
Radio Music Society (Heads Up Records)
Esperanza Spalding
Released March 20, 2012
Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Album 2013
YouTube:
https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kf85J1wEeeh0_ZJ6tNdUrBn_FHPu1-qq0
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/album/50ZGiAqYPxQpDVs7QT2ys8?si=nfileRr_SsuMlJZlhXPvWQ
About:
It has not taken Esperanza Spalding long to emerge as one of the brightest lights in the musical world. Listeners familiar with her stunning 2008 Heads Up International debut, Esperanza, and her best-selling 2010 release Chamber Music Society, were well aware that the young bassist, vocalist and composer from Portland, Oregon was the real deal, with a unique and style-spanning presence, deeply rooted in jazz yet destined to make her mark far beyond the jazz realm. That judgment was confirmed on February 13, 2011, when Spalding became the first jazz musician to receive the GRAMMY® Award for Best New Artist. On March 20th, 2012, Heads Up International, a division of Concord Music Group, gives us Spalding’s latest release, Radio Music Society, her most diverse, ambitious and masterful recital yet. 11 songs are accompanied by conceptual short films, which further express Esperanza’s inspiration and story behind each track. Shot in various locations including New York City; Barcelona, Spain; and Portland, Oregon; all videos will be available to purchasers of Radio Music Society as a digital download or a DVD on the deluxe version.
Radio Music Society is a companion, rather than a sequel, to Spalding’s previous disc, which reached No. 1 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz Chart. “Originally I thought it would be fun to release a double album,” she explains, “One disc with an intimate, subtle exploration of chamber works and a second one in which jazz musicians explore song forms and melodies that are formatted more along the lines of what we would categorize as “pop songs.” Those are the two things that really interest me, and it intrigues me to think about different presentation approaches while writing each kind of song. On the pop song side, I think about listeners who aren’t into jazz, but I also think about the people within my musical community who can interpret each idea best.”
“Radio Song,” the new disc’s opening track, both sets the tone and confirms the aptness of Spalding’s “radio music” metaphor. “Everyone has the experience of turning on a car radio,” she explains,” mindlessly flipping through the dial and suddenly a fragment grabs you and you’re totally digging it. I wanted to capture that moment when the music just sinks in. It’s about the power of song, and how at the least it can save the day.”
Fleshing out the concept with original music was second nature to Spalding. “I have this book of music that I’ve written, and so much of it fit either the Chamber Music or Radio Music concept. Songs develop for me in fragments, so for these projects, I took my notes and organized them into coherent works of music.”
In the process, Spalding added her original, affirmative perspective to classic radio music themes. Songs about love run a full gamut. “Hold On Me” is a narrative of unrequited love, inspired by people who cling to dreams of relationships that can never be realized. “Let Her,” one of Spalding’s older compositions, was inspired by “different people I’ve known who are in miserable situations, then complain when they end.” “Cinnamon Tree,” written to cheer up a friend, celebrates platonic love, and Spalding’s belief that “the love between friends is just as important as romantic love.”
“Crowned and Kissed,” with references to King Arthur and Midas, is about “the unsung royalty in your life, men and women who quietly, every day do the most honorable things, and who deserve to be honored even if they don’t end up with castles and thrones.” The edgy “Smile Like That” marks the moment a person realizes that his or her partner has developed other interests. “I’m saying, `Okay, I get it, let’s not beat around the bush,’” Spalding explains.
Her takes on the state of our country and our culture are equally fresh and insightful. “Vague Suspicions” confronts society’s short attention span and our habit of absorbing horrific events and celebrity gossip as part of the same media overload. The brief “Land Of The Free” speaks to the sinister system of false imprisonment by outlining the case of one innocent victim who spent 30 years in jail for a crime he did not commit.
“Black Gold” is specifically addressed to young boys of color. “So much of our strength is drawn from resistance and endurance,” she explains, “but black pride didn’t just start with the slave trade. I wanted to address our nobility, going back to our incredible ancestors in pre-colonial Africa. I remember meetings when I was in elementary school about being strong as young black women, and I don’t think the boys had those meetings. This song is meant to speak to those young men, and I imagined it might one day be something that a parent could sing to his or her son.”
Radio Music Society also features “City of Roses,” a celebration of her native Portland, Oregon that Spalding was commissioned to write by Banana Republic, and two cover tunes. Taking the advice of one of her mentors, tenor saxophone giant Joe Lovano: “When you do a classic, you have to find your own reason for doing it.” Spalding charges Stevie Wonder’s “I Can’t Help It” with the energy of apprehensive new love and adds original lyrics to Wayne Shorter’s “Endangered Species.”
