When the
Grammy-winning musician Billy Childs was 11 years old, his older sisters
introduced him to the work of Hall Of Fame singer-songwriter Laura Nyro. Her
blend of Broadway-inspired melodies, jazz improvisation and socially conscious
lyrics have stayed with him.Now he has returned to this early source of
inspiration, conceiving and orchestrating Map To The Treasure: Reimagining
Laura Nyro, to be released by Masterworks on September 9, 2014.
"I
related to her more than the other singer-songwriters of that era because the
piano was the engine that was driving a lot of her music," Childssaid.
"It was easy for me to escape into the world of the music because of its
theatricality. The way she used silence, dynamics, going from extreme changes
from very loud to very soft or vice versa-or heavily orchestrated to minimal.
All of these were used to tell whatever story she was telling. Also, her words
were not literal, more metaphorical and allegorical, so you could imagine what
she was talking about and made it easier for me to conjure up images in my
mind."
Childs
is not alone in his enthusiasm. An incredible range of musicians are on board
to interpret Nyro's narratives. Classical soprano Renée Fleming and cellist
Yo-Yo Ma add new meaning to her hometown ode, "New York Tendaberry."
Jazz stars Esperanza Spalding and Wayne Shorter collaborate on Nyro's pictorial
"Upstairs By A Chinese Lamp." R&B chanteuse Ledisi updates the
hit "Stoned Soul Picnic." Other prominent voices include Alison
Krauss, Rickie Lee Jones, Shawn Colvin, Dianne Reeves, Susan Tedeschi, Lisa
Fischer, and Becca Stevens, with featured instrumental soloists Chris Botti,
Jerry Douglas, Chris Potter, and Steve Wilson also on board.
"It's
incredible," Childs said. "Between myself and [producer] Larry Klein,
there have been a lot of people who we've worked with, particularly Larry in
terms of vocalists. And there are a hell of a lot of Laura Nyro fans out there.
Combined with the novelty and timeliness of it, people just said, ‘Yeah!' And
Masterworks is a really credible label."
While Childs
had been thinking about a Nyro project for several years, it was a conversation
two years ago between his agent Myles Weinstein and record executive Chuck
Mitchell that set the process in motion. Mitchell, who has been a Nyro fanatic
since her debut in the mid-‘60s, would not let this project slip past him. When
Mitchell arrived at Sony Music Masterworks, Childs said, "all of a sudden
it turned into this thing that we could not only do, but do it in a way we had
not even thought of." That included reconnecting Childs with Larry Klein.
The two musicians studied theory together as teenagers and had worked as
sidemen for Freddie Hubbard.
Childs'
own experiences in leading jazz chamber groups proved invaluable to creating
the widescreen scope of Map To The Treasure. On this disc, his focus is on
arranging the ensemble and guests to best present Nyro's imagery, rather than
draw attention to himself as an improviser.
"My
chamber group is all about getting the most out of the fewest instruments,
which helped from the standpoint of orchestration," Childssaid. "To
tell the stories the right way, orchestration is key to the success of telling
those stories. Laura was so full of dramatic symbolism and poetry, the ensemble
plays a big role in conjuring up such vivid images. And when it was time for a
piano solo, I wasn't worried about setting myself up to look good. It was,
‘What do I need to tell the story?'"
Even
after Childs' decades of considering Nyro's music, at the heart of it all is
his unyielding devotion to her art. That love is the heart of the
re-imagination of Map To The Treasure.
"The
way she hit me, and way she continues to hit me is on an emotional level other
than the intellect," Childs said. "If you love somebody, does that
change? If you love your son, daughter, or mother does that change? I don't
think so. Her music is such that it's so open for interpretation-you can spend
your life interpreting it and make the music mean certain things to you. It may
mean different things as time goes on, but my relation to it has not."
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