[Dixielandjazz] "Sweet Mama Stringbean" previewed

Kit W. Johnson kit at bscjb.com
Fri Dec 17 14:34:12 PST 2010


Bob Ringwald wrote...

<<<<'Sweet Mama Stringbean' - ValLimar and Frank Jansen celebrate the blues
and trailblazing career of Ethel Waters>>>>

And I can't resist piggybacking off that thread to plug a song written by
clarinetist Steve Matthes and recorded by Black Swan Classic Jazz Band in
2005 with Marilyn Keller on vocals named "Sweet Mama Stringbean". The song
is reflective of Ethel Waters' time with the Black Swan Phonograph Company
and includes all of the titles she recorded with Black Swan in the lyrics.
It's a nice tune: Steve did a good job and Marilyn and the band present it
well.

If you're interested in getting a copy of the CD you can check out the "This
Joint is Jumpin'" CD on our web site at www.bscjb.com. If you are interested
in the "Sweet Mama Stringbean" track only, you can hear a sample and obtain
a digital download at http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/bscjb2.

Advertisement concluded.

Cheers,
Kit

Kit W. Johnson
Black Swan Classic Jazz Band
503-292-7673
503-970-1251 (cell)
kit at bscjb.com 
www.bscjb.com 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: dixielandjazz-bounces at ml.islandnet.com
[mailto:dixielandjazz-bounces at ml.islandnet.com] On Behalf Of Robert Ringwald
Sent: Friday, December 17, 2010 10:18 AM
To: Kit Johnson
Cc: Dixieland Jazz Mailing List
Subject: [Dixielandjazz] "Sweet Mama Stringbean" previewed


at Fremont Centre Theatre
by Bliss
Pasadena Weekly, December 16, 2010

She was a star at the height of the Harlem Renaissance. She was one of the
first
African-American women nominated for an Academy Award. Harold Arlen composed
the
standard "Stormy Weather" for her to sing. Yet Ethel Waters languishes in
the shadows
of others whose careers were enabled by her trailblazing achievements.
Singer-actress ValLimar Jansen and husband Frank Jansen hope to raise
awareness of
Waters' significance with "Sweet Mama Stringbean." Taking its title from
Waters'
youthful vaudeville nickname, the play features ValLimar's renditions of
several
standards associated with Waters, including her signature anthem "His Eye Is
on the
Sparrow," "Stormy Weather," "Am I Blue" and "My Handy Man Ain't Handy No
More." It's
currently in a limited run at the Fremont Centre Theatre, where the lobby
hosts a
display promoting a campaign to fund a star for Waters on the Hollywood Walk
of Fame.
"Everybody, when I was growing up, thought that 'Julia' with Diahann Carroll
was
the first show starring an African-American woman, but it really wasn't,"
says ValLimar.
"I'm really hoping that people will begin to realize and recognize that
Ethel's kind
of been forgotten."
Waters was born in 1896 or 1900, depending on which of her autobiographies
you believe,
after her teenaged mother was raped. Violence was more prevalent than warmth
or love
throughout her poverty-stricken childhood. By her late teens she was singing
and
dancing on the black vaudeville and carnival circuits. By the 1920s, she was
a star,
recording for Columbia and Paramount, and performing at venues like the
Cotton Club.
In 1933 she starred on Broadway in "As Thousands Cheer" -- the first
African-American
woman to do so. She also had her own radio show, another first, and earned
an Academy
Award nomination for 1949's "Pinky."
She opened another door when she starred in the 1950 TV series "Beulah"
(although
she wound up departing the show in protest over scripts) and continued to
sing in
nightclubs. Widely acclaimed for her role in the classic 1952 film "The
Member of
the Wedding," she later ran afoul of pop culture arbiters when she toured
with evangelist
Billy Graham. She died in 1977.
"Sweet Mama Stringbean" evolved out of a monologue ValLimar wrote for a
class after
reading Waters' 1951 autobiography "His Eye Is on the Sparrow," basing the
scene
on a "reconciliation moment" between Waters and her mother. The play focuses
on Waters'
early career, before 1939.
"Ethel really is the bridge that goes from the shout-and-hollering blues to
the more
urban, smooth-sounding blues [and] vocalists that use their voice like a
saxophone,
like a horn," ValLimar says. "It was really Ethel that did that, and then
Ella [Fitzgerald]
just took it on [laughs]. There were many discussions about how Ethel really
was
the originator of that sound, and how she influenced the real blues-jazz
women that
didn't sing pop. Ethel teeter-tottered on this real fine tightrope... blues
got her
on the radio but pop kept her on the radio. Think about Beyonce and Mariah
Carey
and Rihanna; pop has come a long way. [Laughs] In Ethel's day, 'Am I Blue,'
'Dinah'
and 'Stormy Weather' were considered pop."
Onstage, she avoids imitating Waters' voice (which was, typical of many
pre-World
War II blues singers, "very nasal, very in the front of the mask"). Instead,
she
strives to capture Waters' style.
"I come as close as I possibly can to approximating how she interpreted the
music
in terms of phrasing and somewhat in sound, in terms of how she would scat,"
she
explains. "Ethel began scatting long before Ella was born [laughs]. She was
really
patterning her voice after a clarinet, in the same way that later on Billie
Holiday
patterned her voice off of a saxophone....
"This is going to sound strange," she says, "but when I listen to Mariah
Carey I
can hear Ethel's influence, even though Mariah Carey might not have ever
heard anything
that Ethel did, because Ethel influenced other singers who influenced the
singers
today. I would put her as the bridge between Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey -- the
women
who are the beginning of the blues -- Ethel is the bridge that brings the
blues into
popular music."
Jansen insists "Sweet Mama Stringbean" depends on husband Frank's music
direction.
"All the arrangements have been written very, very carefully to be true to
the style,"
she says. "If you come to the show just to hear the music, you'll be able to
feel
and to travel and to see this arc of progression from 1901 to 1939, to feel
the music
progress and to hear it. I'm very proud of Frank for doing that."


--Bob Ringwald
www.ringwald.com
Fulton Street Jazz Band
530/ 642-9551 Office
916/ 806-9551 Cell
Amateur (Ham) Radio K6YBV

War does not determine who is right - only who is left.  


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