Kurt Elling

 V
Location:
Manhattan, New York, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Jazz / Experimental / Swing
Site(s):
Label:
Concord Records
Type:
Major
Available now, Dedicated to You: Kurt Elling Sings the Music of Coltrane and Hartman, is Kurt's eighth overall album and second release on Concord Jazz.
The live collection was recorded in January 2009 in Manhattan as part of Lincoln Center’s American Songbook series. The 12-track release features an all-star cast of musicians including saxophonist Ernie Watts, the Laurence Hobgood Trio and the string quartet, ETHEL.



Kurt Elling | Dedicated To You EPK from Concord Music Group on Vimeo.
BIOGRAPHY:



In addition to working with his own quartet, Kurt Elling has spent recording and/or
performing time with an array of artists that includes Terrence Blanchard, Dave
Brubeck, The Clayton/Hamilton Orchestra, Benny Golson, Jon Hendricks, Fred
Hersch, Charlie Hunter, Al Jarreau, David Liebman, Joe Lovano, Christian
McBride, Marian McPartland, The Bob Mintzer Big Band, Mark Murphy, John
Pizzarelli, Kurt Rosenwinkel, and The Yellowjackets. He has written
multidisciplinary works of art for The Steppenwolf Theater and for the City Of
Chicago. Moreover, Kurt Elling is a former National Trustee and National Vice
Chair of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (The GRAMMYS)
and was artist-in-residence for the Monterey Jazz Festival's 2006 season.
Kurt Elling's rich baritone voice spans four octaves and displays an astonishing
technical facility and emotional depth. Elling has an awesome command of
rhythm, texture, phrasing, and dynamics, often sounding more like a virtuoso jazz
musician than a mere singer. His repertoire ranges from his own compositions to
modern interpretations of standards, both of which can be the springboard for
free form improvisation, scatting, spoken word and poetry. As composer and
lyricist, Elling has written scores of his own compositions and set lyrics to the
songs and improvised solos of many jazz masters. In addition to the
compositional work he has done with collaborator-in-chief, Laurence Hobgood,
Elling has collaborated in the creation of new pieces with Jon Clayton, Fred
Hersch, Bob Mintzer, Charlie Hunter and Orbert Davis, among others.
One of Kurt Elling's major contributions is as a writer and performer of vocalese,
the art of putting words to improvised solos of jazz artists. The natural heir to
jazz pioneers Eddie Jefferson, King Pleasure, and Jon Hendricks, Elling is the
contemporary voice in vocalese, setting the solos of Wayne Shorter, Keith
Jarrett, Dexter Gordon, Pat Metheny, and others to his own deeply spiritual and
compelling lyrics, an approach that reminds us of the beauty of the original music
and opens us up to a fresh vision. Elling infuses his lyrics with passion, humor,
and a startling intellectual depth, often incorporating images and references from
writers such as Rilke, Proust, Kerouac, Rumi, Neruda and Kenneth Rexroth into
his work.
Kurt Elling has been featured in profiles for CBS Sunday Morning, for CNN, and
in hundreds of newspaper and magazine reviews and articles. The New York
Times called his shows at Birdland "good, battering entertainment."(1/99) Said
the Chicago Tribune, "Kurt Elling is going to change many listeners' minds on the
meaning and purpose of Jazz singing."(1/96) Playboy Magazine named Elling
"the male Jazz vocalist of the Nineties." (10/98) More recently, The Guardian
(UK) declared, "Elling is an omnicompetent artist of almost ruthless efficiency .
(He) is truly a musical phenomenon." (2/02) And Jazz Review (UK) raised the
possibility that "Elling may be the greatest male Jazz singer of all time." (1/02)
In responding to such critical adulation, Kurt Elling says, "I know the places
where I need to work to get better. What's really working for me is the fact that I
have tried to learn from the great masters of jazz singing. If I can digest what
people like Mark Murphy, Jon Hendricks, Betty Carter, Joe Williams and Eddie
Jefferson have done and can contribute something valuable to the tradition then
that will be reward enough."
-Gordon Drummond January 15, 2007
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