Jazz vocalist Rebekah Victoria mines 20th century songs for 21st century sounds and meaning on Songs of the Decades, her new recording
Victoria collaborates with acclaimed trombonist,
composer-arranger and bandleader Wayne Wallace and an assemblage of two-dozen
musicians (including guest vocalist Kenny Washington) for a panorama of songs
from each decade of the 20th century
As a jazz singer, Rebekah Victoria's performance repertoire
tends to come overwhelmingly from the era of the Great American Songbook: the
1920s, '30s and '40s. As she was preparing to record her second album, however,
Victoria was inspired to widen her musical perspective in terms of both time
periods and popular styles. Songs of the Decades, her investigation of the
music from each decade of the twentieth century, was released through Patois Records.
If the album is retrospective, though, it is the furthest
thing from nostalgic. "I wanted to make these songs different- I wanted them to sound very new and fresh," says
Victoria, who is based in the San Francisco Bay Area. "The idea was to
make them as much fun to listen to now as they were in their day, when they
were big hits. For the people that really know these songs, they'll get a kick
out of the differences."
She also had another, more serious priority for assembling
Songs of the Decades. "There's a theme running through the songs,"
she says. "In one way or another, most of them connect to the #MeToo
movement that's happening today. I wanted the album to speak to that." In
other words, Victoria combed through the music of the past and found that it
was not only still fun, but still relevant.
Wayne Wallace, the Grammy-nominated trombonist, composer-arranger,
and bandleader who is also the head of Patois Records, acted as Victoria's
partner for the album. He co-produced it, wrote all of its arrangements-often
incorporating elements of Latin jazz, his specialty-and assembled its
superlative cast of 24 musicians, including improvising vocalist Kenny
Washington, Wallace's bandmates from his own various projects, and a string
quintet that features members of the San Francisco Symphony.
"I was so happy with how it all turned out,"
Victoria says. "Wayne's arrangements really captured the freshness I
wanted, and the musicians he chose were just fantastic. It was a great
experience overall."
Songs of the Decades does not present its selections in
chronological order; Victoria and Wallace sought to create a flow that would
emphasize the variety of the material and the versatility of the singer. That
said, the album opens with its oldest tune. "Some of These Days,"
written in 1910, has a cavalier quality that Victoria injects with sultriness.
But its solo section also suggests a subtle, sobering edge, a warning of the
consequences of disrespect.
The consequences of disrespect are front-and-center of
"These Boots Are Made for Walking," and there's no subtlety about it.
The album's '60s episode gets a down-and-dirty treatment, with earthy Hammond
organ and guitar (courtesy of Frank Martin and Rick Vandivier, respectively)
and soulful horn charts that drive home Victoria's taunting vocal.
"After You've Gone" is perhaps the recording's
most recognizable jazz standard, and the musicians tackle it as such. The 1918
Layton-Creamer classic here becomes a breezy swinger and affirmation of the
singer's self-worth, augmented by Mary Fettig's jaunty clarinet solo and
Victoria's supremely confident phrasing and time feel.
Though it's probably best known through Joni Mitchell's
version two decades later, "Twisted" began life in 1952 as an Annie
Ross vocalese riff on a Wardell Gray blues solo. Its (title-appropriate) twists
and turns give Wallace a place to put his finest and most elaborate Latin-jazz
flourishes, including a double-barreled solo chorus from the trombonist.
(Wallace and Kenny Washington also provide the spoken-word responses to
Victoria's sung lines.)
There's also a trace of a Latin accent on "The Song Is
You," written by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II for a 1932 musical.
More than that, however, it takes on a bebop sensibility in Victoria and
Wallace's hands. The singer drops a delivery with echoes of Ella Fitzgerald or
Sarah Vaughan, with solos by Fettig (now on alto sax) and pianist Joe Gilman
that are steeped in delectable modern jazz language.
Victoria singles out "Un-Break My Heart" as a
particularly challenging tune for the purposes of this album. It's not because
of any technical hurdles, but because the 1996 Toni Braxton hit (written by
Diane Warren) is Songs of the Decades' most recent selection, and therefore its
most familiar. "That's a pop song that everyone knows," she says.
"Finding a way to refresh that one was difficult, but that's part of the
fun of this album." Ultimately, the song receives a subtle reharmonization
and bossa nova beat, with a guitar solo from Vandivier that's also inspired by
Brazilian music-and a sly interpolation of Neil Young's "Only Love Can
Break Your Heart."
"Whispering" was an iconic hit song of the 1920s.
But here it gets thoroughly lifted out of that time with a sexy mambo setting,
a vocalese verse from Victoria (decidedly divergent from the album's feminist
theme), and an expansive scat solo from Kenny Washington-not to mention a
modulation (also in vocalese) to "Groovin' High," Dizzy Gillespie's
revolutionary bebop contrafact of the tune.
A gentle Afro-Caribbean percussion treatment greets Carole
King's "It's Too Late," representing the 1970s. While it's drummer
Colin Douglas and percussionist Michael Spiro who shape the performance,
they're assisted by beautiful solos from Vandivier and pianist Murray Low, as
well as a delivery from Victoria that takes Billie Holiday-like liberties with
its contours.
Like "Whispering," Sy Oliver and Sid Garris's
"Opus One" (from 1943) declines to engage with Victoria's theme of
women's independence and empowerment. "This one's just for fun," she
says. True to her word, it concerns itself with timeless, danceable swing,
heightening the effect by becoming a cleverly plotted medley with Charlie
Shavers's 1938 jazz standard "Undecided."
Songs of the Decades closes with its 1980s installment:
"I Hope I Never," a tune by the New Zealand new wave band Split Enz
(the only non-American song on the album). Here Wallace deploys the string
quintet, which adds piquant emotional release (and a surprising solo from
violinist Eugene Chuklov) to Victoria's remarkably restrained soprano.
Rebekah Victoria grew up in her family-owned nightclub in
Los Altos, California, singing with her father's Greek band. While she chose to
get her college degree in business, she also took formal singing lessons and
theater classes, learning both classical and Broadway singing techniques. She
took a job as a real estate broker but supplemented her income with musical
theater and even jobs as a singing waitress.
After raising her daughter to adulthood, Victoria began to
engage her after-hours singing career more seriously. Deciding that her
heart-and vocal range-really belonged to jazz, she formed a band called
Jazzkwest and began performing regularly in clubs and other venues in the San
Francisco Bay Area, attracting a following that eventually enabled her to
record her debut album, #OldFashionedTwitterTwit, in 2016. While the retirement
of her key collaborator in Jazzkwest presented a challenge, Victoria soon had a
tete-a-tete with San Francisco jazz maven Sheryl Lynn Thomas-who connected her
with Wayne Wallace, beginning the two-year task of creating Songs of the
Decades.
"It's been a really great process," Victoria says.
"I hope it continues on to the next one."
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