An
astonishing tour-de-force of the jazz singer’s art released at a time when jazz
was widely viewed as being artistically moribund and when the market for
straight-ahead jazz had shrunk to something of a rump (although the adventurous
Inner City label had achieved a certain caché with hard-core jazz aficionados
around the world, and notably with the UK’s jazz-funk scene of the late ‘70s).
While many of her contemporaries turned to a more commercially viable and often
musically unadventurous fusion, Janet Lawson’s record made the case for jazz as
a still-exciting, living art-form.
On the
face of it, Janet Lawson can be seen as a direct descendant of those jazz
giants, Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan and Anita O’Day, equally at home with
the precise articulation and interpretation of lyrics, attentive to diction and
the nuances of words, and with the ‘pure’ music of wordless improvisation,
known as ‘scat’ singing. Whereas someone like the once-great Ella had latterly
turned scat into something of a novelty, routinely hammed up for cosy audiences
that didn’t want jazz to sound too ‘difficult’, Janet Lawson, like her
contemporaries in Europe Ursula Dudziak and Norma Winstone, was working at
something altogether ‘deeper’.
From
classic ballads like I Thought About You and It Never Entered My Mind, via a
superlative Round Midnight and a stunning Jitterbug Waltz (who else ever heard
that as a vocal tune?), tunes by singers Bob Dorough (Nothing Like You) and
Blossom Dearie (Sunday Afternoon), and a brilliant original, So High (which
became a favourite of the UK’s burgeoning jazz-dance scene), Janet Lawson made
music that constantly involved the listener in the question of ‘will she/won’t
she pull it off..?’ as her daring improvisations achieved exhilarating flights
of creativity, and the band as a whole creates a whole range of emotional moods
from longing to joy.
This
augmented version of the quintet’s album supplements the original track listing
with an even more diverse selection of material: Gershwin’s stately Ain’t
Necessarily So; the freebop of Joshua, from the book of the second great Miles
Davis Quintet; and a version of the Brazilian ballad Dindi, a tune which Janet
Lawson had previously recorded and released as a seven-inch single on United
Artists.
The
Janet Lawson Quintet was an astonishingly tight-knit band, a collective that
lived and breathed as one, just like the aforementioned Miles Davis Quintet or
the sprawling Mingus band that had originally reinvented Fats Waller’s ’s
Jitterbug Waltz as a modern jazz tune. Reed man Roger Rosenberg and pianist
Bill O’Connell really sound good enough to have had recording careers as
leaders themselves, and drummer Jimmy Madison and bassist Ratzo Harris complete
this fine unit. Rosenberg especially really shines, bringing an understated
virtuosity to proceedings, at times evoking the tenor giant Ben Webster on
those breathy, quiet moments, even whilst playing the unwieldy baritone. His
soprano playing is also inspired, leaping about with vim and vitality.
O’Connell has less time in the spotlight, shines whenever he is in it, and
contributes glorious comping the rest of the time… why have we heard so little
of such great musicians? The other members of the rhythm section display an
extraordinary sensitivity to the vast sweeps that Janet Lawson’s voice makes,
moving from passages of atemporal floatiness into fluid, cooking,
straight-ahead bop within moments.
‘When we
are in flow,’ says Janet in her book, ‘in harmony with the activities of
consciousness, we are “naturally” creative –being brilliant in retort,
uncovering dormant gifts, finding that lost chord in every aspect of our lives.
It’s the natural way to be.’ One would be hard pressed to find a band more in
‘flow’ than the Janet Lawson Quintet circa 1981 (although their follow up album
three years later was equally fine).
Listeners
who know Janet Lawson mainly for the much played So High – brilliant as it is -
should take the time to investigate the rest of the delights available in this
set, quite simply one of the finest jazz records of the past 35 years, and now,
in its augmented form, sounding better than ever.
~ bbemusic.com
~ bbemusic.com
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