IMOKENT MEDIA

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Internationally published journalist and photographer residing in Canada. My work has appeared in major publications throughout Switzerland, Australia, US, UK and Canada. My primary focus is the entertainment industry, with a more specific focus on the music scene. I have also interviewed authors, film producers and actors. I am available as a publicist on a select basis for people in the entertainment industry. I am not interested in recruiting artists who already have a relationship with the publicists or labels that I work with closely. I am not a booking agent. My publicity efforts include writing bios, press releases, and web content (not web design). In addition I can serve as a liaison between media and my client. All work is done on a 50% retainer basis with the remainder due immediately upon completion of the project. You can view my regularly published interviews with recording artist, film producers, music producers, actors and authors at the following sites: www.jazzreview.com, www.popmatters.com, www.growthtrac.com, www.phantomtollbooth.com, www.jazzpolice.com, www.sightmagazine.com.au

Friday, February 09, 2007


Most jazz ensembles or bands have one or two primary composers but not so with the Tierney Sutton Band as I discovered during my recent conversation with the lead vocalist Tierney Sutton. All five musicians and Sutton present ideas to the group and work collaboratively on original compositions and new arrangements for songs previously recorded by others.

“Everybody has veto power over something that we play or an idea that we have. All the (musicians) in the band are very creative and knowledgeable people. They are always striving to find something different than they have found before,” says Sutton.

“These guys play on a lot of great records with a lot of great players. Our drummer (Ray Brinker) played on Genius Loves Company the last album recorded by Ray Charles, (while) Kevin Axt has played with Natalie Cole and Chuck Mangione. All of these guys have played on a million rock, country, television and film projects. For them to come to the table and say, ‘I want to be part of something that is different than anything that I have played or heard,’ means that there is a lot of stretching that goes on,” says Sutton.

As is the case with all the members of the band, Brinker has a broad musical vocabulary that includes working with such diverse people as Joe Cocker, David Lee Roth, Anita O’Day, Randy Brecker and Bonnie Raitt. He has also contributed to countless television and movie scores including the movie The Alamo. Axt’s resume also includes artists such as Melissa Manchester, Dave Koz and David Benoit. Trey Henry the other bass player in the band has worked with the likes of Maynard Ferguson, Henry Mancini, Herbie Hancock and Ray Brown.

When it came to creating her most recent CD On The Other Side, released on February 7th, Sutton says all of the band members determined that they were going to push the envelope. “When we went into Capitol to record it we were all scared. I know I was frightened because I wasn’t sure that I was ready to sing some of the stuff that we had decided we were going to do. I always have complete confidence that they can do anything but I am often not sure that I can keep up with the corner into which they have pushed me. When we got into the studio we all felt that we were onto a different page in the creative process,” she says before adding, “What makes me happy is being involved in that kind of process with people that I respect, regardless of the results and whether I succeed or fail.”

With more than one hundred collaborative new arrangements under their collective belts the members of the band, do not lack for confidence however this time the stakes were higher. “There are always a few (arrangements) that take longer to bake but this time around it was the execution that was risky because it was the first time that we created arrangements that we didn’t even know how many bars there were. (In prior arrangements) the t’s were always crossed and the i’s were dotted. Some of this stuff is really freeform and might go in a very different direction,” she says before listing examples, “You Are My Sunshine”, and the first “Get Happy” (two versions recorded for this CD) are perfect examples of that (freeform). There is a freedom to some of the arrangements (to the point) where we did not know how long the sessions would be. The forms are different ways of playing the songs every time that we do them.”

Elaborating further on the chart style the band adopted for this CD Sutton says, “In typical improvisation you take some kind of form (and it might be) a chord progression of a certain number of bars. You know when the A Minor 7 is going to the D 7 and to the G Major. You know when that is going to happen. What we have done is create a communication process between us where the chords are going by but there is not a standard amount of bars between them. One or the other of us, sometimes two of us at a time will determine when the song progresses. The decision will be made in the moment and not predetermined.

As the Tierney Sutton Band continues to interpret and create new arrangements for standards, they do so with a confidence and enthusiasm that almost throws caution to the wind. When asked if they ever consider it to be a risk to perform a standard very closely associated with another performer Sutton does not hesitate in responding, “Our philosophy about that is if we are worried about it then it better be a really new and different treatment like the way we did “The Lady Is A Tramp,” (I’m With The Band—2005). We should take the song somewhere so far from where the original version is that the (listener) won’t be able to retain in their head the original one anymore. It’s not that we want to erase (the original composition), we just don’t want to be compared to it. I have said onstage that when we do “Route 66” (Something Cool—2002), in my mind no good comes from comparing me to Nat King Cole. That’s not the idea here. We want as little of that to go on as possible.”

