Diane Schuur Cd Blues You Know for Schuur

American jazz musician (born 1953)

Diane Schuur

Diane Schuur at Cabot Performing Arts Center, Beverly, Massachusetts

Diane Schuur at Cabot Performing Arts Center, Beverly, Massachusetts

Background information
Birth proper name Diane Joan Schuur
Also known as Deedles
Born (1953-12-10) December x, 1953 (age 68)
Tacoma, Washington, U.S.
Genres Jazz
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Vocals, piano
Years agile 1979–present
Labels GRP, Concur
Website dianeschuur.com

Musical artist

Diane Joan Schuur (born December 10, 1953), nicknamed "Deedles", is an American jazz singer and pianist. As of 2015, Schuur had released 23 albums, and had extended her jazz repertoire to include essences of Latin, gospel, pop and country music. Her most successful album is Diane Schuur & the Count Basie Orchestra, which remained number one on the Billboard Jazz Charts for 33 weeks. She won Grammy Awards for all-time female jazz vocal performance in both 1986 and 1987 and has had 3 other Grammy nominations.

Schuur has performed in venues such every bit Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, and the White House, and has performed with many artists including Ray Charles, Frank Sinatra, Quincy Jones, and Stevie Wonder. Co-performers on Schuur's albums have included Barry Manilow, José Feliciano, Maynard Ferguson, Stan Getz, Vince Gill, Alison Krauss, and B.B. King. Her album with B.B. King was number one on the Billboard Jazz Charts. She was Johnny Carson's guest on NBC's The Tonight Show eleven times.

Schuur has been blind from nascency due to retinopathy of prematurity, but has absolute pitch retention and a clear song tone. In 1996, she was a guest performer on Sesame Street, where she was interviewed by Elmo and described to him how a bullheaded person tin can learn to use other senses to adapt in the world. In 2000 she was awarded the Helen Keller Accomplishment Honor by the American Foundation for the Blind.

Early life [edit]

Schuur was born in Tacoma, Washington, two months premature and weighing less than three pounds.[1] [two] Complications of prematurity resulted in her total loss of vision. Her twin blood brother, David, had normal vision at nascence but some hearing loss.[3] She also has a younger sister.[4] Schuur grew up in Auburn, Washington, a southern suburb of Seattle.[ii] She attended the Washington School for the Blind in Vancouver from historic period four to 11. She lived at school merely was able to commute home 150 miles on the train by herself. She later transferred to public schoolhouse where teachers' aides helped her keep up in class.[five]

Musical beginnings [edit]

Schuur started singing when she was about four years old. Her mother, who died when Schuur was xiii, loved jazz and had a Knuckles Ellington record collection. Her father, a police force helm, was an apprentice musician who often played piano with his daughter sitting by his side.[vi] [vii] Schuur stated, "Every bit far back as I can call back, singing was in my blood. My parents loved music, and I loved to sing. I was scatting at an early historic period".[iii] She has absolute pitch retentiveness. Different the average person, in Schuur's listen every sound – musical or not – has a note value; for example, if she hears a humming motor, she knows the proper noun that annotation has on a instrument.[8] [9] Schuur listened to the radio avidly in her youth; her early musical idols were Sarah Vaughan and Dinah Washington.[nine] [1] She said that every bit a small child she would oft retreat to a closet to sing.[10]

Schuur first learned to play the piano past ear. Though she later learned to read braille-written music, she found its use frustrating and impractical since information technology took abroad use of one of her easily while playing the piano; however, she often used braille-transcribed lyrics in performances and during recording sessions.[nine] I of her first public performances was at historic period 10, singing state music at Tacoma's Holiday Inn; a booking arranged past her aunt.[five] Even when she was a pupil at the Washington School for the Blind, she would come home on weekends, perform on Fri and Saturday nights and have a train dorsum to school for Monday classes.[10]

At age 15 she was taken by her male parent to Lake Tahoe to audition every bit a lounge vocaliser at Harrah'due south hotel and casino. She got the job, just her widowed father plant information technology impossible to leave his job at the police force forcefulness to chaperone her, and the offer had to exist declined.[2] Schuur was noticed by state music singer/actor Jimmy Wakely, who met her in an Elks Society in 1971 when she was eighteen. Later auditioning for him, Wakely arranged a recording session in California. Accompanied by her sister, Schuur took her first airplane trip to the session in Burbank, and made a 45 rpm record of a vocal chosen "Dear Mommy and Daddy".[3] [i] Schuur performed locally a great deal in her late teens, and had started to develop a distinctive musical voice. Amusement writer Stewart Weiner called it a "crystal-clear vocal tone hitting every note in the center of the bull's centre."[8]

