006.

Ross is also an accomplished actress and has appeared in a number of films. As a child, she sang "Loch Lomond" in Our Gang Follies of 1938 and later played Judy Garland's sister in Presenting Lily Mars (1943). Other notable roles include Vera Webster in Superman III (1983), Mrs. Hazeltine in Throw Mama From The Train (1987), Loretta Cresswood in Pump Up the Volume (1990), Lydia in Blue Sky (1994), and most notably as Tess Trainer in Robert Altman's Short Cuts (1993). She also provided the singing voice for Britt Ekland's part in the cult classic The Wicker Man (1973). On stage, Ross appeared in Cranks (1955) in both London and New York, The Threepenny Opera (1972) with Vanessa Redgrave, The Seven Deadly Sins at The Royal Opera House, Kennedy's Children (1975) at Arts Theatre, London, Side By Side By Sondheim, and in the Joe Papp production of The Pirates Of Penzance (1982) with Tim Curry.

In the early 90s Annie starred in the horror movies Basket Case 2 and Basket Case 3: The Progeny

Annie Ross performs regularly on Tuesday nights at The Metropolitan Room at Gotham (34 W. 22nd St.) in New York City with Tardo Hammer on piano, Neal Miner on bass, Tony Jefferson on drums, and Warren Vache on trumpet.

Discography

  • Singin' and Swingin' (1952)
  • King Pleasure Sings/Annie Ross Sings (1952)
  • Tony Crombie And His Orchestra (1954) (Decca DFE6247)
  • Cranks (Original London Cast Recording) (1955)
  • Skylark (1956)
  • Sings A Song With Mulligan! (1958)
  • A Gasser! (1959)
  • Gypsy (1959)
  • Loguerhythms (1962)
  • Sings A Handful Of Songs (1963)
  • Annie Ross & Pony Poindexter (1967)
  • Facade (1967)
  • You And Me Baby (1971)
  • In Hoagland (1981)
  • Short Cuts (Soundtrack) (1993)
  • Music Is Forever (1995)
  • Cool For Kids (2001)
  • Annie Ross In Poland,1965 (2002)
  • Let Me Sing (2005)
  • Live In London,1965 (2006)

Lambert, Hendricks & Ross albums

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Sings a Song with Mulligan! (1958 Album by Annie Ross & Gerry Mulligan)
Skylark (1956 Album by Annie Ross)
The Way-Out Voices of Lambert, Hendricks and Ross (1961 Album by Lambert, Hendricks & Ross)

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Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Annie Ross" Read more

 

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