Jeanne Lee with Ran Blake – The Newest Sound You Never Heard 1966-67

The first time I learned about “new jazz” singer, Ms. Jeanne Lee, was in 2015. I was given the opportunity to research and write a piece for Bitch Media about African American Women composers. The piece was entitled, Black Women Composers to Discover (re-published in Bitch Media’s online outlet in March, 2018). The blurb from the piece reads:

“Jeanne Lee was a choreographer, composer, and jazz singer who was born in New York City in 1939. While attending Bard College, she met pianist Ran Blake. Together, they won an Apollo Theater Amateur Night in 1962, recorded an album for RCA Victor, and went on European tour. In Europe, Ran Blake remembers, “She created such a sensation—they called her the heir of Billie Holiday.” In 1977, Jeanne Lee collaborated with John Cage for his piece “Apartment House 1776,”  a musical commemoration of the United States Bicentennial. From that piece, she composed the extended work “Prayer for Our Time,” a jazz oratorio.”

Today, after much ground has been broken by women in jazz, Ms. Lee shouldn’t be an artist to “discover.” She should be celebrated by people around the world, young and old. Her longtime collaborator, pianist Ran Blake, made a collection of music and performed in America and different countries often in the 1960s, starting with their debut album, “The Newest Sound Around,” released in 1961. To understand their significance, it helps to consider the time in which these recordings took place. In a time of racial unrest, with the civil rights movement at full strength, Blake and Lee were cutting edge for their time, performing as an African American and white, gender mixed duo. They composed music quite freely, which comes across in their music, elegantly fitting into the free jazz genre, improvising original songs, but also holding true to standards “Mr. Tambourine Man” and “My Favorite Things. Continue reading “Jeanne Lee with Ran Blake – The Newest Sound You Never Heard 1966-67”

Betty Carter, Abbey Lincoln and Linda Sharrock: A Jazz Trifecta

I was sitting in a coffee shop in Baltimore City with experimental artist and founder of the nonprofit TECHNE, Bonnie Jones, listening to her talk about the lack of attention, coverage and general acknowledgement of women in jazz and experimental music. Bonnie who is Korean American and has gracefully surpassed her 20s, calmly expressed that women who play jazz get attention when they are very young, and then music critics leave them virtually unnoticed until they hit their “golden years” in their 60s and 70s when they make their last battle cries – their last tours and final albums.

I have to confess that I am no less guilty of this, and am only able to explain my unintended “late” coverage of women in jazz with the excuse that I was too young to critique some of jazz’s best female stars whose heydays were in the 1960s. If I’d been actively writing then, I would have written about these women with ferocious fervor and commitment. Nonetheless, in 2017, there is no danger in paying tribute to women in jazz who were unapologetic, shone bright with wisdom, and gave themselves fully to their music. I can say that being a bit younger, I can appreciate the later works of jazz artists, being naturally bonded with the modern era they were gracefully adjusting to.

In contemplating jazz, women, and the effect that the active metamorphosis aging can bring on music, its tone and creative process – the question may be if anyone is aware of musicians Betty Carter, Abbey Lincoln and Linda Sharrock’s reality of survival. Continue reading “Betty Carter, Abbey Lincoln and Linda Sharrock: A Jazz Trifecta”