Discovery [edit]

In 1975, at age 22, Schuur auditioned for drummer/bandleader Ed Shaughnessy. Escorted by her twin brother, she went backstage to seek out Shaughnessy afterward he had finished a concert in Seattle with bandleader Doctor Severinsen.[eleven] Shaughnessy said, "Doc'due south concert was over and this young blind girl comes in and sits down at the Fender Rhodes keyboard and starts singing the blues. Well, my hair stood on end!"[2] He hired her to exist the vocalist in his orchestra, "Energy Forcefulness".[12] Jazz trumpeter Airheaded Gillespie heard her and, in 1979, invited her to sit in on a ready at the Monterey Jazz Festival. According to Dave Gelly in his 2002 book, Stan Getz: Nobody Else Simply Me, Schuur's performance created "a minor sensation".[thirteen]

Despite this success, the Shaughnessy connection was non the breakthrough she had hoped for. Schuur failed to impress bandleader Doc Severinsen, who turned her down when she auditioned for a invitee spot on Johnny Carson's Tonight Evidence. Some people in the industry dubbed her "Lady Overkill" considering she had a tendency to oversing or tried to put everything she knew into a cursory space.[2] [xiv] For the next three years, Shuur performed in clubs and sharpened her skills. Jazz saxophonist Stan Getz, who had been impressed when he heard her sing "Amazing Grace" at Monterey in 1979, did non requite up on her. He became her advisor and autobus. Discussing Getz in this role, Schuur stated, "he really was a mentor of mine. He taught me that less is more."[15]

Schuur recorded her first album, Pilot of my Destiny in 1981 in Seattle on the contained label, Great American Records.[xvi] It included some of her original compositions and Getz performed on information technology. Entertainment writer Michael Hoffman, writing in the Arizona Daily Star, said the album suffered from "poor production and distribution" and did non practice very well.[14] The album has become a collectors' item since the original masters were lost.[17] It was re-released on the MIM Label in 1982, on vinyl only.[eighteen]

Breakthrough [edit]

In the early 1980s, Stan Getz remained a backside-the-scenes mover who arranged a 2d advent for Schuur at the Monterey Jazz Festival. In 1982, he invited her to perform with him in a music showcase at the White House during the Reagan administration.[iii] The performance was part of a series designed to encourage established jazz musicians to introduce young artists whom they believe accept exceptional potential.[19] Schuur, and then 29 years onetime, was the just vocalist on the bill, actualization and performing with eminent instrumentalists Itzhak Perlman, Dizzy Gillespie, Chick Corea, and Stan Getz. Afterward the performance, Nancy Reagan rushed to comprehend Schuur.[19] Mrs. Reagan had invited George H.W. Bush and Barbara Bush-league to attend this performance. President Reagan was not there but wrote Schuur a personal letter of the alphabet afterwards.[3]

The White House performance was televised, giving Schuur a much broader audience. Producer Larry Rosen happened to see the broadcast and was impressed by her performance. Rosen and his business partner, musician Dave Grusin, set out to find Schuur past contacting Stan Getz.[2] This led to a recording contract with GRP Records.[20] Nancy Reagan invited Schuur to perform at the White Business firm a 2d fourth dimension, for a "Ladies of the Senate" luncheon in 1987, where she performed as a vocaliser with the Count Basie Orchestra.[2] She returned to the White House a third time to perform for President Clinton in 1995.[3] [21]

Career [edit]

When she signed with the GRP label, digital technology was becoming available and she had veteran producer Dave Grusin supervising her first three albums; the recordings besides benefited from the cachet brought by Stan Getz performing on them. Her first album under this label, Deedles, met with moderate just pregnant success, reaching number 35 on the Billboard jazz charts.[22] [23] Information technology was her commencement tape to be released internationally.[xiv] Following this, Schuur Thing was released in 1985, featuring invitee artist Jos̩ Feliciano, and reached number ten on the Billboard jazz charts .[24] [25] In that same year, a big break came for Schuur when she was invited to perform on the 28th Annual Grammy Awards Prove, broadcast on the CBS Network.[26] Timeless was her 4th album, for which she received her beginning Grammy Award, winning best female person jazz vocal performance for 1986. Four noted arrangers contributed in writing the charts for this recording РBilly May, Johnny Mandel, Jeremy Lubbock and Patrick Williams.[27] The following year she won her second Grammy for best jazz vocal, this fourth dimension for Diane Schuur & the Count Basie Orchestra. The anthology was one of her most successful, remaining at the summit of Billboard's Traditional Jazz Charts for 33 weeks.[6] [28] The Basie Band on the anthology was led by Frank Foster. Foster himself won a Grammy for his work on this same recording Рbest system accompanying a song, Jazz category, 1987.[29] The session included Freddie Green, Basie'south long fourth dimension guitarist. Then 76 years old, Light-green's guitar work on the recording was the final functioning of his career.[twenty] In 1985, while on tour in the Far East, Schuur met B.B. King when they both played at a music festival in Tokyo. Schuur and King hitting information technology off musically, and afterwards fabricated an album together called Heart to Eye. Released in May 1994, Heart to Heart entered the Billboard Jazz Charts at number ane.[xxx] [31]

