Friday, July 8, 2011

American jazz phenom storms the pop world....


By Tony Ozuna
Contra-bassist, singer and composer Esperanza Spalding has attracted national attention in the United States as an up-and-coming jazz star at a time when veteran, major jazz players are hardly recognized by the mainstream media. Spalding's looks and charm haven't hurt her quick rise to popularity, but ultimately it is the music that counts, and Spalding delivers on all expectations.

Born in 1984 in Portland, Oregon, Spalding won the Grammy Award for Best New Artist in 2011, much to the chagrin of fans of teen pop idol Justin Bieber. As one despondent girl wrote on a YouTube clip of Spalding: "I'm a 14-year-old girl - diehard Bieber fan. Naturally, I was devastated when she beat him out for the Grammy. But I have to say, this actually is good music. Bravo, Esperanza."

Spalding is the first jazz artist to ever win the Best New Artist Award, but since she is both a sublime singer and an exceptional bassist, she is already a step ahead of the competition.

As a jazz contra-bassist, Spalding made her debut in Prague in 2009 with Joe Lovano's group US5. For that show, the perhaps unintended main attraction was the rare intensity and electricity between Spalding playing with the group's two drummers, Franciso Mela and Otis Brown III. Spalding's debut album, Junjo (2006) was recorded as a trio with Mela, while her follow-up, Esperanza (2008) features more players, including Brown III on drums.

But despite the intensity she has with these two drummers, Spalding did not feature either on her latest recording, Chamber Music Society (2010).

"Chamber Music Society was inspired by a lot of classical music, and chamber music in particular, so two drummers won't be appropriate for this particular mood," Spalding tells The Prague Post.

The title of Chamber Music Society may be a nod to the Chamber Music Society of Oregon, an advanced youth orchestra and community program that loans used instruments to disadvantaged kids. Spalding joined the society she was a child in Portland, playing violin because cellos weren't available. By the time she was 15, Spalding had become the orchestra's concertmaster.

In 2002, Spalding received a full scholarship to study at Berklee College of Music in Boston, where she first met Joe Lovano. After Spalding graduated, Berklee hired her at the age of 20, making her the youngest faculty member in the college's history.
Besides being a phenomenal bassist and noted teacher, Spalding is also a fine singer in Portuguese, English and Spanish, depending on her feelings.

"I prefer to scat, so it is just spontaneous and unpredictable," she says. "But I always have the three languages in my mind. If a song in Spanish motivates me and I can communicate its meaning, I'll use Spanish. Portuguese is used because of its sound and melodies."



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