 Dear Mr. Sinatra, John Pizzarelli on Telarc Records Dear Mr. Sinatra
not only pays tribute to some of the greatest songs ever performed
during the past century but highlights the remarkable talent of
singer/guitarist John Pizzarelli. He teamed up with arranger John
Clayton and The John Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra to provide
brilliant interpretations of songs such as "Ring A Ding Ding",
"I've Got You Under My Skin", "Nice 'n' Easy" and
"If I Had You". These breathless renditions will have you
leading your partner to the dance floor.
Pizzarelli isn't merely
recording and performing the songs you have heard before but he is
giving them a new voice. "I think when I started out I liked the
sound of the Nat King Cole Trio and in the beginning they
(Pizzarelli's songs) were more cover versions than they were John
Pizzarelli versions. I think the Sinatra CD is the best example of my
saying, 'Here is what I am going to do and here is how we are going
to go about it.' It wasn't like we were covering the songs but we
were totally remaking them. I think in the last five, six, seven
years I have been really lucky to be able to say this is how I sound
and I am going to do these songs without thinking that I am going to
do them like Nat King Cole or whoever. I feel more confident now that
I am doing songs as John Pizzarelli."
Pizzarelli doesn't
really
think of himself as someone who revives old tunes. "It has
always been around for me and I have always heard that music.
Everybody points to a jazz record of Oscar Peterson from say 1955 or
something. Oscar Peterson made a great record with Zoot Sims in the
seventies. Zoot made great records right up to the time of his death.
I think great jazz records are still being made," he says.
Continuing with this
line
of conversation for a moment longer Pizzarelli says, "I had the
word revivalist taken out of my bio. (It referred to me as) one of
the primary revivalists of the great American songbook and it is just
not true. There was only a time period in the seventies where
everything (in jazz) sort of restructured itself. You can have
fifteen different versions of "All Of Me" and it is all
about the sound of the voice and the way the person arranges the song
or a combination of those things."
The singer says one of
the things that keeps jazz music interesting is people saying, "I
like this song and I am going to do it my way. Pop artists on the
fringe of being jazz artists, (such as) Jamie Cullen for example,
find these tunes and do them their way. People just find ways to
interpret it their own way. It is like this wonderful pliable putty
that people can do anything that they want with it." He says,
"It is all the same thing but everybody has their own handprints
and fingerprints on it. That's why it is such an interesting thing. I
have heard it (jazz) all of my life through my father and it is still
something that is vibrant day to day."
While growing up,
Pizzarelli's musical environs were very eclectic. Of course there was
his father "Bucky" Pizzarelli who as John Pizzarelli says,
"My father would take us to concerts where I would hear him play
with Benny Goodman, Clark Terry OR Zoot Sims. I would go to Record
Dates or Jingles and watch him play. Then my sisters like the Beatles
and all that music of the seventies, Jackson Browne, The Allman
Brothers and the Rolling Stones. I was always a James Taylor / Billy
Joel kind of guy."
He says of the rainbow
of
musical colors that highlighted his youthful past, "I never
thought of the music that I was listening to as a particular style as
opposed to a great moment in time. I just thought, 'Wow George Benson
is a great guitar player'.
Frank Weber taught
Pizzarelli to play Nat King Cole's "Straighten Up And Fly
Right". Weber had recorded a critically acclaimed cover version
of the Cole tune. "My father said, 'If you like "Straighten
Up And Fly Right" you should get the Nat King Cole Trio records
if you can find them," Pizzarelli recalls. "When I found
them I was just blown away. I loved the style of the group. I
listened to all these songs that I had never heard before and I
wanted to learn them. I wanted to learn "Route 66" and the
others (because) I just felt they were perfect. I thought they were
great jazz vocal songs," he says.
When you talk with
Pizzarelli you get the sense this is a man who was born for the
stage. There really could not have been another career. He loves what
he is living. "I have always loved performing. I think there is
something about the way that music affects people, to sense that
response. I think that it has to do with the joy that music brings to
people. It is something that has excited me.
I asked him if he took
more enjoyment from playing his guitar or singing and he responded,
"They are inseparable for me. I don't think about what I am
doing. I think if I am playing well on the guitar one night it
charges the singing. (Likewise) I feel that if I am in particularly
good voice and singing the way that I like to sing it charges the
guitar play."
Pizzarelli compares for
me the dynamic of playing with his quartet or with a big band. "I
like the spontaneity of a quartet. You can't really get that with a
big band. We can always play an extra chorus on the fly. When
somebody is playing real hot you can let him play a little longer or
you can switch endings. You can have the idea that it is a little
more spur of the moment."
In contrast he says,
"With a big band I think you have to rely on the quality of the
arrangements and players. (You have to) trust it. I think that is one
of the strengths of what I do with band shows is to get great
arrangements from great arrangers. You have to have great
arrangements because you are going to be standing up there and
playing with them. They are going to have to carry you."
Pizzarelli lists as one
of his career highlights the opportunity to perform with his father
over the past ten years. "We played so much together that we
could go to any room and just destroy it.
Pizzarelli relates to me
some of the more humorous things that occur when he plays with his
father, "People have come up to my father and said nutty things
to him like, 'Your father is a really good singer.' (at this juncture
John Pizzarelli laughs) they get all mixed up. He's (his father)
going, "I'm the father."
I asked Pizzarelli to
reflect upon some of the concerts or setting which he has enjoyed
most over the years. He listed the Montreal Jazz Festival, some gigs
in Brazil and others in LA. "We have had some pretty amazing
moments," he says. |