Nothing Never Happens (Self-Produced)
Bria Skonberg
Released November 1, 2019
Juno Award Nominee Vocal Jazz Album of the Year 2020
YouTube:
https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_khKrDfRQ54enO-9h0EPU3e7yDn0ks4k2s
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/album/1DO3Sg54rjM0vdFXu1hh72?si=6Lw7p-D-TGSZ-fpvJ7DUGg
About:
Whether it’s the hassles and hurdles that arise for a musician touring the world, the run-of-the-mill mishaps that inevitably disrupt daily life, or the barrage of bad news constantly clamoring for attention; Bria Skonberg succinctly captures the hectic tenor of our times in the title of her latest album, Nothing Never Happens. The trumpeter and vocalist found her own escape in order to craft a new set of originals and artfully chosen covers that spans the emotional and stylistic spectrum.
Due out November 1, Nothing Never Happens invites listeners to join Skonberg in diverting attention from the overload of social media, breaking news, political bickering and negative energy, with a stunning album that at times channels the ubiquitous anger and hopelessness that confronts us all in the modern media landscape, but at others manages to drown out that white noise and shine a light on the serene and the celebratory.
The album showcases Skonberg’s working band of recent years – pianist Mathis Picard, bassist Devin Starks and drummer Darrian Douglas – along with guest appearances by saxophonist Patrick Bartley, Hammond B3 master Jon Cowherd, and guitar great Doug Wamble. The project was helmed by GRAMMY® Award-winning producer Eli Wolf, shining a spotlight on Skonberg’s compelling songwriting, smoky vocals and blistering trumpet playing along with the scintillating chemistry of the ensemble.
In calling the album Nothing Never Happens, Skonberg captures the chief obstacle to its own creation. “My favorite way to write music is just to sit at a piano, be quiet and wait for things to surface,” she says, hinting at the struggle to find those peaceful moments in which to compose. “I needed to get out and find a space to process the overload of information and feelings because of what’s been going on in the world in the last few years.”
Of course, it also helps to commune with sympathetic listeners, and Skonberg also enjoyed a unique opportunity to workshop her new music through a monthly residency at Joe’s Pub in New York City, an eclectic venue where audiences were not necessarily jazz aficionados. “It’s a venue where you can do whatever you want,” she says. “I was looking to get some more grit into my sound on this album. That’s a big part of my personality that hasn’t been as represented on my recordings in the last couple of years.”
There is an arc to Nothing Never Happens, beginning with the soulful opening song, “Blackout.” At the surface the song could be taken as a classic “wronged lover” blues, albeit updated for the modern age. But the song is more a rejection of media itself, thereby becoming a mission statement for the album as a whole. When Skonberg sings “I’m done with your face / I’m done with your friends,” it could be directed at an ex, but it also conjures a certain inescapable name that has dominated the discourse over the past few years, with toxic results. Her pointed solo provides a much-needed moment of catharsis.
“Just being able to play music right now is essential to getting to a level of normalcy,” she says. “Playing trumpet really lets me get all those emotions out. It’s not always joyous, but it is a release.”
Skonberg originally recorded “So Is the Day” on her 2012 album of the same name, with a sultry New Orleans flavor. The powerful song has since become a staple of her live sets, slowing down in the process to the dirge-like feel that it takes on here. The slow burn is a testament to the patience and rooted feel of Douglas, while the addition of Wamble’s guitar and Cowherd’s organ adds to the dense, swampy atmosphere.
Zooming out for a bit of historical perspective, “Blackbird Fantasy” is an ingenious mash-up of The Beatles’ “Blackbird” and Duke Ellington’s “Black and Tan Fantasy” that reflects on the cyclical nature of history. The hybrid piece encompasses the Harlem Renaissance, the Civil Rights era that paralleled the British Invasion, and our modern day still much in need of change. The wistful “Square One” recognizes how much is still left to be accomplished, whether in life or in society. Co-written by Nashville songwriter Cariad Harmon, the song is simultaneously resigned and hopeful, retaining a sense of optimism based on what’s been learned and accomplished so far.
The raucous “Villain Vanguard” plays on the name of the legendary jazz club but was inspired by the Women’s Marches that rose up in the wake of the 2016 election. The piece itself captures the marching pace and outpouring of voices that accompany these protests.
Sonny Bono’s oft-recorded “Bang Bang” – which has been covered by Stevie Wonder, Lady Gaga and Nancy Sinatra, whose version Skonberg discovered via the soundtrack to Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill – is another piece that serves double duty: originally about the heartbreak of a childhood romance, it now inevitably conjures images of the gun violence that has erupted across the country. Such tragic events necessarily lead to questions like “What Now?” though Skonberg’s remorseful ballad is more intimate, capturing the self-doubt that can encroach in the twilight hours.
