Blossomn Dearie RIP (RR)

funky16cornersfunky16corners 7,175 Posts
edited February 2009 in Strut Central
February 9, 2009Blossom Dearie, Cult Chanteuse, Dies at 82 By STEPHEN HOLDENBlossom Dearie, the jazz pixie with a little-girl voice and pageboy haircut who was a fixture in New York and London nightclubs for decades, died on Saturday at her apartment in Greenwich Village. She was 82. She died in her sleep of natural causes, said her manager and representative, Donald Schaffer. Her last public appearances, in 2006, were at her regular Midtown Manhattan stomping ground, the now defunct Danny???s Skylight Room. A singer, pianist and songwriter with an independent spirit who zealously guarded her privacy, Ms. Dearie pursued a singular career that blurred the line between jazz and cabaret. An interpretive minimalist with caviar taste in songs and musicians, she was a genre unto herself. Rarely raising her sly, kittenish voice, Ms. Dearie confided song lyrics in a playful style below whose surface layers of insinuation lurked. Her cheery style influenced many younger jazz and cabaret singers, most notably Stacey Kent and the singer and pianist Daryl Sherman. But just under her fey camouflage lay a needling wit. If you listened closely, you could hear the scathing contempt she brought to one of her signature songs, ???I???m Hip,??? the Dave Frishberg-Bob Dorough demolition of a namedropping bohemian poseur. Ms. Dearie was for years closely associated with Mr. Frishberg and Mr. Dorough. It was Mr. Frishberg who wrote another of her perennials, ???Peel Me a Grape.??? Ms. Dearie didn???t suffer fools gladly and was unafraid to voice her disdain for music she didn???t like; the songs of Andrew Lloyd Webber were a particular pet peeve. The other side of her sensibility was a wistful romanticism most discernible in her interpretations of Brazilian bossa nova songs, material ideally suited to her delicate approach. Her final album, ???Blossom???s Planet??? (Daffodil), released in 2000, includes what may be the definitive interpretation of Antonio Carlos Jobim???s ???Wave??? Her dreamy attenuated rendition finds her voice floating away as though to sea, or to heaven, on lapping waves of tastefully synthesized strings. Born Marguerite Blossom Dearie in East Durham, N.Y., on April 29, 1926, she was a classically trained pianist who switched to jazz after joining a high school band. Moving to New York City in the mid-1940s, she sang with the Blue Flames, a vocal group attached to the Woody Herman band, and with Alvino Rey???s band before embarking on a solo career. Traveling to Paris in 1952, she joined the Blue Stars, a vocal octet that recorded a hit version of ???Lullaby of Birdland.??? While there she shared quarters with the jazz singer Annie Ross and met the Belgian flutist and saxophonist Bobby Jaspar, to whom she was briefly married. She also met Norman Granz, the owner of Verve Records, who signed her to a six-album contract. All six Verve albums ??? ???Blossom Dearie??? (1956), ???Give Him the Ooh-La-La??? (1957), ???Once Upon a Summertime??? (1958), ???Sings Comden and Green??? (1959), ???My Gentleman Friend??? (1959) and ???Soubrette Sings Broadway Hit Songs???(1960) ??? are today regarded as cult classics. In the early 1960s a radio commercial she made for Hires Root Beer became so popular it spawned an album, ???Blossom Dearie Sings Rootin??? Songs??? (DIW). Her 1964 album, ???May I Come In???? (Capitol), a straightforward pop collection, was her first to employ a full orchestra, but on subsequent albums she veered back into jazz and supper-club fare, mixing standards, jazz songs and witty novelties. Beginning in 1966 she traveled regularly to London to play Ronnie Scott???s, a popular nightclub, and while in England recorded four albums for the Fontana label. Back in the United States she established her own label, Daffodil Records, in 1974. Its first album, ???Blossom Dearie Sings,??? released at the height of the singer-songwriter movement, contained all original songs, including ???Hey John,??? a tribute to John Lennon (with lyrics by Jim Council), and ???I???m Shadowing You,??? a collaboration with Johnny Mercer. Although Ms. Dearie never had a hit as a songwriter (she usually wrote the melodies, not the lyrics), a number of her songs have enjoyed fairly wide circulation in nightclubs, most notably ???Bye-Bye Country Boy??? (written with Jack Segal), a pop star???s rueful farewell to a farm boy she meets on the road. The last record Ms. Dearie recorded was a single, ???It???s All Right to Be Afraid,??? a comforting ballad dedicated to the victims and survivors of 9/11. She is survived by an older brother, Barney, and a nephew and niece.

