Kurt Elling and his trio - Laurence
Hobgood on piano, Rob Amster on bass, and Willie Jones III on
drums - are playing five nights at
Birdland,
the club Elling calls “our New York
home.” Janis Lane-Ewart, executive director of
KFAI Radio, Jazz Police contributing
editor Andrea
Canter, and I are here for the International
Association of Jazz
Educators annual conference, which offers so
many possibilities for live music that we could stay busy without
ever leaving the conference hotels. But then we’d miss Kurt Elling,
arguably the best male jazz singer working today and, until Kelly
Rossum’s Mohawk, the man with the most interesting hairstyle - a
sort of Colombian drug lord meets Samurai warrior look. So instead of
heading down to the Hilton Grand Ballroom for Monty Alexander and
Maria Schneider, we’re booked for the 11:00 p.m. show at Birdland
on Wednesday, January 11.
Elling tells us at the outset that he’s
feeling mellow; they worked hard the first set and want to take it
easy—for a while at least. He opens by reading Kenneth Rexroth’s
poem
“Lute Music”). Rexroth once noted, “I write poetry to seduce women and to
overthrow the Capitalist system.” This is a poem of seduction:
“Here at the year’s end…let us bring to each other…the
precious metal of our mingled hair, the frankincense of enraptured
arms and legs….” The poem and trio accompaniment segue into
“Stairway to the Stars,” the 1939 lyric by Mitchell Parrish that
has been recorded hundreds of times (by Kevin Mahogany, Chet Baker,
Johnny Mathis, Ella Fitzgerald, and others) but so far not by Elling.
He’s due to release a new album; are we getting a sneak preview?
When you hear Elling live, you’re
aware (far more than when listening to his recordings) of how rich
and resonant his voice is—like a cello, or a double bass being
bowed. It’s almost as if the air around you vibrates. During the
beautiful “Stairway,” he gives us low notes and high, leaping
from one to the other and always making a perfect landing. He follows
with “Detour Ahead” from Flirting with Twilight (2001),
throwing in more falsetto in case we’d missed it the first time.
Afterward comes some back-and-forth with his band, some shuffling of
pages, and Elling’s announcement that “clearly this is a new
arrangement for us; we’ll see what happens.” What happens is a
terrific version of “Undun,” the late 1960s hit by the Guess Who
(“She’s come undone/She didn’t know what she was headed for/And
when I found what she was headed for/It was too late”). At the bar,
during Laurence Hobgood’s solo, a man plays piano on his own
trousers.
The mellow mood has passed by the next
song: a ferocious scat number with no lyrics and a tune Elling hears
only in his head. Willie Jones III, last seen at the Dakota with Roy
Hargrove’s quintet and backing Roberta Gambarini, blazes on the
drums. Next up: “Night Town,” a tune by Don Grolnick, former
musical director for James Taylor, with lyrics by Elling. (To see
some of Elling’s literate, complex lyrics—in English and in
French—visit his Web site and click on
“The Words.”) Afterward, he reads Duke Ellington’s portrait of
the evening hours from Duke’s memoir, Music Is My Mistress:
“Night life is cut out of a very luxurious, royal-blue bolt of
velvet.” Jazz show or poetry jam? A bit of both.
During Rob Amster’s solo, a baby
cries. Eyebrows shoot up as people wonder who would dare to bring an
infant to the late set at Birdland. The answer: Elling and his wife.
They have a 12-week-old daughter, and Elling is radiant. “The baby
doesn’t like the bass,” he jokes, “but she does like the
drums.” His next-to-last song is for her: “When Did You Leave
Heaven?” Singing, he exudes pure joy. Afterward , he tells the
crowd, ”She’ll hear this song when she’s six…she’ll say
‘Dad!!!’ and won’t that be cool?”
The finale: “Nature Boy.” Elling
leaps whole octaves at a single bound. You can hear it on his CD The
Messenger (1997), but it won’t be the same—no long delicious
solos by the band. In live jazz, as Elling says, it’s “never the
same set once.” |