I have heard Helen Merrill
perform live twice, on two nights bookending a week-long gig at the Bermuda
Onion in Toronto in August, 1990. If I’m remembering right, I was there for the
first night of her run, which I think was Monday, August 20. The Bermuda Onion
was a pricy dinner club, located upstairs above a few high-end shops, its
floor-to-ceiling windows looking onto Bloor (somewhere, I think, near Bay); I believe
it had a garish purple neon sign in the shape of an onion flaring out over
the street. It had maintained a jazz booking policy, but with only moderate
success. On opening night for Helen Merrill, the place was practically
deserted. I went with my friend Peter Demas, who lived in the city, and we sat
at a table close to the bandstand. There might have been five or six others in
the restaurant. I don’t think we ordered much food – the price-point, as they
say, was prohibitive – though we might have got a plate of fries, and maybe a
drink. But we weren’t there to eat, anyhow.
The
Sunday Star had run a picture of her
in headscarf and sunglasses, leaning on the restaurant’s piano beside her
husband and accompanist, Torrie Zito, “American jazz great Helen Merrill, “ the
caption read, “is weaving her wonders at Bermuda Onion until Saturday.” (I
clipped it out.) That Monday night I remember her wearing basic black with
pearls. Not that it matters too much how she was dressed, but my sense is that
she had downplayed appearance, the show-biz aspects of a performance, because
music came first, always. To drive this point home, her closer for each of her
two sets that night was “Music Makers,” a tribute she had composed with Torrie
Zito for her 1986 collaborative album of the same title (on Owl) with Gordon
Beck, Steve Lacy and Stéphane Grappelli that speaks directly and with
unadorned, faux-naif candour to the affective value of jazz, its weave: “Music makers /
thanks so much / for the joy you bring.”
The other few faces in the restaurant
that evening, who I would have assumed were dedicated fans like I was, must
actually have been jazz reviewers; brief pieces on Helen Merrill appeared in
the Star and The Globe and Mail in the next day or two. Geoff Chapman linked
Merrill’s selective audience to the accomplished subtleties of her singing –
even after so many years, not everyone had heard her or heard of her:
Helen
Who? The one whose 1954 album with Clifford Brown was rated by one magazine the
best jazz album ever made? Or is she the one whose recording 35 years later
with Stan Getz was voted jazz album of the year?
Right
on both counts. And thus it's a matter of serious wonder that Helen Merrill is
so lightly regarded in North America, save by jazz musicians, while European
and Japanese fans can't get enough of her.
[. .
.]
Last
night, overcoming a late arrival, a bothersome air conditioner and minuscule
rehearsal time with the local bass-drums combo of Gary Binstead and John
Sumner, la Merrill weaved wonders with a moody "Round Midnight" and a
big, rangy version of an enjoyable tune that you realized, later, was good old
"Autumn Leaves" in new guise.
[. .
.]
The
small, enthusiastic gathering, more aware than most perhaps of the thinning
ranks of the great jazz singers [. . .] will treasure what they heard. (“Helen
Merrill Weaves Wonders” Toronto Star
21 August 1990: E2)
Mark Miller was a little less
enthusiastic, but still drew attention to Merrill’s astounding handling of
ballad form:
Some
jazz singers have made their names by the number of notes they can squeeze into
the four beats of a bar. Some have made a style out of the number of bars they
can squeeze into a note. . . . The long
notes are the ones to wait for, the ones that draw the whistles, in a Merrill
song – there was a note in You and the
Night and the Music that simply turned transparent as it drew out in
mid-air. They give her interpretations a quietly dramatic, sultry quality and
lend a variety of softened textures and subtle shadings to the most familiar
standards. The good effect in Monday’s second set, however, was often
undermined by the bruised quality of her voice, a voice apparently “sabotaged”
– that was Merrill’s word – by the club’s air conditioning. (“Revival Act” The Globe and Mail 23 August 1990: C3 )
I was there, so I can confirm
that she did complain about a problematic air conditioner; her voice remains a
sensitive instrument, and the ways in which she re-shapes a melodic line,
slowly unfolding notes like delicate origami blooms, means that her breath and
her pitch are closely responsive to their immediate environment. In some ways,
her style is more suited to the rarefied immediacy of a recording studio than
exposed to the unpredictable elements of background and stage noise. Her
performance that night was, indeed, much less subtle and nuanced than those
I’ve heard on record, although there were moments – like those mentioned in the
reviews, but also in her version of “Lilac Wine” – when you could feel your
heart stop beating, when the room seemed briefly suspended in time.
