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Blossom Dearie
Blossom Dearie was a remarkable American jazz vocalist, pianist and composer from the bebop era known for her unique voice, definitive arranging style and continent spanning career. From recordings and radio to Calvin Klein ads, the Gilmore Girls television show, and many other film and TV soundtracks, her career swung into the 21st Century. Christina Aguilera and Carly Rae Jepsen are fans, and her friend Tony Bennett honored her as a jazz influence. Elton John recently named the piano he uses in his Las Vegas shows after Blossom.
Blossom Dearie was born in the Catskill Mountains of New York State and was given her name by three proud brothers who brought pear blossoms into the house upon her arrival. One of her earliest memories was climbing onto her mother’s lap in front of the family piano and picking out tunes by ear. She started classical piano lessons at five, and at ten she moved to live with her brother in Washington, DC to continue training. It was expected she would enter the Peabody Conservatory. As with most of Blossom’s life, “She had other plans!” Blossom returned to the Catskills and switched to jazz where she developed a style similar to her favorite jazz pianist Art Tatum. She was a part of a band in high school, and after, wanting to see the world, she headed to New York City.
Once in New York she became part of the vocal scene as a member of Alvino Rey’s Blue Reys and Woody Herman’s Blue Flames. She began to play as a solo artist as a headliner and accompanist to other singers like Annie Ross at New York clubs.
Blossom was there for the Birth of the Cool hanging in Gil Evans apartment with Gerry Mulligan, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis. Blossom marked the starting point of her career as 1950 when she sat down and paired piano, with voice, in a little club called the Chantilly in Greenwich Village. Miles Davis once remarked, “She was the only white woman who ever had soul.”
Eddie and Nicole Barclay heard Blossom in New York and encouraged her to come to Paris to record…and she began to see the world. Her first solo album was released on the Barclay label and she was a popular attraction in the Mars Club and the Left Bank. It was in Paris that she met jazz impresario and Verve Records founder Norman Granz. He wanted to record her when she returned back to the States. A brief stint as the founder and arranger of the Blue Stars of France yielded a Billboard charting single, Lullaby of Birdland, sung in French. When other members of the group could not tour America she returned alone and took Norman Granz up on his offer. In that group she first worked with long-time friend Bob Dorough. She met Michel Legrand, whose song, “"La Valse des Lilas” she introduced to Johnny Mercer whose English lyrics turned it into “Once Upon A Summertime.”
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A Musical Tribute To New York
by H William Stine
First show of my 12th season. It was great to be back. But, as reluctant as I am to admit it, the day was certainly not about me. It was September 11th. So for New York, and for anyone and everyone with scars on their heart for what happened on that day twenty years ago, I played songs celebrating the indomitable spirit, the complexity, and the inspiration that is New York City; and paid tribute to one of its icons, ...
read moreBlossom Dearie: Blossom Time at Ronnie Scott's
by Samuel Chell
Several years ago Blossom Dearie said that of all her recordings, this on-location session from 1966 was her personal favorite. Although artists are notoriously unreliable critics of their own work, it's hard to quarrel with the singer/pianist's preference given the evidence on this reissue. Anyone who has yet to discover the inimitable, Lolita-like voice of this worldly-wise, genuinely hip, surprisingly versatile performer can be assured of making her acquaintance under optimal musical circumstances.
Even devoted fans seem unaware ...
read moreBlossom Dearie: From The Meticulous To The Sublime
by Michael P. Gladstone
As a long-time admirer of singer/songwriter Blossom Dearie, it is good to see that her 1975 album From The Meticulous To The Sublime, a mid-career snapshot of her work, has finally been made available on CD.
Pursuing her own muse, Blossom Dearie formed the Blue Stars of France in the early 1950s, which culminated in a successful recording of Lullaby of Birdland" in 1954. She appeared as the girl" vocalist on the original King Pleasure recording of I'm ...
read moreBlossom Dearie: My Gentleman Friend
by David Rickert
Let’s be clear about one thing from the start. This is more of a pop album than a jazz album, and anyone who buys My Gentleman Friend for the presence of any of the other musicians involved – especially Kenny Burrell – will probably be disappointed. Those who have encountered Blossom Dearie on any of her other Verve releases will be wiser, for she has always been more of an elegant cabaret singer whose delicate voice and modest piano playing ...
read moreBlossom Dearie: Blossom Dearie Sings Comden and Green
by David Adler
This was the fourth of six titles that Blossom Dearie would record for Verve in the mid to late 1950s. As James Gavin explains in his liner essay for the 2001 reissue, Norman Granz wanted to further the success of the songbook" concept he had developed with Ella Fitzgerald, so he sold Dearie on a tribute to the hit Broadway lyricists Adolph Green and Betty Comden. Dearie, accompanying herself on piano, is joined by the dream team of Kenny Burrell, ...
read moreBlossom Dearie: Blossom Dearie Sings Comden and Green
by David Adler
This was the fourth of six titles that Blossom Dearie would record for Verve in the mid to late 1950s. As James Gavin explains in his liner essay for the 2001 reissue, Norman Granz wanted to further the success of the songbook" concept he had developed with Ella Fitzgerald, so he sold Dearie on a tribute to the hit Broadway lyricists Adolph Green and Betty Comden. Dearie, accompanying herself on piano, is joined by the dream team of Kenny Burrell, ...
read moreBlossom Dearie: The Fontana Years, 1966-1970
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JazzWax by Marc Myers
Born in Upstate New York in 1924, Blossom Dearie wasn't really American. The jazz singer, composer, arranger and pianist was more at home in Paris in the 1950s and London in the 1960s. Classically trained as a child, she switched to jazz in high school. After graduation in the early 1940s, Dearie moved to Manhattan and sang in Woody Herman's Blue Flames and with Alvino Rey's Blue Reys. She also recorded with bop vocalist Dave Lambert and pianist Al Haig ...