Opening with Starks’ infectious bass groove, Queen’s “I Want To Break Free” ends the album with a soaring sense of escape. The original’s anthemic melody is enhanced here by the band’s exuberant expressiveness, highlighted by Bartley’s explosive solo. Its inclusion harkens back to memories of Skonberg’s freewheeling high school days. “Talk about being an optimist!” she recalls with a laugh. “I had a convertible in British Columbia, where it rains ten months of the year. But there were always a few days when I could go out, put the top down and rock out to that song.”
The breadth of emotions and styles on Nothing Never Happens mirrors Skonberg’s career to date, which boasts an impressive range of accomplishments and accolades. In the last year alone, she sang the music of Aretha Franklin alongside Michelle Williams of Destiny’s Child, played with U2 at the iconic Apollo, sat in with the Dave Matthews Band, was a featured guest with Jon Batiste, performed as part of The Monterey Jazz Festival on Tour, and sang the National Anthem at Madison Square Garden for a NY Rangers game. The 2017 Juno Award Winner for Best Vocal Jazz Album and 2018 Juno nominee has garnered over 7 million streams on Spotify, made the Top 5 on Billboard jazz charts, and was voted #2 Rising Star by DownBeat Magazine.
Track Listing:
1. Blackout 5:24
2. So Is The Day 6:10
3. Blackbird Fantasy 4:37
4. Square One 4:08
5. Villain Vanguard 4:40
6. Bang Bang 4:40
7. What Now 4:36
8. I Want To Break Free 7:07
Personnel:
Bria Skonberg: trumpet, vocals
Mathis Picard: piano
Devin Starks: bass
Darrian Douglas: drums
Doug Wamble: guitar
Jon Cowherd: Hammond B3
Patrick Bartley: saxophone (3, 5, 8)
Produced by Eli Wolf
Artwork by Lisa Lockhart
Review:
In what can only be considered a wide, darker turn
from her five previous recordings which swayed and swung in more traditional,
pre-bop, jazz settings, award-winning trumpeter-vocalist-composer Bria Skonberg takes
us through the dark night of her heart and the national soul on the fraught,
yet impossible-not-to-listen-to Nothing Never Happens.
Swamped as we all are by the twenty-four-hour news cycle which brings the
apocalypse to our very doorsteps, and the myriad emotions that all too often
empower us or paralyze us, Skonberg urges—grittily, soulfully, with a shadowy,
mid-career-Lucinda-Williams swagger and growling horn—to “get off the
grid” in the insistent opening track, “Blackout.” Pulled and
pulsed by bassist Devin Starks and drummer Darrian Douglas, the
track opens into light and plunges again into the shadows, with Skonberg’s
warm, edgy vocal leading the way. Now on the verge of utter frustration,
Skonberg revisits the lighter tinged “So Is The Day,” the title track
from her 2012 release on Random Act Records, with a slow-burning, shattering
vocal vengeance which rips your heart out while pianist Mathis
Picard and guests Jon Cowherd on Hammond B3 and Doug Wamble on
guitar clear the field with a rock and roll force for the lady to take one last
plunging solo.
The utterly unique and unexpected “Blackbird Fantasy” crash
melds Duke Ellington and his long time trumpeter Bubber
Miley (whose influence is heard all over Skonberg’s own distinctive
instrumental voicing) 1927 composition “Black and Tan Fantasy”
with Paul McCartney’s perennial “Blackbird” for a performance
which would be a highlight on any other recording, if not for the two tracks
that preceded it. Just as Duke brought his many players to the fore, Skonberg
does the same, taking the tune into bandstand territory with Picard, Cowherd
and Douglas swinging away while she solos à la Miley. The wishful and
ruminative “Square One” breaks the tension with dreamy guitar, and a
lyric which includes “Day is over/Work is done/Hear the echoed praises
sung/Still hanging on that bottom rung/Here I am at square one.”
But wait, there is more. Fully aware she has your attention and is in full control, the jazz-rocking instrumental “Villain Vanguard” features alto saxophonist Patrick Bartley Jr blowing in breakneck tandem with Skonberg. In her current frame of mind, “Bang Bang”—originally a breezy, Sonny Bono-written solo hit single for Cher in 1966—becomes a tangle of male/female relationships and the dire violence which all too often results in bloodshed and politicians offering thoughts and prayers. The concluding track, Queen’s playful “I Want to Break Free” from 1984, (known far and wide for its then genre/gender-smashing cross-dressing music video) offers up a full gleam of hope as the band power grooves throughout the track’s exuberant seven minutes. Skonberg has been on track to break through in a big way for over a decade now and Nothing Never Happens is deservedly her moment.
Mrke Jurkovic (All About Jazz)