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Regina Belle Feb. 8-11 at the Iridium Jazz Club

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IRIDIUM JAZZ CLUB
1650 BROADWAY (Corner of 51st)
NEW YORK, NY 10023
RESERVATIONS: 212-582-2121
http://www.iridiumjazzclub.com/

8:30 & 10:30PM, Fri. & Sat. 3rd Sets AT MIDNIGHT

Feb. 8-11 REGINA BELLE

New Jersey native Regina Belle grew up singing gospel and soul while also playing multiple instruments. She then attended Rutgers University, where she studied both jazz and opera. Her big break came when she was introduced to the Manhattans and wound up touring with them and dueting with Gerald Alston on the group's “Where Did We Go Wrong" from their 1986 Back to Basics album. Both the song (which was produced by Bobby Womack) and her performance were great, and the music industry took notice, even if the public wasn't yet aware of this rising soul star.

She recorded her first solo LP, All By Myself, the next year, and her deep sultry voice wrapped itself around the opening single, “Show Me the Way," and took it near the top of the soul charts. She did even better two years later with the album Stay With Me and the single “Baby Come to Me," both of which hit #1. Sounding a bit like Anita Baker, but with trendier (and a bit less distinctive) production and lyrics, Belle continued to chart high over the next several years. She certainly boasted a beautiful voice, which was at its best when she was in all-out-belt mode, such as on her 1990 cover of Carvin Winans' “Make It Like It Was." It was a a gorgeous ballad and she absolutely nailed it vocally. She had more difficulty with some of her softer material, but she continued to develop into a solid song stylist over the 90s, even as the quality of her material wavered.

Belle also became a sought-after duet partner, working with Peabo Bryson on “Without You" and the #1 across-the-board hit “A Whole New World" and with Kool & the Gang's J.T. Taylor on the smash Soul cut “All I Want Is Forever."

Belle's album output slowed in the mid-90s and the hits stopped coming. Her 1998 album Believe In Me on MCA Records was critically acclaimed and showed her voice maturing nicely, but didn't sell as well as its predecessors. It was four more years before she again recorded, signing with Russ Freeman's Peak Records and releasing This is Regina, a solid disc that unfortunately came and went quickly but received some notice for her beautiful duet with Glenn Jones, “From Now On."

In July 2004, Belle released her second Peak CD, Lazy Afternoon, an album of jazz and soul standards produced by George Duke. The disc is the most difficult vocal challenge of Belle's career and serves as a real test of her interpretive skills. She mostly passes the test on the album, as her covers of the title track, the swingy “What Are You Afraid Of" and the classic Sinatra ballad “Fly Me to the Moon" are effective, if not definitive. She is clearly more comfortable and engaging on the soul cuts on the disc, especially a medley of Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes' “The Love I Lost" and the Isley Brothers' “For the Love of You," with gorgeous backing vocals by Detroit group Perri.

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