Ice on the Hudson features vocalists René Marie, Janis
Siegel, Darius de Haas and Karen Oberlin and an all-star ensemble interpreting
diverse songs about the emotional complexities of adult life in today's world.
There’s a special chemistry that’s found only in the rarest
of songwriting partnerships, forever linking the names of composer and lyricist
in the minds of listeners. The names Renee Rosnes and David Hajdu are already
well known to music lovers: Rosnes as one of her generation’s most acclaimed
jazz composers and pianists, Hajdu as an award-winning author and critic. With
Ice on the Hudson, their first collaborative album of songs, the pair reveals a
breathtaking synergy, crafting a collection of deeply felt and genre-defying
songs that join words and music with alchemical results.
Ice on the Hudson, due out October 12 via SMK Jazz (a newly
launched imprint curated by Smoke Sessions Records), brings together four
magnificent vocalists: revered, GRAMMY® Award-nominated jazz singer René Marie;
Manhattan Transfer co-founder and nine-time GRAMMY® winner Janis Siegel,
celebrated musical-theater actor and art-song interpreter Darius de Haas; and
acclaimed jazz/pop performer Karen Oberlin. Their voices are matched by a
stunning ensemble, featuring Rosnes at the piano along with cellist Erik
Friedlander, saxophonists Steve Wilson and Seamus Blake, clarinetist Ken
Peplowski, bassist Sean Smith, drummer Carl Allen, and percussionist Rogerio
Boccato.
While both Rosnes and Hajdu can boast considerable
accomplishments in their respective fields, songwriting was a fairly new
endeavor for both. Rosnes had had a handful of her instrumental compositions
set to lyrics, and Hajdu had collaborated on a few songs with Fred Hersch and
others. When Rosnes and Hajdu decided to try writing together, five years ago,
"Everything clicked," in Hajdu's words.
“Renee is one of the most gifted, most sophisticated and
most creative composers alive,” Hajdu says. “I consider myself the luckiest boy
in the music world for getting to write with this flat-out genius. We both
enjoy the exhilarating thrill of doing something that we care about, that draws
on our professional and life experiences, but that provides a whole new set of
challenges for us.”
For Rosnes, who has long drawn inspiration for her own music
from sources as diverse as the natural world and the visual arts, the
partnership has given her rich depths of emotion and narrative to plumb.
"David is a powerful and compelling storyteller," she says, "and
each of his lyrics has many layers and great substance. It's been a fulfilling
experience to take his words and search for melodies that truly allow the story
to shine through."
Given the tantalizing complexity of Hajdu’s words, Rosnes
found herself exploring a wide range of sensibilities, never concerned with
genre. Ultimately, while some pieces fit comfortably into the jazz songwriting
tradition of Jon Hendricks or Bob Dorough, others evoke the world of musical
theater or such respected singer-songwriters as Joni Mitchell or Randy Newman.
“When I embarked on this project with David, I put the idea of genre out of my
mind,” she explains. “I was most interested in allowing the lyrics to inspire
and move me in whatever direction that musically translated to."
“A Tiny Seed” opens the album with a parable both timeless
and timely, about a wall-building king and the seemingly small detail that
grows to topple his kingdom. Marie’s wry, soulful vocal offers inspiration to
those hoping to turn such fairy tales into reality. Her serpentine lines bring
an exotic mystery to “Little Pearl,” a reinterpretation of Rosnes’ instrumental
“The Quiet Earth.”
Siegel’s voice seems to float into a whimsical daydream on
“I Used to Like to Draw,” a tender reminiscence of the childhood days when we
all gave vent to our imaginations, before the supposed reality of adult life
quashed such fancies. Siegel also sings “The Passage,” which takes the natural
splendor that inspired Rosnes’ instrumental piece “Gabriola Passage” into the
realm of transcendence. On the title track, "Ice on the Hudson," she
takes the bizarre fact that the Hudson River flows both upstream and downstream
as a metaphor for the often contradictory aspects of grown-up reality – one of
several instances of complex ideas that stem from the collaboration between two
artists with a wealth of life experience.
Oberlin offers a bit of culinary respite from the world’s
divisiveness on the playful “I Like Pie” and a bit of romantic perspective on
“I Still Feel the Same.” The moving “All But You” builds from scraps of both
songwriters’ biographies to paint a picture of living with a missing someone.
Rosnes suggested a song based on her experience as an adopted child wondering
about her birth parents, which Hajdu countered with his own background. “Renee
said it felt strange growing up not knowing who her biological parents were,
but my father sat at the dinner table with me every night my whole life, and I
don't know who my father was either. We share that feeling of a hole in your
life, that there are people who could have been there who were not."
Hajdu based “To Meet My Brother” on the tragic loss of his
sister and the feeling of wanting to be reunited, whatever the cost. Darius de
Haas brings tender yearning to that piece and an urgent sensuality to “Confound
Me.” His knack for theatrical drama illuminates “Trotsky in Mexico,” a
Sondheim-like musing on the Russian revolutionary’s fling with Frida Kahlo.
A five-time winner of the JUNO award, Renee Rosnes is one of
the premier jazz composers and pianists of her generation. Upon moving to New
York City from Vancouver, Canada, she quickly established her enduring
reputation as a creative original and versatile collaborator, touring and
recording with such masters as Wayne Shorter, Joe Henderson, BobbyHutcherson,
J.J. Johnson, James Moody, and Ron Carter. With 16 recordings as a leader,
Rosnes has grown ever more ambitious musically, as her most recent album,
Beloved of the Sky (Smoke Sessions Records), attests.
David Hajdu is an award-winning author, critic, and
songwriter. A three-time winner of the ASCAP Deems Taylor/Virgil Thompson Award
for Music Writing as well as a three-time finalist for the National Book
Critics Circle Award, Hajdu is the author of five books, including Lush Life: A
Biography of Billy Strayhorn, Positively 4th Street, and Love for Sale: Pop
Music in America.
Various Artists · Ice on the Hudson
Smoke Jazz · Release Date: October 12, 2018
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