Ladies & Gentlemen Rhoda Scott

Album info

Album-Release:
2024

HRA-Release:
10.12.2024

Label: Framboise Production

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Crossover Jazz

Artist: Rhoda Scott

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 MD Blues 06:46
  • 2 Childhood 06:53
  • 3 Tricky Lady 05:13
  • 4 Stardust 06:33
  • 5 Tyty 05:52
  • 6 A Lady Call Mother 05:22
  • 7 A Quiet Place 05:46
  • 8 One Night of Sin 04:54
  • 9 Dreamers 04:13
  • 10 Lady 07:07
  • 11 I've Got the World on a String 04:07
  • 12 Mood Indigo 05:25
  • 13 Within My Song 06:30
  • Total Runtime 01:14:41

Info for Ladies & Gentlemen

Im Jahr 2024 feiern Rhoda Scott und ihr Lady Quartet zwanzig Jahre musikalische Abenteuer. Um diesen Meilenstein zu feiern, haben sie beschlossen, für ihr drittes Werk ihren Horizont zu erweitern und drei talentierte Sänger einzuladen: David Linx, ein langjähriger Mitstreiter, haucht seinen raffinierten Jazz ein; Hugh Coltman, ein Vermittler von Emotionen, bringt einen Hauch von fesselndem Blues mit; während Emmanuel PI DJOB mit seiner kraftvollen Stimme Gospel, Soul und Weltmusik verkörpert. Dieses neue Album verspricht eine lebendige Begegnung zwischen Stimmen und Instrumenten.

Rhoda Scott, 1938 in Doroth (New Jersey) geboren, hat schon als Siebenjährige in der Kirche ihres Vaters das Orgelspielen erlernt. Durch ihr unglaubliches Talent war sie gleichzeitig in mehreren Jugend- und Gospelchören aktiv und leitete bereits im Alter von 14 Jahren ihren ersten eigenen. Nach dem erfolgreichen Masterabschluss auf der Manhattan School of Music wurde sie durch Zufall bei einem Konzert von Count Basie entdeckt, welcher ihr empfahl, nach Frankreich zu gehen. Dort gelang ihr 1969 mit dem Album »Take A Ladder« der Durchbruch, seitdem ließ sie sich endgültig in Frankreich nieder. Seit über 60 Jahren verbucht Scott weltweite Erfolge und wurde zu einer der wichtigsten Organistinnen, die es je im Jazz gegeben hat. In ihrer beeindruckenden Karriere hatte sie bereits die Ehre, mit Künstlern wie Ray Charles, Ella Fitzgerald, George Benson oder Count Basie gemeinsam aufzutreten. Seit 2004 performt sie mit dem Rhoda Scott Lady Quartet, für das dritte gemeinsame Album haben die Damen mit den Sängern David Linx, Hugh Coltman und Emmanuel Pi Djob auch drei talentierte Quoten-Gentlemen am Start, die den organischen Mix aus Rhythm'n'Blues, Soul und Jazz mit virtuosen Gesängen beseelen.

Rhoda Scott, Hammond Orgel
Sophie Alour, Tenorsaxophon
Lisa Cat-Berro, Altsaxophon
Airelle Besson, Trompete
Julie Saury, Schlagzeug
Gäste:
Hugh Coltman, Gesang
David Linx, Gesang
Emmanuel Pi Djob, Gesang




Rhoda Scott
born in 1938 in Dorothy, New Jersey, U.S.A., is the daughter of an itinerant minister, and she grew up in the tradition of small African-American churches. It is while accompanying the Gospels and Negro Spirituals at the age of 8, that her exceptional musical talent was revealed.

Although self-taught, she was determined to perfect her musical education, and after attending Westminster Choir College in Princeton, New Jersey, she entered Manhattan School of Music in New York, where she was awarded the Borden Prize for the highest academic average, and obtained her Master of Music degree in 1967.

