With her
strong, agile voice, rhythmic virtuosity, and
improvisational ease, Dianne Reeves was
clearly born of jazz. But music, she feels, should have
"no boundaries," so her singing draws upon a
world of influences: Africa, Brazil, and the Caribbean;
gospel and r&b; classic and contemporary pop. As with
Carmen McRae and Billie Holiday, Reeves' musicianship is
tied to a powerful storytelling instinct--one that
surfaced in 1982, when her autobiographical hit Better
Days conveyed the message of hope that sparks all
her work.
A Blue
Note/EMI recording artist since 1987, she has earned a
recent Grammy win and multiple nominations as well as the
admiration of Blue Note president Bruce Lundvall, who
says: "I feel better about my own legacy for signing
her." Both he and Reeves can look with pride at the
vast international audience her albums (eleven to date)
have created. It stretches from New York to London to
Berlin to Brazil to Japan, where she sings regularly at
the Blue Note clubs in Tokyo, Yokohama, and Osaka. In
1997, a return appearance at New Morning, the pre-eminent
jazz club of Paris, resulted in the best-selling CD New
Morning, issued by French Blue Note.
But the
greatest tribute to her artistry comes from the
musicians-- Clark Terry, Sergio Mendes, Gene Harris,
Harry Belafonte--who have actively championed her.
"Whenever I'm around Dianne, it's special,"
says the great saxophonist James Moody. "I dig her
all the time."
The
dignity of her singing is rooted in her childhood. Born
in Detroit in 1956 and raised in Denver, Reeves lost her
father to cancer when she was two. But the women in her
family--her grandmother, her mother (a nurse), her aunt,
her sister Sharon--helped give her an unshakable sense of
fortitude. "They're all fighters," she says.
"All my life I heard about their problems at work,
which were always discussed around the children -what
someone had said, how they dealt with it. They're amazing
to me."
Music was
another gift from the family. Her father had been a
singer; her mother played trumpet; an uncle, Charles
Burrell, worked as a bassist with the Colorado Symphony.
Further inspiration came from her cousin George Duke, the
celebrated keyboardist, composer, and arranger (as well
as her future record producer). As a child Reeves studied
piano, the source of her rich harmonic awareness.
Her
artistic and emotional grounding helped her bear the
pressures of junior high, where she and other black
children in Denver participated in one of the first
bussing programs. Traveling to hostile white
neighborhoods in the late '60s, they found themselves
thrust into a pressure-cooker of racism, ignited mostly
by parents who had been conditioned in a less enlightened
time. "It dawned on me that this was truly
ignorance--ignorance in not wanting to understand one
another," Reeves explains. Then thirteen, she joined
other students--black, white, and Hispanic--in trying to
educate their elders. She participated in sit-ins, spoke
at a school assembly, even sang in a concert organized by
the children to show how music cut across racial
boundaries. "Fortunately it all ended in a positive
way," she says. "People started to look at
themselves and be kind of ashamed of the way they
reacted."
Listening
to the radio, she began to see how pop artists used music
to tell stories about their lives. "Even if was a
song with a nice groove by Stevie Wonder or the
O'Jays," she says, "you also got a lot of
information about life." The voice itself could hold
wondrous technical possibilities, as she learned when she
heard the 1972 album Sarah Vaughan and Michel Legrand.
At sixteen, Reeves put her training on display when she
sang with her high school band at a National Association
of Jazz Educators convention in Chicago. One of the
people who heard her was trumpeter Clark Terry, who
became the first in her long line of illustrious mentors.
He invited her to sing with his All-Star groups, which
included Al Grey, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, and
Tommy Flanagan.
After a few years of singing in local clubs she moved to
Los Angeles in 1976, only to find that straight-ahead
jazz singing was at its commercial low. That's when she
learned to stretch her talent in other directions. She
joined the Latin fusion group Caldera in which she made a
lasting friend: keyboardist Eduardo (Eddie) del Barrio,
with whom she has co-written some of her most powerful
songs. Reeves also sang with Night Flight, an
experimental jazz band led by pianist Billy Childs, who
became her musical director for ten years. "Billy
gave me license to go anywhere musically," she said
in an interview with Herb Wong, her first record
producer. "It wasn't just a backup group for me, it
was a unified group which gave me a basis for my
future."
Wong signed her to his Palo Alto label, for whom she
recorded her first two albums, Welcome to My Love
(1982) and For Every Heart (1985)
(anthologized in the Blue Note CD The Palo Alto
Sessions). During that time she wrote and
recorded "Better Days", a stirring recollection
of her grandmother. Since then Reeves has expanded the
song into a gospelish narrative about her youth. Holly
Bass of the Washington Post called it "a picture of
black Southern life as vivid as any you'd find in a story
penned by Maya Angelou or J. California Cooper."
But at Palo Alto, she says, she still hadn't found her
own voice. "There's only one Sarah, Ella, and
Carmen, and I needed to do my own thing," Reeves
told Milwaukee journalist Tina Maples.
After moving back to Los Angeles in 1987, Reeves became
the first vocalist signed to the newly reactivated Blue
Note label. In Dianne Reeves (1987) and Never
Too Far (1989) she focused on pop-r&b, but
thereafter gave her eclecticism full reign. I
Remember (1991) ranges from jazz standards
("Softly", "As in a Morning Sunrise",
"Love for Sale") to Latin jazz (Mongo
Santamaria's "Afro-Blue") to Stephen Sondheim's
poignant title song. Art and Survival (EMI,
1994), a fiery autobiographical album of pop, soul, and
jazz, includes her gospel-tinged original Come to the
River. Quiet After the Storm (1995) offers
jazz-oriented performances of songs by Joni Mitchell,
Harold Arlen, Duke Ellington, and others; the album won a
Grammy nomination for Best Jazz Vocal Performance. The
Grand Encounter (1996) features jazz giants Joe
Williams, Clark Terry, Harry "Sweets" Edison,
James Moody, Phil Woods, Toots Thielemans, and Kenny
Barron. That Day (1997) finds her in a
reflective ballad mood, accompanied by a jazz trio led by
drummer Terri Lynn Carrington.
Her third Grammy nomination went to her release, Bridges
(1999), which found her back with her cousin George Duke
and all-star band with Mulgrew Miller, Billy Childs,
Terri Lynn Carrington, Kenny Garrett, and Brian Blades,
performing a mixture of originals and contemporary
standards by Leonard Cohen, Peter Gabriel and Joni
Mitchell.
In the year approaching the Millennium, Dianne expanded
her creativity by joining as a guest of the Lincoln
Center Jazz Orchestra in several special Duke Ellington
projects, including a concert at the White House, a TV
series on PBS and a tour of the United States. She was
also featured in a special on the CBS Sunday Morning Show
as well as with the Boston Pops on PBS' Great
Performances.
Reeves once more lives in Denver, but spends much of her
life on the road. "I really believe in
touring," she says. "It's the only way you can
get close to your audience." She remains stubbornly
adventurous, despite the criticism of jazz purists.
"I really try to let the critics know: Look, you
have to allow me the opportunity to grow whether you like
it or not," she says. "It's part of who I am.
It doesn't mean that I'm abandoning jazz. I've just found
different ways to say what I really feel."
Dianne's Grammy winning album, In the Moment, is
the first live album she has done and was prompted by
requests from her many fans who have been thrilled and
moved by her concert performances. She began the New Year
with the release of The Calling, Celebrating Sarah
Vaughan, recorded with full orchestra, and debuted
the program at NY's Avery Fisher Hall. Also set are
appearances with the Montreal Symphony, Hollywood Bowl
and the Colorado Symphony.
September 2002
European booking agent International
Music Network
For booking in Italy, contact: EMMECI
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