Claire Martin

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DISCOGRAPHY

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A Modern Art

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Britain's leading female jazz singer Claire Martin will return to the studio to record her new album A Modern Art. The album is a personal reflection of what it takes to be a musician in the 21st century and features two brand new self-penned tracks.

Produced by Laurence Cottle

Recorded at Phoenix Sound, Iver Heath, Bucks from 10-12th March 2009
Thanks to Peter and Toby for their help in the studio
Engineered and mixed by Calum Malcolm
Surround mixing and mastering by Philip Hobbs and Julia Thomas at Finesplice, UK
Photography and design by John Haxby
Background painting by Amelia Sandie
Hair and make-up by Rebecca Parker
Clothes by Vivienne Westwood

Claire Martin - vocals
Gareth Williams - piano
Laurence Cottle - bass
Nigel Hitchcock - alto sax
Mark Nightingale - trombone
Phil Robson - guitar
James Maddren - drums
Chris Dagley - drums
Sola Akingbola - percussion


Why A Modern Art?

On my last recording I explored the repertoire of the great Shirley Horn to pay my own personal tribute. This time I was keen to record a selection of new material, songs which I feel define me as an individual, and as a jazz singer in the 21st century.

I have always chosen to sing contemporary material from "outside" the Great American Songbook, alongside lesser-known standards and original compositions. In doing so I have strived to find new songs that can stand alongside the classics we associate with the greats including Ella, Sarah, Betty and Carmen.

Only two of the songs on this album are by classic composers: Cy Coleman's ‘Everybody Today Is Turning On' and Rodgers & Hart's ‘Everything I've Got Belongs To You'. Elsewhere, I have chosen songs from some of my favourite writers: Michael Franks, Donald Fagen and Rebekka Bakken. Mark Winkler has contributed lyrics to a great Joshua Redman melody; lyricist Colin Lazzerini has introduced me to two songs I'm proud to have recorded, and the heartfelt ‘As We Live and Breathe' is by my friend, and New York Voices' vocalist, Lauren Kinhan. I was really saddened by the untimely death of Esbjörn Svensson. His beautiful ballad ‘Love Is Real', co-written with Josh Hayden, is a song I recently discovered and I hope makes a fitting tribute to a much-missed musician.

The title song ‘A Modern Art' was written by me with Laurence Cottle and it's my own take on celebrity culture and the mass dumbing-down of musical standards in popular music. Jazz remains as vibrant and relevant as ever and can indeed gain a mass appeal - I'm sure of it! In fact, I'm on a mission, and if you're reading this you've already helped my cause! Please spread the word that jazz isn't an inaccessible art form that is too difficult to understand, nor do you have to wear an anorak and listen to trad in some muddy field in unforgiving British weather. Jazz is a thoroughly Modern Art form and this is my version!

I hope you'll enjoy this album.
Claire Martin

Now playing :  

Track Time Listen Writer
01. Everything I’ve Got Belongs To You 03:36 Play Rodgers & Hart
02. So Twentieth Century 03:19 Play Pat Coleman &
Colin Lazzerini
03. Love Is Real 03:39 Play Esbjorn Svensson, Josh Haden,
Dan Berglund & Ostrom Magnus
04. lowercase 04:33 Play Mark Winkler, Joshua Redman
& Lori Barth
05. A Modern Art 03:11 Play Claire Martin & Laurence Cottle
06. Edge Ways 03:35 Play Claire Martin & Laurence Cottle
07. Love of Another 03:09 Play Rebekka Bakken &
Wolfgang Muthspiel
08. Totally 04:58 Play Pat Coleman & Colin Lazzerini
09. Everybody Today Is Turning On 03:31 Play Cy Coleman & Michael Stewart
10. Sunday Morning Here With You 04:16 Play Michael Franks
11. Promises 03:25 Play Christina Bjordal &
Harald Levang
12. Things I Miss The Most 04:28 Play Donald Fagan & Walter Becke
13. As We Live and Breathe 03:33 Play Lauren Kinhan & Eve Nelson
14. Nirvana 03:32 Play David Cantor

A Modern Art Jazz Times review

She ranks among the four or five finest female jazz vocalists on the planet (it wouldn’t be overstatement to ere cognize her as Anita O’Day’s rightful heiress), and on the rare occasion she performs stateside, the crowds are invariably SRO. So it’s hard to fathom why Claire Martin, a household name in her native U.K. and a perennial British poll winner, remains so under appreciated on this side of the Atlantic. Maybe it’s because those visits are so rare, or perharps because her albums aren’t always easy to find. Well, with the advent of iTunes, almost her entire output is just a click away. As a starting point, you’ll be hard pressed to do better than her latest release.

