What the reviewers have to say . . .
Jazz/Cabaret
“For those of you new to town or living under a rock
for the last twenty years, Mady Kaye is Austin's
premier straight-up, can-do-it-all vocalist.
Equally comfortable laying down cabaret tunes or jazz
standards, on the (Austin Jazz Workshop) CD she sails
through Porter classics like Night and Day, Let's
Do It and Just One of Those Things. Kaye's live shows
are especially buoyant when she's tackling playful
material like Porter's. In her hands his high-minded
bawdiness really comes across with its intended
and sophisticated zing.”
— Rita DeBellis,
Calendars Editor, The Good Life
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Mady Kaye is Austin's premier straight-up,
can-do-it-all vocalist. |
Cabaret:
Tribute to Tin Pan Alley: Sweet History
For many, the term 'history lesson' suggests a dry and dusty audit
of some antique past, conducted by an ancient scholar almost as
dessicated as the bones of his subject. But for those who attended
the history lesson this past weekend at the Z Cabaret, the term
ought to possess a much livelier character. Make no mistake, it
was a history lesson: from the get-go, longtime local chanteuse
Mady Kaye made it quite clear that her "Tribute to Tin Pan
Alley" was intended to enlighted its audience regarding the
history of 20th-century American song. Via her opening aural collage,
she walked us back in time to the streets of New York City just
after World War I, where we could hear the music publishing house
"pluggers"--in-house pianists whose job was to play the
company's hits over and over and over--tickling the ivories for
passersby. And throughout the show, she filled our ears with names
and dates, the hired-gun composers and lyricists whose melodic creations
changed the face of popular music and the years in which they scored
some of their biggest hits. Yes, Kaye was holding class last week.
But when the subject of the lesson is as rich in romance and humor
as America's Golden Age of Song and your guide through the past
is as enthusiastic and appealing as Mady Kaye, well, then the lesson
is a pleasure.
Kaye is an unabashed fan of the Great American Songbook, and just
watching her fervor for it can be captivating. She dances her way
through the subject, gliding from anecdote to anecdote, spinning
from this composer to that, praising their work in turns light and
graceful. And occasionally she's even inspired to kick up her heels
literally, as in a sprightly Charleston number. Her elation pulls
us in and infects us.
But Kaye beguiles her audience with more than her broad smile and
playful patter. She is a skillful interpreter of Tin Pan Alley's
classics, and when she gives voice to these masterpieces of wit
and romance, she communicates all the craft, all the feeling that
has made these songs standards not merely because they brought a
standardized approach to song structure but because they are embraced
the world over as the standard for popular songs. Kaye's polished
technique makes every word clear, every clever phrase ring, even
when her delivery is hushed. In fact, some of the singer's most
effective work comes when she sings softly; her voice comes out
like a taut thread of silk: shiny but surprisingly supple and strong.
In one "class," Kaye couldn't possibly cover all the
great songsmiths of Tin Pan Alley, but with a program that included
such highlights of the Golden Age as Vincent Youmans and Irving
Caesar's "Tea for Two," Fats Waller's "Keepin' Out
of Mischief Now," Richard Rogers and Lorenz Hart's "Manhattan,"
George and Ira Gershwin's "They All Laughed," Cole Porter's
"You're the Top," Harold Arlen and "Yip" Harburg's
"Over the Rainbow," and Duke Ellington's "It Don't
Mean a Thing If it Ain't Got that Swing" (which swung with
a mightly jazz piano solo from accompanists Jeff Hellmer), Kaye's
"Tribute" provided a winning introduction to the subject,
a survey course right up our alley.
– Robert Faires, Arts Editor,
Austin Chronicle, Theater Review |

Her elation pulls us in and infects us.
Her voice comes out like a taut thread of silk.

