Dr. Margie Baker,
San Francisco Musical Legend,
To Release Her 4th CD,
"Margie Baker Sings with So Many Stars,"
On the Consolidated Artists Productions
(CAP) Label,
May 20
San Francisco Musical Legend,
To Release Her 4th CD,
"Margie Baker Sings with So Many Stars,"
On the Consolidated Artists Productions
(CAP) Label,
May 20
CD Release Shows Scheduled for
June 1 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel Ballroom, Burlingame,
& June 14 at Mildred Owens Concert Hall, Pacifica
June 1 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel Ballroom, Burlingame,
& June 14 at Mildred Owens Concert Hall, Pacifica
April 30, 2014
So Many Stars
is a two-disc set on which Baker surrounds herself with some of the
most gifted instrumentalists in the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond.
Her relaxed and swinging phrasing, warm tone, and precise enunciation
inform every number, including songs by Ellington ("Come Sunday," "In a Mellow Tone," "I'm Just a Lucky So and So"), Monk ("'Round Midnight"), and Horace Silver ("SeƱor Blues"), as well as standards like "You've Changed," "Deed I Do," and "Lazy Afternoon."
Among her accompanists, whom she calls "Margie's musical galaxy," are pianist Shota Osabe, guitarist Rodney Jones, saxophonists Jules Broussard and Melecio Magdaluyo, bassists Harley White and Chuck Bennett, and percussionist John Santos, a sixth-grade student of Baker's when she taught in the San Francisco Unified School District.
"This
is a tribute to them," says Baker of the players on the CD. "These are
not egocentric, big-time musicians, but they're wonderful musicians. We
work so much and so well together."
Margie Baker
was born October 11, 1933 "in a shack in the sticks" near Center,
Texas, in Shelby County. "Black people were extremely deprived back
there in those sticks," she says. "That's where I was born -- from
dirt-poor, beautiful, spiritual people."
After
her parents divorced, mother and daughter relocated to San Francisco at
the onset of World War II. Her mother found work as a riveter at
shipyards in San Francisco and Oakland, and the two lived at first in a
cold-water flat in San Francisco's overwhelmingly African-American
Fillmore District.
Upon
graduating with honors from Girls High School at age 15, Baker a
received a scholarship to the University of California Berkeley, where
she spent two years before transferring to San Francisco State College
and earned both bachelor's and master's degrees. Years later, she used
earnings from her part-time singing career to enroll at the University
of San Francisco, from which she received a Ph.D in Education. Baker
moved from the classroom into school district headquarters as Director
of Compensatory Education, where she oversaw the distribution of federal
funds to help low-income children in reading and math.
When Dizzy Gillespie,
her friend since she was a 17-year-old fashion model and a sophomore at
UC Berkeley, finally heard her sing, he offered to take her on the
road, but her responsibilities as a teacher, and eventually as an
administrator, came first. She would, however, go on to sit in with his
band when their paths crossed in Tokyo, New York City, Oakland, and San
Francisco. She retired in 2004, after 48 years of service as an
educator.
Baker
had done very little singing in public before the guitarist at Henri's
Room at the Top on the 46th floor of the San Francisco Hilton Hotel
coaxed her to sit in one night. She sang "I Left My Heart in San
Francisco." Hotel magnates Conrad and Barron Hilton were in attendance
and offered her a job, which she accepted. She spent the next 18 years
singing at Henri's -- two nights a week during the school year, five in
the summer -- as well as for special affairs at the Las Vegas Hilton,
where such celebrities at Tony Bennett, Elvis Presley, and Elizabeth
Taylor heard her sing. She also became a regular performer at the
Monterey Jazz Festival and traveled the world with the festival's
touring shows that included such jazz greats as James Moody and Richie Cole. For the past decade, Baker has sung during brunch every Sunday at the Hyatt Regency Hotel near the San Francisco International Airport, as well as at other hotels, clubs, and churches.
As the 20 tracks on the new CD indicate, Margie Baker
remains a song stylist of the first order. The only thing that has
really changed is, she jokingly admits, "I don't shake my booty as
much."
Baker will be appearing 6/1 at the Regency Ballroom at the Hyatt Regency Hotel/San Francisco Airport in Burlingame, 5:00-10:00 pm, with many of the musicians heard on So Many Stars; and 6/14 at the Mildred Owens Concert Hall in Pacifica, 7:30 pm,
with Keith Williams, piano; Jim Nichols, guitar; Michael O'Neill, tenor
saxophone; Chuck Bennett, bass; and Jerry Pannone, drums.
Web Site: margiebakervocalist.com
Media Contact:
510-234-8781
hudba@sbcglobal.net
www.terrihinte.com
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