Though Richard Rodgers, notoriously finicky about re-interpretations of his songs would surely be enraged by the Everything I’ve Got Belongs to You which opens A Modern Art, Martin’s impishly funkified treatment is marvelous. The rest of the play list bows to more contemporary compositions, most notably Mark Winkler’s tenderly distressing lowercase and Cy Coleman’s delightfully wry Everybody Today Is Turning On. Lauren Kinhan’s affecting As We Live and Breathe is ideally mated with a sharp, Bossa reinvention of Steely Dan’s Things I Miss the Most.

Equally superb are two self- penned additions. Edge Ways provides brilliant, backhanded condemnation of the chronically self absorbed, while the title track offers delicious appraisal of modern society’s celebrity obsession and the corresponding devaluation of genuine artistry.

Written by Christopher Loudon for Jazz Times April, 2010

‘A Modern Art’ – Record Collector

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Claire Martin, however, has consistency in spades. Innovation and taking the difficult path to achieve a bigger goal is uppermost in her mind. Her take on the standard, Everything I’ve Got Belongs To You, on her new album A Modern Art is an ideal example. Here’s a familiar song that remains interesting, as Martin picks it apart and inventively puts it back together. An album that keep you on your toes.

Written by Paul Rigby for Record Collector on 1st October, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – Record Collector

Another top-notch release from a UK jazz artist is A Modern Art, the 13th, and best, long-player from Claire Martin, who began her career as a singer on the QE2. Thirteen is obviously a lucky number for the Wimbledon-born singer, who’s in scintillating form on a blend of uptempo funky numbers (check out her spunky rendering of Rodgers & Hart’s Everything I’ve Got Belongs To You) and ruminative ballads, including a poignant vocal version of the late Esbjorn Svensson’s Love Is Real.

Written by Charles Waring for Record Collector on 1st October, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – UK Vibe

Singer-songwriter and Radio 3 jazz presenter Claire Martin has managed to combine her separate though interrelated professions with great aplomb, but with A Modern Art has come up with arguably her most contemporary sounding and accomplished recording thus far. Perhaps it is the recent residency in New York that has done her a power of good and on this album Martin has very successfully provided a modern twist to the vocal repertoire. This includes the Steely Dan pairing, Michael Franks and even a vocal take on an instrumental piece from the late Esbjorn Svensson. She is to be commended for going beyond the standard jazz repertoire and find other songs that can be just as well interpreted, but relate specifically to contemporary society. Taking a leaf out of the school of jazz irony personified by Mose Allison and Patricia Barber, So Twentieth Century is a nice swinging original piece while the band really stretch out on Love of Another that introduces the talented songwriting of Rebekka Bakken with fine piano and ensemble accompaniment.

A light Latin breeze is one way to describe Martin’s take on Donald Fagen and Walter Becker’s Things I Miss The Most and Gareth Williams plays a lovely solo here. What impresses in general is the desire to take chances (something Claire Martin alludes to in her sleeve notes) and explore new territory in the choice of song as in adding lyrics to the Joshua Redman instrumental Lowercase which is an uptempo number with saxophone, or in the beautiful ballad rendition of Love Is Real in homage to Esbjorn Svensson. The album is extremely varied in tempo and context, the title track providing a big band ambience while Michael Franks’ Sunday Morning Here With You is delivered in the most intimate of settings with trio and guitar. Proceedings end with an even sparser format of guitar, bass and vocals on Nirvana. Claire Martin seems to have reached her own nirvana on this album and A Modern Art seems set to be her most successful to date.

ukvibe.org

Written by Tim Stenhouse for UKVibe.org on 25th September, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – The Jazz Breakfast – Disc of the day: 23-09-09

What I really love is that, in a world of folk singers singing slightly bluesy songs, singers who once had a deal with a jazz label now not singing jazz at all, and singers who think singing standards somehow automatically makes them jazz singers, Claire Martin is the real thing: a jazz singer. It matters not what she sings, she makes it jazz because, like a jazz version of Blackpool rock, it goes all the way through.

She covers a wide range of material on this disc, from rareties of the great American songbook (like Rodgers & Hart’s Everything I’ve Got Belongs To You), originals (like the stunning title track written by Claire and MD Laurence Cottle), jazz pop songs (like Fagen & Becker’s Things I Miss The Most, and Michael Franks’ Sunday Morning Here With You), and, most fascinatingly, modern jazz tunes with added lyrics (like EST’s Love Is Real with words by Josh Haden, and Joshua Redman’s Lowercase with words by Mark Winkler).

