Cassandra
Wilson never fails to surprise and inspire.
Sexy, honey-velvet vocals wrapped around her
own jazzy blue compositions or inventive interpretations
of others’ material led TIME magazine
to name her “America’s Best Singer” in
recent years. On her most recent CD Thunderbird,
which Blue Note Records released in 2006, she
collaborated with red hot producer T Bone Burnett
to surprise, yet again.
The voice is more visual
than audible; shaded, iridescent, tangible,
substantial. It seems to flow effortlessly.
Read any of the dozen or so
biographies on Cassandra Wilson and you’ll
discover some basics: born and reared in Jackson,
Mississippi in the 1960s and 70s by musician
and educator parents. She studied piano for
13 years and played clarinet in the concert
and marching bands of junior high school. During
the 70s, she could be found performing Joni
Mitchell songs behind an acoustic guitar, or
in front of a large funk band, or in the company
of long-time friends in an all-girls band.
In the eighties, Cassandra
moved to New Orleans, and performed with Earl
Turbinton and Ellis Marsalis. Quite by accident,
she was relocated to East Orange, New Jersey
where she made a decision to take her changes
on the New York jazz scene. After a stint as
the main vocalist with Steve Coleman’s
M-Base Collective, Cassandra began recording
on her own. Her development can be tracked
through her discography. From the standards
on Blue Skies to the Grammy-winning
New Moon Daughter, to the combination of originals and
interpretations played by a collection of Mississippi
and New York musicians on both the 2001 release,
Belly of the Sun, and 2003’s Glamoured,
Cassandra continues to evolve as a vocalist,
songwriter, and producer.
In 2000, Wilson returned to
Mississippi to establish Ojah Media Group.
Ojah, a Yoruba word meaning, “the marketplace,” is
an independent multi-media entity dedicated
to documenting and marketing the unique sounds
emanating from Mississippi’s fertile
soil, and its multi-cultural influences. Ojah’s
premiere artists, singer-songwriter Rhonda
Richmond, released her first CD, Oshogbo
Town (produced by Wilson and engineered by Sean
Mackie) in 2003. Richmond’s second CD,
Rhythm and Strings, another Wilson/Mackie collaboration,
is scheduled for release in Spring 2006. Inspired
by the Yoruba deity, Oshun, both Oshogbo
Town and Rhythm
and Strings feature the original
compositions and arrangements for which Richmond
is celebrated.
Cassandra Wilson is a world
renowned vocalist, songwriter and producer,
with an extraordinary following, but at heart
she is still a Mississippi girl whose art reflects
her deep musical and cultural roots, anchored
in the fertile Mississippi soil.
Cassandra's next release is
tentatively scheduled for Spring 2008 on Blue
Note.
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Friday Night
- September 19, 2008 / 9:40pm |
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Arena / Jimmy Lyons
Stage |
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Saturday Afternoon
- September 20, 2008 / 4:00pm |
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Dizzy's Den (DownBeat "Blindfold Test") |
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