Several elements have contributed to the fresh sound that the Tierney Sutton Band brings to old standards, the length of time the members have been together, their diverse musical backgrounds and the fact they are excellent musicians fronted by Sutton’s powerful vocals.

Although Sutton is reluctant to use words that have long since lost their meaning through society’s stereotyping she does so in this case in answering my question concerning what has contributed to the band’s success. “I think we have been a huge success simply because we have been able to keep this together for so long. That to me is success. Our growth professionally as a band has been really organic and I think that is very healthy,” says the Grammy nominated singer (2005 I’m With The Band, Best Jazz Vocal Album).

Sutton continues, “Now we are at a point where we make a living doing this music. We do this band as a priority meaning if any of us have other responsibilities we consult with each other and ask, ‘What is going on in July and is that a reasonable time for me to be away to take this other thing for two weeks?’ The growth of that and getting it to this point has been very slow like growing a plant.”

Aside from the challenges of being a jazz musician or vocalist trying to establish your career Sutton does see some advantages to taking a longer slower road to reach this point in her career. When she first signed with Telarc, her son was only two years old and she was committed to being at home more during those formative years. With the label’s support, she kept her tours down to between a week and ten days. She says, “From a parent’s point of view I am really grateful. From an artist’s point of view I am also very grateful because I was able to develop the stage part of it slowly, the talking to the audience part of it and the music part of it.

“The success part of it is that we have stayed together and have made a bunch of records that show what we are about to a certain degree,” she says.

Sutton says, “When I think of success I think of being a part of a process that is healthy, works and of us leaving a record of what we have done. We have done that even if we were to break up tomorrow and couldn’t do this anymore for some reason.” That they have and they have done it with style and excellence.

http://www.tierneysutton.com/

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The Smooth R&B Vocals of a Calgary Diva


When I first met jazz vocalist Johanna Sillanpaa we were seated in the Good Earth Café near downtown Calgary. In between sips of her coffee and nibbling on her light breakfast, the Swedish singer with the porcelain skin and delicate features talked about her 2006 release of the CD Good Life.

When I wrote Good Life (the CD), it took a long time for me to finish that CD. Some of it was my own neurotic and some of it my own perfectionist (tendencies). I wasn’t ready to let it go yet and finally said, ‘That’s enough release it now and move on.’ That’s the thing as a writer you are only going to get better as you grow. The worst thing you can do is to stay on something for so long that by the time you release it, it becomes dated. My goal is to write as much music as I can and to keep recording.

The CD Good Life is at times introspective with the artist’s moodier darker side surfacing in “One More Day”. “It is sometimes easier to think about hard stuff and get inspiration from that. I find that sometimes it is easier to tap into whether it is love relationships or friendships,” she says.

It is a bit ironic that the title track “Good Life” a song that was the last one to be added to the CD is at the other end of the emotional scale from “One More Day”. “I always have a tendency to lean towards the darker brooding stuff so I said to Sheldon Zandboer one day that I just needed a lighter song. I needed a song that makes you feel good and is more upbeat. We were playing and that one was born out of improvisation,” she says.

“When these songs were born it was definitely the mood of the music that brought on the lyric and the melody. Some of the songs started with, ‘Let’s just get together and jam. Let’s start with a blank page, no words, no chords, nothing.’ You just start playing something and then an idea is born. You find a verse then you move on to a chorus and you build it like that. That is a very loose form of writing. I really like that because you are able to be as creative as you want to be and you can go anywhere,” says Sillanpaa.

Improvisation plays a big role in the music of Johanna Sillanpaa. “Ideas are born out of improvisation all of the time and we do not remember them,” she laments. As a reminder she says, “I don’t know how many times I phone home to my answering machine and find twenty messages that are just me (and she breaks into some vocalese). I do a lot of corporate events and that are intended to be straight up jazz but the musicians always take it a little bit, outside what is written. We always come up with these crazy arrangements on the spot. I would like at some point to do a record of not so standard standards.”

The flip side of Sillanpaa’s writing personality delves into deeper themes and involves a much more structured approach to writing. Songs such as “On The Other Side” surfaced when a friend was grieving over the loss of her father. The songwriter pondered what is on the other side of death and do we get an opportunity to be reunited with out loved ones.