That Redman track is the place to start if you thought jazz singers were a bit too showbiz and cabaret for you – it’s a storming piece of thoroughly 21st century jazz. In fact that can be said of the whole album. Martin has found a way of making jazz singing a modern art when so much of the time it has retreated into an exercise in nostalgia.

She’s warm and romantic when she wants to be, more muscular in tone and articulation when that’s what’s needed, and is the absolute mistress when it comes to fitting a lot of words into a tricky melody line at speed. And her choice of musicians and bassist Laurence Cottle to arrange and produce the whole affair echoes that same modern spirit. Gareth Williams is on piano, James Maddren and Chris Dagley share the drum duties, Nigel Hitchcock is on alto and Mark Nightingale on trombone. Phil Robson comes in on guitar and Sola Akingbola adds percussion.

I’ve also lost track of the number of CDs Claire Martin has made for Linn (great recorded sound guaranteed). And this is, I think, the best one yet.

thejazzbreakfast.wordpress.com

Written by Peter Bacon for The Jazz Breakfast on 24th September, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – The Sunday Times

The most gifted jazz singer this country has produced in 20 years, Claire Martin ought to be a much bigger name on both sides of the Atlantic. At least she has the satisfaction of having helped to redefine the repertoire. As ever, she veers left-field in an intelligent yet passionate set, a haunting treatment of Esbjorn Svensson’s Love Is Real nestling alongside Mark Winkler’s memorably angular lyrics on the Joshua Redman tune Lowercase. Martin leaves ample space for a band featuring some of our most accomplished musicians, the saxman Nigel Hitchcock among them. (You can’t help wishing that she would be more willing to grab the limelight, instead of being one of the boys in the band.)

Written by Clive Davis for The Sunday Times on 20th September, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – The Guardian

Claire Martin doesn’t do makeovers, or market repositionings – she’s a consummate jazz singer with old-school virtues, and she wins plaudits everywhere she works. But her repertoire has always ranged way beyond the standards book, and this fine 13th album features only one Broadway song, plus material by Steely Dan, Michael Franks and more. The title track is a messianic original on jazz’s evolving essence (written with bassist Laurence Cottle), and features some sparkling Nigel Hitchcock alto and Gareth Williams piano – Hitchcock and trombonist Mark Nightingale sound like a much bigger section on Cottle’s funky horn arrangements. Martin’s voice sounds richer and her delivery more relaxed than before, and if one or two of the Latin grooves and sumptuous textures occasionally give the set a smooth-jazz quality, its title track’s sentiment resists. The continuing refinement of this elegant artist is palpable.

Written by John Fordham for The Guardian on 18th September, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – Time Out

Claire Martin has always brought an empowered feminine intelligence to bear on her work, that sidesteps all the retro cliches of her frothy, over-hyped counterparts. The two things that make this her finest album to date are the wry wisdom and gorgeous, post-jazz melodies, sourced from the likes of Steely Dan, Swedish piano trio EST and cult songwriter Micheal Franks. With cunning arrangements by bassist/producer Laurence Cottle, Martin’s dark, velvety voice navigates each harmonic twist, with acerbic words to the wise and poignantly personal tales.

Written by Mike Flynn for Time Out on 17th September, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – Soul and Jazz and Funk

Where ever-dependable Claire Martin’s last album was a tribute to Shirley Horn, this new set is an intriguing mix of brand new material, carefully chosen covers and an eclectic dip into the great American Songbook. The two from that last source are Cy Coleman’s Everybody Today Is Turning On and Rodgers and Hart’s Everything I’ve Got Belongs To You while of the other covers perhaps the most interesting is a take on Steely Dan’s Things I Miss The Most while a version of Esbjorn Svensson’s Love Is Real has an outstanding soul quality. Of Claire’s original material Edgeways is a Latin delight, rivalled by the album’s title cut which takes a much-needed swipe at celebrity culture and the dumbing-down of popular music… naturally, no dumbing-down here though.

www.soulandjazzandfunk.com/news.asp

Written by Soul and Jazz and Funk on 16th September, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – Northern Echo (Jazz Notes)

Claire Martin has a head start in the field of young women singers which has become increasingly crowded over the last decade. Voted Best Vocalist a record five times at the BBC/British Jazz Awards, she is acknowledged as one of the world`s finest jazz singers.

