Wednesday, February 20, 2013
THE RESIDENCY: A TIME TO FIND OUT
Unanswered questions are what the road to a recording is made of. What songs belong here, what is the narrative spine of this music, how can the arrangements support the musical story etc. I'm not sure any artist is ever "sure" of where they are going when they start the journey. It's the unanswered questions that we are willing to ask that set our course and start to define the parameters of the communication.
In my case I have found that the eventual collection of songs is always like a recording of a specific place and time in my life. When I listen to my last few solo discs (available on itunes at https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/micah-barnes/id211531143) they sound like pages torn from a personal journal. The songs map the emotional landscapes I was inhabiting at the time and draw a map of how I got to where I am now.
The new collection I am making is no different. Sure it's a collection of romantic songs about the complications of love..hence the working title "Rules Of Romance" ..But I don't know where this story starts and ends yet..
Taking the songs to the public is the best way to find out. It's in that interaction between singer and audience that the songs start to breathe and come to life. Then they clarify what they are meant to do in the world and create a space for themselves…begin to dictate where they belong and how they can best be presented.
I look forward to being on this journey with lots of you folks who have been there with me along the way. Lets find out together!
http://www.pubaret.com
https://www.facebook.com/micahbarnesmusic
https://twitter.com/micahbarnes
Friday, January 25, 2013
The Romantic Jazz Standard: A Personal History
I had no idea what romantic love was about when I first stumbled on the jazz standards in the songbooks my parents had on the piano. Sure I had heard beloved artists like Streisand and Louis Armstrong sing them on TV and on albums as a kid, but at age 12 I jammed through the "Harms Songbook of Standards"with my father Milton Barnes accompanying me on keyboard and the whole world seemed to expand.I found my heart alive with the joy of expression. And my love of the American Jazz Standard was born…..Thank you Daddio!
Although Billie Holiday was my secret guide through the classics I also listened carefully to Ella Fitzgerald and Nat King Cole during my teenage years. Afternoons and evenings were spent hours clunking away at the piano learning the songs I would begin to perform in public, starting at the very tender inexperienced age of 14.
What was it in these romantic words by Johnny Mercer and Cole Porter that attracted my young heart? What was I hearing in those melodies by Gershwin and Irving Berlin? After all love was something I could still only imagine at that point? I can't honestly say except that my head and my heart were a swirl with the beauty and the magic of these songs that seemed like sacred texts handed down to me personally from the universe as a way to make sense of the world and understand life.
Feb 9th I am honored to be sharing the stage with Jackie Richardson and top notch musicians again this year at Hugh's Room for our annual JAZZ VALENTINE concert in Toronto. An opportunity to explore the material that so inspired me in my youth..and led to so much in my life and my career..
Details and Reservation info here:http://hughsroom.com/2012/10/
Hope to See you at The Show!
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
ATLANTIC STORIES
This is it! I am finally on the plane to our beloved Halifax. (Porter airline which leaves from the island airport in Toronto is only minutes from my door!).
My history with the city and the province is a long one. Way back when Daniel and I were fresh out of high school we made an East Coast swing with our Jazz Cabaret trio that included both St John's and Halifax and made for some wonderful memories. It was then that the idea for the song "I'm Coming Home" (from the latest disc "Domesticated") was born, during a walk by the rough grandeur of the Atlantic ocean.
I visited to perform often during my time with The Nylons and Marc Conners and I always agreed that Halifax was our favorite Canadian city (outside of Montreal of course!). The size, the history, the close knit sense of community really attracted both of us and we day dreamed about moving from our crowded Toronto lives to a kinder gentler place.
The last time I performed in Halifax was a few years ago as a solo artist at the Rebecca Cohen Theatre on tour with jazz diva Molly Johnson. I had returned from California with a little disc under my arm that Molly fell in love with and she promptly invited me out to open the show and join her singing back up on her national tour. Halifax was a sweet stop for us and I vowed to return as soon as it was possible.
Thanks to a couple of dear friends in the business I am now back on the plane heading east and I can't wait to see old friends, meet new ones and enjoy the vibes as I play shows and coach workshops through the week.
