Friday, November 23, 2018

Happy Birthday, Rachelle Ferrell [Watch Videos]


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    

Happy Birthday, Rachelle Ferrell [Watch Videos]

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Happy Birthday to composer, lyricist, arranger, musician, vocalist and musician, Rachelle Farrell who turns 52 today!
Happy Birthday to composer, lyricist, arranger, musician, vocalist and musician, Rachelle Farrell who turns 52 today!
Personal Information
Born in 1961, in Berwyn, PA.
Education: Berklee School of Music, attended.
Career
Jazz and pop vocalist. Began singing at age 13; appeared in clubs in Philadelphia area and sang backup on recordings by Patti LaBelle, George Duke, and others, 1980s; signed to Blue Note label; released debut jazz album, Somethin’ Else, in Europe and Japan, 1990; toured Europe and Japan, 1990-92; appeared at Montreux Jazz Festival, Switzerland, 1990; released pop debut album, Rachelle Ferrell, 1992; Somethin’ Else re-released in U.S. as First Instrument, 1995; released Individuality–Can I Be Me?, 2000.
Life’s Work
Though the worlds of jazz and black pop have numerous musical interconnections, the divide between them has been an increasingly difficult one for performers to surmount in recent years. That difficulty is vividly demonstrated by the career of Rachelle Ferrell, a superbly talented vocalist who has steadfastly attempted to make her mark in both realms. Though she has amassed a strong following in both genres and can sell out large urban auditoriums across the U.S. and in several foreign countries, her recording career has been only an intermittent one.
Ferrell was born outside Philadelphia in Berwyn, Pennsylvania, in 1961. Her childhood was suffused with music; her father had played jazz, the family listened to gospel, and she took classical music lessons in violin and piano. She found her musical calling at age 13 as a substitute vocalist, and from then on took any opportunity she could to sing. Ferrell attended the Berklee School of Music in Boston, a unique institute of higher education with a curriculum that focused on popular music. There Ferrell honed her already strong musical foundations and cultivated her songwriting and arranging abilities; among her classmates was the soon-to-be jazz star Branford Marsalis.
Sang Backup for Patti LaBelle
Teaching music in a program run by the New Jersey State Council for the Arts, Ferrell made the acquaintance of the legendary jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. Gillespie, she told Ebony, told her parents that “Rachelle is gonna be a major force in the industry.” Ferrell built a fan base in local venues around Philadelphia and began singing backup on recordings by various artists; some of them, such as Patti LaBelle, with Philadelphia roots. By the late 1980s, Ferrell had evolved into a formidable musician, with strong songwriting skills and a six-octave vocal range that was matched among active singers only by superstar Mariah Carey.
But her skills and work in the industry still had not brought her a recording deal. That changed after executive Bruce Lundvall of the jazz-oriented Blue Note label heard a demo tape of her pop compositions and sought out one of her live jazz performances. Impressed, Lundvall realized the range of Ferrell’s talents and arranged an unusual contract with Blue Note and its parent company, Capitol, that called for one pop and one jazz album. The jazz disc was recorded first, but, mindful of the limited market for jazz in its U.S. birthplace and the commercial risks of categorizing Ferrell as a jazz artist, the label decided to release it only in Europe and Japan, where African-American jazz artists have a long history of finding appreciation.
Entitled Somethin’ Else, the album topped Japanese charts in 1990 after it was released by Capitol’s Toshiba EMI branch and Ferrell supported it with an appearance at Japan’s Mt. Fuji Jazz Festival and at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland. Recorded with a group of veteran jazz players with whom Ferrell had worked for years, the album featured standards such as Rodgers and Hart’s “My Funny Valentine,” but also ventured into more unusual material for a jazz artist such as Sam Cooke’s pop hit, “You Send Me.” In her Blue Note biography, Ferrell pointed to her long experience as a performer as a reason for her interpretive abilities: “…When one performs four sets a night, six nights a week, that experience affords you the opportunity to present the song from the inside out, to express its essence.”
Released Pop Debut
The album also included two Ferrell originals, and it was Ferrell’s songwriting that came to the fore on her R&B debut, entitled Rachelle Ferrell and released in 1992. Industry insiders were well aware of Ferrell’s talents, and the album got strong advance buzz, won positive reviews from critics, and climbed to the top of Billboard magazine’s Heatseekers chart of emerging recordings. But there things stalled–partly, Ferrell believed, because Capitol’s marketing efforts were so strongly geared toward young listeners that adult releases like hers tended to get lost in the shuffle. Rachelle Ferrell received little radio airplay.
Ferrell’s ace in the hole, however, was her continuing appeal to live audiences. Touring in support of the album, Ferrell packed such huge venues as the twin Fox theaters in Detroit and St. Louis, elaborate 1920s movie palaces usually reserved for big-name headliners. Capitol took notice and belatedly began to support the album with a major marketing effort. After languishing in the lower reaches of the charts for over two years, sales picked up, and Ferrell received a gold record for sales of 500,000 copies. She also picked up an award from the live-performance trade magazine Pollstar for Best Adult Contemporary/Jazz Artist in 1994.
The Blue Note label decided to capitalize on this new success by releasing Ferrell’s Somethin’ Else album in the United States. It was given the new and more distinctive title First Instrument, a title that was Ferrell’s own suggestion. “I chose this title to remind people that the voice was and is the first instrument,” she told Ebony. “Today, the voice has taken a bit of a backseat to the technology….I want to bring back the intrinsic value of the voice.”
Struggled with Categories
First Instrument topped jazz charts, but Ferrell noticed that despite her best efforts, she felt increasingly constricted by the categories that are such a prominent feature of the contemporary music marketplace. Asked by the San Francisco Chronicle whether she would choose jazz or pop if forced to pick one or the other, Ferrell retorted: “If you have to choose between your right leg and your left leg …” She noticed that the new fans she had acquired with the Rachelle Ferrell album seemed disappointed when she sang jazz exclusively at concerts after the release of First Instrument.
“I live comfortably in the worlds of pop, R&B, jazz, gospel, and even classical music,” Ferrell explained in her Blue Note biography. “Ultimately I would like to be accepted on the basis of the full scope of my music rather than the narrowness of music and marketing.” Nevertheless, a struggle over the direction of Ferrell’s career ensued, and for a period of several years she grew disaffected with the music business and even stopped writing new music.
Ferrell reemerged in late 2000 with a new album, Individuality (Can I Be Me?); she told Essence that her time away from music entailed “giving myself permission to be who I am.” That new identity seemed to encompass a reconciliation of the various musical impulses that had defined Ferrell’s career, for it included both jazz and R&B elements that showcased Ferrell’s magnificent and undimmed voice to best advantage. Individuality (Can I Be Me?) featured Ferrell’s own compositions. “This entire album was written from the space of personal experience,” she told Essence. “I’m so grateful to be able to express these things. It’s beautiful to be in a daily state of gratitude.”
Rachelle Ferrell Bio Courtesy of Answers.com
More about Rachelle Ferrell
Watch videos:

