From the moment Jane Blackstone stepped onto
the streets of Union Square in New York City at age 18, her determination
to live her life’s passion as a jazz vocal artist has never
faded. She is a true musical spirit who can handle it all. As
vocalist, pianist, composer and educator, her pursuit of musical
expression has taken her to four continents and through a diverse
array of life-enriching experiences.
Performing with the greats like Lee Konitz, Mark Egan, Victor
Lewis, Sheila Jordan, George Mraz and Carla Bley, and with
an international solo career that has taken her to Tokyo, Buenos
Aires, Berlin, Amsterdam and most of the top New York clubs,
Jane has finally released her first CD as a leader, the extraordinary
natural habitat/nyc on her own Motief Records.
"This was first and foremost an attempt at bringing together
people who had touched my life. These people happen to be great
musicians! And to make the music that had been on my mind and
in my heart and that I felt finally, I was ready to sing and
arrange."
Those great musicians Jane gathered together are some of her
closest and most dedicated colleagues. Along with pianist Tino
Derado, bassist Ratzo Harris and drummers Jamey Haddad or Steve
Johns, who are present on most of the tracks, outstanding contributions
are made by reedman Bob Mover and tuba/ trombonist Sam Burtis
as both players and arrangers. Legendary pianist (and a former
piano teacher of Jane's) Sir Roland Hanna makes a very special
guest appearance with a superb solo on “Without a Song” and
offers deliciously sensitive accompaniment on the beautiful
Rogers and Hammerstein ballad “We Kiss in a Shadow.”
Pianist
Bob Albanese also guests on his own “The Rainbow
I See in Your Eyes,” another lovely ballad further graced
by Mover's touching soprano sax. Mover, who co-arranged this
piece with Jane, also collaborated with her on the aforementioned “Kiss” and
her own “Room For Everybody,” as well as arranging
his own “Mystics,” an easy swinger with a boppish
bridge.
Burtis, a longtime associate of Jane's gong back to
when they hung out together on New York's explosive Latin scene
back in the '70s, also co-wrote with her for Western Hemisphere,
a twelve piece ensemble that played regularly in New York clubs
between 1982 and 1985. Here they renew that collaborative spirit
on three pieces - a delightful blending of Bob Dorough's “Nothing
Like You” and the popular standard “Sometimes I'm
Happy,” the soulful Blackstone original, “Once
4U,” and the moving, mesmerizing piece, “The Human
Touch.”
On the latter, Derado offers a delightfully lyrical turn on
accordion, a fine contrast to his energetic piano solos on
the grooving “Where You At,” and the ‘Nothing/Sometimes’ medley.
Harris, Haddad and Johns create the perfect setting for a vocalist;
swinging, driving, or providing a soft cradle, dependent upon
the context of the piece or the spur of the moment. And always
with exactly what Blackstone requires.
Jane stepped away from the piano for this date, instead concentrating
on the vocal challenges of the diverse material, much of it
drawn from music that had deeply affected her in the past.
Some of her favorite artists' versions of “We Kiss in
a Shadow” (Sonny Rollins), “Nothing Like You” (Miles
Davis), “Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea” (Thelonious
Monk) and “The Human Touch” (Nina Simone) inspired
their inclusion here, and Jane puts her own unique stamp on
them.
Her superb vocal artistry is always on full display whether
gently caressing the ballads, scatting on “Where You
At,” swinging gently on “Deep Blue Sea,” or
passionately dramatic on Ivan Lins' “In the Art of Survival.” "I
wanted humor/playfulness, a little toughness, some earthiness,
swing and intelligence – I also wanted to portray this
incredibly diverse city – like life – it's a New
York City thing."
A native of New England, Jane began performing in the late
'60s at 12 years old. After touring New England with her own
Boston-based blues/rock unit, she moved to New York in the
late '70s and soon found herself recording with Carla Bley
alongside renowned jazz vocalist Sheila Jordan.
She immersed herself in everything the rich New York Scene
offered, playing large venues with two of the city’s
best young jazz orchestras, as well as some of New York’s
top jazz clubs. In 1984 she was awarded an NEA Grant to study
piano with Joanne Brackeen meanwhile pursuing her vocal studies
with veteran vocalist Anne-Marie Moss (Manhattan School of
Music).
She also made the studio scene – everything from jingles
and voiceovers to singing background vocals for notables like
Esther Phillips, Deodato and Gato Babieri. Jane received a
Grammy nomination for “High Clouds” with the New
York Vocal Jazz Ensemble.
Continuing to be a presence on the late 70's New York Jazz
scene, Jane worked with people like Don Grolnick, Lee Konitz,
Fred Hersch, and Benny Aronov while leading her own trios,
which included such well-known sidemen as pianists Harold Danko
and Armen Donelian, bassists David Fink and Chip Jackson, and
drummer Jimmy Madison.
In the late 80's Jane relocated to Atlanta, continuing to
perform as well as teach, and in 1991, devoted herself primarily
to a solo career. That same year she made her first trip to
Japan as soloist and teacher in Tokyo, Kobe and Nagoya, and
has returned there for five repeat engagements/tours.
She also performed regularly in Europe and South America,
where a 1992 month-long engagement in Buenos Aires developed
into a relationship with the International Association of Jazz
Educators, bringing her back there in 1999 for concerts and
residency activities. Returning to New York after the Argentine
tour, Jane began to reconnect with her earlier associates and
plan for the recording.
An accomplished photographer and actress as well, her influences
include Shirley Horn, Sarah Vaughan, Ella, Betty Carter and
especially Nina Simone. But she's also been heavily inspired
by Gil Evans, Miles, Monk, David Sanborn, James Cotton, Ray
Charles and the early Paul Butterfield Blues Band.
"I continue to live with the hope that music will 'feed'
me – that I should every day take time to listen a little – to
sing a little, to mentally and physically practice my chosen
art. If I should miss a day, then hopefully I am teaching and
showing someone else how to enjoy music, how to find their
own personal melodies...no matter at what level."