In 1988, she received a phone telephone call from Frank Sinatra asking her to sing with him in a benefit concert in Palm Springs, filling in for Liza Minnelli, who was unable to perform. Schuur was a guest at the Sinatras' abode, then performed in a concert with him conducted by Quincy Jones.[32] Sinatra gave her an abstract oil painting he had created. Years afterward, afterward his death, Schuur made an album called I Remember You: Love to Stan and Frank, an homage to her then late friends Sinatra and Stan Getz.[xv] Schuur continued making albums through the 1990s and into the 2000s, sometimes experimenting with essences of other genres. Schuur Burn (2005) featured Caribbean Jazz Projection musicians, with Brazilian guitarist Oscar Castro-Neves.[33] Talkin' 'Bout You – an album titled after the Ray Charles song of the aforementioned proper noun, was in the pop category. Jazz purists were not happy with her crossing lines into other genres, saying she was on the periphery of jazz; nevertheless, her pop music still received Grammy nominations – merely in a dissimilar category.[34] [35]

In 1996, Schuur appeared as a invitee performer on Sesame Street. In an interview by Elmo, she answered questions virtually how a blind person tin learn to use other senses to get along in the earth.[36] In 1998, she was a special guest on "Ray Charles in Concert", a do good for the Miami Lighthouse for the Bullheaded.[37] [38] [39] She performed at Carnegie Hall in a tribute to Irving Berlin in 1988, and once more in 1996 in a tribute to Ella Fitzgerald.[40] [41] Schuur gave a functioning in 1999 to laurels Stevie Wonder at The Kennedy Middle Honors.[42] She sang "I Just Called to Say I Love You" arranged and accompanied by Herbie Hancock. Amusement writer Jake Elyachar rated this every bit 1 of the pinnacle 20 best performances ever given on the Kennedy Honors serial. Wonder was visibly emotionally moved by the performance.[43] She was awarded the Helen Keller Achievement Honor by the American Foundation for the Blind in 2000.[44] [45] Late in 2003, Schuur released Midnight, featuring original songs written by Barry Manilow for the album. Manilow'due south long-time songwriting team, which included co-producer Eddie Arkin, and lyricists Marty Panzer, Bruce Susan, and Adrienne Anderson, contributed to the project.[41] Manilow produced the album and also performed on it. The guest artists were Brian McKnight and Karrin Allyson and it was backed by Tony-winner Bill Elliott and the Bill Elliott Swing Orchestra.[46] [47] Her second alive album, Diane Schuur: Live In London, was recorded at Ronnie Scott's, a celebrated jazz guild in London's Soho District.[48] Scott's is the site of previous alive albums past Ella Fitzgerald and Nina Simone.[49]

Schuur came to Nashville in 2011 for her first country album, The Gathering, produced by Steve Buckingham.[50] She said that the anthology was prompted by thoughts of her male parent, who loved land music, and also by the success of Ray Charles in the country genre.[15] Alison Krauss, Vince Gill, and Mark Knopfler were guest artists.[51] Allmusic reviewer Thom Jurek said about The Gathering that while Schuur maintained her signature singing manner, "she was as well interested in omitting the twang".[fifty]

Schuur was Johnny Carson's guest on NBC's The Tonight Show xi times.[11] [52] As of 2015, Schuur had made 23 albums. She maintains an active bout schedule, and, as of 2016 and 2017, has booked dates to perform in Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Rome, Palermo, Guanajuato, and multiple cities across the United States.[53]

Personal life [edit]

Schuur received a financial settlement from her birth hospital for her loss of vision.[2] Prematurity itself is associated with incomprehension, but it was not universally known at the time of her birth that loftier levels of oxygen in a neonatal incubator can take a negative upshot on the developing retinas of the eyes, thereby increasing the incidence of blindness.[54] [55] The settlement money helped her to buy a house in later on years.[2] Schuur was chosen "Deedle-Babes", "Deeds" and other variations of this name by her mother, who died of cancer at age 31.[56] "Deedles" is the nickname which stuck and became the title of one of her early albums.[57]