Receiving wider fame as presenter of Jazz Line-Up on BBC Radio 3, Claire appears at jazz festivals worldwide.

17 years on from her debut album The Waiting Game, Linn Records has released her 13th CD, A Modern Art.

The dazzling arrangements are by Claire`s long-time musical collaborator, bass player Laurence Cottle, and he has surpassed himself here with charts worthy of Stevie Wonder or Steely Dan.

His syncopated version of Rodgers and Hart`s Everything I’ve Got Belongs To You has Nigel Hitchcock (alto saxophone) and Mark Nightingale (trombone) playing a tricky horn chart which has a direct line to Stevie’s Sir Duke.

So Twentieth Century has a similarly dense brass arrangements which Donald Fagin would approve and witty lyrics by Colin Lazzerini to boot, plus a virtuoso saxophone solo from Hitchcock. Claire contributes lyrics on a couple of originals in partnership with music by Laurence Cottle, the title track and Edgeways, a bossa nova with overdubbed vocals by Claire and an effortlessly fluent solo from Mark Nightingale.

A Modern Art is the apt title for this album, which must go straight into the best of 2009 list. It is a stunning tribute to an outstanding jazz singer and an all star band, right up there with the classics such as the 1960s Mel Torme/Marty Paich albums. Techno-freaks will be delighted to learn that this new release is on Hybrid Super Audio Multichannel CD by Linn.

Written by Ron Burnett for Northern Echo on 11th September, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – London Evening Standard

p>It’s a treat to hear alto-sax virtuoso Nigel Hitchcock in full flight – and trust Britain’s brightest jazz singer to organise it. Claire Martin always delivers the goods.

She’s got an instinct for outstanding British players – Hitchcock, guitarist Phil Robson, pianist Gareth Williams and bass-guitarist Laurence Cottle, for example – and an ear for the worthiest unsung songs by such as Rebekka Bakken, David Cantor, Michael Franks, Colin Lazzerini, Donald Fagen and Esbjorn Svensson.

Everything, including two new originals by Cottle and Claire herself, is delivered with her attractive mixture of slickness, warmth and humour. Catch her at Ronnie Scott’s on Monday and Tuesday.

Written by JACK MASSARIK for London Evening Standard on September, 2009

Strong on lyrics, but with a focus on funk and blues – BBC Review

She’s performed with John Martyn and Noel Gallagher and often features Tom Waits and Nick Drake songs in her repertoire, so it’s no surprise that Brit jazz singer Claire Martin has chosen to make A Modern Art a scrapbook of contemporary songs.

The exception is Rodgers and Hart’s Everything I’ve Got Belongs to You. It was written in the 1940s, but it’s strikingly forthright and modern, fitting neatly with tunes by the likes of Donald Fagan and Coleman and Lazzerini.

While all the pieces on A Modern Art are strong on lyrics, the focus is on funk, blues, driving bass and swinging horns. Surprisingly, the horn section is just Mark Nightingale on trombone and Nigel Hitchcock on sax, but together they manage to sound like a miniature big band.

Bassist Laurence Cottle’s complex arrangements blur the boundaries between the singer and the band. He writes Claire’s voice into the horn section in So Twentieth Century and there’s plenty of space for solos. Hitchcock rocks on Everything I’ve Got Belongs to You, Nightingale’s trombone chatters through Martin and Cottle’s Edge Ways (a funny piece about a terminal bore), and Gareth Williams’ fluid piano sets cascading notes against shifting time signatures in Promises.

In a moving tribute to Esbjörn Svensson, Claire’s version of his ballad Love is Real shuns frippery. There are no tricky time signatures or clever arrangements here. Williams gets straight to the simple, bluesy heart of the piece while Claire’s voice starts silky and breathy and expands to gospel proportions.

With A Modern Art, Claire Martin proves that vocalists can be musicians too, even if they don’t sit behind a piano.

www.bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/qw9x

Written by Kathryn Shackleton for BBC Review on 11th September, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – Greater Manchester City Life

No-one manages to transplant the sophistication of the Songbook era to our own time with the conviction of Claire Martin.

She announces her modernity by providing the antithesis to modernity on the title track. So Twentieth Century is a wry put-down of allegedly unfashionable musical and human virtues. Martin’s achievement is clear: the songs proclaim ennui, disillusion and detachment, while the singer herself is the incarnation of sass and vivacity.

