Sunday, March 10, 2013
Cécile McLorin Salvant - The Sound of Surprise
Interpretation of the great American Songbook is overdue for
major renovation. I know just the singer for the job. Her name is Cécile
McLorin Salvant. I first learned about her in a “Goings On About Town” note on
Lincoln Center’s “American Songbook” series: “The swinging singer Cécile McLorin
Salvant, who has a vocal warmth to match her rhythmic ease, is a vibrant
neo-traditionalist who makes the old new again” (“Jazz and Standards,” The
New Yorker, February 4, 2013). Not
recognizing the name, I went to iTunes to see if there were any samples of her
work. I found a 2010 album called Cécile, containing ten songs. I decided to buy it. I’ve been listening to it
ever since. Whoever wrote that anonymous New Yorker blurb knows what he/she is talking about. “Swinging”
is exactly the right word to describe Salvant’s singing, along with
“delightful,” “inventive,” “agile,” “rangy,” “magnetic,” “calm,” and “assured.”
Her rhythms and inflections and accents change continually. Her voice seems
capable of endless colors and timbres. Her dynamics are consummate. On Cécile, she sings an exquisite version of Gigi Gryce’s
“Social Call.” Ben Ratliff, reviewing her performance at Dizzy’s Club
Coca-Cola, says, “She radiates authority” (“A Young Vocalist Tweaks Expectations,”
The New York Times, November 2,
2012). Ratliff’s piece is illustrated with a video of Salvant singing Richard
Rodgers’s “I Didn’t Know What Time It Was.” What a mesmerizing rendition! She perfectly expresses that great song’s mysterioso quality. There’s a fascinating YouTube video of her singing
Harry Warren’s “I Only Have Eyes For You” in which she repeats “disappear,” in
the line “You are here, so am I / Maybe millions of people go by / But they
all disappear from view / And I only have eyes for you,” an astounding eight times. It’s
an amazing interpretation. Salvant’s singing has what Whitney Balliett
identified as jazz’s defining characteristic – the sound of surprise.
Credit: The above photograph of Cécile McLorin Salvant is by Tony Cenicola; it appears in The New York Times (November 2, 2012), as an illustration for Ben Ratliff's “A Young Vocalist Tweaks Expectations.”
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