"From the first ringing notes – "Oh Freedom"
of Cynthia Felton's Freedom Jazz Dance session, I was lifted by the life force
of her celebration of the common language of jazz, blues and gospel.
Here is Cynthia Felton bringing the impact of her
multi-dimensional human voice. And dig the heart-pulse beat – also known as
swinging – in all of her storytelling including such too seldom heard originals
as Charles Mingus' "Duke Ellington's Sound of Love."
Although this is a singer with a four-octave range, she does
not engage in surface pyrotechnics – technical wizardry. Dizzy Gillespie once
told me: "It took me years to learn what notes not to play, "Cynthia
Felton doesn't flashily pyramid notes. Each sound is part of her inner being.
Her passion led her to found The Ethnomusicology Library of
American Heritage where she focuses on that deep heritage that has become a
global music transcending barriers of national languages and backgrounds. The
intent of the library is "to bring attention to artists and music history
that might not be so known."
And Cynthia Felton, as you hear in this session, surely
deserves to be much better known. I confess I did not know about her until this
recording. Now Cynthia' music has become part of my life.
- Nat Hentoff
At The Jazz Band Ball: Sixty
Years On The Jazz Scene
(University of California Press)
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