The music is realized by many of the brilliant musicians who are part of Spalding’s ever-expanding universe. In addition to longtime partners Lovano, keyboard player Leo Genovese and drummer Terri Lyne Carrington, the ranks contain jazz legends Jack DeJohnette and Billy Hart; guitar heroes Jef Lee Johnson and Lionel Loueke; an array of master vocalists including Algebra Blessett, Lalah Hathaway, Gretchen Parlato, Leni Stern and Becca Stevens; hip-hop giant Q-Tip (who performs on and co-produced two tracks); and two Portland-based musicians, Janice Scroggins and Dr. Thara Memory, who provided essential mentorship in Spalding’s youth.
Four tracks feature the horn section of the American Music Program, a youth big band of musicians age 12 to 18 directed by her longtime mentor and teacher Dr. Memory, who conducts and provides horn arrangements; while the soulful pianist on “Hold on Me” is Ms. Scroggins, who Spalding studied with as a child. “Both of them are phenomenal artists who aren’t well known outside of the Northwest,” Spalding emphasizes. “Janice Scroggins was, quite honestly, too deep for me when I was eight years old. She unifies completely the sounds of gospel, blues and jazz, our American roots music. And Dr. Thara Memory, the teacher I came up through, has dedicated his life to spreading the message of this music. I had to have his youth band on the record, because they’re part of my Music Society, too.”
Among its many strengths, Radio Music Society is a celebration of the men and women who have helped cultivate Spalding’s talent, as well as those who have nurtured her vision and inspired her along the way. “I’ve had the honor and blessing of working with so many phenomenal jazz musicians over the years,” she says. “As I’ve gotten to know them and their music, I’ve grown to love them as family and colleagues. I wished for an opportunity for us all to interpret songs together, so that they can be heard and received by a larger audience. All my personal heroes who are revered in the jazz world – like Joe Lovano and Terri Lyne Carrington – should be heard by a mainstream audience, because what they manifest in their music is so beautiful, sincere and uplifting. I think they literally bring good into the lives of the people who hear them. So I’ve tried to put together a program of music that speaks to the non-jazz listener, but can still provide a viable foundation for my jazz heroes to express themselves. Hopefully, people can enjoy all the elements of my music without being told which genres it is ‘supposedly’ a blend of. Everyone is invited to listen with no pre-conceived notions. It’s a journey. Think and feel for yourself. But, most importantly, ENJOY!” “Art doesn’t thrive with too much analyzing and explaining,” Esperanza Spalding notes, “The idea of `radio music’ is very broad.” Radio Music Society is destined to expand the concept even further, not to mention the horizons of the music world’s most exceptional young artist.
Track Listing:
1. Radio Song (Esperanza Spalding) 6:32
2. Cinnamon Tree (Esperanza Spalding) 5:35
3. Crowned & Kissed (Algebra Blessett / Esperanza Spalding) 4:34
4. Land of the Free (Esperanza Spalding) 1:54
5. Black Gold (Esperanza Spalding) 5:16
6. I Can’t Help It (Susaye Greene Brown / Stevie Wonder) 4:42
7. Hold On Me (Esperanza Spalding) 3:40
8. Vague Suspicions (Esperanza Spalding) 5:50
9. Endagered Species (Wayne Shorter / Esperanza Spalding / Joseph Vitarelli) 6:37
10. Let Her (Esperanza Spalding) 4:20
11. City of Roses (Esperanza Spalding) 4:35
12. Smile Like That (Esperanza Spalding) 4:17
Personnel:
Esperanza Spalding: vocals, electric and acoustic bass
Leo Genovese: piano, Rhodes, guembri, keyboards (1-3, 6, 8-12)
Terri Lyne Carrington: drums (1-3, 5, 9, 11)
Anthony Diamond: saxophone (11)
Q-Tip: vocals, glockenspiel (11)
Jamie Haddad: percussion (1)
Gretchen Parlato: background vocals, spoken word (1, 6, 10)
Raydar Ellis: spoken word, sounds (10)
Leni Stern: background vocals (10)
Becca Stevens: background vocals (1, 6)
Justin Brown: background vocals (1, 6)
Alan Hampton: background vocals (1)
Chris Turner: background vocals (1)
Darren Barrett: trumpet (1, 2, 3, 9, 10, 12)
Jeff Galindo: trombone (1, 3, 8,10, 12)
Daniel Blake: saxophones, flute, (1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 10)
Jef Lee Johnson: guitar (2, 9)
Olivia Deprado: violin: (2)
Jody Redhage: viola (2)
James Weidman: organ (4)
Algebra Blessett: vocals (5)
Savannah Children’s Choir: choral voices (5)
Lionel Loueke: guitar, voice (5)
