Jazz Police       Click to save on Hotels Hotels Cars Cars Cruises Cruises flights Flights
JP
“It’s like a language. You learn the alphabet, which are the scales. You learn sentences, which are the chords. And then you talk extemporaneously with the horn. It’s a wonderful thing to speak extemporaneously, which is something I’ve never gotten the hang of. But musically I love to talk just off the top of my head. And that’s what jazz music is all about.” - Stan Getz
 
Support our live jazz coverage. Visit our sponsors. If you plan to shop amazon.com or download iTunes, click through here:
Apple iTunes
Advertisement

Go to top of page  Home | CD Reviews | Interviews | SF Bay Area | Chicago | Los Angeles | New York | Twin Cities, MN | More Cities | Festivals | FAQ | News | Contact | Video of the Week |

Main Menu
Home
CD Reviews
Interviews
SF Bay Area
Chicago
Los Angeles
New York
Twin Cities, MN
More Cities
Festivals
FAQ
News
Contact
Video of the Week
Visitors: 14311212
Woodwind & Brasswind
Kate McGarry Hits “The Target”—West Coast Tour, May 24-June 3 Print E-mail
Written by Andrea Canter, Contributing Editor   
Sunday, 20 May 2007
It’s always my goal to reach the essence of the song and its meaning to me, and deliver that to the listener.” – Kate McGarry

ImageKate McGarry delivers—not the all-too common, pleasant but benign songbook fare – but personal renditions from an eclectic repertoire that redefines the realm of vocal jazz. With her most challenging and rewarding recording yet, Kate celebrates the release of The Target (Palmetto) with a two-week tour of the West Coast. from Santa Cruz to Oakland to Seattle and ending in Los Angeles. She’ll be joined by her Target collaborators, Keith Ganz, Gary Versace, Reuben Rogers, and Greg Hutchinson. Showcasing Kate’s elastic contralto and inventive phrasing, The Target is enveloped in a lush tapestry of engaging instrumentals. Yet the attentive listener—to the recording or live music— will also be rewarded by the nuances evolved from a childhood of Irish folk melodies, a study of African rhythms and avant garde experiments, spiritual reflection, and an unwavering mission to infuse each song with new meaning.

 

Kate McGarry

 

Growing up in a large Irish Catholic family in Hyannis, Massachusetts, Kate and her nine siblings were surrounded by diverse musical influences—Celtic folk songs, The Mills Brothers, the Beatles, 70s funk and pop. The urge to sing was ever-present, from family talent shows to sing-a-longs in Irish pubs to her first introduction to jazz through the music of Bill Evans, Ella Fitzgerald and later Keith Jarrett. Next came more serious study of African American music with Dr. Horace Boyer and of avant garde jazz with Archie Shepp at the University of Massachusetts. Singing around Boston led to connections in Los Angeles, and soon Kate was part of the LA scene, with regular appearances at Catalina’s, the Jazz Bakery and Le Café. Here, Kate’s journey on record had its auspicious beginning in 1992 with Easy to Love, prompting Music Magazine to call her "...a strong improviser who shows taste and restraint worthy of the most mature jazz singer.”

Back east for a few years of meditation and teaching at the ashram in the Catskills, Kate’s singing and songwriting kicked into high gear with her contract with Palmetto—their first and still only contract with a vocalist. Show Me (2003), a dazzling collection reflecting her diverse tastes in standard and world music, prompted C. Michael Bailey (All About Jazz) to comment, “She scats like a dream without caricature.” And without caricature or imitation, Kate was generating considerable buzz as an original voice, as likely to suggest Betty Carter and Kurt Elling as Cassandra Wilson or Norah Jones. On her 2005 release, Mercy Streets, Kate artfully balanced the pop/folk sound of Joni Mitchell and Peter Gabriel, the lyrical post bop vocabulary of accompanist Fred Hersch, and the south-of-the-border rhythms of tango and samba. All About Jazz called it “one of the most important vocal albums of the year.”

