The
lure for many in the audience at Luba Mason’s show Thursday night at
the Regattabar was the hope that her husband, salsa giant Ruben Blades,
would join her onstage. Blades did, albeit briefly.
“I’ve got to remember how to do this,” joked the singer, Harvard Law
School grad and politician, who recently stepped down as Panama’s
minister of tourism. “I haven’t shared a room with a musician in - I
don’t know how long. But I’m not complaining,” Blades added.
Nor was the crowd, which discovered that Broadway and TV veteran
Mason had more than enough vocal juice and stage charisma to keep
things interesting.
Except for the Latin rendition of “Happy Birthday” the band played
for Blades, who turned 61 Thursday, this wasn’t a salsa event. The
inspiration came from farther south - Brazil - and it provided the
perfect introduction to New York native Mason, a relative newcomer to
the concert circuit.
You’re more likely to know blond-haired Mason from TV, where she has
appeared on “Law & Order” and “NYPD Blue,” or in one of eight
Broadway shows, including “Chicago,” where she appeared opposite Brooke
Shields. Mason and Blades met as cast members in Paul Simon’s musical
“The Capeman.”
At the Regattabar, any over-the-top Broadway tendencies were toned
down as Mason dug into material, mostly her own, from her new CD,
“Krazy Love.” Credit for exquisite accompaniment goes to her band -
pianist Dario Eskenazi of Paquito D’Rivera’s band, bassist Jimmy Haslip
of the Yellowjackets and Brazilian musicians guitarist Sandro Albert
and drummer Marco Da Costa.
Mason showed she’s more than capable of belting it out, which she
did on an appropriately sassy version of “Love for Sale.” But more
often than not she was in a romantic, sentimental mood, with her sultry
voice the perfect vehicle for a cover of “Skylark” and a gorgeous
Spanish-language rendition of “The Look of Love.”
But the Brazilian songs were Mason’s most sensual, and her
understated duets with Blades highlighted that strength best. Blades’
slightly rough-hewn Portuguese vocals on “E Com Esse Que Eu Vou”
underscored Mason’s feathery singing in English, and that magic was
reprised by the pair with even more sugar on Antonio Carlos Jobim’s
classic “Corcovado (Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars).”
B. Young, Boston Herald
Sweet nights - and stars - indeed.
LUBA MASON, with RUBEN BLADES - KRAZY LOVE - CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE THE CD
At the Regattabar, Cambridge, Thursday, July 16, 2009.
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