Genevieve Lillian Hering, known by her stage name Jeri
Southern, (August 5, 1926 - August 4, 1991) was a jazz pianist and singer.
A converted piano player and vocal coach, Jeri Southern
became one of the most underrated jazz vocal interpreters of the 1950s despite
a voice regarded as subpar. Transforming a potential failing into her prime
strength, Southern was devastatingly effective at delivering songs charting the
downhill romantic life of world-weary everywoman characters. After recording
for Decca, Roulette, Capitol and Jasmine during the 1950s though, she abruptly
retired after growing tired of the music industry.
Born in rural Nebraska, Jeri Southern played piano by ear at
the age of three and began formal lessons three years later. She studied classical
piano and voice at a school in Omaha, but after an introduction to jazz at a
local nightclub, Southern quickly changed her focus.
After beginning her career at the Blackstone Hotel in Omaha,
she joined a United States Navy recruiting tour during World War II. In the
late 1940s, she worked in Chicago clubs where she once played piano for Anita
O'Day. Convinced to begin singing as well, Southern abandoned her classical
training and began singing in a voice just several steps removed from her speaking
voice.
After signing to
Decca in 1951, her first hit, "You Better Go Now," established her
style — lyrically focused, somewhat desultory, and definitely lovesick, the
style of singing often called (for better or worse) torch songs. Her decidedly
unflashy voice lent additional weight to the lyrical concerns of other Southern
favourites like "I Don't Know Where to Turn," "Ev'ry Time We Say
Goodbye," "Someone to Watch Over Me" and "If I Had
You." She also had a moderate hit in 1954 with "Joey." In 1955
her recording of "An Occasional Man", reached #89 in the Billboard
pop chart.
The first time Sinatra met Southern he told her she was
"just the best, the very best", and apparently hugged her so hard he
almost hurt her. Singing aside, Nat King Cole also rated her as one of the
great pianists.
Southern ended up more popular in Britain than the US –
American stars almost never travelled to the UK in the 50s, so her stage fright
didn't count against her – and she even scored a Top 30 hit in the UK here with
“Fire Down Below." The track peaked at #22 in the UK Singles Chart in June
1957. Southern's LPs of the '50s for
Decca utilized mostly small groups in an era of large orchestras, including top-flight jazz-pop names like Ralph Burns, Dave Barbour and Marty Paich.
Decca utilized mostly small groups in an era of large orchestras, including top-flight jazz-pop names like Ralph Burns, Dave Barbour and Marty Paich.
After Southern recorded two LPs for Roulette during 1958,
she moved to Capitol for her most celebrated album, 1959's Jeri Southern Meets
Cole Porter, arranged by Billy May. She recorded only one additional LP for
Capitol (live at the Crescendo) before retiring in 1961, after years of
paralysing stage fright. Just the thought of going on stage, or seeing her name
in lights, made her enormously anxious. Southern hated performing in front of
anyone – even her daughter Kathryn had to sneak into the room to hear her
practising Beethoven sonatas and Debussy's Images, while frequently improvising and composing her own melodies.
practising Beethoven sonatas and Debussy's Images, while frequently improvising and composing her own melodies.
She married several times, raised a family and worked as a
piano/vocal coach in Hollywood . She wrote Interpreting Popular Music At The Keyboard
during her final years.
Her last public performance was at the Vine Street Bar And
Grill in Los Angeles, where she was persuaded by Anita O’Day to emerge from the
audience and play a medley of Jerome Kern songsShe died of pneumonia six months
later in Los Angeles of double pneumonia in 1991, at the age of 64, just a day
before her 65th birthday.. She was booked for her first studio time in years at
the time of her death.
After she died, jazz promoter and former Chess Records
executive Dick LaPalm said: "More people should have known about her. She
should have stayed, remained in show business and gotten the recognition she
deserved."
(Info compiled mainly from AMG & Wikipedia & the
Guardian)
For “Jeri Southern – You Better Go Now / When Your Heart’s On Fire” go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www42.zippyshare.com/v/yaqgleRA/file.html
1. YOU BETTER GO NOW
2. GIVE ME TIME
3. SOMETHING I DREAMED LAST NIGHT
4. THE MAN THAT GOT AWAY
5. WHEN I FALL IN LOVE
6. JUST GOT TO HAVE HIM AROUND
7. DANCING ON THE CEILING
8. SPEAK SOFTLY TO ME
9. WHAT GOOD AM I WITHOUT YOU
10. I THOUGHT OF YOU LAST NIGHT
11. THAT OLE DEVIL CALLED LOVE
12. REMIND ME
13. SMOKE GETS IN YOUR EYES
14. CAN I FORGET YOU
15. LITTLE GIRL BLUE
16. I REMEMBER YOU
17. HE WAS TOO GOOD TO ME
18. YOU'RE DRIVING ME CRAZY (WHAT DID I DO)
19. YOU MAKE ME FEEL S0 YOUNG
20. SOMEONE TO WATCH OVER ME
21. AUTUMN IN NEW YORK
22. MY SHIP
23. NO MORE
24. LET ME LOVE YOU
If you were to leaf through all the material written about Jeri Southern in the past five years or so by record reviewers, night club critics, newspaper columnists and others, you would notice a constant recurrence of such words as delicacy, sensitivity, taste, subtlety and restraint. And if you find these qualities admirable, then it's a fine experience you have in store as you listen to these lyrical little milestones in Miss Southern's recording career. On some of them she sounds very close to tears, on others she sounds wise and profound and perhaps just a bit cynical. Sometimes she seems like a wistful little girl, and the next minute she's silken and sultry and seductive. The moods are many and complex, and they are all Jeri Southern's. They are all yours too, to share with her here in this album.