I want to thank you, my baby/For your constant faith in me/Through all of life’s journeys/ You were always inspiring me/ You hold the key to this heart of mine,” Sillanpaa gently coos the words to “Thank You” a spectacular song. Sheldon Sandboer’s whispering piano chops accompany her, while Rob Vulic’s drums can be heard quietly in the background.

For as much as Good Life produced tracks are R&B shaded jazz tunes, the Sillan & Young quartet that she co-founded with guitar virtuoso Aaron Young is more organic and stripped down. She says, “The Good Life music is very mellow and I feel that I have room as a singer to be flexible.” The quartet on the other hand has more of an alternative jazz sound that leans toward folk. The ensemble also features extraordinary pianist Sheldon Zandboer whose every chop you want to drool over. Bassist Kodi Hutchinson and drummer Tyler Hornby complete the quartet. The group is in the midst of its second major recording.

Sillanpaa says, “I have really found a home with this particular quartet. We try to work together as much as we can. They are there for the music and you can feel it. What brings the best out of me is I know that the musicians onstage with me love the music as much as me.” The singer feels she has found that with the quartet.

As jazz takes, root in this western Canadian city Sillan & Young have become buzzwords in the music community. When an artist’s career is still in its infancy, the musician/singer usually invites all their friends and distant cousins to their concerts to keep from performing before empty chairs. Sillanpaa has now reached the point where her concerts are regularly sold out. Laughing she says, “Usually you know at least half of the (people in the) room and they are your friends. You see them (the people she does not know) singing along to your lyrics and that’s kind of tripping.”

In some ways it seems very distant from the time she was competing in talent competitions and star searches in Sweden as a ten year old or later as a professional performer aboard European cruise ships between the ages of fourteen and seventeen. “I did everything from Janis Joplin to Aretha Franklin. I was very fortunate to start at such a young age,” she says.

By the age of 16, Johanna had been presented with two different recording deals in Sweden as well as in France.

When Sillanpaa was eighteen her family moved to Edmonton, a city located in northern Canada. Eventually she enrolled in the music program at Grant MacEwan College. Much to her chagrin at that time, it appeared her only opportunities to sing were going to come through country music, as the jazz scene in the city of Edmonton was non-existent. She is also quick to point out that the musical landscape in Alberta has changed significantly over the past decade. The red-hot Alberta economy has led to a simultaneous population explosion and the arts community has been one of the beneficiaries.

Sillanpaa’s first big break came with the jazz and funk octet Yomozo. “We started off doing covers and eventually did a CD. We wanted to have high energy and something very different. It was an amazing project that opened up a lot of doors for (jazz) in Calgary. There was a point where we were working five house gigs per week,” says the singer.

After three years, the members of Yomozo went their separate ways and the singer/songwriter considered moving to eastern Canada known for its big jazz venues and festivals in Montreal and Toronto. She decided to stay in Calgary however and it was there that she hooked up with Aaron Young who had just returned from an almost continuous five years stint touring Europe.

As Sillanpaa and the quartet Sillan & Young continue to color outside the lines, the young artist is currying favor with critics in France, Germany and the UK. She has also performed with jazz and R&B acts throughout the United States.

Among her, many aspirations she says, “At some point I would like to go back to Scandinavia with my music because I also know I have a very non Swedish influence in my style now. I would really like to take my music back and to see if it goes over well there.”

** photo by Joe Montague-copyright protected

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The Funky, Elegant and Sophisticated Music of Lauren Wood



Most people associate Lauren Wood with her song “Fallen” from the soundtrack of the movie Pretty Woman. The soundtrack sold eighteen million copies. In many ways, the hit song, which rocked European charts as well as those in North America, overshadows the many other successes that this superbly talented singer/songwriter/producer has enjoyed.

Wood’s most recent album Love, Death & Customer Service is her eighth album and second self-produced record released under her own label Bad Art Records. Wood has almost thirty movie and television songwriting credits. The songstress with the romantically etched alto vocals has appeared as both a soloist and background vocalist for a number of top performers such as the Doobie Brothers, Kim Carnes, Patsy Moore and Albert Hammond. She has authored songs that have been recorded and performed by numerous high profile artists including, Cher, Leo Sayer, Nicolette Larson, Billy Preston, Warren Hill, Johnny Mathis and Dusty Springfield. These accomplishments only begin to scratch the surface of Lauren Wood’s career.

