Sunnyside Records, 2008

Rebecca Martin didnโ€™t come to New York in 1990 carved out as a jazz singer. She came as a singer filled with stories from a lifetime spent with others marked with pain and patience and sometimes sensuous joy. The Growing Season was produced at engineer Paul Antonellโ€™s Clubhouse studio in Rhinebeck and contains 13 compositions that dote upon existential themes and recapturing whatโ€™s already present within us.

Like ice-coated branches on a shivery winterโ€™s day, Martinโ€™s voice glistens and crackles on each tune. Her plaintive message in โ€œTo Prove Them Wrongโ€ reassures us of our intrinsic strength and wisdom that waits to be called upon. In โ€œAfter Midnightโ€ we hear the haunted and remorseful thoughts of a soldier after resettling home; thoughts that bring him back to the battlefield. Martin counsels those holding in the best part of themselves during โ€œFree At Lastโ€: If given just a โ€œlittle bit of time,โ€ would you give back what youโ€™d taken? Itโ€™s a piercing question that sharply snaps back at you. For this fourth release under her name, she chose a road-tested bandโ€”guitarist and keyboardist Kurt Rosenwinkel, who produced the album; drummer Brian Blade; and her husband, bassist Larry Grenadier. Theyโ€™re all masterful at creating symbiotic relationships with whomever theyโ€™re playing with.

RhAuthor Salman Rushdie poses the question: โ€œWhy do we care about singers? Wherein lies the power of songs?โ€ About Martin, Antonell says: โ€œSheโ€™s got real songs.โ€ www.rebeccamartin.com.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *