helenmerrill.com
Biography
Helen Merrill's
long history in jazz began with her first album on the Mercury Emarcy
label arranged and produced by Quincy Jones in 1954 up to her latest
CD album released in early 2000. In between were more then 50 Jazz albums
and countless concerts, club dates, festivals and other jazz activities.
Ms. Merrill was
born in New York City. Her parents were Croatian immigrants and her
most recent recording is titled "Jelena Ana Milcetic, AKA Helen
Merrill" tracing her musical experience. She started her career
at the 845 club in the Bronx wile still in high school. The promoter
at the club was noted for his ability to spot young future stars. Among
these appearing with Helen at the time were Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie,
Bud Powell, Oscar Pettiford, and numerous others. The name on the marquee
was Helen Milcetic, her name which she later changed to Merrill.
Ms. Merrill entered
the world of music just as the big band era was ending and the much
more challenging field of working with small groups had begun. During
these formative years she worked with Earl Hines, Charles Mingus, Thad
Jones, Clifford Brown, Gil Evans, Charlie Byrd, Marian McPartland, Al
Haig, Jim Hall, Elvin Jones, Ron Carter, Bill Evans, Stan Getz, and
literally hundreds of other musicians.
Although she has
made a large number of jazz albums and knows her way around recording
studios in the United States, Japan and Europe, Ms. Merrill's recording
career began in a non-commercial atmosphere in the now famous Rudy Van
Gelder studio in New Jersey. She was accompanied by Jimmy Rainey, Don
Elliot and Red Mitchell. The result was a single that eventually led
to a contract with Mercury. Without much fanfare, Mercury released a
jazz album titled simply "Helen Merrill"
It was an instant
success and has remained so to this day, more then 45 years later. The
album, including one of the most acclaimed versions of the song, "What's
new?" has been reissued and repackaged scores of times on various
labels around the world. Readers of the Japanese magazine FM radio voted
the recording the best jazz album of the past 50 years.
Mercury quickly
signed Ms.Merrill to a new contract calling for four additional jazz
albums. That first album featured Jimmy Jones, piano; Clifford Brown,
trumpet; Milt Hinton, bass; Oscar Pettiford, cello and bass; Barry Galbraith,
guitar; and others. The songs were "Whets New?" "Don't
explain" "Born to Be Blue" "You'd Be So Nice To
Come Home To" "Falling In Love With Love" "Lilac
Wine" and "Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year"
She recorded "Helen
Merrill with Strings" for Mercury in 1955, "Dream of You"
in 1956, "Merrill at Midnight" in 1957 and "Nearness
of You" also in 1957.
Helen Merrill lived
for a number of years in Europe and recorded jazz albums in Italy, France
and Norway and did frequent concerts. She made a number of trips to
Japan for concerts and recorded for Japan Victor. She eventually moved
to Tokyo in 1967. She returned to New York in 1972 where she now lives,
making annual concert tours in Japan and Europe.
Ms. Merrill recorded
two Jazz albums in New York which have had exceptional success throughout
the jazz world. They were "The Feeling is Mutual" and "A
Shade of Difference" with arrangements by Dick Katz, featuring
Thad Jones, flugelhorn; Hubert Laws, flute; Jim Hall, guitar; Ron Carter
and Richard Davis, bass; Elvin Jones, drums; Garry Bartz, saxophone.
Ms. Merrill sings "A Lady Must Live" "My Funny Valentine"
"Lonely Woman" "Where Do You Go?" and other jazz
numbers
Both Albums have
recently been reissued in the CD format by Polygram on the Verve Label
PolyGram also has
reissued a boxed set of CDs of the first Mercury albums under the title
"The Complete Helen Merrill on Mercury" As a footnote to history,
the late Leonard Feather, jazz historian and music critic for the Los
Angeles Times, said in his book "The Book Of Jazz, From Then 'Till
Now" (Dell), in discussing the gradual hiring of white musicians
in black bands and hiring of blacks in previously all white orchestras,
"...the most stubborn barrier of all. Involving implicit defiance
of the mongrelization taboo against which southern politicians had inveighed
in the race for white votes, fell in 1952 when Helen Merrill, unmistakably
blonde, sang for three month's with Earl Hines Sextet..."
In that same book,
Feather wrote: "Srah Vaughans impact was a prelude to a succession
of borderline pop-jazz vocalists. Nat King Cole, a jazz singer by any
yardstick when he recorded with his own accompaniment in the early 1940s,
was strictly a pop singer with faint tracers of jazz when he died in
1965. In a similar fringe zone are Frank Sinatra, Mel Torme, Barbra
Streisand, and dozens others who have been mildly influenced by real
jazz singers, There is a significant common denominator; these artists,
though beyond reproach as performers, have little or no deep feeling
for the blues.
"A few have
shown real jazz qualities; Peggy Lee and Helen Merrill, for example,
both have warmth of timbre, an acute sense of phrasing and a soulful
quality that give their best work a beauty comparable with Billie Holidays
Ms.Merrill has recorded
more then 40 albums.