Artists
Performance Lincoln songbook
full of anticipated
surprises Abbey
Lincoln received a warm standing ovation
March 8 at Lincoln Center's Alice Tully
Hall, just for appearing on
stage. It was the
first of many, as she began a three-night
retrospective. "Abbey Lincoln: Over the
Years, An Anthology of Her Songs" was an
overdue concept, adoringly embraced by her
fans. Having played significant roles in
the civil rights movement, as an actress,
poet, painter and composer, her time has
certainly come. With a
different program and personnel each
night, Lincoln performed about half of her
more than 80 compositions, joined by Joe
Lovano, Savion Glover, Freddy Cole, Steve
Coleman and others. Lovano's
saxophones and James Weidman's piano
complimented Abbey's first
night&emdash;they watched every movement
of her body for direction, and knew when
not to play. Her bassist, drummer, cellist
and singers did not seem as comfortable
following the spontaneity that ruled the
evening. Lincoln
drops tempos dramatically at unusual times
during her songs. While these surprises
delight an audience, they seemed less
welcome for the accompanists. "It doesn't
matter how many times you practice a song
in rehearsal, it will be different,"
explained one of the musicians following
the first concert. Her encore
was another surprise, as we expected only
her own material. She introduced Hoagy
Carmichael's "The Nearness of You"
stating, "I learned by listening to the
great songwriters." "The
River," full of fire, opened the second
night, with only cellist Jennifer Vincent
and singers Bemshi Shearer and Stacie
Precia returning again. "Talkin' to the
Sun" closed the first set with another
stunner. She scat-sang some of the tune as
if she had done so all of her life, in
spite of a reputation for never scatting.
She later
explained to me, "I did that because I
forgot the words," and laughed aloud. "I
want to know the words&emdash;every word
counts. Bessie Smith didn't scat. Billie
Holiday didn't scat." Lincoln
brought out her backup vocalists to open
the next set with an upbeat, powerfully
sung "Caged Bird," perfection to my ears.
"You Gotta Pay the Band" gave pianist
Rodney Kendrick, alto saxophone player
Steve Coleman and percussionist Khalil
Kwame Bell each room to shine. The
evening closed with an encore of "The
Music is the Magic," again with Shearer
and Precia's backup, no less intoxicating
than her 1992 recording with the Staple
Singers, from "Devil's Got Your Tongue," a
favorite. The audience gave her yet
another lengthy "standing O" before
drifting out in a trance. People could be
heard whistling, humming and singing "the
music is the magic of a secret world, it's
a world that is always within." Savion
Glover and Freddy Cole were added to the
final concert, which I couldn't attend.
Having witnessed Savion's ability to make
music with his feet as well as great
drummers, and having been told that the
third night was even better&emdash;hard to
believe&emdash;made me wish that the
taping of this event that had been
discussed had taken place. "Savion
stopped the show. Freddy Cole was like
having Nat there," Lincoln told me, as I
also verified that each performer had been
exclusively her choice. She said she is
interested in taking some of these
musicians into a recording studio. I look
forward to the next chance to hear this
quintessential Renaissance woman of jazz,
and to enter her magic, secret
world. Crowning of a Jazz
Palace Jazz at
Lincoln Center and AOL Time Warner held a
"Topping Out" ceremony at Columbus Circle
in Manhattan Feb. 27. While "Topping Out"
might sound like the name of a swing tune,
we learned that this is a traditional
completion celebration for ironworkers
putting that last steel girder into place
as they "top out" the skeleton of a
skyscraper. Hard hats
far outnumbered suits atop five stories of
open framework that is to be the Allen
Room, one of three primary performance
stages for the new J@LC campus that will
be part of these sophisticated twin
towers. Our folding chairs faced a stage
with a gaping hole for a backdrop, five
stories high and about eight stories wide.
When permanent seats face a similarly
situated stage in about 18 months, only a
glass wall backdrop will stand between the
audience and clear vistas of Central Park
and the graceful east side skyline.
Mayor
Bloomberg and construction executives
explained that while the steel would be
complete for this south tower at 20
stories, the concrete above would climb to
80 floors. Following increasing trends for
building big, this 2.8 million square foot
structure is really five different
buildings stacked atop each other for
radically diverse uses. AOL Time Warner's
world headquarters, massive retail,
condominium and hotel spaces with valet
parking and 24 entrances will be complete
late in 2003. Wynton
Marsalis played "Buddy Bolden's Blues"
with a few band-mates from his orchestra,
as that last beam, decorated with an
evergreen tree and American flag, was
hoisted behind him. Marsalis announced
"The Year of the Drum," J@LC's 450-event
2002-2003 season, detailed at
www.jazzatlincolncenter.org.
Lincoln
Center should be commended for continuing
to diversify its programming beyond its
former scope. Abbey Lincoln praised
Marsalis as "a lot more than a musician."
Her retrospective is the type of concept
we look forward to seeing more
of. BMFMain
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Abbey Lincoln:
Over the Years, An Anthology of Her
Songs
Scrapple from
the Apple March
8 2002
By
Russ Dantzler
With a different program and
personnel each night, Lincoln
performed about half of her
more than 80 compositions,
joined by Joe Lovano, Savion
Glover, Freddy Cole, Steve
Coleman and others.

Russ and Abbey