The sizzling summer heat. A
backyard barbecue filled with food, family and friends. A tune comes on the
radio that instantly sets bodies in motion. As people start moving and
grooving, someone exclaims, “That’s my jam!” This scene is what soul-jazz flutist
Ragan Whiteside envisioned when creating her latest single, “Jam It.” The hot
track became her fourth consecutive Billboard Top 10 single when it hit the
ninth spot on the chart for the week of August 3. At No. 9 with a bullet, it’s
still rising like the mercury.
Whiteside wrote “Jam It” with seminal urban-jazz artist Bob
Baldwin, who produced the joint with Dennis Johnson (Marion Meadows, Freddie
Jackson, Phil Perry, Melba Moore). The cut previews Whiteside’s forthcoming
fifth album, “Five Up Top,” slated to drop this fall from Randis Music, an
indie label run by Whiteside and Johnson.
“Your favorite party song comes on the radio and someone
claims it as their jam. I wanted ‘Jam It’ to give you that feeling and get
people dancing - whether you're at a backyard barbecue or just driving to work.
Wherever you're listening, you should turn up your speakers and JAM IT!” said
the Atlanta-based Whiteside.
Whiteside’s hit streak began when her 2017 “Treblemaker”
album sent all three singles into the Billboard Top 10. Another collaboration
with Baldwin, “Early Arrival” featuring saxophonist Kim Waters, got things
started when it checked in at No. 7. She scored her first Billboard No. 1 hit
with “Corey’s Bop,” a clubby trek she wrote with Johnson and Baldwin. Her own
boisterous party starter, “See You at the Get Down” celebrated at No. 5.
Whiteside’s vibrant and velvety flute leaping amidst jazzy
rhythms and funky beats is ushering her instrument back into the centerstage
spotlight. She takes pride in being a completely independent artist who is
flourishing while releasing her own recordings. A classically trained flautist
and vocalist who grew up in Mount Vernon, New York, Whiteside took up the flute
after first learning piano, violin and drums as a child. While studying
classical music, she discovered her passion for songwriting and arranging. When
Whiteside first became a jazz, funk and R&B mixologist, she won the Capital
Jazz New Artist competition. She began collaborating with Baldwin and Johnson
for her debut disc, “Class Axe” (2007), pouring splashes of classical into
intoxicating jazz, funk and R&B cocktails. Whiteside incorporated fusion
into the branded brew on subsequent sets: 2012’s “Evolve,” 2014’s “Quantum
Drive” and “Treblemaker.” Among her honors, Whiteside was named Flutist of the
Year at the Black Women in Jazz & Fine Arts Awards.
Either on her recordings or as a guest artist, Whiteside has
flanked urban/contemporary jazz cohorts Earl Klugh, Kirk Whalum, Rick Braun,
Marion Meadows, Walter Beasley, Patrice Rushen, Chieli Minucci, Frank McComb,
Eric Darius, Baldwin and Waters. Her spirited stage performances have made her
a popular draw at festivals and cruises such as the Seabreeze Jazz Festival,
Mallorca Smooth Jazz Festival and the Capital Jazz SuperCruise. Catch Whiteside
in the coming weeks at the Derby City Jazz Festival in Louisville, KY on August
10; Fourth Avenue Jazz Festival in Birmingham, AL on August 24; and at the Gulf
Coast Jazz Summer Fest in Pensacola, FL on September 1. For more information,
please visit http://www.raganwhiteside.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment