IF YOU’D LIKE TO HEAR THE GREAT HOLIDAY CLASSICS WITH REFRESHING 2012 TWISTS, TURNS AND EXTRAORDINARY ARRANGEMENTS - JUST LISTEN TO “AN ANGEL CITY CHRISTMAS” BY THE ANGEL CITY BIG BAND FEATURING SENSATIONAL VOCALIST BONNIE BOWDEN. I CAN’T SAY ENOUGH ABOUT THIS DELIGHTFUL COLLECTION.THE VERY HIP TRIBUTE TO MY OLD BOSS GENE AUTRY IS THE FIRST TUNE HEARD WITH BONNIE AND THE BAND COMBINING “HERE COMES SANTA CLAUS/SANTA CLAUS IS COMING TO TOWN” ALONG WITH A TIP OF THE STETSON TO GENE THROUGH THE OPENING BARS OF “FROSTY”. THE TOM KUBIS ARRANGEMENT OF “LET IT SNOW” LETS THE BAND AND BONNIE TAKE A JUBILANT AND VERY CREATIVE SLEIGH RIDE. “WHITE CHRISTMAS” IN UP-TEMPO, BIG BAND FASHION?YOU BET - AND IT WORKS. THE DYNAMICS ON “O HOLY NIGHT” WILL BRING GUARANTEED GOOSEBUMPS. YEARLY, MY OLD FRIEND MEL TORME WAS ALWAYS HAPPY TO ANNOUNCE THE MOST RECENT VERSIONS OF HIS CLASSIC “THE CHRISTMAS SONG.”I KNOW HE WOULD HAVE BEEN DELIGHTED WITH BONNIE BOWDEN AND THE BAND’S FINE READING OF HIS GEM. YES, GEM IS THE OPERATIVE WORD FOR “AN ANGEL CITY CHRISTMAS.” Chuck Southcottwww.ChuckSouthcott.com
Bonnie Bowden and the Angel City Big Band just made Christmas 2011 better and brighter than ever! What's more...I'll still be playing their CD next holiday season, too...and the seasons after that. They have put some zing in my listeners' holidays! Chuck Cecil www.JazzandBlues.org
"An Angel City Christmas" is a gift that keeps on giving in touching versatility and jolly charisma. Not only does this sunny band of west coast pros swing it jazzy, play it smooth but they are graced by that “angel of song,” Bonnie Bowden. The soulfully sweet timbre many of us fell in love with early on via her Sergio Mendes and Brasil ’77 days and more recently for her scintillating renderings of the American Popular songbook, is indeed eternally vibrant as she fronts the festivities with uniquely rhythmic pizzazz on “Let it Snow” and “Winter Wonderland.” In a Doris Day mood, Bonnie can break your heart with her balladry on “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” while she intoxicatingly invites a la Ann-Margret with “What Are You Doing New Year’s Eve?” Her homage to Ella on “The Christmas Song” is spellbinding. It is said they don’t make consummate good music like this anymore, even for Christmas, but La Bonnie Miss Bowden and the Angel City Big Band make this not only a magical outing worth playing all 2011 holiday season long but a refreshingly new perennial favorite. Robert-Allan Arno, The Soul of the Voice, Ltd. Forever Fifth Dimension
This recording is outstanding on several levels...Bonnie Bowden's singing is wonderful, the band and arrangements and the concept of these Christmas songs is just great. I have heard these tunes all my life...but this CD recording takes these songs to a higher level. Congratulations to all that had a part in this outstanding recording. Pat Longo www.PatLongoBigBand.com
Of all the fine Christmas albums released this year, none are better or more beautiful than Bonnie Bowden’s “An Angel City Christmas”. Peter Marshallwww.MusicOfYourLife.com
Looking for a perfect gift for that hard-to-please big band fan on your list? Consider "An Angel City Christmas," the new CD from the Angel City Big Band, featuring vocalist Bonnie Bowden. It's 13 tracks of yuletide favorites along with "What Are You Doing New Year's Eve?" and the quasi-seasonal "I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm." The Big Band Academy is pleased to recommend this disc with our highest enthusiasm.David Bernharthttp://BigBandAcademy.blogspot.com
Bonnie Bowden's “An Angel City Christmas”, featuring the Angel City Big Band, a West Coast orchestra. The album features Bonnie warmly singing Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas, Let It Snow and I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warmamong others. Two instrumental charts of note: O Holy Night by Ralph Carmichael and a swinging I'll Be Home for Christmasby Gregory Yasnitsky. Straightforward, up-tempo holiday charmers sweetened by Bonnie's pop touch. You'll find this one atAmazon Marc Myers www.JazzWax.comThe first time Bonnie Bowden sent a copy of her new CD 'An Angel City Christmas' with The Angel City Big Band to us, it mysteriously disappeared in the mail. (That's understandable as it is a very good album - enjoy Mr. Postal Person.) The second time was a charm and we are adding tracks as I type! Grab a copy for yourself at CD Baby An Angel City Christmas feat. Bonnie BowdenBob Perry www.ThePenthouse.fm
The Angel City Big Band featuring Bonnie Bowden, An Angel City Christmas If you’re looking for a collection of Christmas songs well sung and played in nicely crafted arrangements, this one meets your criterion. The arrangers include Tom Kubis, John LaBarbera and Ralph Carmichael, the singer is the unfailingly cheerful and gratifyingly in-tune Bowden, and the songs are all proven classics. If for nothing more than Bowden’s astonishing high-register unison vocalese with the trumpets on “Let it Snow,” this would be one of my new seasonal favorites. Over the years, I have grown tired of “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” and “The Christmas Song,” Nat Cole and Mel Tormé notwithstanding. Bowden and the Angel City crew of skilled studio craftsmen restored them for me. She does a great job with the verse to “What Are You Doing New Year’s Eve. Doug Ramseywww.ArtsJournal.com/Rifftides