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Cabaret
Mady Kaye Does a Ritzy Cabaret Act
"Mady's cabaret-style act is as lustrous as a polished gem...
Many performers who call themselves singers would do well to play
Mady's CDs. Not a syllable or intonation is lost, however complicated
the lyrics. And like Ella Fitzgerald, Mady almost always sings the
verse as well as the chorus. She does so with melodic and lyrical
precision as well as her trademark saucy attitude."
– Dot Fowler, Arts & Entertainment,
Lake Travis View, Concert Review |
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Jazz
Sophistication and Elegance
"It's no secret that the martini & cigar crowd has ruined Scott
Joplin's legacy for everyone, turning jazz into lounge - the elegant
and sophisticated into the pretentious and empty. Well, then, Mady
Kaye's blood is on their evening wear, because sophistication and
elegance are swooning under the spell of Kaye's cool, seductive
jazz stylings. And that's not just because Kaye sings "Autumn Leaves"
in French. Mais, non, mes amis. Neither is it the singers's own
Dixieland rent party, "Take it Home Someplace Else," nor her four
song ode to the seasons, which ends the album like Mother Nature
sweeping leaves from the Autumn trees. It's not even the strong
support of local jazz vets like Rich Harney, Spencer Starnes, A.D.
Mannion, Mitch Watkins, Tony Campise, John Mills, and Bob Meyer,
that makes Kaye sound like she's walking on clouds of her own design.
Okay, it's a lot of that - all that actually. That, and the fact
that Kaye sounds like she was born to duet with Mel Torme. Mainly,
though, it's that Kaye doesn't sing "lounge" music, she sings jazz
- lives each note, breathes every line, inhabits every song. And
when someone sings like that, it isn't cigar & martini music, it's
a champagne and caviar rendezvous for two."
– Raoul Hernandez, Music Editor,
Austin Chronicle, CD Review.
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Jazz
The Cream of the Crop
"Particularly for a town this size, Austin
is blessed with an uncommon crop of top-grade female jazz singers
- witness the annual "Women in Jazz" sessions, at which 10 or 12
fine and diversified vocal stylists are featured each year - but
for my tastes, the cream of this crop remains the elegant and variously
gifted Mady Kaye. Ms. Kaye has graced our city's music scene for
a number of years now since moving here from her native New York
state, notably during her long stint at the Hyatt Regency's lobby
bar, and she has developed a sizable corps of intensely loyal fans,
who'll be delighted to learn of a new CD. "Songs for All Seasons,"
a baker's dozen of standards and originals, marks Ms. Kaye's recording
debut as a songwriter and lyricist, for which she has contributed
a four-number song cycle done in collaboration with pianist Rich
Harney and Robert "Dude" Skiles. On all of the selections, though,
Ms. Kaye displays her unusual vocal agility and her unfailing good
taste in assocation with a pair of classy rhythm sections (pianist
Jeff Hellmer, bassist Spencer Starnes, and drummer A.D. Mannion
or pianist Rich Harney, bassist Paul Spikes and drummer Art Kidd)
and, on several selections, a horn section that includes saxists
Tony Campise and John Mills, trumpeter Bob Meyer and trombonist
Mike Mordecai. Ms. Kaye's CD will, of course, be available in record
stores around town, and the singer herself will be turning up in
various venues sandwiched between her numerous private enagements.
But in the meanwhile, it's certainly nice to have her elegant voice
floating down into our homes whenever we want it."
– John Bustin, West Austin News |
Ms. Kaye displays her
unusual vocal agility and her unfailing good taste. |
Jazz
A Reader of Fine Poetry
"...She can put a line through one color
change after another without a pop, wheeze, or break in the tone.
In ballads, her phrases run like a long white glove up the arm of
a tall woman. The voice itself sounds like liquid silver, and she
is always excitingly in tune. She declaims her text like a reader
of fine poetry, and she continues to improve. I listened to an early
tape, in which her virtues were already apparent... Her work of
the past ten years or so (since I've been listening) is emotionally
spot-on. As a jazz singer, she seems influenced most by cool and
bop, Jon Hendricks and Mel Torme among the mix. At least, it takes
brains for an artist to remind anyone of these singers. Her musical
intelligence is formidable. Charlie Parker's music attracts Kaye.
She has put words to at least two of his solos. On this CD, she
tackles the fiendishly difficult "Au Privave" at breakneck tempo.
It's like watching an elaborate needlepoint pattern realizing itself
in the time it takes to draw a breath. Awesome, witty precision.
Not the least of the CD's pleasures is Kaye's almost perfect sense
of repertiore. Excepting "Autumn Leaves," there's not one particularly
well known song here, and yet almost all are winners, as if anything
is needed to convince one of the depth of the American popular song.
Heavens! These are the discards? My favorite song on this album
includes the hilarious "Take it Home Someplace Else" and "So Hot"
and the pensive "Autumn Song."
– Steve Schwartz, New Orleans, Contributing Author, http://www.classical.net
For complete review see this site. |

Her musical intelligence is formidable. |
Jazz
The Feminine Mystique
"Mady Kaye's wide ranging set was arguably
the most complete of the evening as she bebopped through a Charlie
Parker tune and then delivered a bluesy "That's Life," featuring
a tremendous tenor solo by Tony Campise. She also reworked Johnny
Mercer's big-band standard "Traveling Light" into an effective small
ensemble piece. Kaye, always the model of pitch and intonation,
also created the concert's most entertaining segment as she brought
Campise center stage to sing with her on "Centerpiece." With Sandy
Allen adding to the vocal mix, Kaye and Campise brought down the
house with an extended duet combining humor and talent in equal
proportions. Kaye also successfully tackled improvisation of a different
sort than most vocalists attempt as she took suggested words - inlcuding
dinosuars, chile peppers, and puddles - from the audience and seamlessly
wove them into a rousing rendition of "Don't Get Around Much Anymore."
– Michael Point, Austin American Statesman, Concert Review:
"The Feminine Mystique: Women in Jazz Pack the Victory Grill" 6/23/97
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Kaye and Campise brought down the house
with an extended duet combining humor and talent. |
Jazz
Women in Jazz Dazzles
"...Mady Kaye's set was an entertaining and
intriguing one as she premiered material (including a sensitive
song cycle), from her upcoming CD "Songs for All Seasons." Sipping
hot tea between songs, Kaye was fighting a cold, though no one would
have known from the polished professionalism of her performance.
Kaye, however, is not just a pro, she's an excellent and evocative
vocalist who has the artistic audacity to add a Charlie Parker piece,
complete with harmonica solo, to her set."
– Michael Point, Austin American Statesman, Concert
Review:
"Women in Jazz Dazzles Audiences" 10/15/96 |
She's not just a pro,
she's an excellent and evocative vocalist. |
Vocal Instruction
Austin Chronicle Picks
Mady Kaye. A very talented musician and singer
in her own right, Mady Kaye is also a much sought after vocal instructor.
Beginners with career aspirations and professionals who just want
to keep their chops in shape are among her legion of satisfied students.
Kaye's main criteria for selecting students is that they share the
same delight in singing and professional attitude reflected in her
own work.
– Austin Chronicle's Critics Picks:
Best Professional Voice Instruction |
A much sought after vocal instructor. |
A Medley
"Mady Kaye, putting the Sssssss in sophisticated. Mady sings, struts
and shows us all how it's done."
– From the 1997 Jazz Festival Program Guide,
by Marie Black
"Miss Kaye has a sweet, strong voice and
precise diction... The rendering of ballads, show tunes, and some
surprises by the Mady Kaye Trio... is a joy."
– Howard Thompson, New York Times
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Putting the
Sssssss in sophisticated. |
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For more information contact Mady Kaye:
mady@madykaye.com
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512.458.9900
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