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Singer-pianist has versatility, musicality on her side

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Special To The Times

Jazz singer-pianist Carol Welsman, who made her Los Angeles debut Tuesday night at Feinstein’s at the Cinegrill, is a talented Canadian with a string of Juno Award nominations dating to the mid-’90s. She was co-host of the 2000 Billboard/BET on Jazz Awards with Herbie Hancock and was named vocalist of the year in Canada’s 2002 National Jazz Awards.

More than the already-distinguished career, however, it was Welsman’s sterling performance that raised the question of why it has taken so long for her to make a Southland appearance.

At a time when the jazz record business is scouring nooks and crannies in search of young singers with the potential to succeed Diana Krall, Welsman is that rarest of discoveries: a fully formed artist with the musicality, imagination and looks to cruise to the top of the jazz vocal genre.

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Much of the material in Welsman’s lengthy set was drawn from her recent Savoy Jazz album, “The Language of Love,” a collection varied enough to display her versatility.

On medium tempo songs such as “Just One of Those Things” and “I Got Rhythm,” she sang with a body-moving sense of swing, enlivening the lyrics with impressive scat segments delivered in unison with her piano lines.

On slower numbers -- especially a touchingly intimate “A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square” -- she balanced the poetry of the words with the flow of the melody in a fashion rarely heard in jazz singing.

There’s a certain irony in the fact that an artist capable of competing musically with Krall is another Canadian. But Welsman clearly has what it takes to do the job.

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Carol Welsman

Where: Feinstein’s at the Cinegrill, Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, 7000 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood

When: Tonight through Saturday, 8:30 and 10:30 p.m.

Price: $35, plus $30 minimum beverage or dinner purchase

Info: (310) 769-7269

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