In her sixth album, Soliloquy, Sylvia Brooks combines her talents as a classically trained actor, vocalist, and storyteller to create a deeply expressive jazz recording centered on the emotional complexities of the human experience. Collaborating with longtime arranger and pianist Christian Jacob, Brooks blends thoughtful interpretations of jazz standards with compelling original compositions, including songs inspired by real-life stories such as A Letter to Sophie and Lizzie’s Dance. Supported by an accomplished ensemble, the album moves seamlessly between vulnerability, drama, and hope, with Brooks’ theatrical delivery and lyrical sensitivity giving each performance remarkable depth. Reviewer Dee Dee McNeil praises Soliloquy as a richly dramatic and emotionally engaging work that could easily translate into a captivating stage production.
Female Jazz Vocalists You Need to Be Listening to Right Now
Jazz has always had an individual and moody storytelling quality. Instrumentalists have been instrumental (pun intended) in crafting its history, but vocalists are the ones who often close that gap between music and listener. Via the choices they make in phrasing,...



