Singer Matt Dusk's new disc is called My Funny Valentine: The Chet Baker Songbook |
Talented singer Matt Dusk continues his exploration of the great songs of a bygone era with his new disc, out today, My Funny Valentine: The Chet Baker Songbook (EOne Entertainment). Dusk doesn't call the album a 'tribute' record, which would suggest a copy or aping of Baker's soft singing style, something that Dusk accurately maintains would not fit his crooner voice. Rather, he takes on Baker's catalogue, and finds a happy ground between how he normally swings and how Baker sings. Dusk sat down with Critics At Large's David Churchill to discuss extensively the making of the CD. David also wanted to look a little behind the scenes of how the live performance side of Dusk comes to fruition, so he asked for Steve Macdonald – Dusk's sax player, musical director and “wing man” – to sit in and offer his insights into that side of putting out a disc like this, and ultimately performing the material live.
dc: Steve, what intrigued you about Chet
Baker that you thought Matt should be
singing his songs?
sm: Initially, when he finally told me he
did want to cover Chet, I was a little confused, because, as he just said, he's
on the other end of the singing spectrum in terms of delivering the song. And
yet I always liked Baker and thought it would be a cool idea for Matt to sing
them. What I thought was most interesting for Matt was that Chet sings just
like he plays the trumpet. If you listen how he plays trumpet and you listen
how he sings, it's like they are one and the same. His approach is very similar
regardless of whether he has the horn in his face or not. So, I thought, 'if
Matt's checking this out, this could be interesting'. Up to then, Matt always
sang in the Frank Sinatra way. But Chet sang like an instrumentalist would
approach melody and lyric. So, I thought, 'what a cool thing for Matt to do'.
md: Though the way Chet sings is incredible
– the way he phrases – it's very difficult for me to do that, because I grew up
knowing how to do something completely lyrical, whereas Chet was very musical when
he sang. It's almost like, 'here's the written music, I'm going to play it like
an instrument would read it.' So I couldn't necessarily go in and sing it the
way he sang it, because it didn't make sense to me the way he sang it
musically, but the way he approaches how he uses his voice was very
interesting to me. However, it was also very important to me that this not
just be a tribute record where I imitated him. That's why I called it The
Chet Baker Song Book, because I still had to be me. That was the thing. I
had to sing songs that would sound right for my voice. Because if I was to sing certain of his songs that would not work with my voice, it might sound
cheesy.
dc: Steve and I were talking earlier, and I
said to him, 'Oh good, this isn't a tribute album. I can still hear Matt in
this. He's trying a new approach, but he's still Matt Dusk.'
Steve Macdonald blowing sax |
sm: Yes, you've got to stretch yourself.
Because artistically you just can't always be doing the same stuff.
There has to be growth, evolution and exploration, and that is where you find
your expression because you will try stuff that will work and try stuff that
will not work.
md: (laughs) And we are really good at
doing stuff that doesn't work! We are really good at failing at it too (laughs
again). But you know, you look at so many different artists, but they are only
remembered for a handful of things.
dc: That's true. If I'm being frank, if you
asked the most average of jazz listeners to name a Chet Baker song, “My Funny Valentine” is probably the only one they can come up with.
md: That's true.
dc: Just in terms of how he's known. I like
Baker, and I have a CD or two, but listening to your CD I kept thinking, 'oh
yes, I forgot he did that.' For example, the version you did of “Time After
Time” was lovely.
md: Thank you.
dc: ... but with so many of his songs, I
forgot these were Chet Baker songs. He's not Sinatra in terms of that pantheon
of songs Frank's known for. Which leads to my next question. How did you decide
what songs of Baker's to do if you didn't want to do the ones “wrong” for your
voice, as you suggested?
Chet Baker, later in life |
dc: When you were putting the album
together and you decided, 'I want to do a duet', such as when you used
Emilie-Claire Barlow, did you think, 'this song needs two voices and this is the
singer I want?'
md: Well, to be honest with you, that was a
last minute decision. I wear two caps: the artistic cap and the business cap.
And when I was sitting down with my new label, EOne Entertainment, we were
talking about other artists they had on the label. EOne also represents Emilie.
