helenmerrill.com
"Music Maker" Article
Helen Merrill's
debut recording, 'A Cigarette For Company', was recorded on December
15, 1952 with the Earl Hines band. More important to her legacy are
the 1953 recordings of 'The More I See You' and 'My Funny Valentine'
on the Roost label (Roost 575). These recordings led to her signing
in 1954 with the newly launched Emarcy label of Mercury Records.
"Helen Merrill"
(Emarcy MG 36006), her self-titled debut album on Emarcy Records was
recorded in December, 1954. It is a classic jazz recording with Clifford
Brown, Danny Bank, Jimmy Jones, Barry Galbraith, Milton Hinton, and
Osie Johnson. The album was arranged by Quincy Jones. This debut set
many of the standards that she has maintained in her recordings throughout
her career: collaborating with quality musicians, choosing great songs
to sing; taking creative risks, assuring sensitivity to the lyrics;
and unquestioning musicality. In all, she recorded five albums for Emarcy
from 1954-1958. Each shows different strengths of her musicianship and
her continuing growth as an artist. She ended the decade with the 1959
Metrojazz album "You've got a Date with the Blues" (Metrojazz
E1010). Accompanying her on this album are Frank Wess, Barry Galbraith,
Johnny Cresci, Milton Hinton, Kenny Dorham, Jerome Richardson, Al Hall,
and Jimmy Jones. It is a thematic album. It is beautifully sung. The
interpretations have a timelessness that rests very much on Miss Merrill's
sensitivity to the music.
As the 1960s began,
Miss Merrill was a vagabond, roaming the world. For both professional
and personal reasons she lived abroad in Italy and Japan for a good
part of the decade. This period exposed her to a world view, and she
incorporated this into her music. Mid-decade, 1965 and 1968, respectively,
she recorded the albums, "The Feeling Is Mutual" (Milestone
9003) and "A Shade of Difference" (Milestone 9019). Her collaborator
on both albums is pianist Dick Katz. Accompanying her on "The Feeling
Is Mutual" along with Mr. Katz are Thad Jones, Jim Hall, Ron Carter,
Arnie Wise, and Pete LaRosa. The musicians playing on "A Shade
of Difference" are Thad Jones, Hubert Laws, Gary Bartz, Jim Hall,
Richard Davis, Ron Carter, Elvin Jones, and again, Mr. Katz. These musicians
create two gems. "The Feeling Is Mutual" sets a very high
standard for the period. It was not widely marketed at the time of its
released. It receives more attention when re-released thirteen years
later as "Something Special" (Inner City 1060). Both albums
are artistic statements, vocally and musically, reflecting the creative
impulses of all. By no means do these two albums mark the high point
of Ms. Merrill's recordings, as some of her most sensitive singing is
still in the future.
The 1970s were challenging,
creative, and full of risk-taking for Miss Merrill. As the decade began
she was still living in Japan. She hosted a show for a Tokyo radio station.
By the end of the decade she had produced albums for pianists Al Haig,
Tommy Flanagan, and Sir Roland Hanna, as well as for vocalist Ann Burton.
It is her recordings made in the seventies that are most revealing.
"Sposin'" (Victor SMJX-10132), with the Gary Peacock Trio
recorded in 1971, is a modern statement. This album commands attention.
It is as creatively imposing today as it must have been in 1970. Miss
Merrill's vocals play around and through the music which is teeming
with an atonal influence. It has a jarring version of 'My Man' juxtaposed
with an entrancing version of 'If You Could See Me Now'. The essence
of 'My Man' has never been communicated in this way, with the dissonance
the lyrics foster, played out in both the vocal and the music. The trio
is composed of Gary Peacock, Masahiko Satoh, and Motohiki Hino.
In 1972 she moved
back to the United States. In 1976 she produced and recorded the album
"Helen Merrill/John Lewis" (Trio Pap 9050). It is a recording
of understated romanticism. Both singer and pianist are responsive to
the mood and to each other, creating music that transcends both. Accompanying
Miss Merrill and Mr. Lewis on the non-duet tracks are Richard Davis,
Hubert Laws, and Connie Kay.
The 1980s was a
decade of much activity for Miss Merrill. Early in the decade she recorded
albums in Japan. Other recording sessions during the decade include
a composer series, albums of the music of Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern,
Cole Porter, and Richard Rogers & Oscar Hammerstein. Mid-decade
she recorded two albums for the Owl label in France. By the end of the
decade she was again recording on the Emarcy label, by then a part of
Polygram.
The 1987 Emarcy
album, "Collaboration" (Emarcy 834-205-2CD), is a masterpiece.
It is a revisiting of her 1956 album, "Dream of You". Her
collaborator on both these recordings was arranger Gil Evans.
"Collaboration" is fresh, full of rewards for the listener.
