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Dee Alexander and Chicago Soul Jazz Collective @ Jazz Showcase, Chicago
Chicago Soul Jazz Collective with Dee Alexander
December 20, 2023 – 8:00 pm
Chicago
Chicago Soul Jazz Collective with Dee Alexander
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Shows: 8pm & 10pm
Jazz Showcase
806 S. Plymouth Court | Chicago
Tickets: $15 â $30
Chicago Soul Jazz Collective
Trumpet / Marques Carroll
Tenor Sax / John Fournier
Keys / Amr Fahmy
Guitar / Larry Brown, Jr.
Bass / Micah Collier
Kit / Keith Brooks II
Voice / Dee Alexander
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https://delmark.com/tag/dee-alexander/
https://downbeat.com/news/detail/dee-alexander-interprets-billie-holiday-on-latest-delmark-outing
Dee Alexander Interprets Billie Holiday on Delmark Outing
NEWS, FROM THE MAGAZINE, DEE ALEXANDER, BILLIE HOLIDAYBy Howard Mandel â I âDec. 31, 2019
![Image](https://downbeat.com/images/news/_full/DeeAlexander_MarkSheldon.jpg)
âI canât remember a time when Billie Holidayâs music wasnât in my life,â says Dee Alexander, the Chicago singer who collaborates with the Metropolitan Jazz Octet on Itâs Too Hot For Words: Celebrating Billie Holiday (Delmark). âAs a child, my mother played her records, and I awakened to Billie Holiday many mornings.â
Alexander, locally renown for decades of performances in an ever-expanding array of contexts, and heard as a host on the syndicated WFMT Radio Network, shared a story about waking up as a child and going to find her mother. âI came into the kitchen in my little onesie, rubbing my eyes and asking, âWhy was that lady cryning?ââI said âcryning,â not âcryingââabout her man? What did he do to her?ââ The lyric was from Holidayâs blues âFine And Mellowâ: âMy man donât love me/ He treats me awful mean.â
âWe all know Billie suffered that,â Alexander acknowledges, but Lady Dayâs famous songs of mistreatment and despair arenât among the 10 tracks she and MJO tenor saxophonist and co-leader Jim Gailloreto chose to interpret anew. âI wanted to sing positive lyrics, like âThings Are Looking Up,ââ she says. And indeed, Itâs Too Hot For Words reforms the Holiday narrative by focusing on the vocalistâs self-assertions, romantic yearnings and simple joys.
âI was on the hunt for more obscure music by Billie,â explains Alexander, who came up in the 1970s working with rock and r&b bands, advanced to on-the-job training with members of the AACM and spent 10 years in the late pianist Ken Chaneyâs soulful Xperience. Since then, sheâs become a leader in her own right and a sought-after collaborator. âI wanted songs that people werenât so familiar with, keeping in mind at the same time that people want to hear songs by Billie they are familiar with.â
So, while âStrange Fruit,â with its horrific description of a lynching, is a central track, arranged for the octetâs five horns and rhythm section, plus a string sextet to showcase Alexanderâs unflinching power, the album starts with a rousing âAinât Nobodyâs Business If I Do,â then turns to other upbeat and optimistic connections. The finale is an optimistic, Depression-era ditty in which Alexander avows, âMy heart keeps singing I love you/ 24 hours a day.â
The octet veers between intimate chamber group sounds and bold little-big-band statements. Throughout, Alexander exudes warmth, conviction, rhythmic certainty, precise diction and hard-earned effortlessness. Her tonality is pure, rich and comforting, especially in her low and middle ranges. âI want you to feel like youâre in your soft, fuzzy robe when youâre listening to me, like you just came out of the shower or out of the bath and are cozy,â she says. âIâm always trying for the honey in my voice.â
âDee is able to pull off just about anything you ask of her,â says Gailloreto, who was wowed by Alexander upon first exposure in late 2017, and hopes Too Hot For Words is just the beginning of their association. âShe can scat, sing at a whisper, or can make you cry. We did a lot of test recordings with her and a piano, so the arrangers could get a sense of the emotions she was going for, and it was pretty easy to write after that. Weâd learn what the song was about for her, just based on her voice, and do a treatment. Sheâs also fearless, totally willing to go in directions that are unique to the situation.â An example is Alexanderâs surprise shift from montuno to swing at the peak of âToo Hot For Words.â
Considering thereâs other Holiday repertoire suited for similar Dee Alexander-MJO attention, might there be a volume two? âItâs a strong possibility,â the singer says. âBut Iâm also focused on a special project of original material with John McLean, the guitarist. Because I have my own story to tell.â DB
Metropolitan Jazz Octet / Dee Alexander â Itâs Too Hot For Words: Celebrating Billie Holiday
![DE 5032 album artwork](https://delmark.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/DE5032.jpg)
Description
Metropolitan Jazz Octet / Dee Alexander â Itâs Too Hot For Words: Celebrating Billie Holiday
Delmark DE 5032 (2019)
You wonât need to get very far into this disc â about 75 seconds, Iâd say â to know why the Metropolitan Jazz Octet and Dee Alexander seem made for each other. After the rarely heard verse to âAinât Nobodyâs Business,â Jim Gailloretoâs arrangement swirls the horns together into a bebop Dixieland of collective improvisation; and yet, each one emerges with high-def clarity. And so does Alexander when she re-enters; she becomes another instrument in the mix.
Itâs Too Hot For Words is a multi-generational time capsule: sterling musicians of the 21st Century, building upon an octet sound crafted 60 years earlier, to revitalize songs that Holiday began recording in the 1930s. It also serves as a springboard for the one aspect of Holidayâs work that Alexander does mimic. Sutter puts it this way: âDee does what 90 percent of singers donât do: instead of just singing the song, she tells a story â like Billie.â And all the while, the MJO spins evocative stories of their own: wordless but equally literate narratives to complement the human instrument invited into their midst.