Photos by Andrea Canter
"...a truly mature artist on her way up the jazz ladder, and it
shouldn't take long for Underwood to find her way to the top....On
just the unique strength of her voice alone she is a talent, but the
fact that she also plays a fine upright bass and baritone ukulele as
well shows that she is more than just a pretty voice..." -- Kyle
O'Brien , Jazz Society of Oregon's Jazzscene
Portland-based vocalist Belinda
Underwood is a young (29) star on the rise. Celebrating her debut
recording, Underwood Uncurling, the multi-talented Underwood
not only sings but also plays bass and ukulele. A
multi-instrumentalist/singer/songwriter, Underwood defies
classification. "It's hard to classify myself but here
goes.....jazz, Latin jazz, vocal jazz, instrumental jazz, swing,
blues, vintage jazz, lounge, free jazz, big band, pop, rock, folk,
country, middle eastern, world, electronica, singer/songwriter....I
dabble in it all because it is all valid and interesting to me."
Daughter of a jazz pianist, Underwood
notes that she was exposed to jazz in the womb, and from birth as she
napped under her mother's piano. As a child she studied violin and
harp, falling in love with the upright bass at age sixteen. In high
school she traveled to Australia with the Monterey Jazz Festival
Honor Band as a bassist, and in college played and traveled with the
UC Berkeley Wednesday Band. She came rather late to vocal jazz: "It
was hard for me sometimes, to translate my musical thoughts onto the
bass during improvisation. There were lines in my head but my fingers
couldn't find them fast enough, and rather than get frustrated during
practice, I would just sing the bass solo." While at
Berkeley, she met David Friesen at a workshop, and after a short
detour to study dance and music in Havana, moved to Portland to study
with Friesen. She attributes her interest in song writing to Friesen,
who appears on her recording.

Around Portland, she gigs with several
different ensembles, playing jazz and middle eastern music. The
self-produced recording Underwood Uncurling features Friesen,
Airto Moreira, John Gross, Dan Balmer, Clay Giberson, Chad Wagner,
Jason Levis, and Pink Martini members Phil Baker and Martin Zarzar.
Primarily a vehicle for her vocal chops, the recording includes
Underwood's original compositions as well as jazz standards. Wrote
George W. Carroll (The Musicians' Ombudsman), "She can
burn hard on her acoustic bass, while she delivers her rendition of
The American Songbook. Belinda possesses a voice that renders song
with a mastery of inflection.......All backed up by her bold,
innovative, non-compromising, and tight jazz group."
"We have seen the power of music affect change in our own age by
inspiring people to ask questions about the paradigms that keep our
society from growing...I want to create music that lifts people up,
gets people down, causes beautiful feelings as well as uncomfortable
feelings... whatever it takes to help people (myself included) break
free from the habitual ways of thinking about ourselves and about
life... I feel that I have been called to create music to put some
positive energy into the universe and also because making music is a
journey that takes me deeper into myself." -Belinda Underwood
More on Belinda Underwood online at www.belindaunderwood.com |