She came to France for the first time in July 1967 to study counterpoint, harmony, and composition at the American Conservatory of Beaux Arts in Fontainebleau, with the great Nadia Boulanger, who had also taught, among others, Aaron Copeland, Pierre Henry, Phillip Glass, and also Quincy Jones.

After such an illustrious cursus, Rhoda Scott is at ease in any context: classical music, jazz, gospels and blues. Gifted with an exceptional memory, she can play hundreds of themes from standards, but capable of composing a large part of her repertory.

It was Count Basie who discovered her and hired her to play in his club in Harlem, which is where Eddie Barclay, during a stay in New York with his friend Raoul Saint-Yves, heard her play. Impressed by her original style and her communicative talent, they suggested she come to Paris. Director of the renowned jazz club, Le Bilboquet, Raoul Saint-Yves signed her on in July 1968. The following year her first French album was released on the Barclay label, “Take A Ladder,” on which, accompanied on drums by Daniel Humair, she interpreted jazz standards, as well as themes from “West Side Story,” and her own composition, “Take A Ladder.” The album was an immediate success, both critical and popular.

Mastering perfectly her Hammond Organ, the famous B-3, attached to three Leslie speakers, Scott records and performs generally with her only support being a drummer, playing her own bass lines on the organ pedalboard. She invariably removes her shoes to play, which has earned her the nickname of “The Barefoot Lady,” or in French, “l’Organiste aux Pieds Nus.”

In October 1969, she wed Raoul Saint-Yves who continued to be the producer of her numerous recordings, usually associated with a particular circumstance (“Live At The Olympia in 1971, “In New York With Thad Jones and Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra” in 1975, “With Kenny Clarke” in 1977, etc.) or a particular theme (“Ballades” in 1973, “Orgues de Noël” in 1977, “Negro Spirituals” in 1983, etc.) All published on the Barclay label. In 1978, Eddie Barclay presented Scott with a trophy attesting the sale of over 500 000 albums sold.

With the arrival of the Compact Disc, while many of her vinyl albums were being re-edited or compiled, Scott signed a contract with the Verve label and recorded “Frame For The Blues” (1992,) “Feeling The Groove” (1993,) and “Alone” (1997.) In 2003, her “Encore, Encore, Encore,” with Lucien Dobat on drums, was released on the Sunnyside label (USA).

Scott is frequently sought after for her powerful Hammond sound. Among her many collaborations, one can mention “Organ Masters” with Emmanuel Bex, Thierry Eliez, Stéfan Patry, and Benoît Sourisse, “Soul Sisters” with singer La Velle, “Rock My Boat “with David Linx and André Ceccarelli, or “Djangolized” with violinist Aurore Voilqué. On stage, she has been seen with Ella Fitzgerald, George Benson, ,and Ray Charles.

At the famous festival, “Jazz à Vienne” she created in 2004 the Rhoda Scott Lady Quartet with musicians Sophie Alour (tenor sax,) Airelle Besson (bugle,) and Julie Saury (drums.) A group that has lasted, with Airelle Besson being replaced by Lisa Cat-Berro (alto sax.) often appearing at the Sunset Jazz Club in Paris, and on tour.. In 2017, Stéphane Portet, owner of the Sunset, created his own label in order to record the CD “We Free Queens”, with special guests Geraldine Laurent, Anne Pacéo, and Julien Alour.

In 2018, Soctt was promoted to the title of Commandeur in the Order of Arts and Letters. She lives regularly in Chartres, and is active with many choral groups, having made arrangements of Negro Spiritual which are sung throughout France. In 2014, 47 years after her first Master’s degree, Scott obtained a Master of Arts degree in Jazz History and Research from Rutgers University of New Jersey.

For her 80th birthday, Scott has chosen the rising generation of jazzwomen in France. The grand lady of the Hammond organ offers us a jazz which is generous with swing and a touch of blues; a music as joyful as it is lively, music within every listener’s field of reference.



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