 Photo by Brooks Peterson Until recently, fans of Twin Cities
singer Christine Rosholt
who needed a
fix between live shows had to content themselves with a four-song
demo CD. Recorded in 2003, featuring Jay Epstein on drums, Michael
Gold on base, and David Roos on guitar, it’s delightful but leaves
one wanting more. With the release of
Detour Ahead,
her first
full-length CD, we can settle in for 13 classic tracks—some
instantly familiar, some less so, each delivered with a dusting of
sugar.
Drummer Jay Epstein returns, but the
rest of the band is new: Michael
O’Brien on bass, Tanner
Taylor on piano, Robert
Everest on guitars and voice, Steve
Roehm on vibes. All five are on hand (O’Brien having flown in from
his new home in New York) for the official Detour Ahead
CD
release on Friday, February 3, at Rossi’s Blue Star Jazzroom,
arguably the area’s noisiest jazz
club.
 Photo by Ann Marsden
Christine looks adorable in the
fur-trimmed black dress and black hat she wore for the Detour
Ahead cover shoot. Before the show begins, she walks the room,
greeting family and friends. Her husband, Brooks Peterson, beams from
beneath his signature pork pie hat. Three “CD girls”—friends of
Christine’s wearing pink and magenta wigs and little black
dresses—go from table to table selling copies of the new CD. (It
turns out they sell a lot.) Following a hasty introduction by someone
who can’t pronounce the headliner’s name (it’s “ross-holt,”
not “rosh-holt”), Christine joins her band onstage.
In a concert preview published in the
Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Tom Surowicz called Christine “the
hardest-working, most bubbly new jazz singer in town.” She’s
approachable, she’s warm, and she has no diva airs. When she meets
you, she remembers your name. If you show up to see her perform,
she’s thrilled. She’ll put you on her email list, if you want,
and keep you informed of her upcoming gigs, of which there are
usually several—at places like Nochee and the French Press, the
Wabasha Caves (with Beasley’s Big Band), the Times, the Dakota, Bar
Lurcat, Norton’s Restaurant in Bay City, and the Twisted Grill in
Hudson. Like many jazz artists, she does benefits, bookstore
openings, happy hours, and private parties. Some of the Twin Cities’
most popular and respected musicians play in her bands: Dave Karr,
Chris Lomheim, Clay Moore, Reuben Ristrom, Gary Raynor, Pooch Heine.
Even other singers say nice things about her. This is Minnesota,
where high-road behavior is the norm, but still, singers who have
been around a lot longer than Christine admire her drive, energy, and
talent.
The show opens with a trio (Epstein,
O’Brien, Taylor) and the first cut from the new CD, “East of the
Sun (And West of the Moon”). It’s lilting, lovely, and in other
clubs the crowd would have shut the heck up to listen. The second
song, Ellington’s “Just Squeeze Me,” is not on the CD, hinting
that tonight is also about repertoire. From there, Christine leads
her band through a speedy “Surrey with the Fringe on Top” from
Oklahoma, revealing another of her strengths: crisp, clean
articulation. Those of us who saw her in “Take All My Loves:
Christine Rosholt Presents an Evening of Shakespeare” at
Macalester’s Janet Wallace Fine Arts Center a year ago already know
that about her. Singing jazz arrangements of Shakespeare songs was a
tongue-twisting, brain-bending challenge, and she pulled it
off—wearing a ruff.
The fourth song revisits the CD:
Harold Arlen’s “Out of This World.” Christine is singing music
she loves, and it shows. She’s relaxed and chatty. Steve Roehm
comes onstage, Christine exits for a short break, and the quartet
plays Chick Corea’s “Sea Journey.” When she returns, it’s for
Irving Berlin’s “Cheek to Cheek,” and we’re in heaven. The
pensive Ellington-Strayhorn “Daydream” follows. The live
performance features Roehm, as does the recorded version; both times,
voice and vibes blend beautifully. Christine reminds us that everyone
heard on the CD is appearing with her tonight. A live show is always
different from a recording, but it’s nice to know we can bring home
the same people and essentially the same sound we’re hearing now.
Off goes Roehm and on comes Robert
Everest, making his first
appearance of the evening. It’s also his first
live-in-front-of-a-crowd performance with Christine. Matthew
Zimmerman of Wild Sound Studio,
where
Detour Ahead was recorded, suggested Everest to Christine, and
it’s a perfect pairing. Singer, songwriter, guitar player, and
world traveler, he joins Christine for Antonio Carlos Jobim’s
“Chega de Saudade (No More Blues).” Her voice grows silkier to
match his—the soft, convincing caress of the Brazilian style—and
the elegant sound of his guitar, which somehow manages to penetrate
the Rossi’s din. She sings in English, he in Portuguese. We make a
note to hear more of Everest in the future: at Maria’s Café
on east Franklin, where he regularly performs for Sunday brunch, or
perhaps at Barbette or Lurcat. Check his performance calendar
online.  Jay Epstein, photo by Andrea Canter
O’Brien opens “Besame Mucho”
with a bowed bass solo, and couples rise from their tables and move
to the small dance floor while Christine sings. Afterward, she leaves
the stage to Everest, who leads O’Brien and Epstein on another
Brazilian journey. Christine and Roehm return for Jobim’s “Wave,”
and the blend of vibes, nylon strings, bass, and drums is delicious.
Following another instrumental, this one without Everest, Christine
regroups with the original trio of Epstein, O’Brien, and Tanner for
“I Cover the Waterfront” by John Green and Edward Heyman, which
is heard on the new CD, and “Comes Love” by Lew Brown and Sammy
Stept, which is not. They conclude the set with an ebullient “Tea
for Two” in cha-cha style.
Our stay at Rossi’s is over.
Christine and her band are halfway through theirs; they’re
scheduled to perform another two hours (until 1 a.m.), during which
(we can only suppose) they’ll treat the crowd to the other half of
Detour Ahead—songs including “From This Moment On,”
“Honeysuckle Rose,” and “Bye Bye Blackbird.” This has been an
evening of high points and surprises: Everest’s sensuous guitar,
O’Brien’s brilliant bass, the freshness of a top-notch band
shifting from trio to quartet and back again, a fine selection of
songs, and holding it all together, the sweet-voiced, effervescent
Christine. It’s a detour we’d gladly take again.
Christine Rosholt performs at the French Press
Jazz Café on Valentine’s Day with
Graydon Peterson, Tanner Taylor, and Dave Karr.
P.S. The only drawback to an
otherwise excellent evening was the venue. At Rossi’s Blue Star
Jazzroom, live music is an excuse for the crowd to talk even louder.
Please, people, can we refrain from shouting “Hey, Pauly, baby!”
to a friend across the room when a singer is singing? Can we turn off
the televisions at the bar during a show? |