Given that Peter and I were almost her whole audience, and
the only ones sitting up close, when she left the stage after her first set,
she came over to our table. Her manner was a bit wry and ironic; I think she
asked us if we had a cigarette lighter, but neither of us smoked. I think I
bungled saying something complementary, about how much I enjoyed her albums.
She cocked her head a little, as if
unsure as to whether or not I was putting her on, looked me in the eye, and
asked: “Do you have the one with Thad Jones?” I didn’t. I think she told me I
should try to get hold of a copy, though it was probably out of print (which it
was). He was great, she said. “A Child
Is Born” is a beautiful song. And then she left us for the back of the club.
Years later, Emarcy France would reissue not one but both of
her albums with Thad Jones – The Feeling
Is Mutual (1965) and A Shade of Difference
(1968), although they soon dropped out of print again, until Mosaic Records put
them together on one limited-edition CD as The
Helen Merrill–Dick Katz Sessions. It’s not just the presence of Thad Jones,
but the gathering of two groups of musicians’ musicians – Jim Hall, Ron Carter
(with whom Merrill would later record an incredible duo album), Pete LaRoca,
Richard Davis, Elvin Jones, Gary Bartz, Hubert Laws – makes these sessions
astoundingly special. Alongside her albums with Gil Evans, Bill Evans and John
Lewis, I think it isn’t a stretch to call The
Feeling Is Mutual her masterpiece. In the liner notes to the second record,
pianist and broadcaster Marian McPartland suggests that what makes these
recordings so brilliantly alluring is a lyrical tension, both within Helen
Merrill’s voice and in her subtle interactions (I’d suggest) with the other
musicians:
I
remember vividly the first time I heard Helen Merrill sing. It was some years
ago, and I was listening to the radio, late at night, while driving to New
York. Suddenly I heard a voice with an unusual timbre and such poignancy that I
pulled over to the side of the road to listen more closely. [. . .] The
contrasts in her voice are most intriguing: on the one hand, like eggshell
china, and on the other a heartfelt cry, a depth-of-the-soul moan of deep
feeling.
She was right, of course,
about “the one with Thad Jones”; while her performance that Monday night might
have been a bit marred, a bit “bruised,” there is something even in that
heartfelt late effort that partakes of the idea of the cry, of crying: a grainy
emollient pathos. A few years later, I tried to write about it, in a small lyric tribute of my own to Helen Merrill, which appeared in Descant in 1997; strangely, I used the
same metaphor as Mark Miller, the bruise, although for him it was a fault,
while for me, it is the essence of what Helen Merrill does. Late recordings,
such as her duet on “My Funny Valentine” with Masabumi Kikuchi, only heighten
the subtly attenuated grain of her voice, its lovely expiring.
The second gig I attended was the closing night of her
Bermuda Onion run, the Saturday. My parents had come to town, to visit the CNE,
and my dad offered to take us all out to dinner, so I suggested we go see Helen
Merrill. He paid, which was pretty nice. The club was packed that night. She
was great, a bit more showy, a bit higher energy, a bit less nuanced.
Afterwards, I asked my mother what she thought. “Great legs for sixty,” she
said.
Last year, I bought an autographed copy of a Japanese album,
a session Helen Merrill did with Teddy Wilson – another significant pianist in
the music’s history. (Helen Merrill produced a handful of solo piano albums in
the seventies, including significant recordings by Tommy Flanagan and, my
favourite, Roland Hanna – playing Alec Wilder.)
The signature, presumably for a couple she likely doesn’t know, reads “with much love always, Helen Merrill.” The thing is, I think she means it. What she does, what she gives, on these records and in those performances, despite whatever conditions there might be, is a genuine moment of feeling, a pathos that makes you pull your car over and listen. A kind of love.
The signature, presumably for a couple she likely doesn’t know, reads “with much love always, Helen Merrill.” The thing is, I think she means it. What she does, what she gives, on these records and in those performances, despite whatever conditions there might be, is a genuine moment of feeling, a pathos that makes you pull your car over and listen. A kind of love.
2 comments:
Do you recommend the Helen Merrill and Teddy Wilson album (Helen Sings, Teddy Swings)?
Sorry. I forgot to say, Hello. My previous response seemed rather abrupt. The Helen/Teddy album is hard to find on CD but I saw a copy for $80.00 and I was going to buy it as a gift to myself (my limit on a CD is $40.00). Someone posted an audio sample on Youtube of their version of Summertime but it was taken down shortly thereafter and I never got to listen to it. Anyhow, would you recommend the cd?
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