Friday, September 24, 2010
Stardust Melodies
With more than 1500 recordings, Hoagy Carmichael's "Stardust" is one of the most recorded songs in the history of recorded music. Inspired by Bix Beiderbecke, Carmichael wrote the song as a medium-to-up tempo instrumental, and he first recorded "Star Dust," as the title was written then, in 1927. Mills Music published the music as "Stardust," in January, 1929. The publishing house subsequently contracted Mitchell Parish to add lyrics and published this version later that year.
The first commercially-successful recording of "Stardust," that of Louis Armstrong in 1931, remains one of the most well-known and popular. Ken Burns featured this recording prominently in his documentary, Jazz, and Armstrong biographer, James Lincoln Collier described it as "... the epitome of pop songs in a great age of pop songs."
"Stardust" was frequently recorded during the big band era. I am aware of two versions by the Benny Goodman orchestra, one up-tempo along with a slower version. The flip side of the 1936 Goodman version presented below is a Tommy Dorsey version of the same song. Goodman also recorded it in a small group session featuring electric guitar pioneer, Charlie Christian. Arguably the definitive big band recording is the one that Artie Shaw made in 1940.
"Stardust" continued to be a popular choice for the "crooners," both male and female, of the '50s & '60s. Nat King Cole made a hit recording in 1956, and Frank Sinatra recorded a remarkable version in 1961. Sinatra's version is unusual because the introduction supplies few hints of the song's melody and he sings only the verse of the song and omits the chorus altogether.
The lyrics of "Stardust" include the phrase "leaving me a song that will not die." It's doubtful that Mitchell Parish realized that those words would come to characterize his lyrics and the music for which he wrote them. Although composed over 80 years ago, "Stardust" continues to be recorded by artists from all sorts of genres as well as artists who weren't even gleams in their grandfather's eyes when the song was written.
Although usually considered a pop or jazz song, Willie Nelson countrified "Stardust" up a bit in the late '70s. The final video is crooner reincarnate, Michael Buble'.
If you wish to learn more about Hoagy Carmichael and all the other wonderful songs he wrote, check out the fine Hoagy Carmichael biography, Stardust Melody, by Richard Sudhalter.
In the early '90s the Indiana Historical Society in collaboration with the Smithsonian released The Classic Hoagy Carmichael, a 3-CD set with booklet of recordings of many of Carmichael's songs recorded over the years by various artists. Although currently out of print, used copies can be found easily enough. The 3 CDs contain six versions of "Stardust."
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Survivor: Anita O'Day
As she had plenty of both during her life and musical career, Anita O'Day appropriately titled her memoir, High Times, Hard Times. Born Anita Belle Colton in Chicago in 1919, she had a tough childhood: an absentee father, a physically proximate, but emotional distant mother, and the poverty endemic during the Depression years. She left school early and got her start singing for audiences via the dance marathon/walkathon circuits so popular during the Depression. At some point during this period she changed her name to O'Day (one story is that O'Day is pig latin for what she hoped to make lots of: dough). She was eventually hired on as the girl singer for the Gene Krupa big band and achieved considerable popular, if not financial success (although the song was a million seller, O'Day was payed a flat fee for her performance, and received no royalties), with "Let Me Off Uptown." The song was also a something of a cultural landmark as it paired her with African American trumpeter Roy Eldridge, a controversial move during the Jim Crow years.
Following her stint with Krupa, O'Day also sang with Woody Herman and Stan Kenton. With the later she recorded another million seller, "And Her Tears Flowed Like Wine. As the big band era waned Anita went solo and had up and down levels of success through the late '40's and early '50's. In 1956, she signed with jazz impresario, Norman Granz's new Verve label. During this period O'Day achieved some of her greatest musical successes. Granz recorded her with both large and small combos. Among her notable albums on Verve for Granz were Anita Sings the Most, which paired her with the Oscar Peterson Trio along with her long-time drummer/collaborator/drug supplier, John Poole. Retitled Sings for Oscar, this album has been re-released on one disc with Pick Yourself Up, which the authors of the Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings deem O'Days "iconic" album.
Anita received lots of attention in 1958 with the release of Jazz on a Summer's Day, a documentary about the previous year's Newport Jazz Festival that captured (unbeknownst to the singer) her take on Sweet Georgia Brown and Tea for Two. Although not as widely acclaimed as some of her contemporaries, this performance demonstrated O'Day's creativity, swing, and energy were on par with anyone's. Throughout her memoirs, O'Day consistently refers to herself as a song stylist rather than a singer. This performance makes obvious what she meant.
There were lots of high times of another sort, as it was during the 1950's that she developed a heroin addiction that would plague her for 14 years. O'Day recounted her ups and downs in her autobiography, High Times, Hard Times, which was first published in 1981. It is a "tell all" account, and although there are some less than kind comments about others, most of the dirt that is dug is about the author.
If you want to know more about Anita O'Day, but don't want to take the time read her autobiography, she was the subject of a biographical film, Anita O'Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer released in 2009.
O'Day continued to perform and record almost to the day of her death in 2006. Her last album was released in 2007 and was fittingly titled, Indestructible.
Friday, September 10, 2010
RIP Abbey Lincoln
Maybe not a giant, but the jazz world lost a pretty large figure last month in the passing of Abbey Lincoln. Born Anna Marie Woolridge in Chicago in 1930 and reared in rural Michigan, Anna Marie moved to L.A. to begin her professional career as a lounge singer. Around 1955 she changed her name to Abbey Lincoln, and during that year she released her debut album, “Abbey Lincoln's Affair. A Story of a Girl in Love.” Along with Julie London, featured previously, in this blog, Lincoln appeared in the Jayne Mansfield/rock 'n roll vehicle, The Girl Can't Help It. Unlike Julie London, whose style didn't change much over the course of her recording career, Abbey Lincoln's music varied greatly through the years.