Wood’s music as evidenced with Love, Death & Customer Service is elegant and picturesque. She is not a follower but an innovator. She has remained alive and excited about both her music and her life.

“My parents were always really supportive of my music. My mother always taught me that the glass is half full not half empty. I come into life with that,” says Wood and then continues, “My family is also very funny. There was nothing that I could do that was too silly and didn’t make my mother laugh. They (her parents) were both really supportive of all of my whacky ideas.”

Wood recalls something her parents said to her when she was a small child, “You are so brilliant cookie face. You can do anything. Just do it.”

I was raised with a really good and fun loving attitude. All you had to do was put your mind to it and do it. I was taught that there were not limitations and I was taught to have a good sense of humor.”

The desire to have fun and thoroughly enjoy life is imprinted on Wood’s personality. “I think once I decide to do a record I just have to have fun with it. I can’t just put a record out (based upon) what is going on in the industry,” she says.

Wood is not content to fit into a mold. “I have never had music that was happening at the time. (I ask) what type of music would be fun for me to make now?”

Although Wood’s is promoting her most recent studio adventure to smooth jazz and adult contemporary radio stations her music, is a great example of genre blending and creating tones that have no particular genre to call their own. “My music is always a little hybrid. That is the kind of music that I like and cut my teeth on,” she says.

“The kind of music that I love can’t be classified, Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon, Randy Newman. Sting keeps moving into different things. Music that isn’t exactly anything and the minute the person sings you go, Oh that sound, that vocal, that lyric, that melody,” says Wood. She also confesses to being a big Beatles fan. When she was a girl, she had a crush on Paul McCartney.

“I just go with my creative instincts and it leads me to different places on different albums. I am never going in one direction. It is as though each album is its own symphony. It is whatever I am feeling at the time, whatever is fun. I have never been able to direct myself to do anything that is commercial. Whenever I tried (to do that) I just completely lost my bearings,” Wood admits.

There is no indication that Wood lost her way with Love, Death & Customer Service in fact the music suggests the contrary. The recording may be her best solo outing yet. She possesses a gift for creating wispy romantic songs that bare her soul.

“I think (it comes from) my love of melody,” says Wood speaking about her flair for the romantic, “I think I am a very softhearted person and a very compassionate person. It comes from my heart. My deepest expression is very soft edged. I find that a lot of today’s music is not very soft edged. It is all about me, I am better than you. There is a lot of good music out there if you dig for it. There is a lot of bad music out there too. There is a glut of very bad, hard edged, cold music that I don’t relate to.”

Where does Woods’ inspiration for her music come from?

“Usually I will be in my studio at the keyboard and noodling around on it. I will be playing an old song and I will play the wrong chord and go, oohhh that’s kind of weird, that’s pretty. Now where would I go with that weird chord,” she says.

At other times, “I will be noodling around and will feel this energy bubbling up inside of me. I will just start noodling around on the keyboard and will come up with a series of pretty chords. I will ask, what is the prettiest melody that I can put to that,” says Wood. She will often drive around in her car with the series of chords playing in the background and start to form lyrics in her head.

“Something may be bubbling underneath and it will just happen to come out in a lyric. I will go, that’s what I have been thinking about. There it is. For me it is usually music bubbling underneath first,” she says. The songwriter says that often her lyrics will originate with something she is going through in her own life at the time.

When it came time to record Love, Death & Customer Service Lauren Wood the producer surrounded herself with old friends she trusted. Wood says, “The reason that I use these players and the reason I don’t sequence a lot is because I want what they bring to it. I know this group of musicians is going to bring me beautiful gifts that I could never think of. I will always have the last say and I may say how about more like this. These are really, really, special musicians who bring me wonderful ideas. It is a collaborative effort.”

Wood does however exert her influence as a producer and knows what she wants to hear. “Sometimes I have something that I desperately need to have in a song and I will say this song needs to have this,” she says.

Wood takes time to speak warmly about the musicians who appeared on Love, Death & Customer Service. “A lot of them are my best buddies or cohorts that I have worked with for years. This includes (my cousin) Novi on viola and her boyfriend Larry Tuttle on stand up bass. Novi comes with things that are exquisitely beautiful. She and I can look at each other and we know where we are going. We have been playing together for so long that there is no one that is more in tune with me than Novi and I with her. It is almost as if we are twins with mental telepathy. I had Larry play mostly acoustic bass.”