  Comments


  • batmonbatmon 27,574 Posts
    GOD DAMNIT!

    Like Pickwick said " It hard being a music fan these days."

    DAMN!!

    Shit

  • R.I.P. blossom....
    i sang this song with my old band, and i listen to her records often on sunday mornings.


  • Options
    I'm not up on her work, but "I Like London In The Rain" is such a dope track. Sad to hear that she is gone.

  • JRootJRoot 861 Posts
    My friend Geraldine first turned me on to Blossom Dearie in the late 90s. LATE PASS. And when she did, I was like all "ok, supper club cabaret big with the gay no thanks indie rock salute poseur" and stuff. EVEN LATER PASS. I haven't heard all her records, but I've heard a bunch of them. And none of them that I've heard are bad.

    Blossom Dearie has an incredible voice, a light touch on the piano, and a songwriter's sensibility that extends even to the songs that she covered. Heaven's almighty band just got that much better.

    RIP.

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    RIP

    The obit above is very informative.

    I did a record show in Eugene today. I had 4 Blossom Dearie records on Capitol and Daffodil and the Ben Bagley one. Nobody looked at them twice.

    :cry

  • yeah...beautiful gentle voice.
    figure 8 to infinity


  • LokoOneLokoOne 1,823 Posts
    I recently picked up a copy of ???Blossom Dearie Sings??? just randomly cus I liked the name. Didn't know the whole history of her, but she sounds like an interesting person and true artist at heart...Damn shame to hear of her passing.

    What other LPs of her's do ppl reccomend?

  • mannybolonemannybolone Los Angeles, CA 15,025 Posts
    "Blossom Dearie Sings" is definitely in a class by itself - much of Dearie's albums were fairly standard jazz standards in terms of the arrangements you'd expect to find. There is her album with "I Like London In the Rain" on it but to me, that's such a one-tracker (and an expensive one at that), I never bothered to really try for it.

  • JRootJRoot 861 Posts
    I did a record show in Eugene today. I had 4 Blossom Dearie records on Capitol and Daffodil and the Ben Bagley one. Nobody looked at them twice.

    :cry

    The record scene in Eugene is weird. I get this feeling like nobody really knows what they're looking at, so they wind up being guided by an ill-defined sense of hipsterism when making record purchases. (When I was living in Eugene, this description could have applied to me...except back then it was tapes that I was looking at)

    And as for that other dude looking for Blossom recommendations...report to the other Blossom Dearie thread.

    RIP Ms. Dearie.
    JRoot

  • ???Blossom Dearie Sings???

    I found this like a week before I met Tripledouble at the same spot I met Tripledouble at. I remember he was on the phone with somebody and they were doubting my story. 'Member that, T*ny?

  • we met in front of the supermarket herm. it was love at first site.
    you talkinga bout my man the mad hatter? aka captain red wine?

  • man this is depressing news right now, but what an inspiration.
    i finally heard the whole LP with 'london in the rain' and i disagree that it's a one-tracker (maybe it is if you're only into funk or brakes)
    early stuff on Verve is essential
    RIP, i love you Blossom.

  • we met in front of the supermarket herm. it was love at first site.
    you talkinga bout my man the mad hatter? aka captain red wine?

    No hoLmes, we met at PDQ Records. You called me when you got into town and I came by after work. Then after we looked around, you lured me to your mystery machine aka breakz-on-wheelz and showed me your findz.

  • dmacdmac 472 Posts
    This is really sad news. Just a few weeks ago I found a blog post of Blossom Dearie's Winchester in Apple Blossom Time album from 1977 and really flipped over it. And I was [re-]acquainting my girlfriend with Blossom's classic Schoolhouse Rock tunes.
    And I had been on the search for that Christmas album she cut back in '96.

    If I had been at that show, LaserWolf, all of those LPs would have been mine. [Check for my PM.]

  • you lured me to your mystery machine aka breakz-on-wheelz and showed me your findz.

    you right! i love PDQ

    not long after that, my man Paul Westney...another strutter from bitd, steered me to a spot in Lubbock texas where i copped my first copy of blossom dearie sings for a dollar.

    i actually just saw a bunch of blossom dearie records, including "sings" . i will go try to find them.
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