With his new album, Kurt Elling - the outstanding male vocalist in
jazz today — celebrates a legendary legacy outside the jazz world. 1619
Broadway - The Brill Building Project honors a locale that the London Telegraph
called "the most important generator of popular songs in the Western
world." Even for the ceaselessly inventive Grammy-winning singer-lyricist,
it's a hugely unexpected step, and one guaranteed to further solidify his
reputation for bold innovation and superb craftsmanship. "Having done so
many projects about my love for Chicago," Elling says, "I wanted to
make something that spoke of my love for New York." The two cities define
his career. Elling developed his craft in Chicago, and recorded several of his
early albums there—including his debut. Close Your Eyes, which catapulted him
onto the national stage and earned the first of his many Grammy nominations.
(All told, every one of Elling's ten albums has been nominated for at least one
jazz Grammy—a streak unequalled in Grammy history.) But in fact, Elling and his
family have lived in Manhattan since 2008, and 7679 Broadway - The Brill
Building Project is his response to that experience. "I didn't want to
cover any of the New York songwriters jazz people usually go to: the Gershwins,
Rodgers and Hart, Cole Porter, all of whom I love; I wanted to reach out for
something different. The vast collection of songs coming out of The Brill
Building seemed like a gold mine." A honeycomb of offices and
claustrophobic studios at 1619 Broadway, in the heart of midtown Manhattan, the
fabled Brill Building at its peak served as the creative home for more than 160
tenants associated with the pop-music industry. Of these, the vast majority
were composers and lyricists. From the mid-1930s through the early 1970s the architects
of the "Brill Building Sound” churned out a preponderance of the popular
songs that three generations of America grew up hearing and singing. The term
"Brill Building Sound" describes the string of rock-and-roll
masterpieces that defined the genre and signaled its first maturing. These
instantly recognizable songs came from such songwriting teams as Leiber and
Stoller ("Stand by Me"), Goffin and King ("Will You Still Love
Me Tomorrow?"), Mann and Weil ("You've Lost That Lovin'
Feeling"), and Bacharach and David ("Walk On By"). Such teams
crafted hit after hit while working in a physical environment with paper-thin
walls that allowed the writing teams to hear and learn (or steal) from each
other. It became a fertile and competitive hothouse of cross-influence and
collaboration. Even as Elling began researching this material, he "knew
this would be a challenge, because the Brill is so much associated with
doo-wop"—not his usual neighborhood. For help, he turned to a friend: hit songwriter
and educator Phil Galdston ("Save the Best for Last"). "This is
really his metier, and he did encyclopedic research," says Elling.
"We must have touched on a couple hundred songs before we narrowed it
down. Phil did a masterful job of codifying first-tier, second-tier, and
third-tier choices. Several of my choices, like the classic "On
Broadway," were foregone conclusions; some, like that hip lick recorded by
The Coasters, "'Shoppin' for Clothes," gradually percolated to my attention."
And, indeed, the reworking of that novelty "B-Side" fails right into
Elling's penchant for spoken-word fun, games and hipster jive. Another surprise
choice is the Goffin-King exercise in social satire, "Pleasant Valley
Sunday." As Elling recounts, "I had summarily dismissed that one
until it had time to simmer on its own, and I found an idea on how to handle
it." This version mixes John McLean's retro-lectric guitar,
authentic-sounding sound clips of the 60s, and an audio profile that recalls
Ken Nordine's classic "Word Jazz." The result is a trippy and
darker-than-the- original ride through a neighborhood that the Monkees first
visited in 1967. Some jazz fans may raise an eyebrow at these song choices, but
they'd do well to remember that throughout the 20th century, artists from Louis
Armstrong to Sonny Rollins and Herbie Hancock have successfully transformed one
era's pop songs into another generation's jazz standards. And throughout his
career, Elling has worked to expand the jazz repertoire, sprinkling his albums
with songs made famous by (among others) The Zombies and King Crimson. Some of
the tunes on 1619 Broadway - The Brill Building Project were actually written
years after their composers had left the Brill entirely. For example, Elling
explains, "Carole King, like many other signatories to The Brill Sound,'
never had an actual office at the Brill. So it doesn't pay to be too didactic
about any of this. The Brill is both a physical reality and a mental construct;
and because of that, I felt comfortable casting a wide net." That wide net
contains more than rock and doo-wop. As Elling's inspired song choices reveal,
the Brill was a hive of music activity from the mid-30s on, housing the
creative efforts of Irving Berlin, Sammy Cahn, Johnny Mercer, Harry Warren, and
more. One survey estimates that of the 1200-odd songs performed between 1935
and 1948 on the Your Hit Parade broadcasts (radio and then television), more
than 400 of them— nearly a third of the total—came from Brill tenants. Thus the
inclusion here of such great American standards as "I Only Have Eyes for
You" (Warren/Dubin, 1934) and the Sinatra signature "Come Fly With
Me" (Cahn/Van Huesen, 1957). For that matter, even Duke Ellington (through
his long-time publisher Irving Mills) leased space in The Brill, as did Nat
"King" Cole and a host of other Swing Era stars. Elling pays heed to
that corner of the Brill as well, with the Duke's "Tutti for Cootie,"
written to showcase the Ellington band's unsurpassed trumpeter Cootie Williams.