Wood continues, “I always use my favorite guitarist in the world and good friend Larry Treadwell. He is unbelievable. What comes out of Larry Treadwell’s guitar is so unexpected. You never know what kind of gifts he is going to bring to the session. It is always so much fun recording with Larry Treadwell.”

The beats for Love, Death & Customer Service were a community effort. Wood plays some percussion, Peter Bunetta sparkled behind the kick drum and on the toms and Arnold Lucas also plays percussion. Bunetta produced Wood’s Cat Trick CD. He also was one of the producers for the song “Fallen”.

“Billy Payne on keyboards was a really important element on this record. He played all the keyboards that I can’t play. I have a good feel but I play simple and straight ahead. If there are funkier things that I need or a New Orleans kind of feel, he is brilliant. He was a huge contributor to this album,” says Woods.

Wood recruited three friends for vocals. Vicki Randle sang counterpoint on “Come Live With Me”, while Stephen Bishop who she refers to as one of her dearest friends appears on the song “You Are Mine”. Chris Montan now an executive with Disney provided vocals for “Contradictions” a single, Wood released to radio in January.

“It is really important to me that the record is elegant. That is exactly what I was trying to go for. I wanted it to have a lilt to it. I wanted it to sound really wide and for you to hear all the delicate intricacies and all of the things that I worked so hard and for so long putting into this record,” says Wood. She accomplished just that as Love, Death & Customer Service is one of the prettier albums to come our way in a long time.

Please visit: www.laurenwood.com

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Bob Reynolds Joins John Mayer For Tour


Tenor saxophonist Bob Reynolds will be touring with John Mayer early in 2007. The two Berklee alumni have kept in touch over the years and although Reynolds has played the Monterey Jazz Festival, toured Japan and performed at the Kennedy Center the upcoming gig with one of the music industry’s hottest young stars have to rate at the top of the list.

Reynolds says the admiration for Mayer runs much deeper than the hit songs he has punched out, “He is somebody I respect beyond his music.”

Not unlike a lot of other musicians Reynolds has experienced several forays into a variety of musical genres and sub genres over the years. “I play in your straight ahead swing jazz setting or in more experimental forms such as modern jazz. When I am playing with bands that are groove, soul, funk, rock oriented I have a really natural approach which people seem to really like,” the saxman explains, “Whatever the setting is I am not thinking, ‘Now I am going to put my jazz hat on or my pop hat on.”

The tour will go along way towards setting aside some of the disappointment that often accompanies being a young jazz artist. “When I came out of Berklee I was expecting more of what I had seen precede me,” says Reynolds. What he had seen precede him was the likes of Joshua Redman, Chris McBride and Roy Hargrove, all of whom have gone on to forge stellar careers.

One of the things they don’t tell you in school is sometimes it takes years before you have a steady stream of gigs. Reynolds says the opportunities to perform at jazz concerts and the number of people attending them on American soil have both declined in recent years. “It just reached the point of saturation and you a zillion people across the country (playing). What you end up with are a lot more capable players than there are slots or the need for them,” he says.

Another thing they don’t tell you in school and can easily be applied to a lot of other professions is there isn’t always a tried and true formula for success. “When I was in college (the thinking was) you go and do this and if you are a really great player that will lead to sideman work and (that in turn) will lead to record deals,” says Reynolds.

The trouble is the world changed while Reynolds was still at Berklee. Big jazz record labels disappeared or became almost completely inactive. Reynolds says a lot of the artists who used to appear on large labels now find themselves signed to smaller deals or staying as independent artists. “Everything is sort of crushed toward the middle and in some ways it put a lot of people in the same boat,” says Reynolds. For instance he says although an established artist who has been in the industry for fifteen years might find himself inheriting the same kind of record deal as an artist whose resume and experience isn’t as substantial.

Even in New York City the Mecca for jazz musicians in bygone years Reynolds has noticed a difference. I don’t see the same kind of trends that were happening ten years ago. Reynolds believes that artists today have to have a plan rather than just waiting for requests for their services to roll in. “You have to figure out where you want to fit in. Where are the places that you are going to end up thriving? While the number of opportunities has decreased due to a disproportion of artists to venues Reynolds acknowledges there is still an awful lot of music happening in New York City.

Reynolds wonders out loud just how much better off artists are who say that it is great for them to remain independent because it gives them total control over their music. “That’s great if you are a Dave Douglass or a Maria Schneider but what if you are somebody that nobody has heard of yet?” he asks.

