
Jimmy Scott wowed the crowd at the Charlie Parker Jazz Festival on Sunday in Tompkins Square Park (photo by twi-ny/mdr)
Blue Note
131 West Third St.
August 31 & September 1, bar $20, table $35, 8:00 & 10:30
212-475-8592
www.bluenote.net
www.jimmyscottofficialwebsite.org
Born in Cleveland in 1925, Jimmy Scott started singing as a young child. At thirteen, he developed Kallman’s syndrome, which stunted his growth and left him with a high-pitched, feminine voice. He eventually grew eight more inches, but his voice never fully matured — and has been dazzling jazz fans for decades. On Sunday at the Charlie Parker Jazz Festival in Tompkins Square Park, Scott, who turned eighty-five in July, treated a packed crowd to splendid versions of such standards as “It Had to Be You,” “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child,” and “Embraceable You,” which he had performed with Bird himself back in 1950. Although he is now confined to a wheelchair and can’t hit or hold the notes like he used to, Scott still displays his uncanny knack for vocal phrasing and emotional power, and his sense of humor was evident in his delightful between-song patter. However, in one poignant moment during “Motherless Child,” Scott looked up to the sky after singing, “I’m ready to go home.” Scott, backed by the excellent Jazz Expressions — T. K. Blue on alto sax, Alex Minasian on piano, Hillard Greene on stand-up bass, and Dwayne Broadnax on drums — will be celebrating his eighty-fifth birthday in style at the Blue Note with four shows over two nights, featuring special guest Gregoire Maret.