In 1996, at age 43, Schuur married Les Crockett, a retired infinite engineer whom she affectionately chosen "Rocket". Years later he developed Parkinson'southward disease, prostate cancer, and other health problems; they eventually divorced, "but not for the usual reasons", says writer Jeff Spevak.[58] Crockett developed dementia and hallucinations requiring institutional intendance – with her blindness, she simply could not take care of him.[58] [59]

Schuur is a voracious reader and a cat possessor.[15] She is an ardent fan of the American daytime idiot box series The Young and the Restless, to the extent of personally visiting the set on at least three occasions.[threescore] Her Grammy awards, one inscribed in braille, sit on a Baldwin piano given to her past the manufacturer.[eight] In 2011, Schuur experienced skydiving in Hawaii, fastened in tandem to an instructor, and said, "I don't know if I'd ever do that over again."[59] [61]

In a 2011 interview on PBS in Houston with Ernie Manouse, Schuur stated that she had chronically struggled with her weight. She had a drug and alcohol addiction in the late 1980s, and had attempted suicide in the by. At 1 point, she was stopped from jumping from a tertiary story window by her brother-in-constabulary.[57] She benefited from twelve-step programs and, equally of 2016, had been sober for several decades. Schuur has dedicated songs to the founder of Alcoholics Anonymous in her shows. She stated that her life has grown much more spiritual as she has matured.[57] [62]

Discography [edit]

