Harry
Connick, Jr.
 |
| 2010
MJF PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE: |
| WHEN: |
Sunday Night
Sept. 19, 2010 / 7:00pm |
| WHERE: |
Arena
/ Jimmy Lyons Stage
 |
  
| MJF
HISTORY: |
MJF
DEBUT!
 |
|
|
Over the past two decades, Harry Connick,
Jr. has taken a very hands-on approach
to his recording career. The multi-talented
Connick has called the shots at the numerous
phases of his album projects – writing
original material or picking songs, choosing
the ensemble settings and writing arrangements,
singing and playing piano, and with the aid
of co-producer and longtime confidant, Tracey
Freeman, overseeing mixing and mastering. Whether
performing the American Songbook or in the
jazz, blues or funk idiom, the process has
yielded consistent success, not to mention
worldwide sales of over 25 million discs.
For Your Songs, his newest collection
on Columbia Records, Connick expands his vision
to encompass 14 classic popular songs; his instrumental
pallet through a striking integration of a string
orchestra and his swinging Big Band; and his
basic approach to recording.
Clive Davis, the legendary
producer and Chief Creative Officer of Sony
Music Entertainment, is the driving force behind
the change. “The
term `producer’ is normally kind of nebulous
in my environment,” Connick says. “He
might set up the sessions and ensure that we
get the best possible sound. Tracey has done
that, and acted as a sounding board; but I always
made all the musical decisions. As my co-producer
on this album, Clive was very involved in the
overall concept, song selection and choice of
tempos. And, although he didn’t come to
the studio when we recorded, he gave me lots
of comments on the mixes.”
It was Davis who suggested
that the album be built around pop classics. “He wanted to
feature me as a singer,” Connick notes, “and
we threw ideas for songs back and forth for four
or five months. He had ideas on the arrangements
as well, including a couple that I would have
never thought of. It was a new role for me, and
it was invigorating.”
The songs that Connick
and Davis selected include some of the best
known work of singer/songwriters Billy Joel
(“Just the Way You Are”),
Lennon-McCartney (“And I Love Her”)
and Elton John (“Your Song”), as
well as classics made immortal by the likes of
Nat Cole (“Mona Lisa”), Frank Sinatra
(“All the Way”) and Elvis Presley
(“Can’t Help Falling in Love with
You”). “Bésame Mucho,” sung
in both Spanish and English, is a long-time favorite
of Connick’s father, while “Some
Enchanted Evening” was included after Connick
heard it performed in the current revival of South
Pacific. Regardless of the source, however,
Connick approached each title with his usual
musicality and interpretive strength.
“Although I have wrestled with this for
some time, I don’t think that anyone’s
version of a great song, however classic, should
preclude my singing it,” he insists. “I
respect the originals, but believe that there
is always room for another interpretation. I
take each song in its rawest form, as it appears
on the sheet music, and go from there.”
When it came to choosing
the proper tempos, Davis’ input was critical. “The one
thing that Clive repeatedly pounded into my brain,
which I had been thinking about myself for a
while, was how easy it is for tempos to become
too slow. He made an interesting point one day
when he said that `it’s not always about
a performance.’ In other words,
don’t let a song get so into your head
that your version only has personal meaning.
He really kept my focus on the songs.”
Davis also suggested that
Connick orchestrate the album, rather than
turning arranging chores over to someone else. “I was fine with
that, and even kind of excited,” Connick
admits. “To use a film analogy, it would
have been like an actor showing up on a movie
set, knowing that the director and producer had
worried about everything else. But Clive persuaded
me to do it myself.” It was a wise decision,
as Connick displays a unique and subtle manner
of balancing the sensitivity of strings and the
punch of his big band. “I have never really
been able to do that kind of writing throughout
an entire record,” he acknowledges. “It’s
a more spacious approach, with the orchestra
in service to the singing; and it was a kick
to sing over those charts.”
Connick’s vocals are also in service to
the songs, as are the contributions of his featured
guests Branford Marsalis (heard on “All
the Way”), Wynton Marsalis (“Can’t
Help Falling in Love with You” and “Who
Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)”)
and Bryan Sutton (“Can’t Help Falling
in Love with You” and “And I Love
You So”), as well as longtime Connick Big
Band stalwarts Leroy Jones (“(They Long
to Be) Close to You”) and Jerry Weldon
(“Mona Lisa”). “As a singer,
I’m pretty straight with the melodies,
and when the soloists asked me what I wanted
them to do, I explained that this record is supposed
to be straight. Playing a melody straight can
be deceptively hard. As my bass player Neal Caine
pointed out, the album was a great lesson in
discipline, and a great way to understand your
function in the overall process. On this record,
as a pianist, there were times when I would go
to play my part with the tape rolling and hardly
play anything, because it was all already there.”
What was already there, of course, was a collection
of timeless songs, collaboration with a legendary
producer, and the unprecedented talent that is
Harry Connick, Jr., monumental parts that together
have created the even greater whole that is Your
Songs.
|