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Jazz Musician of the Day: Blossom Dearie
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Blossom Dearie's birthday today!
Blossom Dearie was a remarkable American jazz vocalist, pianist and composer from the bebop era known for her unique voice, definitive arranging style and continent spanning career. From recordings and radio to Calvin Klein ads, the Gilmore Girls television show, and many other film and TV soundtracks, her career swung into the 21st Century. Christina Aguilera and Carly Rae Jepsen are fans, and her friend Tony Bennett honored her as a ...
read more
Jazz Musician of the Day: Blossom Dearie
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Blossom Dearie's birthday today!
Blossom Dearie was a remarkable American jazz vocalist, pianist and composer from the bebop era known for her unique voice, definitive arranging style and continent spanning career. From recordings and radio to Calvin Klein ads, the Gilmore Girls television show, and many other film and TV soundtracks, her career swung into the 21st Century. Christina Aguilera and Carly Rae Jepsen are fans, and her friend Tony Bennett honored her as a ...
read more
Jazz Musician of the Day: Blossom Dearie
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Blossom Dearie's birthday today!
Blossom Dearie was a remarkable American jazz vocalist, pianist and composer from the bebop era known for her unique voice, definitive arranging style and continent spanning career. From recordings and radio to Calvin Klein ads, the Gilmore Girls television show, and many other film and TV soundtracks, her career swung into the 21st Century. Christina Aguilera and Carly Rae Jepsen are fans, and her friend Tony Bennett honored her as a ...
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Blossom Dearie on Dusty
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JazzWax by Marc Myers
One of my favorite Blossom Dearie albums is That's Just The Way I Want to Be. Recorded in London in early 1970 for the European Fontana label, the album features all hip, pop originals, most of which you've never heard before. Blossom is impossibly vulnerable and delicate on the record. Nestled among the album's gems is my favorite Blossom Dearie song—Dusty Springfield. Last week, I was emailing with singer and poet Arlene Corwin in Sweden, and it turns out she ...
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Jazz Musician of the Day: Blossom Dearie
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Blossom Dearie's birthday today!
Blossom Dearie was a remarkable American jazz vocalist, pianist and composer from the bebop era known for her unique voice, definitive arranging style and continent spanning career. From recordings and radio to Calvin Klein ads, the Gilmore Girls television show, and many other film and TV soundtracks, her career swung into the 21st Century. Christina Aguilera and Carly Rae Jepsen are fans, and her friend Tony Bennett honored her as a ...
read more
Jazz Musician of the Day: Blossom Dearie
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Blossom Dearie's birthday today!
Blossom Dearie was a remarkable American jazz vocalist, pianist and composer from the bebop era known for her unique voice, definitive arranging style and continent spanning career. From recordings and radio to Calvin Klein ads, the Gilmore Girls television show, and many other film and TV soundtracks, her career swung into the 21st Century. Christina Aguilera and Carly Rae Jepsen are fans... Read more.
Place our Musician of the Day widget ...
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Jazz Musician of the Day: Blossom Dearie
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Blossom Dearie's birthday today!
Blossom Dearie was a remarkable American jazz vocalist, pianist and composer from the bebop era known for her unique voice, definitive arranging style and continent spanning career. From recordings and radio to Calvin Klein ads, the Gilmore Girls television show, and many other film and TV soundtracks, her career swung into the 21st Century. Christina Aguilera and Carly Rae Jepsen are fans... Read more.
Place our Musician of the Day widget ...
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Blossom Dearie: Sings Broadway
Source:
JazzWax by Marc Myers
Russ Garcia probably wasn't the best choice to arrange Blossom Dearie's 1960 album, Soubrette Sings Broadway Hit Songs. The show tunes are dated for 1960 (most are from forgettable shows of the 1930s and '40s), many of the songs could be classified as novelty numbers, and the arrangements are too cute by half. In some respects, that was the fault of the album's concept. A soubrette is an actress or other female performer playing a lively, flirtatious role in a ...
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Jazz Musician of the Day: Blossom Dearie
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Blossom Dearie's birthday today!
Blossom Dearie was a remarkable American jazz vocalist, pianist and composer from the bebop era known for her unique voice, definitive arranging style and continent spanning career. From recordings and radio to Calvin Klein ads, the Gilmore Girls television show, and many other film and TV soundtracks, her career swung into the 21st Century. Christina Aguilera and Carly Rae Jepsen are fans... Read more.
Place our Musician of the Day widget ...
read more