As diverse as her solo releases have been her other projects—performing or recording with such artists as Fred Hersch, Kurt Elling, Victor Lewis, Maria Schneider, Jason Robert Brown, Hank Jones, and Clark Terry; her 2005 collaboration with Hersch and Elling on Hersch’s musical translation of Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass; a 2006 collaboration with the Jazz Tap Ensemble; writing, recording and producing (with Ganz) children’s songs for the Heinle’s Picture Dictionary for Children; and singing and recording for the upcoming Sunnyside release with the vocal group MOSS (with Peter Eldridge, Theo Bleckmann, Lauren Kinhan, and Luciana Souza). A new challenge lies ahead as Kate was recently appointed to the faculty of the Manhattan School of Music for fall 2007.

The Target

ImageOn The Target, using the instrumentation of organ, guitar, bass, drums and sax (with Theo Bleckmann on voice loops), Kate returns to a sound solidly in the jazz tradition. As for the playlist, each tune was chosen on its own merits, yet all “are inextricably connected to each other,” notes Kate. “Each song is an attempt to connect and interact with the musicians in a way that is organic to that tune. Most are deliberately arranged to allow an unfolding or an exploration to take place.”

What unfolds is pure magic, from the opening Bobby Troup classic turned on its ear, “The Meaning of the Blues,” to the short-and-sweet closing, “New Love Song,” written for Kate by husband/guitarist Keith Ganz. In between Kate explores a diverse palette: Luciana Souza’s “No Wonder” (spiced by Kate’s vocal gymnastics); a very swinging trio rendition of the Betty Carter classic, “Do Something”; Brigadoon’s “Heather on the Hill” (reshaped by Kate and pianist Gary Versace as a 21st century Celtic ballad); a noir-ish take on Sting’s “Sister Moon” (further haunted by Versace’s accordion); great standards like the Hammerstein and Kern gem, “Nobody Else But Me” (note Keith Ganz acrobatic guitar), “It Might As Well Be Spring” (revel in Kate’s exquisite phrasing and the gold-threaded lyricism of Ganz and Versace) and “The Lamp Is Low” (reinvented by Keith Ganz’ arrangement, reinvigorated with Donny McCaslin’s wailing tenor).

The Target also bears the unmistakable imprint of Kate McGarry as composer and lyricist. The title track is based on a poem from her days at the ashram searching for a deeper understanding of God, “a contemplation of who actually does the searching and who does the finding.” With Gary Versace adding an ethereal touch to Kate’s original verse, the Evans/Davis classic “Blue in Green” conjures the eternal wanderer, seeking truth. Guitarist Steve Cardenas’ “She Always Will” glows not only from Kate’s introspective lyrics but also from the plaintive basslines of Reuben Rogers and shimmering cymbals from Greg Hutchinson.

ImageThe Target reflects an eclectic weaving of old and new, swing and contemplation, searching and finding, Kate McGarry’s most definitive artistic statement to date. Notes Kate, “The Target is a celebration of the creative impulse—what happens when musicians come together with the intention to connect and give of themselves.” Join her celebration at these West Coast venues:

  • May 24 (7 pm), Kuumbwa Jazz Center in Santa Cruz (www.kuumbwajazz.org)
  • May 26, KRML Jazz and Blues Co., Carmel (www.krmlradio.com)
  • May 27, Shelton Concert Series, Sebastopol (707-829-6718)
  • May 29 (8 & 10 pm), Yoshi's in Oakland (www.yoshis.com)
  • May 30 (7:30 pm), Triple Door in Seattle (206-838-4333)
  • May 31 (8 & 10 pm), The Vic in Santa Monica (www.thevicforjazz.com)
  • June 3, Steamers in Los Angeles with Keith Ganz and Derek Oles (www.steamerscafe.com)

Text for this article adapted from the author’s press release and web biography (see www.katemcgarry.com).

 
 Monday, 13 October 2008
BOOK TRAVEL WITH JAZZ POLICE AND SAVE! Search for deals here.
City Arrival Date Nights Adults Rooms
Today's top ten jazz downloads
JP Archive
Add Jazz Police button to your google toolbar
Latest News





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
 
Go to top of page  Home | CD Reviews | Interviews | SF Bay Area | Chicago | Los Angeles | New York | Twin Cities, MN | More Cities | Festivals | FAQ | News | Contact | Video of the Week |
All material protected by copyright. © 2007 Jazz Police and contributing writers & visual artists. All rights reserved. Material may not be reprinted or redistributed without permission of the contributing writers & visual artists.
Jazz Police makes no warranty, expressed or implied as to the accuracy, completeness or utility of information provided. All information is subject to change without notice.