Originally, I wanted to do a duet with Molly Johnson because I really liked her
voice, and she said, 'sure, we'll do it,' but it just never happened. And I
thought, 'oh, I totally forgot about Emilie.' We share similar people in our
bands. I saw her show about a year ago and really liked it, so I pitched the
idea. And, it was just a dream come true. I mean, the way I envisioned the
song, “Embraceable You”, I thought 'it's a nice song'. We did a quick take of
it, never intending to use it on the disc. But then I played it back and it
worked out so beautifully, that I just had to use it. And then we thought
'let's get [trumpeter and flugelhorn player] Guido Basso to melody on the
verse. In the end, it wasn't what we planned, but it worked out way beyond
expectations. It's one of my favourite
tracks.
dc: Arturo Sandoval, how did he come to
play trumpet on the CD?
Trumpeter Arturo Sandoval |
dc: Since neither one of you were in your
comfort zone on this, do you think you helped each other step outside what you
normally do?
md: At the end of the day, as an artist,
you are always sort of insecure, you are also a little vain, so you want to
make sure what you do comes across as well done. I know Arturo worked very hard
at it. He therefore really embraced that side of the music, but at the same
time he put his own spin on it.
dc: I want to talk about you two, Steve and
Matt ...
md: ... husband and wife (laughs).
dc: How did you two meet and how long have
you been playing together?
sm: We met at York University [in Toronto] in 1999. I
was performing in my end-of-the-year recitals, and at the end of my set, Matt
walked up and said, 'hey, you sound good. Do you want to play in my band?' And
I said, 'sure.'
md: No you didn't; you said no.
sm: I didn't .
md: You certainly did. You said you didn't
have time for me ...
dc: Well, you said you were like a married
couple ...
(all laugh)
(all laugh)
sm: I had heard of Matt because a few of my
friends were in his band. They would come back from the weekend, talking about
the gig they had with Matt. I think Matt might have been having trouble with the
sax player he was working with at the time, so he approached me. We gigged
together for a couple years, but then the work dried up a bit. I was at a day
job to make ends meet, and I got a phone call out of the blue from Matt saying,
'we're going to Las Vegas for a year. Can you do it?' Part of it ended up being
for a forgettable reality show that eventually broadcast on Fox in 2004 called The
Casino.
Steve Macdonald and Matt Dusk, in 2007. |
sm: I'd been working with Matt even before
any of the record deals. He and I got tight, and he started to work closer with
me on managing the ins and outs of the operation of the band before we recorded
any of his albums, so we got to know each other, and got to know that I was
somebody he could trust and depend on. When the transition was made to the
major label, and all these new people were coming in, Matt said, 'you've always
been my guy, I'd like to you to continue to be my guy'. I walked into that
relatively inexperienced, so it took me a bit of time to get the hang of it.
But, what the job entails is putting all aspects of the live show together – I
mean, what you see on stage. For example, getting musicians, doing arrangements
that are needed for the live show, charting the music and rehearsing the band.
Then, of course, when you are on stage, if there is anything odd going on, I'll
step in and make the adjustments, but of course Matt is pretty great at doing
that himself. But if he's too occupied in the performance, I'm pretty quick to
jump in and address anything that needs addressing.
dc: Give me an example.
sm: It happens a lot when you are working
with a band that is untested. For example, we travel to different countries and
we need pick-up players. We fly in, exhausted, and we are in a rehearsal studio
with a group of guys we've never played with before and I have to run the
rehearsals. I send the music in advance, and sometimes they are prepared and
sometimes they are not. My job, then, is to make sure they have the right idea
about what they are supposed to do. When we get to the show and, for whatever
reason, they are doing something particularly bone-headed or wrong, I have to
intervene and correct them. It could be a drum groove, or it's an element of
arranging they are not getting. My task is to lean over and give them some
direction to put them back on the right track.
dc: With Steve as your Musical Director,
what freedom does that give you, Matt?
md: Just time. I don't have the experience,
or knowledge. It's like in a car, different parts do different things. Steve
can talk to all the parts and get them to work the way they are supposed to
work.
sm: I speak "musician".