Miss Merrill re-interprets songs with the intervening thirty years weighing
in, giving her interpretations of the lyrics greater meaning, with a
maturity that captures the richness of the orchestrations. This can
be attributed to the richness that life brings the longer it is actively
lived. "Collaboration" is an orchestral album including the
following musician: Steve Lacy, Gil Goldstein, Mel Lewis, Danny Bank,
Phil Bodner, Jerry Dodgion, Chris Hunter, Wally Kane, Roger Rosenberg,
Jimmy Knepper, Joe Beck, Buster Williams, Lew Soloff, Shunzo Ono, Dave
Taylor, Harry Lookofsky, Lamar Alsop, Theodore Israel, Harold Colletta,
Jessy Levy, and Jay Berliner.
From all appearances
the rekindled relationship with the Emarcy label (now Universal) in
the late 1980s gives Miss Merrill great freedom. Her recordings in the
1990s for the label are consistent, artistic expressions and achievements.
The track, 'Young and Foolish', from the 1996 album "You and the
Night and the Music" (Gitanes 537 087-2CD), underscores what her
maturity has brought to her interpretive skills. This track is spell-binding.
If any comparison can be made with the recordings of this period, it
may well be with the meritorious albums the late Sarah Vaughan made
for the Pablo label from 1978-1982.
Two of Miss Merrill's
albums from the 1990s that will surely endure are "Clear out Of
This World" (Antilles 314 512 654-2CD) and "Brownie--Homage
to Clifford Brown" (Gitanes 314 522 363-2CD). "Clear out Of
This World" is exquisite. It is an intimate and sensual recording.
The music is for adults, conveying the meanings of love, life, and living.
The musicians that work with Miss Merrill to bring this about are Roger
Kellaway, Red Mitchell, Terry Clarke, Tom Harrell, and Wayne Shorter.
"Brownie--Homage
to Clifford Brown" is a recording of high merit, both musically
and artistically. Once again, as with "Collaboration", Miss
Merrill looks backward, this time to her 1954 debut, "Helen Merrill",
to create a recording for the present. "Brownie" is poignant.
It allows the musicians to express their appreciation for Clifford Brown
who is part of their artistic heritage. At the same time, they reveal
their own strengths and the lessons learned from this heritage. It is
a tribute to musicianship. The players are Lew Soloff, Roy Hargrove,
Tom Harrell, Wallce Roney, Kenny Baron, Rufus Reid, Victor Lewis, and
Torrie Zito.
The new century
begins and Miss Merrill continues to make music that excites challenges,
provokes, and satisfies. Her artistry requires attention. It is subtle
and complex at the same time. It must be listened to actively. Each
album is best heard in its entirety as a total piece. This provides
the listener with the emotional rewards that all great art provides.
Her best works are collaborative efforts. She works off her fellow musicians
and they, in turn, work off her.
During her career
Miss Merrill has also recorded albums outside of jazz that are worthy
in themselves and add dimensions to her music. These show her ability
to challenge herself and deepen her artistry. For example, in the 1963
album "The Artistry of Helen Merrill" (Fontana Tl 5270), she
reveals her sensitivity to folk music. While living in Japan she again
reveals her affinity for folk music, though this time the music is recorded
with the accompanists playing traditional Japanese instruments. The
album recorded in 1966 is "Sings Folk" (King KICJ 8383CD)
with Hozan Yamamoto on the bamboo flute (shakuhatchi). Her 1970 album,
"sings Beatles" (Victor VICJ-23172CD), at first thought, seems
a questionable project. This is pop-rock music.
Listening to this
album today, one is taken by the creative interpretations and the nuances
she brings to the music. Two later albums to sample outside the jazz
tradition are "Carrousel" (Finlandia 0603-14914-2CD) and "Jelena
Ana Milcetic aka Helen Merrill" (Gitanes 543 089 2CD). "Carrousel"
is her 1996 recording of songs by the Finnish composer Heikki Sarmanto.
This is a song cycle of very polished pop music. It is light and lyrical.
"Jelena Ana Milcetic aka Helen Merrill" recorded in 1999 reflects
the intertwining of her Croatian heritage with her musical history.
Its concept and execution shows a deep appreciation of how her life
experiences and art are woven together.
Helen Merrill's
legacy does not rest on one or two recordings. She has consistently
recorded during these past fifty years, having recorded over 40 albums.
At the same time, she has extensively toured worldwide, performing at
jazz festivals and a variety of venues. Like all great artists her every
effort has not always been successful. It is her ability to continually
learn, grow and move forward that has produced aural works of lasting
beauty. Her musicality, high standards, and creativity have resulted
in recordings that help define what vocal performances should be. Time
and again, from that debut recording in 1952 until today, she has recorded
albums that compel and challenge the listener, and most importantly,
give great pleasure. These noteworthy albums, "Helen Merrill",
"You've Got A Date With The Blues", "The Feeling Is Mutual",
A Shade of Difference", "Sposin'", "Helen Merrill/John
Lewis", "Collaboration", "Clear Out Of This World",
and "Brownie", do not grow tiresome. These remain fresh and
alive with each listening. Like Billie Holiday, she sounds like no one
but herself. She is a singular artist with a truly individual style.
Over the past fifty years, Helen Merrill has recorded extraordinary
albums in each decade that stand the test of time. This is the definition
of a great--Music Maker.