Websites:
Official Rachelle Ferrell website
Rachelle Ferrell on Twitter
Rachelle Ferrell on Facebook

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Tuesday, October 30, 2018

yissy garcia npr






From Cuba With Love: Yissy Garcia And Bandancha's 'Universo'


Yissy Garcia, part of a new creative vanguard emerging from Cuba.
Courtesy of the artist
Since diplomatic relations broke off between the United States and Cuba in 1961, musical exchange between both countries has been largely left, outside of tours, to the underground. Yissy García remembers her father, Bernardo García — a co-founder of Irakere, one of the most iconic bands in the history of Cuban music — sharing cassette tapes full of artists like Herbie Hancock after he would toured the U.S. These treasured souvenirs shaped her musical foundation — and the methods of sharing music haven't changed much since, either. Yissy & Bandancha's first album, Ãšltima Noticia, was only available for purchase in-person at her shows in the U.S., until about a month ago.
Despite that, the powerhouse Cuban drummer, composer and band leader Yissy Garcia & Bandancha are releasing a new single, "Universo," to U.S. streaming services.
The band's manager, Yoana Grass, says the single's release has been a long and challenging process. Grass was able to find a place for "Universo" on platforms like Amazon, Tidal and Spotify by taking a detour to the U.K., striking a deal with Ditto Music, a world music distribution company with a base there.
Article continues after sponsorship


"Universo" is the sound of the band ushering in a more urban flare, incorporated those concrete textures into its energetic, funky and genre-bending style, which blends jazz, funk, rumba-driven cadences and rap (courtesy of DJ Jigüe).
Recently, I sat down with Yissy Garcia to ask her about her relationship to American music and what it's like being an artist in the era of Trump.

NPR Music: Who are some of your biggest musical influences?
Yissy Garcia: Honestly, above all since I was young I listened mostly to American music — which is interesting because in Cuba, American music is hard to come by. I admire drummers like Buddy Rich and Dave Walker. Eventually, I realized that it's important to nourish myself with music from my own country and started listening to drummers like Julio Barreto and Rodney Joven. I grew up in a musical family so I was always surrounded by music; my father was a drummer. Beyond that, I had a cousin who liked electronic music and another who liked salsa, and we would constantly share music and listen to it together. All of these experiences have had a tremendous influence on how I compose, how I make music and who I am.
How did you go about getting your hands on music from the United States?
It has always been hard to have access to American music in Cuba. When I first began studying, it was a time when we had no Internet. But we did have cassette tapes. Whenever a musician travelled they'd come back with music on a tape. So we'd copy it, and pass it along.
Not much has changed since then. We have access to Internet now, but it's still very complicated. So the process remains; except for that I am the one traveling now. So whenever I do, I download music offline and we use USBs or hard drives to share with our friends. We still don't have real access to information about the world, so this is how we do it.
This barrier between the United States and Cuba — how has it influenced your creative process?
I think that Cubans are truly luchadores -- warriors. The barrier only makes us stronger, and gives us more drive to break through it, find our way around it and push forward.
I think that every musician has been affected by the relationship between the U.S. and Cuba. We all think that they are musically extremely powerful places and a lot of collaborations between both countries have shown us this. But recently it's been more difficult.
If the doors were wide open it would be easier, but then there is a chance that we simply wouldn't work as hard as we do now. Still, I feel there is so much room for the U.S. and Cuba to collaborate not only musically but culturally, and that is what we need to focus on.

What does it feel like to be a Cuban artist in the Trump era?
It has been challenging. Honestly it's the Cuban people that have to suffer the consequences of these policy changes. We are the ones that feel it.
Trump's new policies have closed off a lot of opportunity for Cubans to leave the island. When Obama was in office it was a lot easier, far more flexible. But now it's been pure insanity, especially when it comes to booking logistics for tours. We arrived here today, because we were already in South America and managed to get our visa in Argentina. We had to stay extra days and our manager was working day and night to make it happen. If it wasn't for the fact that we already had access to an embassy in a foreign country that could help us, we would have never made it to New York City. I have a master class coming up at the University of Michigan, and we want to keep touring. I don't know how we're going to manage, but we hope to return soon.
How do you plan to respond to these policy changes personally and professionally?
By making music. Using creativity as an outlet and trying to take my music as far as I can — and, of course, have fun and enjoy life. Otherwise, life isn't worth living.

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