md: Musicians, as in any trade, if you
don't know the lingo they understand then they don't respect you. For example, I can get on stage and sing and
dance, but if I don't know how to come in on the downbeat of "one" then I'm
useless to them. And we've both worked with singers who don't have that
ability, and they really shouldn't call themselves professionals. Having Steve
there allows me to work on being the front man, or marquee artist. In reality,
whatever name you see on the marquee is just the tip of the iceberg. There's a
good core group that make it happen. If you give me lots and lots and lots of
time, I probably could chart out the music very slowly, but I just don't have
the time. And Steve's expertise over the years has allowed him to become very
efficient at it.
dc: Let's switch back to the Baker disc. I
saw on the liner notes that there were two orchestras.
md: Correct. We did the rhythm and horns...
sm: The big band part ...
md: ... In Toronto. And we overdubbed it
with a full the orchestra we recorded in Russia.
dc: Russia?.
Matt performing onstage with Steve, in 2006 |
dc: Steve is listed as conductor in the
notes.
sm: Of the big band only.
dc: Conducting, in this example. What does
that entail? Have you conducted before?
sm: Yes, I've conducted for Matt before,
but not often. Most of what we do doesn't require it. It's very rare that it is
called upon. In this particular instance, since I'd spent so much time
preparing the music – I was working with Matt. I was working with the
arrangers. I was doing a bunch of the copying. A lot of this stuff I knew quite
intimately by the time we actually got to the floor. Matt said, 'you're the
right choice for this, so go up and do it'. I was up there conducting the big
band. It was very necessary because there were all sorts of things going on
such as time, tempo and metre changes. It's all very technical stuff that can
be a nightmare if you don't have someone waving their arms at the front.
dc: Let's talk about Baker himself. Before
the interview started, Matt, you and I were talking about the tragic nature of
Baker's life. Did that have any draw for you to do the disc because he was such
a troubled soul?
md: When I watched the Bruce Webber
documentary, Let's Get Lost (1988), it was kind of the roof on the building. I was debating if I was going
to do this, so I thought 'let's just watch this story and see.' After watching
that and researching him, I would not use the word "tragic" to describe Chet Baker.
I don't find his life very tragic because everything he did, he did to himself.
It wasn't like something out of the nowhere happened to him. Everything was
done by choice and in a strange way he was happy to make those choices. Seems
like he never regretted anything. His was more a 'that's life' kind of guy. But
especially after watching Webber's film I felt I understood the man more and
therefore I could approach the vocals. I took away from that that he really
didn't care for much. For him, little was very sacred. I mean, be it his life,
relationship with his family, with his lovers. In the film, his ex-partners
make very clear how he was. When I was doing the vocals, it was like I
sometimes had to step back and go, 'maybe I shouldn't care as much. Perhaps I
should have a couple drinks and just do the song and see what happens'.
Sometimes it would work; sometimes it wouldn't.
I didn't shoot up and do any crazy things (laughter), so yeah.
dc: What do you hope the listeners take
away from the album?
md: I want the listeners to take away a
sense of just awe. Not for me, though I am part of the record, but I want them
to feel the same way I did when I first heard the finished CD, I thought this
is just great music from absolutely everybody involved. And I want the
listeners to walk away thinking 'this is terrific, now let me find out more
about this Chet Baker guy. Maybe I can go online and watch this Let's Get
Lost doc, and go wow, that guy's amazing. Let me go listen to his stuff'.
dc: Finally, what gigs do you have coming
up soon to promote the disc?
md: There's a promo at First Canadian Place
in Toronto at noon on the 12th. RUN now, if you're reading this on the 12th at noon (loud laughter). On JazzFM (91.1) in Toronto that night at 7 PM we have
a live to air concert. We're playing on The Marilyn Denis Show on the 14th, Valentine's Day (CTV, 10 AM in Toronto). Also, on the 14th, we're doing a free gig at Yonge-Dundas Square. March 23rd
we play the Randolph Theatre in Toronto at Bathurst and College. It's a gorgeous new venue that only
holds abut 500 people. In
the fall, we will start to tour the world with the disc. And then next year, a
new album (laughs).
– David Churchill is a critic and author of the novel The Empire of Death. You can read an excerpt here. Or go to http://www.wordplaysalon.com
for more information (where you can order the book, but only in
traditional form!). And yes, he’s begun the long and arduous task of
writing his second novel, The Storm and its Eye.
No comments:
Post a Comment