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Sunny! That’s the best word to describe Inga Swearingen’s new CD First Rain.
It sounds like a bubbling brook, it looks like sunlight filtered through green leaves, and it smells like fresh air after a spring rain.
The local jazz singer brings her highly trained voice to songs more aligned with the pop folk genre—think Everything But the Girl, Joni Mitchell, Natalie Merchant, Cassandra Wilson.
Swearingen also proves herself a talented writer, penning half of the album’s songs and choosing an equal number of perfect covers and traditionals, including “Black Is the Color of My True Love’s Hair,” the Beatles’ “Blackbird,” and jazz classics such as “Heart and Soul” and “Skylark.”
On Sunday, Oct. 25, Inga Swearingen appears in concert at the Clark Center at 4 p.m. with a cornucopia of guest performers. Afterward, Inga will sign CDs at a reception with food and drink in the lobby. Tickets are $23.50, available online at ClarkCenter.org or by calling 489-9444. Tickets are also available at Boo Boo Records. New Times spoke with Inga Swearingen via e-mail.
New Times You have a new video, which is really wonderful. Is that a first? How was the experience?
Inga Swearingen Thank you. Glad you liked it. We had fun making it! Barry Goyette planted that seed in my head a while back, and having a new album gave us a reason to do it. It was my first video and I was a bit shy, but I trust Barry completely. We shot in a very comfortable place for me—Old Edna Barn—and as the day went on, it just felt like a jam with my friends.
New Times This CD really stretches the definition of jazz. What was your artistic vision here?
Inga Swearingen Well, I view jazz as a big umbrella—there’s a lot that can fit under it, in my opinion. But you’re right; there aren’t many swing tunes on the album. We did incorporate jazz harmony and improvisation and the sense of exploration that jazz encourages. When I arrange a song, I try to get to the essence of the lyric and find a musical way to communicate that. And when I write, I’m pulling from everything that inspires me, be it jazz, classical, folk, rock—anything good. I try not to ask myself what genre I think it is until I have to describe it to others.
New Times You’re working with a lot of great local players. Have you developed any special sort of artistic relationship or collaboration with any of them (including Barry Goyette)?
Inga Swearingen Yeah, the musicians on this CD are amazing. They each contributed something very special, both in notes and spirit. Usually I’d bring a sketch of a song to Jeff Miley, our guitarist, and we’d work out some ideas together. That helped me see what worked and what didn’t before taking it to the band. Once we had the songs recorded in the studio, Chris Robertson and I worked together to create an overall warmth to the album. We made many decisions about how to present the songs in an honest way that supported the lyric. Barry Goyette heard the album and suggested we shoot the photos up at my parents’ farm. I now realize how significant that was to package this music in images of my home. Peg Eckert heard the music and saw the farm photos and created the perfect dress for me to wear at the CD release concert. The whole thing has been a collaboration. We formed a vision together and everyone added to it, and it was FUN!
New Times What’s the plan for promotion?
Inga Swearingen Promotion is a lot of computer time, and I’ve made friends with that. I do have some help getting it out there on a more national level, and I continue to try and play for new audiences frequently. Heather Hellman has done a great deal to help get the word out, and, once again, Barry Goyette has given the project a sense of unity with his incredible aptitude for anything visual.
New Times One final question: What surprised you most about how this album came out?
Inga Swearingen Last year my friend Pam Dooley said, “It’s time for you to record again; let’s have a party.” So we put on a couple of house concerts at the farm that helped to fund-raise for the project. I was surprised and touched by people’s generosity. We made this together and the music is filled with that gratitude and love.
Double Soul Brew
There must be some cosmic alignment going on, because Downtown Brew has two acts with soul in their name this week. We’ll get to that in a minute.
First, on Thursday, Oct. 22, Straylight Run and Lydia deliver an evening of rock, alternative, and experimental music (7 p.m.; all ages; $12 presale or $13 at the door). Straylight rose from the ashes of early-2000s emo act Taking Back Sunday, swapping out Sunday’s aggression for a sound the band describes as “pensive, dreamy, and often piano-driven.” After the concert, the next installment of the Central Coast DJ Competition will get its freak on as DJ Katchafiya goes mano-y-mano with DJ Sol.