And on the flip side, Paul Simon, represented here by "American
Tune," still keeps an office at the Brill. On track after track, Kurt
Elling and Laurence Hobgood, his collaborator for two decades, illustrate the
creative fireworks that have marked their work together from the start. Some
tracks, such as "On Broadway" and "You Send Me," glow with
atmospheric re-harmonizations (either audacious or subtle), unexpected rhythms,
and jazz sensibility. Others, such as "I'm Satisfied" and "A
House is Not a Home," artfully distill the essence of the original through
a jazz filter. But all of them manage to strike a balance of tradition and
modernity that will by now be familiar to Elling's longstanding admirers, on a
program of songs guaranteed to bring new fans to the party.
The party
takes place at 1619 Broadway, as The Brill Building Project provides the
inspiration for intrepid exploration of the great jazz singers of our time.
Kurt Elling,
vocals, Grammy-winner is among the world's foremost jazz vocalists. He has won
every DownBeat Critics Poll for the last fourteen years and has been named
"Male Singer of the Year" by the Jazz Journalists Association eight
times in that same span. Every one of Elling's ten albums has been nominated
for a Grammy. Elling's rich baritone spans four octaves and features both astonishing
technical mastery and emotional depth. His repertoire includes original
compositions and modern interpretations of standards, all of which are
springboards for inspired improvisation, scatting, spoken word, and poetry. The
New York Times declared, "Elling is the standout male vocalist of our
time." The Washington Post added, "Since the mid-1990s, no singer in
jazz has been as daring, dynamic or interesting as Kurt Elling. With his
soaring vocal flights, his edgy lyrics and sense of being on a musical mission,
he has come to embody the creative spirit in jazz." Elling was the
Artist-in-Residence for the Singapore and Monterey Jazz Festivals. He has also
written multi-disciplinary works for The Steppenwoif Theatre and the City of
Chicago. The Obama Administration's first state dinner featured Elling in a
command performance. Elling is a renowned artist of vocalese-the writing and
performing of words over recorded improvised jazz solos. The natural heir to
jazz pioneers Eddie Jefferson, King Pleasure, and Jon Hendricks, Elling has set
his own lyrics to the improvised solos of Wayne Shorter, Keith Jarrett, and Pat
Metheny. He often incorporates images and references from writers such as Rilke,
Rumi, Neruda, and Proust into his work. The late poet and Bollingen Prize-winner
Robert Creeley wrote, “Kurt Elling takes us into a world of sacred particulars.
His words are informed by a powerful poetic spirit." Said Robert Pinsky,
former Poet Laureate of the United States, "In Kurt Elling's art, the
voice of jazz gives a new spiritual presence to the ancient, sweet and powerful
bond between poetry and music." Kurt Elling has toured vigorously
throughout his career, thrilling audiences throughout the world, in that time
he has led his own ensemble and has collaborated with many of the world's
finest orchestras. Elling's latest recording, 1619 Broadway - The Brill
Building Project, honors and celebrates the locale that the London Telegraph
called "the most important generator of popular songs in the Western
world." Elling's interpretations and signature arrangements of songs like
"On Broadway," "A House Is Not a Home," and "So Far
Away" make this record a must-have for those in search of current great
singing. Even for the ceaselessly inventive Elling, 1619 Broadway is another
unexpected step, and one guaranteed to further solidify his reputation for
thrilling innovation and superb craftsmanship.
No comments:
Post a Comment