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Train |
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Previous Issues
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Sarah Vaughan
1924 - 1990
In 1942 at
the Apollo Theater's weekly Amateur Night Sarah won first prize for a
rendition of "Body and Soul" that so impressed jazz singer Billy
Eckstine that he persuaded his bandleader, Earl Hines, to hire her. In 1944
Eckstine left Hines's band to form his own and took Sarah (as well as jazz
greats Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker) with him. Vaughan stayed with the
band for a year, and then in late 1945 she began her long solo career. For the
next 45 years she was to record virtually every jazz and pop standard against
backgrounds that varied from small and big jazz ensembles to large studio
bands and symphonic orchestras. Her earliest hits, "Lover Man" and
"If You Could See Me Now" (1946), and a number of duets with Billy
Eckstine, including "Dedicated to You" and "I Could Write a
Book" (1949), established her as a new jazz star. She had a comfortable
three-octave range, a heavy vibrato, and an uncanny ear. Possessing perfect
(not relative) pitch, she executed with seeming effortlessness the most
challenging and intricate harmonies. Vaughan's
early success was achieved with a mix of jazz originals ("Black
Coffee" and "If You Could See Me Now") and the better Tin Pan
Alley tunes such as "Body and Soul," "I've Got a Crush on
You," and "Tenderly." In the 1950s she waded into more
commercial waters, recording show tunes such as "Whatever Lola
Wants" and "Mr. Wonderful," which consequently widened her
audience. Some of the songs were By 1960
Vaughan had fully returned to her artistic strengths, and for the last 30
years of her career she sang in jazz clubs, concertized in auditoriums, and
produced a remarkable body of recorded music for the Roulette, Mercury,
Columbia, and Pablo labels. Her output over that period was almost uniformly
excellent, but among her best albums are The Duke Ellington Songbook, volumes
1 and 2, which, making the most of Ellington's compositional genius, contains
magnificent versions of "All Too Soon," "Lush Life,"
"Sophisticated Lady," and "Day Dreams"; The Explosive
Side of Sarah Vaughan, with arrangements by the great Benny Carter; How Long
Has This Been Going On?; Sarah and Basie; and Gershwin Live!, for which
Vaughan won the 1982 Grammy for Best Jazz Vocal Performance. Beginning
in 1957, when she first recorded it with Quincy Jones' band,
"Misty" was the song most associated with Vaughan and most often
requested by live audiences, but by the mid-1970s Stephen Sondheim's
"Send in the Clowns" had become her showpiece, the closing musical
signature of her concerts. Vaughan
was married four times: to bandleader George Treadwell, to professional
football player Clyde Atkins, to Las Vegas restaurateur Marshall Fisher, and
to jazz trumpeter Waymon Reed; all ended in divorce. She had one daughter,
Deborah "Paris" Vaughan. Vaughan died of lung cancer in her Los
Angeles suburban home on April 3, Singer Mel Torme credited Vaughan with having "the best vocal instrument of any singer working in the popular field." New York Times jazz critic John S. Wilson called hers "the finest voice ever applied to jazz." Billy Eckstine said that she was his favorite all-time singer. Alternatively and affectionately known as "Sassy" and "The Divine Sarah" (echoes of Sarah Bernhardt), she commanded respect both as musician and person. Sarah Vaughan's legacy as a performer and a recording artist will be very difficult to match in the future. |
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Live Music Magazine 2006 |
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JAZZ TRAIN |
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