Vocalist, composer and musical risk-taker, René Marie will be
appearing at
the Jazz Standard
Tuesday, May 24th through Sunday, May 29th with
Rene Marie (vocals), Kevin Bales (piano), Herman
Burney (bass), and Quentin Baxter (drums)
plus special guest on Friday & Saturday night only
Roland Guerrero (percussion).
"...has the pinpoint pitch, creamy tone and rhythmic verve that
are the opening ante in a jazz-vocal career..."
- Geoffrey Himes, The Washington Post
Vocalist René Marie has
taken the jazz world by surprise. While her story may be unusual - how
she didn't sing in public for more than 20 years, how she finally left
her husband and job at a bank in 1998 to launch a music career and
succeeded so quickly - it has been through her recordings that she has
proven she is worth lauding even if she had the most ordinary of
backgrounds. On her 1998 self-produced debut CD, Renaissance, she turns
the formerly bouncy "Mr. Sandman" into a steamy stroll through restless
yearning and renders "Tennessee Waltz" as a gut-bucket blues-yodel
about lust and betrayal, revealing how Marie claims new ownership of
time-worn standards. On How Can I Keep From Singing?, her MAXJAZZ
debut, she hits the ground running with a positive interpretation of
"God Bless the Child" at a blistering tempo, then abruptly shifts gears
by pairing the spiritual "Motherless Child" with a graphic portrayal of
"Four Women." Vertigo, her second MAXJAZZ project, is full of emotional
and vocal twists and turns in a musical landscape that covers
everything from Marie's original love-passion conundrum, "Don't Look At
Me Like That", to the controversial pairing of the confederate anthem
"Dixie" with the anti-lynching lament "Strange Fruit." On her last
recording, Live At Jazz Standard, she scores a juxtaposed musical coup
by opening Leonard Cohen's "Suzanne" with a scatted, a cappella version
of Maurice Ravel's "Bolero" to create what one reviewer described as an
"astonishing and goose-bump raising centerpiece." On her fourth MAXJAZZ
release, Serene Renegade, Marie sings not only about her remarkable
story but also those of her father, her mother, her sister and brother
and her sons. With this recording, she reminds the listener of her
great ability to mine the spirit of a song and interpret it in
affecting fashion.
The music world has definitely been moved by Marie. The Academie du
Jazz in France selected Vertigo the Best International Jazz Vocal CD of
2002. The other nominees were Joni Mitchell and Cassandra Wilson. Both
JazzTimes (U.S.) and Jazz Review (UK) chose Vertigo as one of the best
CDs of 2002 while DownBeat critics voted her one of their "Rising Star
Vocalists." Her third MAXJAZZ release, Live At Jazz Standard, hit the
top 20 on Billboard's jazz chart a month before its official release.
Her first two CDs also topped the jazz charts and won AFIM (Association
for Independent Music) Awards for Best Jazz & Cabaret Vocal.
[Others nominated included Karrin Allyson, Jimmy Scott, Nnenna Freelon
and Susannah McCorkle.] How Can I? was selected as one of the top five
jazz albums of 2000 by SESAC (Society for Stage Authors and Composers),
joining Tom Harrell, Stefon Harris and Greg Osby as the best in their
field. National Public Radio (NPR) touted her as one of the most
innovative and exciting vocalists to come upon the jazz scene. And
prestigious venues like The Kennedy Center, Jazz At Lincoln Center, Le
Jazz Au Bar and the Jazz Standard have called upon her. She's performed
at major festivals and halls around the world including in Portugal,
Russia and France.
Photo by
Howard A. Gitelson
Some critics have suggested that Marie is from the same mold as
other great jazz vocalists of the past and present. But in reality, her
artistry was formed from unique experiences during her early years in
Warrenton, Virginia, up to her present life in Atlanta, Georgia. She
studied classical piano, sang in an R&B band and soaked up
knowledge from her tutors in rhythm, harmony, emotional intensity and
improvisation - Maurice Ravel; Hank Williams; Harry Belafonte; Peter,
Paul & Mary; Sly and the Family Stone; Nina Simone; James Brown;
Aaron Copland; and the Beatles. Married at 18 and a mother of two sons
by 23, she shifted her focus to raising her family, which proved to be
a useful period of incubation. She started listening to jazz and
singing it around the house, gave piano lessons and composed as she
exposed herself and her sons to a wide variety of music - show tunes,
jazz, hip-hop, world music and rap. Her diverse jazz influences - from
Joe Zawinul, Billy Strayhorn, Thelonious Monk, Wayne Shorter - and her
wealth of life experiences contribute to the open and adventurous
spirit in her performances, arrangements and compositions,
distinguishing her as a gifted artist. See www.renemarie.com for more information.
Rene Marie
at
The Jazz Standard
Tuesday, May 24th through Sunday, May 29th
7:30pm / 9:30pm
Rene Marie (vocals); Kevin Bales (piano); Herman Burney (bass); Quentin
Baxter (drums)
plus special guest on Friday & Saturday night ONLY
Roland Guerrero (percussion)
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