Janet Lawson (born Janet Polun; November 13, 1940 in
Baltimore, Maryland) is a jazz singer and educator.
Lawson was born in Baltimore to a Jewish father and Catholic
mother from Eastern Europe. Her father was a jazz drummer and her mother was a
singer and lyricist who sometimes sang in her father's band. At home, they
worked on songs together at the piano. Janet was performing on the radio at age
three, and singing with jazz bands before her eighteenth birthday.
When she was eighteen, she moved to New York City and got a
job as a secretary at Columbia Records. She lived across the street from Al
Jeter, the head of Riverside Records, and made contacts when she attended
parties at his penthouse apartment. She went to jazz clubs and was inspired by
seeing Thelonious Monk. She made her debut at the Village Vanguard with Art
Farmer.
During the 1970s, while in her thirties, Lawson discovered
transcendental meditation and yoga, and she spent time in California, singing
and studying theatre. Meanwhile, the flip side of a 1970 release of “Two Little Rooms,” a jazz tune called
“Dindi,” had become a sleeper hit in England, and suddenly Lawson found herself
in demand.
She started her own quintet in 1976 and became known as an
inventive and expressive scat singer with a very wide range. One night whilst
playing at Beefsteak Charlie’s on 13th and Fifth, they were spotted by New York
Times critic John S. Wilson. The next day, Wilson’s New York Times piece loudly
proclaimed, “Janet Lawson Has the Dream Jazz Voice.”
Engagements and recordings with artists like Eddie
Jefferson, Ron Carter, Bob Dorough, Tommy Flanagan, Barry Harris, Milt Hinton, Barney
Kessel, Dave Liebman, Joe Newman, Rufus Reid, Clark Terry, Ed Thigpen, Cedar
Walton, Count Basie and Duke Ellington followed. There were more hit recordings
(“So High,” “Shazam/Captain Marvel,” “Dreams Can Be”) and, in 1981, a Grammy
Nomination.
She recorded two superb albums in 1980 and 1983 for Inner
City and Omnisound. Lawson also appeared
on records by Eddie Jefferson (1977) and David Lahm (1982).
She has taught voice at New York University and the late
1990’s the New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music, given private lessons,
taught elementary school children, and has made trips every year to Latvia to
attend a youth music camp.
In the early 2000s, she was diagnosed with Lyme disease and
Bell's palsy, suffering damage to her vocal cords. The illness stymied her
career, and stripped her vocal chords of much of their power and flexibility.
Her recovery has been slow, but steady, and that she’s continued to pursue her
development as an artist and a human being throughout the often frustrating and
maddening process of healing is a testament to her strength of character and
spirit.
At present Janet is engaged in a health crisis and has left
NYC to live with family in Baltimore.
Awards and honours: Grammy Award nomination, Best Jazz Vocal Performance,
Female, 1982. Hall of Fame nomination, International Association for Jazz
Education, 2007.
(Compiled and edited from Wikipedia, All About Jazz and
Allegro (newsletter of the Associated Musicians of Greater New York)
For “Janet Lawson Quintet” go here:-
ReplyDeletehttps://www.mediafire.com/file/4m52rb5rv085adr/Janet%20Lawson.rar
1.You Promised
2.Jitterbug Waltz
3.Sunday Afternoon
4.Round Midnight
5.So High
6.Nothin' Like You
7.It Ain't Necessarily So (The Miles Davis Session Version)
8.I Thought About You (The Miles Davis Session Version)
9.It Never Entered My Mind (The Miles Davis Session Version)
10.Joshua (The Miles Davis Session Version)
11.Dindi (Mono Version)
BONUS
12. Two Little Rooms (B side of Dindi single)
This album contains nearly all the contents of two albums released in 1981 and 1983. The 1981 release was nominated for a Grammy. (She lost to Ella.) And when you hear Janet Lawson's exquisite vocals, you will know why. Her improvisational jazz scat vocals that the New York Times called "the Dream Jazz Voice" still dazzle. Track 12 is the B side to Track 11, which I have added as a bonus from a 1970 solo effort.
All taken from YouTube, so quality may vary. The above playlist is only for evaluation. If you want better quality please buy the album.
I have had this album for a long time, and it is one of my most played. Every home should own a copy. Good to see you spreading the word Bopper.
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