Dim the Lights is the 43rd album by American jazz vocalist Mark Murphy. It was recorded in 1996 when Murphy was 64 years old and released by the Millennium label in Canada in 2004. This album is a collection of standards performed in duets with pianist Benny Green.
Background
Mark Murphy considered himself a rhythm singer.[1] He explained why he chose Benny Green for this recording: "Benny Green has been playing with Ray Brown, and he's one of the new hot musicians coming out of the newer trends in jazz where they are listening to the later 50s music of rhythmic players like Ramsey Lewis and Ahmad Jamal. And to us it's old but to them it's brand new".[1] Green was a protégé of Oscar Peterson and had worked with Art Blakey and Betty Carter.[1]
Dim the Lights was recorded in Calgary in 1996 but not released for over three years in a limited edition (September 1999).[1] The year of the recording Mark Murphy won the Downbeat readers' poll for Best Male Singer.[1][2] Murphy won again in both 2000 and 2001.[1] The album was released again in 2004, eight years after the original recording.[3]
Recording
Murphy experiments with overdubbing on track 4. The three tunes of the medley are overlayed so that you hear the vocal tracks of all three songs at once, including three different scat choruses.[1]
Murphy contributes original lyrics to two tunes, "Dim the Lights" and "Time all Gone".
Scott Yanow includes Dim the Lights in his list of Murphy's "other worthy recordings of the past 20 years" in his book The Jazz Singers: The Ultimate Guide.[5]
Murphy biographer Peter Jones thought the results of the overdubbing of the three songs of the medley in track 4 to be a muddle.[1]
In a DownBeat article from 1997, Dan Ouellette called Dim the Lights "a superb duo recording".[2]
Writer Jim Santella called Dim the Lights a "highly recommended album" in a review in 2000.[6]
In A Biographical Guide to the Great Jazz and Pop Singers, Will Friedwald said, "Dim the Lights teams him with Carter veteran Benny Green, and with his usual plethora of ideas, some brilliant and some bizarre".[7]
^ abcdefghJones, Peter (2018). This is hip: the life of Mark Murphy. Popular music history. Sheffield, UK ; Bristol, CT: Equinox Publishing. pp. 124, 137, 139. ISBN978-1-78179-473-9.
^ abOuellette, Dan (April 1997). "Mark Murphy The Start of Something". DownBeat: 27.
^ abcLarkin, Colin (2002). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Colin Larkin, Muze UK Ltd (eds.) (Concise 4th ed.). London: Virgin. pp. 899–900. ISBN978-1-85227-923-3.
^Santella, Jim (January 1, 2000). "Mark Murphy. Dim the Lights". AllAboutJazz.
^Friedwald, Will (2010). A Biographical Guide to the Great Jazz and Pop Singers (Kindle ed.). New York: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 352. ISBN978-0-375-42149-5.