By Andrew Gilbert
Jazz and country music are often cast as antithetical cultural forces, signifying a blue state/red state divide. The former is black, urban, and sophisticated, while the later is white, rural (or suburban), and populist.
The truth is that jazz and country music have been kissing cousins since the styles took shape early in the 20th century, and in fact formed a blissful union with the rise of western swing in the late 1930s.
For case study of how savvy artists can seamlessly meld two quintessentially American musical forms, look no further than “Crazy In Love With Patsy Cline,” a side project that Lavay Smith pursues when she’s not delivering her Red Hot Skillet Lickers repertoire of jump blues and swing anthems (songs she performs regularly at Ashkenaz).
The San Francisco diva originally paid tribute to Cline back in 2006 as part of a collaboration with New Orleans vocalist Ingrid Lucia, and Miss Carmen Getit, resident chanteuse with Steve Lucky and the Rhumba Bums. But for the past year or so she’s made the project her own, and she brings her inimitable sass to the Nashville sound Friday at Freight & Salvage.
For Smith, creating a program featuring songs indelibly associated with Cline makes perfect emotional sense. “When I had my heart broken, I listened to nothing but Billie Holiday and Patsy Cline,” Smith says. “A while ago I thought, I wish I could hear them singing each other songs, because they’re so similar, at least in the intensity of feeling.”
While addiction and hard living felled Holiday, Cline died in a plane crash in 1963 at the age of 30. She was at the height of her fame, a mainstay on the Grand Ole Opry and one of the only female country artists to play Carnegie Hall. Both Cline and Holiday attained iconic status through their gift for turning songs about abject romantic surrender into anthems of survival.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment