 Ann Hampton Callaway © Bill Westmoreland It
was Cyndi Lauper who rode the pop tune "Girls Just Want To Have
Fun" in the early eighties but Chicago born songstress Ann
Hampton Callaway is one of New York City's bright lights in 2006 and
she is the one having all the fun. The lady with the effervescent
personality and fabulous vocals often refers to herself as a lover.
"I
was just born to be a lover," says Callaway. "I think that
sense of love immediately draws people in. I am so glad that I can
sing because all of that stuff can come out. I think everyone is a
lover. I think music is the most powerful way to refresh that
identity of being a lover and getting in touch with your heart. (You
can) really feel things and feel safe enough to feel things,"
she says.
Draw
you in she does as the sultry voiced Callaway melts even the
staunchest male ego with her rendition of Richard Rogers' and Lorenz
Hart's "Blue Moon". The Diva Jazz Orchestra's horns sizzle
and blow some torrid notes as they perform on the torch tune.
Callaway and Andy Farber added their own arrangements to "Blue
Moon" and the result is an outstanding performance.
"(I
bring) awareness attention to my performances. I want to bring people
together, (and for me) to be as close as I can to the audience. I
want to share the secret part of who I am with great courage because
it takes a lot of courage to sing and expose your heart in music,"
Callaway says in discussing both her live performances and studio
work.  Sherrie Maricle (Diva Jazz Orchestra) © Paul La Raia
Employing
the services of an orchestra while recording an album is something
almost unheard of these days and yet Callaway called upon friend
Sherrie Maricle and the Diva Jazz Orchestra to back her up on Blues
In The Night. She refers to it as, "an electrifying musical and
personal chemistry." The orchestra and Callaway had first teamed
up during 2005 in New York City's Diet Coke Women In Jazz Festival
hosted by Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola at the Lincoln Center. As Callaway
says, 'my agent had the smarts to put us back together again at the
Blue Note before we did the recording. We got to have some more fun
together."
Sherrie
Maricle the bandleader for Diva Jazz Orchestra says, "From our
first shared down beat performing with Ann Hampton Callaway it has
been one of the most exciting, energized and explosive musical
collaborations."
Callaway
however is much more than just a pretty voice she has always had an
abundance of talent as a composer and arranger but it seems in recent
years she is like a snowball going down hill. Says Maricle, "Blues
In The Night undoubtedly has confirmed Ann as one of the most amazing
voices in music, a brilliant composer, profound lyricist and creative
arranger."
"I
was really glad that the Diva Jazz Orchestra could join in because
there are certain things that happen to me when I am singing with a
big band that I wanted to put out there with these songs," says
Callaway.
Callaway
was first inspired to use a big band when, "I heard Grover
Washington's CD All My Tomorrows. I thought this really works. It was
so carefully and beautifully put together. I thought if you just put
a little care into this it can work to bring everything together. I
am really happy with how it came out and how the different sounds of
each song blend together."
Callaway
collaborated on many of the arrangements with Bill Mays including the
fun "Hip To Be Happy", the melancholic "No One Is
Alone" and the pensive "Willow Weep For Me". Mays
says that Callaway's feel for the music and her "wonderful
phrasing" contribute to her ability to prompt throbbing hearts
and evoke tears. Mays says one of his favorite songs from Blues In
The Night is "It's Alright With Me". "The tune has
never been treated quite that way before and is a really warm and
sexy reading," he says.
In
discussing the emotional investment she makes in her live
performances the singer says, "I commit to being the deepest,
most honest, open hearted singer that I can be. I really listen to my
great musicians and live inside of these songs."
"As
I get older I have a sense of the importance of music and how
powerful it is to bring people together. That is a very essential
part of who I am. When I walk out on the stage I walk out with the
awareness of what we are dealing with as people these days. (I also
possess) a sense of great love and joy. (I am aware of) the power of
music," Callaway says. She adds, "I try to reach people on
a very strong emotional level. The way that I perform is being in
the moment and listening (to where the audience is)."
She
gives a lot of credit to co-producer Elaine Martone for the success
of this album. "Once you get into the recording process that is
when having a producer as sensitive, supportive and delightful as
Elaine Martone (is appreciated)," says Callaway. She says when
it comes time to become a vocalist, "I know that I can trust her
(Martone's) instincts. I can totally count on her to hear 'yes this
is a take' or 'no let's do another one'. She is able to say to the
Diva Jazz Orchestra (things such as) on measure 134 will you please
do a crescendo here," she says.
In
continuing to discuss Martone's contributions in the studio Callaway
says, "She is such a musician that if there are things that
weren't working in the take she was able to in a very positive way
put that across so we could do the best work we could. Having that
kind of intelligence and support made me feel free to just get in
there and sing. "
"Jazz
purists are wary of Ann Hampton Callaway," she says and then
quite dramatically and with a sense of mischief in her voice she
relates, "They go, 'Oh my God she sings songs theatrically
sometimes. She actually entertains people. Do we want such a person
in our jazz room?"
Callaway
draws upon her use of humor and her commanding stage presence to
endear herself to the audience. "If they get the laugh and are
responding to the humor you know they (the audience) are listening
more than the average audience," she says.
Callaway
says, "The sense of humor thing is really essential to me. If
you can't have fun with people then you can't really connect with the
crazy world that we are living in and you are missing out on the joy
of being with people that you don't know. If you go to a pub in
Dublin, immediately you are a friend when you walk in. That is what
I want to express and feel with people no matter how many seats are
in an amphitheater or a little jazz club.
It
is her ability as a performer that led Telarc Records to sign
Callaway. After seeing her perform at Sculler's Elaine Martone who
also works in the capacity as SVP Artist Relations and Production for
the label says, "I thought she had one of the most dynamic
voices and compelling stage presences I had heard."
She
has the luxury of still being able to bask in the Tony Award
nomination for the Broadway production of Swing. She appeared in the
Robert De Niro movie the Good Shepherd and wrote and sung the theme
song for the hit sitcom The Nanny which starred Fran Drescher. She
is now busy writing the musical score for the movie State of Affairs
as well as producing a PBS pilot for the spring of 2007. The later is
projected as a television series about singers and songwriters. If
the pilot is successful Callaway is projected to host the series.
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