Vocalist Barbara Dane
To Release "Throw It Away ... ,"
Her First New Recording in 14 Years,
On Her Dreadnaught Music Label
August 19
Dane Is Backed by Pianist Tammy Hall,
Bassist Ruth Davies, & Drummer Bill Maginnis,
With Guest Spots by
Pablo Menéndez on Blues Harp &
Richard Hadlock, Soprano Saxophone
CD Release Show Set for August 24
At Yoshi's, Oakland
July 22, 2016
Barbara Dane's
extraordinary life has been distinguished by decades' worth of
collaborations with major artists in jazz, blues, folk, and world music
as well as by uncompromising public stands for social justice and civil
rights. At 89, the indomitable Oakland-based singer is still active,
still performing, and, on her new CD Throw It Away..., in inspired form. The disc, her first new recorded work in 14 years, will be released on August 19 by Dane's Dreadnaught Music imprint.
Dane points to her chemistry with the elegantly swinging pianist Tammy Hall
as having "given me the freedom to explore new ways of singing." A
Dallas native and longtime San Franciscan, Hall is the latest of great
piano players to have recorded with Dane, including Earl "Fatha" Hines
and Don Ewell. "She pays attention to what the singer is saying, and
this is rare," says Barbara. "Tammy knows how to clarify my meaning
through the music, and oh my, does she swing!"
Rounding out the rhythm section are in-demand bassist Ruth Davies, known for her years of work with Elvin Bishop and the late Charles Brown, and the vocalist's old friend and colleague, Bill Maginnis, on drums. Barbara's son Pablo Menéndez,
leader of the Cuban group Mezcla, produced the date on a visit from his
home in Havana. And although his main instrument is guitar, here he
blows some terrific blues harp on three tracks. The other special guest
on the project is trad jazz veteran Richard Hadlock, who contributes soulful soprano sax on the ballad "All Too Soon."
This is Barbara's most eclectic and subtle set of songs to date. Starting out with a juicy Memphis Minnie blues ("I'm Sellin' My Porkchops"), she explores tunes from the jazz canon by Abbey Lincoln (the title track), Duke Ellington ("All Too Soon"), and Fats Waller ("How Can You Face Me?"); songs by singer-songwriters Paul Simon ("American Tune"), Lennon-McCartney ("In My Life"), and Leonard Cohen ("Slow"
-- "That's a woman's song if I ever heard one"); two original blues and
one old folk tune reimagined by Mose Allison with new words by Dane; a
hilarious jazz waltz ("The Kugelsburg Bank"); and a country-style topical song by a local postman.
When Barbara burst onto the scene in the late 1950s, Playboy magazine's jazz critic Leonard Feather called her "Bessie Smith in Stereo" and Time magazine described her voice as "pure, rich . . . rare as a 20 karat diamond."
Nowadays her rich alto tones retain their customary warmth, but instead
of shouting the blues, she has found new ways of communicating, using a
more relaxed and intimate way of singing.
In the 1950s and '60s the Detroit-born Barbara Dane
performed and recorded with many of the greats of jazz and blues
including Jack Teagarden, Benny Carter, Lightnin' Hopkins, the Chambers
Brothers, Memphis Slim, and Willie Dixon. Her first album, Trouble in Mind, appeared in 1957 on the San Francisco Records label. She recorded Livin' with the Blues for Dot in 1959 with a combo that featured Earl Hines with Shelly Manne, Plas Johnson, and Benny Carter. Dane appeared on national TV's Timex Jazz Show with Louis Armstrong
and was featured on Playboy After Dark, receiving a special award from
Hugh Hefner as one of the outstanding jazz artists of the year. She
scored a Top 40 hit in 1960 with a single on the Trey label titled "I'm on My Way"
that was produced by Lee Hazlewood and Lester Sill and has become a
cult classic in recent years on England's Northern Soul scene. Her album
On My Way (Capitol Records, 1961) featured a different version of the song, which can be heard throughout the 2010 PBS special Freedom Riders.
Never confining herself to one genre, Dane also performed and recorded folk and world music, taking a cue from early mentor Pete Seeger.
Many young singers such as Jackson Browne, Taj Mahal, Bonnie Raitt, and
Ry Cooder were exposed to her music at the Ash Grove in Los Angeles,
where Dane was a frequent headliner. In the 1960s and '70s, she sang at
demonstrations in Washington and in small towns all over America, from
the Freedom Schools of rural Mississippi to the gates of military bases
in Japan and Europe. In l966, Barbara became the first American musician
to tour post-revolutionary Cuba.
(Nine of her earlier recordings are available on her web site, and another five of her classic albums can be purchased from Smithsonian Folkways.)
In the fall of 2017, Barbara's 90th year will be celebrated
with a weekend of events culminating in a concert at UCLA's Royce Hall. Nina Menéndez, the new CD's executive producer, is now heading up The Barbara Dane Legacy Project.
Among the project's goals are the placement of her extensive archives; a
PBS-style TV special profiling Barbara's life; and the publication of
Dane's soon-to-be-completed autobiography.
Photography: CD
cover photo by Ashley James; Tammy & Barbara by Tom Ehrlich; young
Barbara courtesy of the artist; portrait of Barbara by Steve Kahn.
Web Site: barbaradane.net
Media Contact:
hudba@sbcglobal.net
510-234-8781