While Reynolds acknowledges that perhaps for some people the world of record labels may not have been idyllic it did provide a safety net of sorts. The people who complain about the problems they had with a record label (never had to do (their own) publicity, distribution or finding a producer. They don’t know what a huge chore that is. They are coming from (the perspective) of just focusing on their music whereas somebody like me is wearing ten different hats.

Like many other jazz and blues artists Reynolds is discovering fresh opportunities in Europe. “Most of my touring experience (abroad) has been concentrated in Spain and there is really a thriving jazz community there,” says Reynolds telling me about his personal experiences, “When this record (Can’t Wait For Perfect) came out I went over to Spain for two weeks. I played shows and concerts that don’t even exist here. I would play a big venue and then the next night I would go into a small town to play in some theater or club. You think nobody is going to show up for (your concert) and the place is packed. It doesn’t happen here because in the suburban towns everybody hits the movie theater or the restaurant. It’s a different environment. The first time that I went to Spain I considered moving there.”

One of the things that you quickly learn about Reynolds is he candid and not shy about sharing his opinions. It doesn’t come from an egotistical base but rather a confidence in his abilities. That confidence came at an early age as a child actor appearing in commercials with Bill Cosby and modeling. At the age of twelve he was directing what he refers to as B movies and his distributor struck a deal with Blockbuster. No that is not a typo he really was twelve years old.

It is not surprising then when I asked him what he likes about his new CD Can’t Wait For Perfect to hear him say, “I like every part about it from start to finish from what the tunes are, how they sound and the order of the tunes. I put a lot of blood sweat and tears into crafting it.”

He is also not shy about mentioning the names of mentors such as Aaron Goldberg who he refers to as “having a huge influence upon my career.” Goldberg appears playing the Fender Rhodes and piano on “Fiction”, “Nine Lives” and “The Escape” from Can’t Wait For Perfect.

Reynolds is just as eager to talk about his friendship with bassist Reuben Rogers who provides the strong acoustic bassline for the album Can’t Wait For Perfect. “I can’t say enough good things about Reuben. He’s one of my favorite people and definitely one of my favorite musicians. I met him in Boston. I played with him in all these funk band situations at a place called Wally’s Café. He played the electric bass on Tuesday and Sunday nights.”

Reynolds describes Rogers as, “a pretty funky electric player. He elevates every situation. He just brings so much groove to any situation that he is a part of. Even if you are on your worst day he makes you sound good.”

The music of Bob Reynolds has been described by Joshua Redman as, “Some of the freshest, most compelling, and most soulful music I have heard recently. Bob Reynolds is an amazing musician, with something very exciting and original to say.” Certainly Can’t Wait For Perfect continues that theme.

Visit: www.bobreynoldsmusic.com

** Photo by Liz Pierce

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Monday, October 23, 2006

Ellen Johnson Paints a Masterpiece with These Days


“I don’t paint so I guess in my music I try to paint (using) words and sounds. People have made mention that with this CD (These Days) they hear all these subtleties and nuances. I do that on purpose because I am not just trying to sing a song I am trying to add colors to it with my voice,” says Ellen Johnson from her home on the west coast.

The well spoken Johnson continues to talk about her passion for music, “If you walk out in nature and look at beautiful scenery, it’s not always the same and there are different emotions, pictures and colors that evoke in different moments. I think that is what jazz does.”

From her home near a marina and wildlife sanctuary the photos of which can be found on her CD cover, Johnson certainly has a daily inspiration that infuses her music.

“It (These Days) starts out with very bright and deep colors, and then it goes into pastels. All of these songs came out of my experiences. I hadn’t put out a CD in seven or eight years. I’ve had a lot of experiences since then and they haven’t all been good (she says laughing). I have also had a lot of wonderful experiences. I think that is what the colors (represent) for me, from the harshness of the colors to the softness of the colors,” Johnson says.

One of those major losses was Mac her English Sheepdog/Setter cross who had been with her for seventeen years. “He was my best friend and he died a couple of years ago. He went through a lot of things with me in my life. I know some people don’t understand that animals sometimes get you through hard times. They love you unconditionally and are there for you. They add something to you and give you a connection to another part of life. I loved him so much and I still miss him terribly,” she says.