St FX Wed Nov 28th
Stayner's Thurs Nov 29th
Details up at http://www.facebook.com/events/332163900212546
Join the adventures on twitter!https://twitter.com/micahbarnes
Monday, November 26, 2012
The Grand Piano
Liberty Village to Queen West
I grew up in a skinny dark victorian house in The Annex area of downtown Toronto. It seems that all of the houses had an old out of tune upright piano left over from earlier days in what would have been the parlor.
An old fashioned home entertainment system!
That's how I grew up playing the piano to accompany myself on those glorious standards in my parents music books. For some reason when I play an electric keyboard it all becomes intellectual compared to when I lay my hands on an actual instrument and can "feel" the sound.
My father Milton Barnes was a classical composer and so one would assume that he would have worked on a real piano. It was always a heartache to me that he created all that beautiful music on an electric piano, and I always vowed that one day I would own and play a grand piano. So when brother composer and drummer Daniel needed to move out of his Liberty Village studio this month I made the purchase of the baby grand that has graced his studio these past years.
Perfect timing. I am right at the place in the writing of new material where working on a real piano could deepen and open up the musical possibilities. Besides supporting my composing life the piano also gets to aid in the support of my clients at my Singers Playground coaching studio.
What every artist needs..... The best tools available to create with.
Here's to you Miltie!
http://www.micahbarnes.com
http://www.singersplayground.com
Friday, November 23, 2012
On The "Cover" Tune.
People often ask me how I pick which tunes to cover. Usually I start with being attracted to the words and melody on an intellectual level. I always have to learn and sing through a tune before I know whether it's something I can make my own. I find myself having to live with a song a long time before it really feels like I'm singing my own experience. But once that happens it can really and truly feel like I "own" the song.
In particular I am attracted by the richness and depth of the jazz ballad A powerful musical tradition that I first understood from the intimate voodoo of Billie Holiday first and a little later Nat King Cole's rich and intelligent dreaminess. The "American Standards" tradition has overplayed some of these gems but that doesn't take away from the brilliant construction and magic of songs like "Body and Soul", "Lush Life" and "Lover Man": Sacred texts that bear exploring over the course of a lifetime.
In my early teens while learning the standards I was really attracted to the irreverence of Fats Waller. The sheer force of his comic personality overcame the 30's tin pan alley triteness with a rollicking bawdy combination of humor and virtuosity that really captivated my imagination. In my current set Fats is well represented by "A Porter's Love Song To A Chambermaid" as a joyful counterpoint to the more moody stuff.
Also included in the current batch are songs by a very different kind of musical personality, Smokey Robinson, a man who Bob Dylan once called "America's Greatest Poet" Smokey's grace with a lyric and soulful delivery were an early contribution to the Motown factory system that set the standard for everything to come.
These days I am also featuring favorite songs by Cole Porter, also an early inspiration, having written both words and music to his clever ditties, which were so key to moving the popular song from the dusty parlor into swinging Broadway and nightlife of the 30's. Writing in New York allowed me to drink in last years excellent Broadway revival of "Anything Goes" a few times.
Mr Porter's music was considered edgy and hip back in the day but they still speak to the restless romantic spirit today.
Stay in the loop on upcoming live shows and upcoming recordings on the Facebook Fan Page
And hear the developing adventures first hand at Twitter
To download Micah's latest disc "Domesticated" please log onto Itunes
Monday, September 3, 2012
"The Dangerous Game"
Up at the boathouse end of summer, wearing thermal socks and drinking hot coffee to be sure!
I have been digging in and building the material for the Winnipeg show, taking the ideas that worked last time around our West and further shaping everything so the audience goes on a stronger ride, gets a deeper experience.
The last time out the show was mostly cover tunes, this time my job is to include the originals from my solo disc's that tell more of a personal story while including classics from the Jazz and Blues, Pop and R&B and of course Nylons repertoire worked in.
I am loving starting out the new version of the show with the song"The Dangerous Game" it's kind of like the title song of a mini musical.
I learned very young that songs from the Jazz standard songbook mostly started out as show songs and have always felt it was important to understand what the song was originally built to "do" in the original context, move plot, tell story, reveal character, motive and truth. After all the great work is great work and it's important to know why it's speaking so loudly to audiences.
