‘Glad Rag Doll’ Diana Krall
Diana Kralls Glad Rag Doll instantly grabs your attention, and not just because of the provocative cover art featuring the lovely singer decked out in, well, not much.
Its the songs, and T Bone Burnetts usual excellent production, that are the real draw here.
There are no lilting orchestras or dreamy string quartets followers of Krall have come to expect. Sure, her signature piano is there, along with her smoky vocals, but its Marc Ribots guitar that establishes a ghostly, vaudevillian feel to the mostly jazz songs Krall covers.
Everything comes together to serve the Prohibition-era theme of the record perfectly. Even a song written in the 1950s – Doc Pomus Lonely Avenue – seems right at home.
Let it Rain, a modern take on the 1925 Gene Austin song, sounds both utterly modern and timeless. Thats something thats not easy to pull off, but Krall does it in a way that seems effortless.
Throw in a tasteful amount of Mellotron, ukulele, banjo and bass and Glad Rag Doll rocks. It rolls. It swings. It shuffles. Its sexy, sly, intimate and exhilarating.