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"You think of the guitar as a beautiful lady, something you can hug. ... It replaces the bartender, the housewife and the mistress. It's the last thing you want to see at night and the first thing you want to hold in the morning." - Les Paul
 
 Thursday, 08 January 2009
Karrin Allyson and Nancy King Close Out Dizzy's Month of Women in Jazz Print E-mail
Written by Andrea Canter, Contributing Editor   
Sunday, 24 September 2006
She brings a timbre that is part ice and part grain...incisive, original, and emotionally convincing.”—Gary Giddins

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Karrin Allyson

With a sure and smoky alto, a wide-ranging repertoire from ballad to samba to blues, and a presence that nearly pulls you onstage beside her, two-time Grammy nominee Karrin Allyson is a deservedly popular jazz chanteuse—not to be confused with a “jazzy” pop singer. Of her distinctive voice, jazz historian/critic Gary Giddens notes, “She can swing, she can scat, she can croon the blues—and she plays one mean piano.” Touring in support of her latest recording, Footprints, Allyson will be on stage with Nancy King and the Bruce Barth trio at Dizzy's from September 27th - October 1st.

Born in Kansas and raised in Omaha and San Francisco, Karrin Allyson studied classical piano before being turned on to jazz (and the songs of Nancy Wilson, Carmen McRae, Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald) as a college student. After graduating from the University of Nebraska with a degree in piano, she spent her early professional career in Minneapolis, then moved to Kansas City to work at her uncle’s club, The Phoenix. Kansas City proved to be a great opportunity to develop her jazz chops, and there she met long-time collaborators Bob Bowman, Todd Strait, Paul Smith, Rod Fleeman and Danny Embrey. In 2000, Karrin finally made the move to New York City with orchestra conductor/husband Bill McGlaughlin. In addition to her frequent appearances in jazz clubs and festivals around the world, she has appeared at Carnegie Hall (tribute to Ella Fitzgerald), Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall, the New York City 92nd St. YMCA, on Public Radio International’s A Prairie Home Companion, and with symphony orchestras around the country, including the new Carnegie Hall concert series at Zankel Hall.

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Karrin Allyson

In the past decade, Karrin Allyson has made ten recordings for Concord reflecting classic American jazz roots as well as French and Brazilian influences. In fact her minor in college was French (her major was music), and her love of both French and Portuguese seeps into her live performances as well as recordings, most notably on From Paris to Rio. Her 2001 CD, Ballads: Remembering John Coltrane, was nominated for a Grammy (best female vocalist). Wild for You (2005), a tribute to the popular songs of her youth, garnered another Grammy nomination "These are the songs I grew up with," she said, "the songs that made me want to sing in the first place. Before I got into jazz, I studied classical piano. But when I became a teenager, I heard these songs, and they piqued my interest. I got the sheet music and learned to play them and pretty soon thought, 'I'd like to do this for a living.’ ”

Footprints, released this summer on Concord, brings Allyson back to the classic jazz literature. Working with lyricist Chris Caswell, classic jazz works by Nat Adderley, Hank Mobley, Wayne Shorter, Dizzy Gillespie, John Coltrane and more are transformed into modern songs, along with contributions from Oscar Brown, Jr. and Jon Hendricks. Guest vocalists Hendricks and Nancy King join Allyson along with a smokin’ trio of Bruce Barth, Peter Washington and Todd Strait. “As a singer, I feel very influenced by instrumentalists and by many classic instrumental songs,” says Allyson. “It’s tricky to put lyrics to the great, iconic tunes, because you want to do them justice.” Justice is well served. [click here for jazz police review]

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Nancy King

Of vocalist Nancy King, Karrin Allyson said, “She is, I think, one of the best singers that ever walked the planet.” Similarly, Herb Ellis labeled her “the greatest living jazz singer.” Arriving in San Francisco from Springfield, OR in the 1960s, she met future husband Sonny King at the Jazz Workshop and joined his band. In addition to performing for the next two years at the Workshop, she worked with Vince Guaraldi, John Handy, Sonny Donaldson, and Flip Nunez in San Francisco, and studied with Jon Hendricks. After moving to Las Vegas and then back to Oregon to raise her sons, King recorded her first album and made some appearances in New York before starting a collaboration with pianist/composer Steve Christofferson, with whom she has performed on the west coast since the 1980s. She released Straight Into Your Heart (Mons, 1997) with Christopherson and the Dutch Metropole Orchestra and appeared with Ray Brown on his Some Of My Best Friends Are Singers (Telarc, 1998), touring with Brown and his trio during the next year. Recent collaborations include performances with Karrin Allyson and Elvis Costello, as well as continued recordings with Steve Christofferson. Notes vocalist Mark Murphy, “Her singing flies between our ears with a certainty of inevitable rightness that is at least... simply thrilling.”

There’s nothing better than hearing what you’ve written interpreted by a voice that understands and improves every word.” –Chris Caswell

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Bruce Barth © Andrea Canter

Now in his mid-40s, pianist Bruce Barth was a young lion who continues to roar. A California native who moved to New York in his teens, Barth studied privately with Norman Simmons, Jaki Byard, and Fred Hersch at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston in the early 1980s, and made his first recording, The African Game, with composer George Russell in 1983. Back in the New York area in the late 1980s, Barth worked with Nat Adderley, Stanley Turrentine, and Terrence Blanchard, recording his first CDs as a leader—In Focus and Morning Call (Enja); both were selected by the New York Times for their Top Ten lists. In addition to his numerous recording and performance duties, Barth has produced many of the Vocal Series releases for MaxJazz. Said Terence http://www.jazzpolice.com - Jazz Police Powered by Mambo Generated: 21 June, 2006, 12:48 Page 3 Blanchard, “Bruce is a great musician, a force to be reckoned with. He has a wide range of abilities—he can be very percussive and energetic or play with the subtleties of a Hank Jones or Herbie

Karrin Allyson will be on stage with Nancy King and the Bruce Barth trio at Dizzy's from September 27th - October 1st. Hancock.”

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