On vocalist and composer Sara Gazarek's previous five,
critically-acclaimed albums (Yours-2005, Live at The Jazz Bakery-2006, Return
To You-2007, Blossom & Bee-2012, Dream In The Blue-2016), we hear an
accomplished artist steeped in the history of jazz and blues, who effortlessly
explores complex rhythmic and harmonic ideas, expressive phrasing, to-die-for
range, exquisite tone, and authentic story-telling, and so much more. On her
sixth recording, Thirsty Ghost (due out on August 23, 2019), we hear Gazarek's
soul. Over twelve select tunes (plus bonus tracks) we experience an un-caged
Gazarek, flush with the courage, artistic volition, and musical acumen to be
able to offer her audience a transformative, revelatory album that explores a
more honest, messy, beautiful place - of hunger, thirst, and of wanting
more. More connection, more
transparency, and a more wholehearted experience that is welcomed only when one
can finally address the exultation and lamentation that comes with taking a
deeper look at adulthood.
Stumbling into a recording contract right out of college in
2004 not only came with big management and an even bigger booking agency - it
also came with a lot of responsibility for a twenty year old artist. Gazarek
quickly found herself recording, touring, and interacting with press and new
fans. And, while everything seemed to be moving in the right direction, this
level of visibility at such a young age actually created a certain amount of
pressure to be the carefree, light-hearted girl that her mentors and managers
expected. Gazarek explains, "I had been told that the ultimate goal was to
craft a set of fun, light music that left people feeling happier than when
they'd come in the door. And my band and I were giving it to them."
Four years ago, Gazarek found herself standing at a fork in
the road regarding her artistic direction and raison d'être. The vocalist
elaborated, "I had experienced a near-death trauma in my family, there was
palpable tension in my long time musical partnership, and my marriage was
crumbling. I was singing mostly straight ahead songs about light hearted
things, and, in a genre that prides itself in authenticity and expression, an
incessant knot in my stomach told me something was about to explode. It was my
dear friend and mentor Kurt Elling who, after a performance at Birdland in NYC,
metaphorically took me by the shoulders and shook my soul with these very
poignant words:"
"I see who you are... And it's so much bigger, so much
deeper, so much more multi-dimensional than your music is right now. Don't be
afraid to walk away from what you think people want from you - and to step into
all of the depth, darkness, and radiance of who you really are. That's what we
are thirsty for. The honest, messy, beautiful YOU."
As the dust began to settle, Gazarek stood in a state of
bewilderment - and, like any artist, she did all she knew how to do: she took a
deep breath, and turned headlong into her art. She listened, wrote, read,
improvised, traveled, sought, leapt, learned, and watched. Gazarek explained,
"I finally felt ready to explore new songs and sounds, hoping to give
voice to very specific experiences and, in some instances, wounds that I wanted
to heal." Gazarek worked alongside Stu Mindeman, Josh Johnson, Geoff
Keezer, Larry Goldings, Erin Bentlage, and Alan Ferber, in an attempt to
reconnect with her own authentic creative voice. "We began to perform
these songs, and it was entirely terrifying, but necessary. And most
importantly, it felt exhilarating to finally be making art that reflected what
I was experiencing - music that was vulnerable and human. In the end, I
internalized the idea that 'a forest never grows, higher than the depths it
knows // the warmth of sunlight comes and goes, but beauty only grows, When It
Rains. (Distant Storm)"
In retrospect, Gazarek is now able to acknowledge that,
while her world was falling apart, it may have felt wildly chaotic - but that now,
looking back, she sees a beautifully orchestrated ballet that brought her
exactly where she needed to be. "I'm finally here, living wholeheartedly
in the light and the dark," explains Gazarek. "We decided to record
these songs, in the hopes that people might see their own human experiences
reflected back at them, through these songs and these arrangements."
Lonely Hours - Gazarek first discovered this song through
the Sarah Vaughan recording, "Lonely Hours." She explains, "I
was record shopping with my friend Jeff Babko, and found this one - I thought,
I love these orchestrators, and these songs. This is for me. I hadn't heard the
title track before, and I fell in love. I approached Josh Johnson and asked him
to arrange it for an upcoming show in Los Angeles. I explained that I wanted
something that felt like that 'pacing the floor at 3am' feeling, living in that
emotional rollercoaster of desire and mourning. I love what he came up with -
the off kilter 5/4 meter and the explosive dynamic shifts are so
evocative."
