Suzanna Smith Halfway Between Heaven &
LoveSuzanna Smith has been a creative force on the rich Bay Area jazz vocal
scene since 2005 -- as a performer and songwriter as well as founder/producer
of San Francisco's long-standing Savanna Jazz vocal jam session and co-founder
of the nonprofit Bay Area Jazz & Arts, Inc. Her constant efforts to nurture
local jazz have redounded to the benefit of many artists, including Smith
herself. With Halfway Between Heaven & Love, to be released by the singer's
Ink Pen Records on November 19, Smith delivers one of the year's most
impressive vocal projects, an intoxicating mix of original tunes and
beautifully rendered standards.
"There
is an essential, profound difference between being a singer and being an artist,"
writes CD co-producer Kitty Margolis in her album notes. "In today's
oversaturated music-scape it's wise to be patient when making the maiden
recording voyage until one has something unique and compelling to say. Halfway
Between Heaven & Love was undeniably worth the wait."
Accompanied
by some of the most creative figures on the Bay Area scene, Smith combines the
confessional imperative of a singer/songwriter with the rhythmic acuity of a
jazz chanteuse. She wrote the lyrics for nine of the album's 13 tracks while
collaborating on the music of five songs with pianist/keyboardist Michael
Coleman.
Suzanna Smith The album opens with a graceful
bebop medley as Smith's clever lyrics link Tadd Dameron's "Lady Bird"
and Miles Davis's "Half Nelson." Featuring the album's core trio with
Coleman, bassist Brandon Essex, and drummer Hamir Atwal, the piece immediately
establishes Smith as a singer of rare poise and presence.
Smith
and Coleman's "Paper Boat," "The Man That Broke the Dragon's
Heart," and "Comet" more than hold their own alongside the
American Songbook gems -- "Hooray for Love," "Alone
Together," and Michel Legrand's "Summer Me, Winter Me." Smith
closes the album as she started, with an original lyric set to a modern jazz
classic, Dexter Gordon's Latin swinger "Soy Califa."
"I'm
always looking for ways to play within the boundaries of a song's
'container,'" Smith says. "I think of songs as rooms and the longer
you live within them, the more you can move about without bumping into things.
I love when I reach that point with a song."
Born in
Boulder, CO in 1974 and raised in Livermore, east of San Francisco, Suzanna
studied computer science and studio art at Wellesley College. There she got
deeply involved in the a cappella scene, a passion she brought back to the Bay
Area after graduation. After performing around the region for several years in
a five-woman ensemble, she eventually decided to pursue vocal studies at the
Jazzschool in Berkeley, where she worked closely with Laurie Antonioli,
Madeline Eastman, Maye Cavallaro, and Stephanie Bruce. She also studied
privately with Kitty Margolis, resulting in a unique mentoring relationship
between the two vocalists.
Suzanna Smith As she gained confidence, Smith
started sitting in at open mics, which led to regular engagements and
invaluable experience. Her reputation spread with a monthly gig at San
Francisco's Savanna Jazz, where she also produced and hosted a monthly vocal
jam session that ran for three years. She has also performed at many of the
region's top clubs and venues, emerging as a startlingly fine singer with a
repertoire that's wholly her own.
Smith
lives in Oakland with esteemed jazz vocalist Kenny Washington and their infant
son Miles. "This has been a big year for me -- having a baby and working
hard to release this album," says Smith. "It almost feels like I'm
giving birth to two babies. It has been fascinating to see the meanings of my
songs shift in the years since I first wrote them. The songs continue to apply,
just in new ways, to all the changes in my life. It has also been powerful to
see them become personal anthems for other people's life experiences."
Smith's
CD release show will take place Friday 11/22 at Oakland's Sound Room, the home
of Bay Area Jazz & Arts, Inc. (BAJA). She'll be backed by musicians from
her new album, including Michael Coleman, piano; Michael O'Neill, tenor
saxophone and clarinet; Ken Husbands, guitar; Brandon Essex, bass; and Jon
Arkin, drums.
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