After
winning the 2015 Sarah Vaughan International Vocal Competition then performing
at the Montreal International Jazz Festival the following year, 25-year-old
singer and songwriter Arianna Neikrug makes her grander introduction to the
music world with the August 24, 2018 release of Changes on Concord Jazz.
Produced by
the Grammy-winning pianist and arranger Laurence Hobgood, Changes displays
Neikrug’s gift for interpreting tunes from the Great American Songbook and more
recent pop and R&B classics from the ’70s. The disc also contains two
originals that reveal some of Neikrug’s journey from her hometown of Los
Angeles to New York City, where she argues she truly belongs.
Hobgood, who
recruited his regular trio mates – drummer Jared Schonig and bassist Matt
Clohesy – for Changes, describes Neikrug as “an intellectual and complex
person.” “I can honestly say that she’s the most theoretically informed singer
that I’ve ever worked with – in terms of just knowing music,” Hobgood says.
“She understands the basic structures of music and how to talk about it. She
has a healthy combination of being strong-willed with being totally open-minded
to suggestions. Those are attributes of a singer with a long career.”
Changes
begins with a hypnotic reading of “No Moon at All” on which Neikrug initiates
by pairing her comely soprano with Hobgood’s economical piano accompaniment.
Soon after the rhythm section enters the fray and buoys her along as she
demonstrates her assured sense of swing, bluesy phrasing and remarkable
scatting acumen.
Neikrug’s
graceful rendition of “Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most” is the second of
the Great American Songbook compositions to appear on Changes. Neikrug says
that she started singing the Fran Landesman and Tommy Wolf tune when she was
only 17, but with little understanding of its emotional subtext. “How could I?
First of all, living in Los Angeles, I only had summer my whole life. So, what
is spring?” Neikrug laughs. “After I first moved to New York, I finally
understood what spring was all about. I found out why so many songs are written
about the weather and the seasons, because they make a huge difference in your
mental and emotional state.”
The disc
shift gears with Neikrug’s divine makeover of Al Green’s R&B staple, “Let’s
Stay Together” on which she sings the pleading lyrics and succinct melody atop
Hobgood’s beguiling arrangement. Hobgood suggested the song to Neikrug during
one of their first think-tank sessions while they were scanning Rolling Stone
magazine’s “100 Best Songs.”
Neikrug’s
burgeoning songwriting talent gets the spotlight with “Changes,” the disc’s
title track. Spurred by a lithe samba rhythm, the song touches on the difficult
period between graduating from Frost School of Music at the University of Miami
with a bachelor of music degree in studio music and jazz vocal performance and
applying for the Sarah Vaughan International Vocal Competition. “I was going
through my first major depressive episode,” she recalls. “I was experiencing a
rough time because I didn’t have any structure or job yet. It was weird for me
to be out in the real world and think, ‘Okay? What do I do? How do I make a schedule? Where do I go?’”
Now in
hindsight, Neikrug sees that struggling, transitional period as a blessing
because it afforded her some of life’s big lows and highs, which enabled her to
write more convincing life-based songs and interpret emotionally gripping
standards. “Having to build yourself up when you’re down is not an easy thing
to do” she says. “But how else are you going to write music from the heart and
emote these big experiences that you can put into your art? In the worst way,
it’s kind of cool.”
Changes
continues with the first of two intriguing mash-ups, “Never Let Me Go/I’ll Be
There.” Neikrug and Hobgood delve into Ray Evans and Jay Livingston’s 1956
standard as a sparkling duet before the rhythm section slides in for a
sumptuous rendition of the Jackson Five’s Motown gem. “I’ve been pitching ‘I’ll
Be There’ as just a lush jazz ballad to a number of singers for about 15 years.
Nobody has bit until now,” Hobgood says.
Neikrug
returns to jazz standards with a blistering version of “The Song Is You,” on
which she flaunts her rhythmic and tonal agility before delivering her second
original “New York Song,” articulating her long desire to move to the Big Apple
then returning to standard repertoire again by digging deep into the jazz canon
for her bewitching, R&B-laden refurbishing of “After You’ve Gone,” a Henry Creamer
and Turner Layton classic that’s 100-years-old. At the Sarah Vaughan
International Competition, she’d performed a vastly different, more up-tempo
treatment of “After You’ve Gone” during the final round.
Neikrug then
performs what she argues is the song that sealed her win at that aforementioned
competition – Bob Dorough and Terrell Kirk’s “Devil May Care.” Again, she
explains that Hobgood’s mesmeric arrangement differs from the one she performed
at the competition, which she described as “sassier and more down-home blues.
Changes
concludes with its second mash-up – two Joni Mitchell songs “Help Me/Be Cool.”
After college graduation, Neikrug went on a Joni Mitchell binge, beginning with
the 1971 landmark LP, Blue. “[‘Help Me’] sounds almost as if it were written
for my voice,” Neikrug says. “The key is perfect; the melody is perfect. The
song is challenging enough that I had a desire to learn it. But it was also about storytelling and being
young and full of angst.”
After
agreeing on “Help Me,” Hobgood suggested intertwining it with “Be Cool.”
Neikrug had her reservations though. “To be honest, the first time I heard it,
I said, ‘OK, could you give me something a little bit harder to sing?’” Neikrug
laughs. “But Laurence wanted to do a mash-up. It almost resembles how I wish
pop music sounded. It still sounds really hip but it’s challenging, eye-opening
and re-imaginative.”
Blending the
right amount of reverence for the jazz tradition with a knowing glance to
modern pop and R&B classics, sprinkled with two inviting originals, Changes
will delight both jazz purists and novices without making any unwise artistic
compromises as she superbly negotiates the glories of jazz’s past with a
wide-eyed optimism that betrays her tender age. “When you’re recording your
debut album, fresh out of college, you’re not exactly sure how you want to
present yourself,” Neikrug explains. “It was easier figuring that out by
discovering who I didn’t want to be. I’m just trying to take the jazz tradition
and move it in my direction.”
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