Life experiences have added to the depth and sometimes the shadows in Johnson’s music. “In my life the music has always been the one thing that has pulled me through situations. (Sometimes it is) just singing and being able to release some of that (emotion). It helps you to sing in a deeper way. There are songs that I sing (and she laughs) that now I have a real understanding of what those words are all about! I have a much closer relationship to the music,” she says.

Johnson observes, “I think there are things that we go through that we can in another medium. It can be something that is very healing and also gives back. I think your writing becomes deeper and richer. Your performance becomes deeper and richer.”

Although Johnson’s taste for music is eclectic and she proclaims a fondness for classical, pop, folk and musical theater, jazz seems to be where she has found her home at the moment. The common thread for Johnson is the music must be well written, have depth and come from the heart.

“I really like interesting lyrics that say something thoughtful and have depth to them. (I like lyrics that) make you think for a minute hmmm. That’s what poetry is, images that evoke emotions,” she says. It was these elements that early in her career drew her to Joni Mitchell’s music and later in life has created an affinity for the works of 20th century poet Maya Angelou.

Whether it is in poetry or in music Johnson is drawn to art that provokes an emotional response. “I think there is music that comes from you being bare and exposing yourself,” the singer says. She goes on to say that she suspects one of the reasons she finds herself in jazz is it tends to be less commercial than some other genres and more often comes from a deep seated emotional base.

“The reason I am attracted to jazz at this point in my life is I like the idea of being in the moment and communicating to people spontaneously. I love improvisation because of that. It allows me to express something in the moment. I also love it (jazz) because it has the perfect balance of discipline and freedom meaning that you have to know what you are doing. Once you know what you are doing you have the freedom to take it somewhere else or to see it from another point of view and for some reason that really appeals to me,” says Johnson.

She continues, “There is no hook (in jazz). You can go in different directions. The melodies are sophisticated and when I say sophisticated I mean they can go in more places than say pop music or folk music.”

Johnson finds the attraction to jazz “is never ending and I can always find a new way of looking at a song.”

Once again Johnson’s desire to discover music that touches her and that she can in turn use to touch the lives of others contributed to the song selection for These Days. “On my CD I don’t do just standard and I don’t want to only do standards I love them but I want to find songs that can express more of who I am and can bring these different colors and sounds,” she says.

Johnson has combined the old and the new to great effect with this most recent release. She provides soulful Portuguese vocalize on “Esperanca Perdida”, adds satirical lyrics to Charles Mingus’ “Noddin’ Ya Head Blues” (a look at white collar crime) and takes a playful approach to “No Moon At All”.

Darek Oles bass work comps the singer nicely and delivers the evocative quality to the music that Johnson continually strives for. “I really like musicians who bring out emotions because it is like they are speaking to me through their instrument,” she says.

Although Larry Koonse appears on guitar, Roy McCurdy on drums and Ana Gazzola provides percussion it is the chemistry of Oles and Johnson that makes These Days work so well. “I like the intimacy and the interaction between just the two instruments. I like the relationship between the voice and the bass because in reality they are both single line instruments although we do know the bass can play some chords,” she says.

Johnson finds both the contrast and dynamic between her high soprano voice and the bass to be exhilarating. “It has been a challenge for me to work within my lower range. The higher (range) is a piece of cake for me. In fact on my past CDs I have really gone to the extremes of my high end. I just felt I wanted to explore the other end (of my range) a little bit more. I wanted this (These Days) to be beautiful and simple,” she says.

“Darek is such a lyrical bass player and as I said in my liner notes I felt as if he was singing with me. He has this beautiful sense of a lyric line. He has gorgeous warmth in his bass sound. Darek is very creative and spontaneous which is what I needed,” she says.

Johnson feels that Oles’ ability to think outside the boxfrom what a bass player might traditionally play contributed to the success of These Days. She says, “I didn’t want somebody who would just do walking bass lines behind me. I wanted somebody who could add personality and who would express himself whether it was a lyrical nature, rhythmic nature or whatever it was. He wasn’t somebody I had to encourage to do that, he just has it. It was a lot of fun. We just kind of clicked together. It was a magical experience for both of us.”

The songs on These Days have many textures and like a child blowing bubbles through a ring you find each new one is unique, fascinating and beautiful.

Although Johnson is renowned for her work as a teacher and composer she has a reminder for us, “Everybody is so concerned about technique but let’s not forget that it is the heart and soul of the music that we want to get to. The people who are really astounding sing from their souls.”

All material protected by copyright. All rights reserved by the author Joe Montague.

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