Bonnie Bowden's CD is exceptional. The dynamics, style and concept are terrific. I especially enjoyed her interpretation of “Indian Summer”. Many vocalists can't help but get strident as they reach for the notes. She kept a smooth and in control style that is perfect for that tune and that arrangement. I was surprised at her “playing first trumpet” with the band...a great touch. The band was very tight and the tempos were right in the pocket. That in itself is a winner!Sammy Nesticowww.SammyNesticoMusic.com The Miracle Springs Hotel in Desert Hot Springs came alive to the sounds of music and the thrilling voice of the internationally renowned Soprano Bonnie Bowden last Sunday, July 24th. Well-known Cabaret producer Irwin Rubinsky brought one of his star attractions to audiences of the west valley with a show called “Classical Meets Broadway”. The show featured the beautiful singing voice of Bonnie Bowden who blended opera, Broadway classics and standards with songs from motion pictures into a wonderful afternoon of first-rate cabaret entertainment. Bonnie paid tribute to the music of such diverse composers as Gershwin, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Puccini, Lloyd Weber, Sondheim, Schubert, and such singers as Barbra Streisand, Doris Day, and Andrea Bocelli, among others. Her repertoire included classic opera, Broadway show tunes from “Damn Yankees”, “A Little Night Music” and even a song from the Alfred Hitchcock movie “The Man Who Knew Too Much”, “Que Sera, Sera”. This song was performed as an interactive number where Bonnie moved through the audience soliciting singing participation from various audience members. Bowden’s show is a polished class act. Her singing style is smooth and confident and features a lovely lilting coloratura soprano. She sang in French, Italian, Latin and English to the delight of the more than one hundred guests who listened enraptured until the closing number and then erupted into a standing ovation, pleading for more. Beautiful and gracious, entertainer Bonnie Bowden gladly attended a “meet and greet” moment with the audience members at a dessert and champagne gathering following her performance. It quickly became an autograph and picture-taking session for her old fans as well as new fans. It was a wonderful afternoon of top-rated talent performing in Desert Hot Springs. Jack Lyonshttp://DesertLocalNews.com/archives/3683 Bonnie Bowden's big break came at an unlikely place: Disneyland. As she grabbed the microphone and the Tomorrowland rock band rose from its underground stage, her voice caught the attention of Brazilian pop star, Sergio Mendes. She quickly became the only American in Sergio's band. She traveled the world, sang solos with Sergio, became virtually fluent in Portuguese and even passed on some of her Portuguese prowess to Steve Wonder who wrote the song "Bird Of Beauty", one verse of which is in Sergio's native tongue. Stevie wanted to make sure he sang the lyrics precisely so he invited Bonnie to join him in the recording studio and help him perfect his pronunciation. The song came out beautifully and Bonnie's face beams as she remembers Wonder telling her how he loved her singing on Mendes' album "Love Music". Eventually Bonnie branched out on her own, recording numerous albums and performing solo. With a voice both powerful and smooth, Bonnie has become a local favorite drawing a varied crowd with her shows that have as she puts it "something for everybody". And she can definitely sing almost anything in any language, from pop to classical to Broadway to jazz. Music legend Sammy Nestico, best known for his arrangements for the historic Count Basie Orchestra, will testify to that. One night while performing with the Frank Capp Juggernaut Big Band, Nestico loved Bonnie's singing so much that he passed on a special arrangement of "Indian Summer" that jazz icon Sarah Vaughn performed decades earlier.Bonnie’s upcoming holiday album "An Angel City Christmas" will be out in December. Lex Kumarwww.WestlakeMagazine.com Bonnie Bowden's "Music of the Night": Wonderful. She is pure class...a versatile Angel of Song. Dvorak/Mills: Such a sensitive yet powerful artist...Miss Bowden is breathtaking! "I love Being Here With You!": A-plus swingin'. We love being here with Bonnie! Robert-Allan Arno, The Soul of The Voice Ltd. Forever Fifth Dimension In the rarefied realm of performing artists, one generally finds a niche where one's strength lies and explores options within that range. But for the lyric coloratura, that range is far and wide. As the performer who adds "color" and interpretive depth to a piece, the vocal acrobatics demanded are limited to her ability to capture the nuances and harmonic variances which most enhance the composition. The natural artist, one whose vocal range is a natural gift rather than a trained commodity, is a rare gem among gems. Her high notes float naturally as if pulled from the air itself. Her low notes are rich and soulful. Her name, in the Conejo Valley, is Bonnie Bowden. Elaine Yamasaki www.WestlakeMagazine.com