Never Will I Marry - Nancy Wilson's version of this song
with Cannonball Adderley is iconic. Gazarek wanted a treatment of the song that
felt more contemporary, but in a way that was less declarative, and more
welcoming. "I was in a place where I had just come out of my own marital
dissolution, and wanted to explore the world - all the while embracing the idea
that I might not ALWAYS feel that way. There's a question in this arrangement,
an openness that lends itself to change."
Easy Love - "I remember being at a point where I
realized that I might actually be ready to open myself up to love again, but I
didn't want it to be difficult. Any kind of relationship built on love is
supposed to take work - but it shouldn't feel hard. Just like how a bird isn't
aware that the wind and sky are there supporting it, I wanted something that
felt free of muscle and force," said Gazarek.
I Get Along Without You Very Well - Exclusive to the U.S.
release of Thirsty Ghost (not available on the Japanese release). This song is
very special to Gazarek. She elaborates, "I remember sitting in Stu's
living room in Chicago, talking to him about how heartbreaking this lyric is,
but how meditative, raw, and open it felt to be in the space of denial -
vacillating between the real truth and the truth we wished we were
living."
I Believe When I Fall in Love - Gazarek uses this lyric and
arrangement to embed a sense of unsteadiness and reality into the relationship,
and to express it as equal parts declaration and question; "I Believe When
I Fall In Love with you, it will be . . . forever?" The story and climax
of this song, the tension and release of the arrangement, the driving instrumentation
and percussion spin the song and story in an entirely new way.
Jolene - Gazarek's "Jolene" grabs you by the
throat and never lets go. Gazarek laughs (now) that when she experienced her
own "Jolene," her reaction was NOT to kindly ask her to "please
don't take my man" - but rather to break things, and curb a great desire
to burn down the house. "I told Geoff Keezer that I wanted something much
more fiery, maybe slower than the original but with some double-time
implications. He came back with what he called, 'Trent Reznor meets Game of
Thrones', which I think (somehow) perfectly conveys what we wanted to get
across," says Gazarek.
Gaslight District - If "Jolene" grabs you by the
throat, this original composition conjures up emotions of haunting uncertainty.
Gazarek elaborates, "I asked Larry to write this one with me, with this
title in mind. It was a play on words - the Gaslamp District of San Diego, and
being 'gaslighted' by a partner. The lyric takes an interesting turn from
imagery to literal storyline, and I think Stu Mindeman, Alan Ferber, and Erin
Bentlage were all able to capture the foggy undertones, lack of clarity,
darkness, etc., that was needed to tell this story." The vamp at the end
is worth the price of admission alone.
The River/River Man - This is a pairing of a Sara Teasdale
poem (The River) with Nick Drake's "River Man". Gazarek shares,
"the thing I adore about Nick Drake's writing is that it's poetic in an
ambiguous way, leaving so much to the interpretation of the listener. I wanted
to shed some light on what this story means to me, and paired the two with that
intention in mind. The poem speaks about leaving something in search of more or
better ground, but realizing, once you've left and arrived at this new
destination, the idea was better than the reality. It's an anthem for being
happy with what you already have, and the freedom in not constantly questioning
it."
Cocoon - This Bjork song typifies how in tune, supportive,
and loving Gazarek's musicians are throughout the entire album - every note is
perfectly placed, played, and expressed for the sole purpose of framing and
supporting her. "'Cocoon is one of the most terrifying songs on the album
for me. It's incredibly exposed, and there are so many beautiful, vulnerable,
flawed moments throughout the track. I've never felt so honest and bare on a
recording before. This song speaks to finally experiencing love after such a
long journey, and the blinding light finally coming through, after the dark.
The joy that one can feel once you've processed so much hurt, and are finally
able let go and breathe into the bigness of it all," explains Gazarek.
Distant Storm - This song (originally an instrumental
composition by pianist, Brad Mehldau) essentially serves as the title track of
the album. "Thirsty Ghost" is a lyric from the verse, and speaks to
the over-arching lesson that was learned in the story of this record. Gazarek
explains, "a Thirsty Ghost, to me, is someone who is searching to be
satiated (desperate for feeling, emotion, validation, love, etc), but is unable
to fully process said satiation because they are not whole - they're incomplete,
a ghost, a shell. Once I wholeheartedly embraced the light AND the dark in my
life and my art, I was finally able to feel this sweeping wealth of experience
and emotion. And that's what this song - and this entire record - is
about." The poem in the middle, sung by Kurt Elling, was also penned by
Gazarek in an attempt to encapsulate what he shared with her all those years
ago: "he's this voice, a distant gift, reminding me of who I am, calling
me to step into that space... Thank goodness Brad Mehldau graciously approved
the lyrics - the story of Thirsty Ghost wouldn't be complete without this
song!"
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