Raymond Angry: organ (5)
Tivon Penicott: tenor saxophone (5)
Igmar Thomas: trumpet (5)
Corey King: trumpet (5)
Joe Lovano: tenor saxophone (6)
Ricardo Vogt: guitar (6, 8, 10)
Lyndon Rochelle: drums (6)
Janice Scroggins: piano (7)
Billy Hart: drums (7)
Jack DeJohnette: drums (8, 10, 12)
Lalah Hathaway: vocals (9)
Gilad Hekselman: guitar (12)
American Music Program (Big Band) (1, 7, 11)
Kama Bell: clarinet
Andrew Olsen: alto saxophone
John Carey: alto saxophone
Adam Reihs: tenor saxophone
Kyle Zimmerman: alto saxophone
Renato Caranto: alto saxophone
Stanley Matabane: tenor, alto saxophone
Nicole Glover: tenor saxophone
Jeff Rathbone: baritone saxophone
Benjamin C. McDonald: trumpet
Benjamin Seacrest: trumpet
Sam Seacrest: alto saxophone
Noah Conrad: trumpet
Hayden Conrad: tenor saxophone
Tre Palmedo: trumpet
Noah Hocker: trumpet
Kiran Bosely: trumpet
Stan Bock: trombone
Dan Brewster: trombone
Jerry Stalnaker: bass trombone
Ian Garner: trombone
Javier Nero: trombone
Matt Warming: trombone
Ashton Summers: trombone
Aaron Reihs: tenor saxophone
Recorded Summer 2011, at Atlantic Sound Studios, Brooklyn, NY
Avatar Recording Studios, New York, NY; Kung Fu Bakery, Portland, OR; MSR Studios, New York, NY; Raydar Studios, New York, NY; Water Music, Hoboken, NJ
Produced by Esperanza Spalding, Q-Tip and Dave Love
Engineers: Fernando Lodeiro, Blair Wells, James Frazee, Brian Montgomery, Bob Stark, Joe Ferla, Raydar Ellis, Jeremy Loucas
Assistant Engineers: Chris Cardillo, Sean Kelly, Tim Marchiafava
Mixing: Joe Ferla, Erik Zobler
Mixing Assistants: Derik Lee, Brett Mayer
Mastering: Paul Blakemore
Review:
If there’s to be an unofficial ambassador for contemporary
jazz then Esperanza Spalding could fit the bill nicely. The young bassist,
singer, and composer brings a fresh exuberance marked by prodigious talent;
honoring those who have paved the way, yet seeking to pursue her own path.
Whether receiving the 2011 Grammy for “Best New Artist” or
shining bright at the 2012 Academy Awards , in an unusual yet memorable
performance, she’s riding a wave of deserved recognition.
Where 2011’s Chamber Music Society (Heads Up International) fronted a
jazz trio with classical strings and voice, its companion release Radio
Music Society reveals Spalding’s passion for pop music forms. There was a
time when jazz and pop music sometimes shared the airwaves on the same program
lists, but that’s an entirely different topic. As already proven on previous
releases, she’s quite convincing in almost any setting, while bringing her own
whimsical and sophisticated style to the program.
The set is a veritable songbook as Spalding delivers her dual threat of sublime
singing and swinging basses, with some help from an impressive roster of
artists. There’s the ebullient “Radio Song” that spins an infectious
arrangement with vocal harmonies in the vein of The Manhattan
Transfer and Take 6, or pleasant surprises such as Michael
Jackson’s hit “I Can’t Help It,” written by Stevie Wonder, with
raspy notes from saxophonist Joe Lovano.
Yet there are multilayered qualities at work in
Spalding’s compositions. Contrapuntal harmonies are present in “Cinnamon
Tree,” which switches from balladry to dark toned funk provided by
guitarist Jef Lee Johnson. But there’s also awareness of social issues in
the uplifting words of “Black Gold,” dedicated to young boys of
color, or the bittersweet irony of “Land Of The Free”—sweetness found
in Spalding’s supple voice yet bitter truths heard in lyrics that speak about
injustices in the criminal justice system.
If there’s one song that stumbles, it’s the lighthearted tale of an inevitable
breakup in “Let Her.” But there are also moments of weightier
brilliance such as “Vague Suspicions,” whose video provided in the
deluxe edition is simply riveting, as the music is brought to life in scenes of
serenity and war casualties from opposing views. There’s a plethora of good
music throughout the set: funky horn vamps; an ’80s electronic fusion-like
grooves in Wayne Shorter’s “Endangered Species,” where Spalding
shows here electric bass skills; and some Lena Horne-like glam on
“Hold On Me,” in a swanky big band setting.
Not fitting neatly into either a jazz or pop music box can present a conundrum
for some fans and critics, but Spalding’s interests are clearly diverse. She’s
more than just another pretty face who can sing and play what everyone wants.
Her words and music, as continued in Radio Music Society, are telling new stories
in her own voice.
Mark F. Turner (All About Jazz)