Friday, 21 March 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " VANESSA RUBIN " IS AN AMERICAN JAZZ VOCALIST AND COMPOSER : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                                    BLACK                     SOCIAL                HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  Vanessa Rubin (born March 14, 1957 in Cleveland, Ohio) is an American jazz vocalist and composer.

Biography

Rubin was born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio, grew up in a musical household to parents from Trinidad and Louisiana. She achieved her Bachelor of Arts degree in Journalism from Ohio State University. She received a standing ovation for her performance of “God Bless the Child” while competing in the Miss Black Central Ohio Contest, which convinced her that her true calling was to sing in the jazz tradition. This Billie Holiday masterpiece has since become her ”official” theme song. Ms. Rubin returned to Cleveland, where she began singing in many of the city's clubs and hotels and performing with the best of the city's musicians. She also formed and managed her first group, consisting of organ, guitar, vibes and drums. Soon after she moved to New York City in 1982, Ms. Rubin performed at Sweet Basil and the Village Vanguard with the Pharoah Sanders Quartet. She then began to study with pianist Barry Harris at his Jazz Cultural Theatre.[1] Since that time she has worked with an impressive list of musicians includingKenny BarronLionel Hampton, the Mercer Ellington Orchestra, Cecil BridgewaterEtta JonesToots ThielemansSteve TurreCedar Walton, andGrover Washington, Jr. More recently she has completed international tours with Herbie Hancock, the Woody Herman Orchestra, and the Jazz Crusaders.
In 1992 she signed with the Novus label, and her releases for the label are quite enjoyable, including a fine tribute to Carmen McRaeI'm Glad There Is You: A Tribute to Carmen McRae (1994), the ballad-dominated set does have a reasonable amount of variety, Rubin gets off some fine scatting on "Yardbird Suite" and she introduces an excellent original in "No Strings Attached." Onzy Matthews is an arranger on this release, it would be his last set of recorded arrangements before he passed in 1997. A variety of guests including Grover Washington, Jr.Frank FosterAntonio HartCecil BridgewaterKenny Burrell and Monty AlexanderPastiche (1993) assisted by a fine rhythm section and such sidemen as trumpeters E.J. Allen andCecil Bridgewater, trombonist Steve Turre, and (on one song) tenorman Houston Person, Rubin expertly interprets the lyrics with both honest emotion and swing, occasionally scatting in unison or in counterpoint with the horns. She delivers everything from honey-laden ballads purring like a kitten, to up-tempo swinging and scatting like a saxophone.[2] This disc offers a good example of her talents. She also performed the song "Just Squeeze Me" on Clark Terry's Live on QE2.





























































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