"... Here is the singer's singer
if labels mean any thing. Listening to Jimmy is like having a performing heart. The experience of
life and the art of expression sing through Jimmy and make us partners in his incredible passion.
I love him and I never want to say goodbye. When the song stops with Jimmy's last note we're back
in the world as it was. Not quite so pretty, not quite so passionate. And we can only wait for
Jimmy to sing again and take us that little bit higher." -Lou Reed
Hear Jimmy Scott perform at the Dakota Jazz Club in Minneapolis October 10th and 11th.
The world is finally catching up to Jimmy Scott. After more than
five decades of being admired by fellow vocalists and a select claque
of hipsters, the man whom Joseph Hooper, in a New York Times
Magazine profile, called "perhaps the most unjustly ignored
American singer of the 20th century" is finding a dedicated
international audience for his unique, emotionally penetrating art.
The
life story of Jimmy Scott is filled with heartbreak and hope, qualities
he expresses most directly in his gripping, highly personalized
readings of material from the Great American Songbook. He has been
“rediscovered” decades after he disappeared from the public eye. Born in Cleveland in 1925,
Jimmy Scott's early years were filled with devastating hardships. At age 12, he was diagnosed with Kallmann's Syndrome,
a rare hormonal condition that kept his body—and his voice—from developing beyond boyhood. Seven months after the diagnosis,
his beloved mother, the sole guardian of Scott and his nine siblings, was killed in a car accident.
Her children were separated and sent to live in foster homes. "I fought through it," Scott says of the
condition. "It didn't matter. I was accepted into show business back in
the early Forties. That helped a lot, and it never bothered me like it
might some others."
Scott
was 14 when he first heard Judy Garland sing "Over the Rainbow" in The
Wizard of Oz. It
"became a symbol of hope, an escape from misery, the promise of lasting
love." "Pennies from Heaven" carries a similar meaning. "Just keep
trying to make it some way," he explains. "Pennies will be there for
you."
The
freedom with which Scott's voice floats so effortlessly over rhythm
sections has been likened to that of the legendary tenor saxophonist
Lester Young. Scott recalls that "Don't Take Your Love from Me," which
he performs on Over the Rainbow, was one of two tunes he sang
the first time he sat in with Young, during the mid-1940s at a club in
Meadville, Pennsylvania.
"Billie
Holiday loved him, and I could dig why," Scott says of Young.
"Listening to him helped me so much in the expression of singing. It
was such a comfortable thing to have him play between your vocal lines
and to have solos played by him."
Holiday,
when once asked by a reporter which singers she liked, named only
Scott. He returns the compliment by applying his distinctive style to
one of her signature songs, "Strange Fruit," poet Lewis Allan's
haunting tale of a lynching. Scott also reprises a couple of his own
signature songs on Over the Rainbow: "Everybody's Somebody's
Fool," the ballad that first brought him fame in 1950 as featured
vocalist with the Lionel Hampton big band, and "When Did You Leave
Heaven?," the old Bing Crosby favorite that Scott made all his own with
a 1955 single that became something of a jukebox hit.
Scott's
unique way with songs, which cuts to the emotional core of lyrics with
its subtly delayed timing, carefully clipped syllables, and ringing
sustains, has inspired numerous other singers for half a century. Nancy
Wilson and Frankie Valli borrowed elements of Scott's style in the
Sixties, while Lou Reed and Madonna have championed his singing in
recent times. "He is without a doubt the master of the ballad form,"
Wilson once stated. Ray Charles, another Scott fan, has said that "he
defined what 'soul' is all about in singing long before anyone was
using the word."
The
singer's big break came in 1949, when Lionel Hampton hired him on the
recommendation of Paul Gayten and billed him as "Little Jimmy Scott."
"Everybody's Somebody's Fool," recorded at Scott's second session with
Hampton, gave the singer his first and only chart hit, placing at No. 6
on Billboard's list of R&B jukebox platters. The labels of
some Decca 78s mistakenly credited Irma Curry, Hampton's female
vocalist at the time, but many fans knew better, especially women, who
swooned at Scott's every deliciously split syllable during his year on
the road with Hampton.
Scott's
hit and three other songs recorded with the Hampton orchestra, along
with early Fifties solo sides for the Coral and Brunswick labels, were
reissued in 1999 on the GRP CD Everybody's Somebody's Fool.
Also released that year was the three-CD The Savoy Years and More
containing his 1952 recordings for Roost Records and his 1955-75 output
for Savoy. Scott also made a magnificent album for Ray Charles's
Tangerine label and another for Atlantic, but Savoy threatened suit and
had both suppressed.
The
singer spent long periods away from the microphone. He worked for a
time as a hotel shipping clerk and as a caretaker for his ailing
father. Scott returned to performing in 1990, and his career took off
again two years later when Seymour Stein heard him singing at
songwriter Doc Pomus's funeral and signed him to the Warner
Bros.-distributed Sire label. Scott recorded two albums for Sire, one
for Warner Bros. proper, and one for Artists Only! before joining
Milestone Records last year.
The
past couple of years have seen Scott making triumphant tours of Europe
and Japan, as well as being the subject of a Bravo Profiles
television special in which he was saluted by such admirers as Alec
Baldwin, Ruth Brown, Ray Charles, Lionel Hampton, David Lynch, Joe
Pesci, Lou Reed, and Frankie Valli. And Scott has become a fashion
model in an Italian advertising campaign for a new line of cashmere
sweaters by celebrated Milan designer Saverio Palatella.
The
wisdom that Jimmy Scott has acquired during his often-difficult life
oozes from every track of Over the Rainbow. As David Ritz
observes so eloquently in his booklet notes for the Milestone CD: "In
the fragility of his voice, there is enormous strength. His songs say
that we can live with our inconsistencies; we can be fools but still
survive; we can still hope for those pennies from heaven. We look to
him for lessons in how to live our lives with patience, dignity, and a
sense of wondrous beauty."
Hear Jimmy Scott perform at the Dakota Jazz club in Minneapolis October 10th and 11th.
The Dakota is located downtown Minneapolis on Nicollet Ave Mall at 10th Street. Visit
www.dakotacooks.com for more info.
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