Having originally sketched the musical and lyrical themes of "The Dangerous Game" in New York city last August, I was deeply under the influence of the great theatre and musicals I got to see that year while my partner was working on Broadway.
The stand out productions for me were the simple joys of hearing Cole Porter's "Anything Goes" score, especially Sutton Foster's fresh take on old standards like "You're The Top", "I get A Kick Out Of You" and "Blow Gabriel Blow", "Easy To Love" and of course the tap a da tap a da tap dancing title song.
I have been digging in and building the material for the Winnipeg show, taking the ideas that worked last time around our West and further shaping everything so the audience goes on a stronger ride, gets a deeper experience.
The last time out the show was mostly cover tunes, this time my job is to include the originals from my solo disc's that tell more of a personal story while including classics from the Jazz and Blues, Pop and R&B and of course Nylons repertoire worked in.
I am loving starting out the new version of the show with the song"The Dangerous Game" it's kind of like the title song of a mini musical.
I learned very young that songs from the Jazz standard songbook mostly started out as show songs and have always felt it was important to understand what the song was originally built to "do" in the original context, move plot, tell story, reveal character, motive and truth. After all the great work is great work and it's important to know why it's speaking so loudly to audiences.
Having originally sketched the musical and lyrical themes of "The Dangerous Game" in New York city last August, I was deeply under the influence of the great theatre and musicals I got to see that year while my partner was working on Broadway.
The stand out productions for me were the simple joys of hearing Cole Porter's "Anything Goes" score, especially Sutton Foster's fresh take on old standards like "You're The Top", "I get A Kick Out Of You" and "Blow Gabriel Blow", "Easy To Love" and of course the tap a da tap a da tap dancing title song.
I also loved hearing the Sondheim's score for "Follies" in full production, although the show ended up feeling strangely flat, a show so chocked full of classic songs that it works just as well as a concert.
BUT the stand out experience was, of course, Audra McDonald reinventing Porgy and Bess both musically and dramatically for all time; playing Bess as written, a desperate and anguished drug addict. Her full and powerful upper range drawing every hurt and desire and complexity of emotion possible in the score. The production might have felt a little light in places (especially the choreography) but in truth her performance grounded the whole production in a reality so heart searing that it was actually life changing to see it. ..
Yeah, so New York City musical theatre. Very influential to my writing and building of a show these days. After all I'm trying to make a story through song happen on stage ...not so different from the guys building these shows and these scores.
Preview songs from solo discs at: http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/micah-barnes/id324429103
FB fanpage is at:http://www.facebook.com/micahbarnesmusic
Info on Winnipeg show:http://www.wecc.ca/site09/performers/Micah_Barnes.html
Thursday, August 30, 2012
CABARET:The World Of The Solo Performer
I don't believe that Cabaret is a dead form.
Although cliches of the genre abound, the reason I was attracted to it as such a youngster (I started playing the coffee houses and cafe's in Toronto as a teenager) was that it spoke to me as a kind of living art form that could allow me to blossom.
Lets not forget that in the 70's we not only had breakthrough performers like Bette Midler and Liza Minelli but also rock n roll stars like David Bowie and Lou Reed borrowing heavily from the world of Cabaret and reinventing the concepts.
Lucky for me Toronto had a vibrant Cabaret scene in the 70's and early 80's which allowed me to perform 7 nights a week and be able to pay a band while I worked out a way of entertaining crowds night after night.
My current solo show is a reflection of what I learned at that time, combining Jazz standards with originals, reinventing R&B and classic Pop covers to suit my musical personality and combining them all in a kind of narrative that tells my own story.
Although I love working with musicians, the challenge of the one person cabaret show is something I've been working with a long time, and it feels like a natural place to communicate from.
The immediate relationship created with the audience is one of intimacy, my favorite kind of relationship ha ha!
To hear current material from the new show please log onto Myspace
To join my FB fan page and stay in the loop on upcoming shows please click "like"
on this page: Micah Barnes Fan Page
To follow my adventures on twitter follow me at Twitter
Cheers
Y'all!
Micah Barnes
http://www.micahbarnes.com
Labels:
Bette Midler,
Cabaret,
David Bowie,
Liza Minelli,
Lou Reed
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