Year Championship Genre Label
1982 Pilot of My Destiny Jazz Music is Medicine
1984 Deedles Jazz GRP
1985 Schuur Affair Jazz GRP
1986 Timeless Jazz GRP
1987 Diane Schuur & the Count Basie Orchestra Jazz GRP
1988 Talkin' 'bout You Jazz, Popular GRP
1988 A GRP Christmas Collection Jazz, Vacation GRP
1989 Diane Schuur Collection Jazz GRP
1991 Pure Schuur Jazz, Pop GRP
1992 In Tribute Jazz GRP
1993 Dear Songs Jazz, Pop GRP
1993 A GRP Christmas Drove, Vol. Three Jazz, Vacation GRP
1994 Middle to Centre (with B. B. King) R&B, Jazz GRP
1996 Love Walked In Jazz GRP
1997 Dejection for Schuur Dejection, Jazz GRP
1997 The Best of Diane Schuur Jazz GRP
1999 Music Is My Life Jazz Atlantic / Wea
2000 Friends for Schuur Jazz Concord
2001 Swingin' for Schuur (with Maynard Ferguson) Jazz Concord
2003 Midnight Jazz, Pop Concord
2005 Schuur Fire (with Caribbean Jazz Project) Jazz, Latin Hold
2006 Diane Schuur: Alive in London Jazz GR2 Classics
2008 Some Other Fourth dimension Jazz Concord
2011 The Gathering Country, Jazz Vanguard Records
2014 I Call back You: Dear to Stan and Frank Jazz Jazzheads Music Grouping
2020 Running on Faith Jazz Jazzheads Music Group
Diane Schuur Grammy Awards History
Year Category Title Genre Label Result
1986 Best Jazz Vocal Performance – Female person Timeless Jazz GRP Won
1987 Best Jazz Vocal Operation – Female Diane Schuur and the Count Basie Orchestra Jazz GRP Won
1989 Best Jazz Vocal Performance – Female person The Christmas Vocal Jazz GRP Nominated[63] [64]
1991 Traditional Popular Performance Pure Schuur Pop GRP Nominated[63]
1993 Traditional Pop Performance Dearest Songs Pop GRP Nominated[63]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c Schuur, Diane. "Almost Diane > Bio". dianeschuur.com. Archived from the original on November two, 2016. Retrieved November xxx, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Plume, Leonard (April 27, 1986). "Diane Schuur Riding a Sure Thing". The Los Angeles Times. p. 64.
  3. ^ a b c d eastward f Block, David (Nov 19, 2013). "Profiling Legendary Jazz Vocalist/Pianist Diane Schuur (Interview)". blindfilmmaker.com. Songwriter'south Monthly. Retrieved November xxx, 2016.
  4. ^ Penn, Roberta (February 28, 2008). "A moment with ... Diane Schuur/jazz artist". seattlepi.com. Hearst Seattle Media. Retrieved February 17, 2017.
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  6. ^ a b Mueller, Michael East; Belfiore, Michael. "Entry for Schuur, Diane – Contemporary Musicians". encyclopedia.com. Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. Retrieved December five, 2016.
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  9. ^ a b c Feinstein, Michael (May sixteen, 2014). "Diane Schuur On 'Vocal Travels' (podcast interview)". npr.org. National Public Radio. Retrieved November xxx, 2016.
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  13. ^ Gelly, Dave (2002). Stan Getz: nobody else but me (1st ed.). San Francisco: Backbeat Books. p. 158. ISBN978-0-87930-729-5.
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  16. ^ "EIU Jazzers to play with Diane Schuur". Mattoon Journal Gazette (Illinois). March 7, 1992. p. C4.
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  19. ^ a b O'Connor, John J. (December 22, 1982). "Television receiver: Jazz at White House Stars Itzhak Perlman". The New York Times.
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  23. ^ "Newsmakers-Bully Reasons to Party". Billboard. 97 (1): ix. January 5, 1985. ISSN 0006-2510.
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  43. ^ Elyachar, Jacob (December 26, 2011). "The Kennedy Eye Honors-The 20 Best Performances, Part 2". jakes-take.com. Jake Elyachar. Retrieved February xv, 2017.
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  46. ^ "Diane Schuur/Midnight/Credits". allmusic.com. Allmusic, member of the RhythmOne group. Retrieved December 28, 2016.
  47. ^ Ashton, Kimberly. "Professor Nib Elliott Wins Tony Award for Hit Broadway Musical". berklee.edu. Berklee College of Music. Retrieved Dec 28, 2016.
  48. ^ "Diane Schuur: Live In London, the new album". jazzreview.com. Jazz Review. Retrieved February 14, 2017. [ permanent dead link ]
  49. ^ Stephens, Vincent (July 1, 2006). "Diane Schuur: Alive in London". allaboutjazz.com. All About Jazz. Retrieved February xiv, 2017.
  50. ^ a b Jurek, Thom. "Review of "The Gathering"". allmusic.com. Allmusic, fellow member of the RhythmOne group. Retrieved Nov 29, 2016.
  51. ^ "Alison Krauss, Vince Gill Featured on Jazz Vocalizer Diane Schuur's Country Anthology". cmt.com. Viacom International. Apr 6, 2011. Retrieved February 16, 2017.
  52. ^ Zimmerman, David (March 7, 1988). "A Schuur bet as the side by side jazz superstar". The states Today. p. D4.
  53. ^ "Diane Schuur Concerts". Diane Schuur.com/concerts . Retrieved December vii, 2016.
  54. ^ "Retinopathy of Prematurity". The New York Times (Times Health Guide). December 19, 2016.
  55. ^ "Facts Nigh Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP)". nei.nih.gov. The National Institutes of Health. Retrieved December xix, 2016.
  56. ^ Heckman, Don (March 2008). "Diane Schuur: Deedle Me This". jazztimes.com. JazzTimes. Retrieved Dec 18, 2016.
  57. ^ a b c Manouse, Ernie (July 27, 2011). "Diane Schuur on InnerVIEWS with Ernie Manouse". youtube.com. Houston PBS. Archived from the original on 2021-12-nineteen. Retrieved December iii, 2016.
  58. ^ a b Spevak, Jeff (June 26, 2014). "Diane Schuur Getting the Story Correct". democratandchronicle.com . Retrieved December three, 2016.
  59. ^ a b Spevak, Jeff (June 22, 2014). "Evolution of Life". Democrat and Chronicle. Rochester, New York. p. 4C.
  60. ^ "Diane Schuur featured in CBS Soaps in Depth". dianeschuur.com . Retrieved December 25, 2016.
  61. ^ "Skydive Hawaii". youtube.com. YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-xix. Retrieved February fourteen, 2017.
  62. ^ Stewart, Zan (Nov xiv, 1991). "A New Beginning, for Schuur: The Jazz and Pop Singer, Who Will Perform in Costa Mesa, Is Regaining Control of Her Life". Los Angeles Times.
  63. ^ a b c "Grammy Past Winners Search". grammy.com. The Recording University. Retrieved Dec 1, 2016.
  64. ^ "S Beach Jazz Festival/artist/lineup". southbeachjazzfest.com. South Beach Jazz Festival (Miami Beach). December 11, 2016. Retrieved December 31, 2016.

Further reading [edit]

  • Staff (March 21, 1988). "Dinah Shore Likes Seeing Diane Schuur". The Desert Sun. p. 21.

External links [edit]

  • Diane Schuur'southward website

morenoolad1969.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diane_Schuur

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