Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Stephanie Crawford was born on August 30, 1942 in Detroit, Michigan and divided her childhood between living with her mother in Detroit’s Black Bottom, called that due to its dark soil, and with an aunt in Chattanooga, Tennessee. She grew up surrounded by jazz, blues, R&B, and gospel music, from which she draws from.

Although singing was her first love from childhood she did not sing in public until she was 36, after working on a Chrysler assembly line and as a short-order cook, and earning a bachelor’s degree in painting from Wayne State University.

Her first live performance in front of an audience was accidental while taking in a rather bad pianist/vocalist in a local dive. Whe she would forget the words, Stephanie would call out the lyrics. Fed up, the woman challenged her to come up and sing and the rest is history. The invite to come back was given and she found her home.

A move to New York City, while working on her master’s in fine arts, Crawford became so immersed in the Manhattan jazz scene that she dropped out of school in order to devote more time to sitting in at jam sessions. She found herself seeking out and studying with Frank Foster and Barry Harris.

Her next stop was Paris, France where she won the prestigious Django d’Or award for Best International Jazz Vocalist in 1993. Singing did not pay the bills, so to support herself Stephanie taught jazz singing at two music schools. Returning to New York City she found work with a Portuguese wine importer.

Vocalist Stephanie Crawford, is clear that talent and fame are not synonymous, and though she continues to sing, helping to keep the fading local jazz scene alive, and continues with her passion for art. Just prior to the pandemic she performed in New York City at the Laurie Beechman Theater.

GRIOTS GALLERY

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Linda Ciofalo was born on August 28, 1972 in New York City, New York. She began singing from a very early age, first appearing in public at the age of nine. The music at this time in her life was traditional church music but later, after deciding upon a career as a singer, she studied at the Juilliard School of Music.

Encouraged by educator Howlett Smith to explore jazz, Linda studied at jazz workshops, learning from singers such as Sheila Jordan and Mark Murphy. She also performed with Murphy, as well as pianist Barry Harris.

In the mid-80s her professional career was launched when she was chosen from three hundred applicants to sing with a big band. Although her chosen field is jazz, Ciofalo has also sung with reggae and rock bands, and has performed in the musical theatre. Her performances take her from small clubs to festivals, and is mainly centred on the East Coast states.

Vocalist Linda Ciofalo, who is also an accomplished songwriter, sings a wide-ranging repertoire, incorporating sultry ballads and raunchy blues songs.

GRIOTS GALLERY

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

James Andrew Rushing was born on August 26, 1901 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma into a musical family. His father, Andrew was a trumpeter, and his mother, Cora, and her brother were singers. He studied music theory with Zelia N. Breaux at Frederick A. Douglass High School in Oklahoma City and was unusual among his musical contemporaries for having attended college at Wilberforce University.

Encouraged to play violin by his father, Rushing was inspired to pursue music and sing blues by his uncle Wesley Manning and George “Fathead” Thomas of McKinney’s Cotton Pickers. He toured the Midwest and California as an itinerant blues singer in the early 1920s before moving to Los Angeles, where he played piano and sang with Jelly Roll Morton, then Billy King before moving on to Walter Page’s Blue Devils in 1927. He and other members of the Blue Devils defected to the Bennie Moten band in 1929.

With Moten dying in 1935, Jimmy joined Count Basie for what would be a 13-year job. A proponent of the Kansas City, Missouri jump blues tradition, it could be heard in his performances of Sent for You Yesterday and Boogie Woogie for the Count Basie Orchestra. After leaving Basie, his recording career soared as a solo musician and a singer with other bands.

In 1950 he retired briefly but then formed his own group that would appear in the 1957 television special Sound of Jazz, and made a guest appearance with Duke Ellington on the 1959 album Jazz Party. In 1960, he recorded an album with the Dave Brubeck Quartet, was among the musicians included in an Esquire magazine photo by Art Kane, A Great Day In Harlem, and toured the UK with Humphrey Lyttelton and his band.

In 1969 Rushing appeared in The Learning Tree, the first major studio feature film directed by an African-American, Gordon Parks. Vocalist Jimmy Rushing,  who was singing on weekends at the Half Note Club in Manhattan until weeks before his death, passed away on June 8, 1972 at Flower Fifth Avenue Hospital in New York City. Rushing was one of eight jazz and blues legends honored in a set of United States Postal Service stamps issued in 1994.

GRIOTS GALLERY

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Jeanie Barton was born on August 18, 1978 in London, England. She spent years as a principal in the National Youth Music Theatre, then studied jazz harmony at Morley College in London as well as improvisation with BBC Jazz award winner Anita Wardell. She also cut her teeth as a singer for bebop pioneer Laurie Morgan’s trio, fronting their famous North London weekly gig, Downstairs at The King’s Head in Crouch End for over a decade.

She went on to support Georgie Fame, as well as backing vocals for Luddy Samms of The Drifters. Barton has performed for Samuel L Jackson,  Shirley Bassey, and Pierce Brosnan. She has sung at The Jazz Cafe, The 606 Club, Ronnie Scott’s and The National Theatre, as well as a Parisian cruise on the Seine and the Cannes Film Festival.

Vocalist Jeanie Barton was voted Best Newcomer at the Marlborough Jazz Festival 2015, and in addition writes for the London Jazz News and Nottingham Live, formally the Nottingham Post.

GRIOTS GALLERY

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Fay Victor was born on July 26, 1965 in Brooklyn, New York City. After spending her early childhood years in New York, Zambia, and Trinidad & Tobago, her mother settled in Long Island, New York where she spent her teenage years. After her mother’s sudden death, she re-discovered music and singing, and after a three-month stint at a club in Fukui City, Japan with pianist Bertha Hope, she decided to start a career as a jazz singer.

In 1996, Fay settled in Amsterdam, The Netherlands and performed and toured through the country, as well as Spain, Germany, the UK, Sweden, Russia, and India. While living in the Netherlands, Victor branched out into blues, songwriting, and forms of improvising outside the standard jazz canon.

Returning to the States in 2003, Victor has made her home in New York City. She has worked with the likes of Randy Weston, Roswell Rudd, Anthony Braxton, Misha Mengelberg, Vijay Iyer, Tyshawn Sorey, Wadada Leo Smith, Nicole Mitchell, Marc Ribot, Martine Syms, Daniel Carter, William Parker, Darius Jones, Wolter Wierbos, Ab Baars, Joe Morris, Sam Newsome, and Reggie Nicholson.

Victor has coined the term “freesong” to describe her vocal approach. In her jazz repertoire, he has specialized in the work of Thelonious Monk, Ornette Coleman, and Herbie Nichols.

Vocalist, composer, lyricist, and educator Fay Victor, who originally sang in the traditional jazz field, has expanded her repertoire to include blues, opera, free improvising, avant-garde, modern classical music, and occasional acting, continues to perform and record.

FAN MOGULS

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