On Friday, Oct. 23, Tomorrows Bad Seeds return with Bare Feet (8 p.m.; all ages; $10) to deliver an evening of rock, reggae, and dub. L.A.’s the Bad Seeds like to mix in a little soul, hip-hop, and punk in their set, so if you’re expecting roots reggae, fugitaboutit!
On Saturday, Oct. 24, the first “Soul” band cometh! Hip-hop act Souls of Mischief hit the club (7:30 p.m.; all ages; $14 presale or $16 at the door). Some of these dudes have been rhyming together since they were 8, which is when Oakland native Tajai hooked up with his future band mate A-Plus while both were in elementary school. Tajai met Phesto in junior high school. Then A-Plus later introduced Tajai and Phesto to the final member Opio in high school. That’s some old skool history.
Holy crap! Three amazing genre-bending virtuosos are joining forces on Monday, Oct. 26 at 8 p.m. in the Performing Arts Center’s Cohan Center! Witness the spectacle of Béla Fleck, Zakir Hussain, and Edgar Meyer conjuring a brand new sound mixing classical, bluegrass, and world music, represented on their new CD The Melody of Rhythm.
“When I play with Zakir, I’m not an Indian musician, but we can find a place to meet,” said Fleck in press materials. “Along with carrying the top level of Indian classical music in his veins, Zakir is incredible at understanding music from all over the world and collaborates effectively with an amazingly diverse number of musicians. [Plus], Edgar is one of my longtime pals and influences. I’m thrilled to find a new way to collaborate with him.”
“Working with Béla and Edgar is an experience that transcends musical collaboration,” added Zakir. “Certainly, it’s a creative effort unprecedented in my own life—a way of looking at melody and rhythm through their eyes, affording me another way of expressing myself through my instrument.”
Meyer agreed, saying, “The give and take between musicians is often very defining. Ideally, I’m more focused on Béla and Zakir than I am on myself. From the beginning, Bela’s vision on the instrument transcended traditional expectations and Zakir brings a complete re-defining of tabla without any loss of traditional values.”
A free pre-concert lecture will be held at 7 p.m. in the Performing Arts Center Pavilion, presented by Cal Poly Music Dept. faculty member Ken Habib. Student and adult tickets range from $20 to $48. Call 756-2787.
More music…
The Richard Green Band, still riding high on the success of their new album Better Days, plays the Frog and Peach on Thursday, Oct. 22 at 9:30 p.m. Green writes amazingly hooky tunes that you’ll have to pry out of your head with a crowbar.
There’re too many great shows to list during the 33rd Annual Jubilee-By-The-Sea that happens on Thursday, Oct. 22 through Sunday, Oct. 25 at venues throughout Pismo Beach. See 20 acts on five stages perform a total of 118 shows. Big band, Dixieland, swing—they’ve got it all. For badges (Yes, you do need stinking badges) call 773-4382 or 800-443-7778. All-Event badges are $20 to $80. Daily badges are $20 to $40. Get more info at pismojazz.com.
Christian, R&B, and country artist Sonya Diane Jones, with hubby Nick, returns to town with three gigs: Friday, Oct. 23 at the Manse on Marsh, at 3:30 p.m., in SLO; Saturday, Oct. 24, at Creston Village, at 3 p.m., in Paso Robles; and Sunday, Oct. 25 at Merrill Gardens, 3 p.m., in Santa Maria. The retirees always get a big kick out of these shows, and they love visitors, so come on out!
How come SLO doesn’t have some special regional music? You should start it; I’m busy writing about Son Jarocho, the music of the Mexican State of Veracruz, which blends Spanish, African, and indigenous influences. It’s bold, lively, and captivating, and one of its purveyors, Pa’sumecha, is coming to the Steynberg Gallery on Saturday, Oct. 24 at 8 p.m. ($15 presale at Boo Boo Records or $20 at the door).
CD Reviews
—Malik Miko Thorne, of Boo Boo Records and mikovision.blogspot.com, where you’ll find archived reviews and soundclips.