The video below is from The Girl Can't Help It, and features Abbey in a gown previously worn by Marilyn Monroe.
Later in the 1950s Lincoln began to collaborate with legendary drummer Max Roach (whom she later married) and moved in a much "jazzier" direction. One of her important albums of this period was Abbey is Blue, which featured, in addition to Roach, other prominent jazz musicians of the time, including Stanley Turrentine, Wynton Kelly, and Philly Joe Jones. Although the album included some "standards," e.g., "Lost in the Stars" (Kurt Weill & Maxwell Anderson) & "Come Sunday," (Duke Ellington) this is not a pop album.
Abbey singing "Come Sunday" from Abbey is Blue:
In 1960 Lincoln and Roach collaborated the groundbreaking jazz and civil rights album, “We Insist! Freedom Now Suite”, but during the rest of that decade she concentrated on a semi-successful acting career. After divorcing Roach in 1970, she spent most of the '70's honing her songwriting skills and did not release another album in the U.S. until 1979's People in Me." Her profile remained low during the 1980s until she signed with Verve in the early 1990s, where she remained for the rest of her recording career. Her last album for Verve, Abbey Sings Abbey, released in 2007, was a retrospective and reworking of some of her earlier recordings.
The next two videos are from Abbey's Verve period. The first is her composition, "Down Here Below," from A Turtle's Dream, and features Kenny Barron on piano and Charlie Haden on bass subtly supplemented by strings. The second video is "Windmills of your Mind" from her next to last album, Over the Years, which the Amazon reviewer suggested might have been the best album of her career. This song features her rhythm section: Brandon McCune (p), John Ormond (b), and Jaz Sawyer (d) plus Joe Lovano on tenor.
The video below is from The Girl Can't Help It, and features Abbey in a gown previously worn by Marilyn Monroe.
Later in the 1950s Lincoln began to collaborate with legendary drummer Max Roach (whom she later married) and moved in a much "jazzier" direction. One of her important albums of this period was Abbey is Blue, which featured, in addition to Roach, other prominent jazz musicians of the time, including Stanley Turrentine, Wynton Kelly, and Philly Joe Jones. Although the album included some "standards," e.g., "Lost in the Stars" (Kurt Weill & Maxwell Anderson) & "Come Sunday," (Duke Ellington) this is not a pop album.
Abbey singing "Come Sunday" from Abbey is Blue:
In 1960 Lincoln and Roach collaborated the groundbreaking jazz and civil rights album, “We Insist! Freedom Now Suite”, but during the rest of that decade she concentrated on a semi-successful acting career. After divorcing Roach in 1970, she spent most of the '70's honing her songwriting skills and did not release another album in the U.S. until 1979's People in Me." Her profile remained low during the 1980s until she signed with Verve in the early 1990s, where she remained for the rest of her recording career. Her last album for Verve, Abbey Sings Abbey, released in 2007, was a retrospective and reworking of some of her earlier recordings.
The next two videos are from Abbey's Verve period. The first is her composition, "Down Here Below," from A Turtle's Dream, and features Kenny Barron on piano and Charlie Haden on bass subtly supplemented by strings. The second video is "Windmills of your Mind" from her next to last album, Over the Years, which the Amazon reviewer suggested might have been the best album of her career. This song features her rhythm section: Brandon McCune (p), John Ormond (b), and Jaz Sawyer (d) plus Joe Lovano on tenor.
Friday, September 3, 2010
The Problem with Categories: Madeleine Peyroux
Probably no one personifies the difficulties in trying to categorize music more than Madeleine Peyroux (pronounced like the country). Her voice has been compared to Billie Holiday. She co-wrote most of the songs on her latest album, but she has covered songs written or popularized by everyone from Hank Williams to Frank Sinatra to Leonard Cohen to Bessie Smith and covered Edith Piaff in French. She is profiled on AllAboutJazz.com, but records for a label mostly known for bluegrass and "roots" music. She's even been know to sport a top hat.
Peyroux's background is as varied as her music. Born in Athens, GA, she spent her early years in Brooklyn, Southern California, & Paris. Her music career began on the streets of the French capital, and she later toured Europe with the Lost Wandering Blues & Jazz Band.
Her debut album, Dreamland, released in the U.S. in 1996 sold an impressive 200,000 copies and was received with critical acclaim as well. In the wake of the success of Dreamland, Peyroux was in great demand on the festival circuit and as an opening act for some big-name artists. Rather than rushing back into the recording studio, however, she waited until 2004 to release her next album, Careless Love. In subsequent years, she has released two more albums for Rounder Records, Half the Perfect World and Bare Bones. All three of these Rounder albums were produced by veteran Larry Klein, perhaps best known as Joni Mitchell's producer and ex-husband. Although Peyroux's music is difficult to pigeonhole, one thing for certain is that she is a song stylist; she applies her own unique stamp to all her songs, even ones that have been recorded many times before. One of my favorite songs on Careless Love is Hank Williams' "Weary Blues." She changes the phrasing, slows down the tempo, and gives the song a "bluesier" feel. If you heard the two versions and didn't pay attention to the lyrics, you might not recognize them as the same songs.
This next video is an old one, featuring Madeleine covering Billie Holiday in her street musician days with the Lost Wandering Blues & Jazz Band. The song appears in a little more polished version on Dreamland.
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