Steely Dan cast a large shadow over A Modern Art, even if there’s only one Becker-Fagen cover (Things I Miss The Most: the last word on ennui). It’s there in the seamless fusion of pop and jazz, and in the perfection of the arrangements. Yet the album avoids sterility: the highlight is a heartfelt reading of Esbjorn Svensson’s Love Is Real, a true modern jazz standard.

Written by Mike Butler for Greater Manchester City Life on 7th September, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – The Times

For her thirteenth album, the singer makes impressive efforts to dodge the tried-and-tired of the jazz repertoire. She sings lyrics to a free-flowing Joshua Redman melody and makes Steely Dan’s wry The Things I Miss The Most her own. Elsewhere, her versions of such urbane numbers as Everything I’ve Got Belongs to You by Rodgers and Hart and Cy Coleman’s Everybody Today is Turning On are utterly assured.

Written by John Bungey for The Times on 29th August, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – Jazzwise

One of the problems of the relatively insular jazz scene in the UK is ubiquity. You see an artist over the years, and you think you know their story. But artists grow, they mature and suddenly they can turn around and take you by surprise. Which is what A Modern Art does. Claire Martin has always been a talented and exciting singer, but with this album, she gives evidence of both maturity and being at one with her art in a way that builds on He Never Mentioned Love, her previous album. She could always sing a good song well, but like many recordings by Ella Fitzgerald there was a sense of remaining at arms length from the emotional subtext of the lyrics. But here she seems intent on conveying each song’s inner meaning, revealing an emotional depth that was perhaps missing on earlier albums such as Off Beat. This is revealed on pieces such as Love of Another and As We Live and Breathe and even witty pieces such as The Things I Miss the Most or So Twentieth Century. To paraphrase Robert Graves, Claire Martin is really very good, despite all the people who say she’s very good.

Written by Stuart Nicholson for Jazzwise on 28th August, 2009

‘A Modern Art’ – The Metro

As a multiple winner of prestigious ‘best vocalist’ awards, you could hardly call Claire Martin an unknown quantity. Her 1992 debut, The Waiting Game, immediately established her pre-eminence among her peers but her new album shows the London diva isn’t one to rest on her laurels. Packed with fresh and very contemporary-wounding arrangements, the significantly titled A Modern Art (Linn) reaches beyond the Great American Songbook to explore fresh songwriting territory. The album still contains a few jazz standards but it’s the less obvious inclusions that really catch the ear, in particular Steely Dan’s Things I Miss The Most: ‘The talk/The sex/Somebody to trust/The comfy Eames chair/The good copper pans,’ runs the wryly melancholic lyric, beautifully delivered with trademark cool-school virtuosity by Martin. There’s great work from rising piano star Gareth Williams, too.

Written by Robert Shore for The Metro on 28th August, 2009

 
 

LIVE DATES

Saturday, 25th February, 2012
8:00pm

Buxton Opera House
Buxton Derbyshire SK17 6XN

Water Street

Four Four Time 2012 The long-running partnership of one of the foremost jazz singers of her generation and the legendary classical and screen composer has played to packed houses and rave reviews in New York, London and elsewhere since 2000. Claire and Richard both share a great love of the American composer and lyricist Irving Berlin, widely considered to be one of the greatest songwriters of all time. Berlin wrote hundreds of songs, many becoming major hits, which made him a legend before he turned thirty. This brand new show, with classy arrangements by Richard, will include such classics as Let’s Face The Music And Dance, How Deep Is The Ocean, What’ll I Do?, Cheek To Cheek and Let Yourself Go, all delivered with the style and panache that you would expect from these two great friends and world-class artists. ‘Style does not go out of style’……

Tuesday, 14th February, 2012 -
Wednesday, 15th February, 2012
8:45pm

The Pizza Express
London

Dean Street Soho

St.Valentine’s ‘love in’ with Claire Martin and her trio. 2 nights of love songs featuring pianist Gareth Williams, Laurence Cottle on bass and Matt Skelton on drums. Requests will be taken and dedications read out!!

Saturday, 11th February, 2012
7:45pm

The LIghts
Andover

West Street Andover Hampshire SP10 1AH

Claire Martin and Ian Shaw for one night only. Not to be missed!

Friday, 3rd February, 2012
8:00pm

Stoneybeck Inn
Penrith

Bowscar, Penrith CA11 8RP

Claire Martin with guitar legends Jim Mullen and Laurence Cottle for an intimate trio evening. This is the venue’s first jazz night, so come along and support it and shake off your Winter blues!