Rachel Z recalls influence of Joni Mitchell melodies

Friday, March 28, 2003


BY ZAN STEWART
Star-Ledger Staff

"They freaked out. They knew the songs, they liked the arrangements, they
stayed with us when we improvised. And I saw I could connect with people
using the door of familiarity."

Keyboardist Rachel Z, talking on her cell phone as she walks around her
Manhattan SoHo neighborhood, is recalling the audience's reaction at
London's Barbican Theatre last May, where she opened for singer Dee Dee
Bridgewater before a crowd of 4,000. There, she and her trio gave the first
live performance of jazz versions of Joni Mitchell tunes, songs she had
just recorded and which were released last fall on the album, "Moon at the
Window" (Tone Center).

Since that debut, Z, a jazz-leaning artist who spans genres, having played
with both jazz giant Wayne Shorter and progressive rocker Peter Gabriel,
has found herself drawing a new audience.

For example, at her performance at Trumpets in Montclair earlier this
month, Susie Chankalian, one of Z's friends from the fifth grade at River
View School in Denville, came by with her 12-year-old daughter, who read
that Z was performing Mitchell material.

"Susie sent me an e-mail, saying that they both really liked the
arrangements," says Z, who was born Rachel Nicolazzo in Manhattan and moved
to Denville at age 5. "These are people who wouldn't usually listen to jazz."

Z, who shortened her name in the'80s when she was a member of the
first-rate jazz/fusion band Steps Ahead, performs with her trio Tuesday and
Wednesday at Sweet Rhythm in Greenwich Village. Teaming with bassist Nicki
Parrott and drummer Bobbie Rae, Z will offer such well-known Mitchell tunes
as "Big Yellow Taxi," "Both Sides Now" and "Help Me" and less-familiar ones
like "Lakota" and "Chinese Man" during the first set. Then she'll break off
into what she describes as "new standards" for the second, playing numbers
by Gabriel, Lennon-McCartney and others.

The Mitchell treatments have a melodic context for the audience and still
offer the leader and her partners lots to dig into. For example, "All I
Want" is done up-tempo. "That way, we get what we need in terms of a
challenging improvised section and the people get a song they know and like
which means something in their lives," Z says. "Ladies Man" is another
number that was originally slow and is, in Z's hands, done fast. "Big
Yellow Taxi" is given a buoyant treatment, says Z, even though the lyric is
fairly dark -- "They paved paradise/Put up a parking lot."

"Ultimately, the music is light- hearted, so we kept it more straight but
with a jazz groove," Z says.

"Chinese Cafi" is delivered slowly and emotively, as is perhaps Mitchell's
best-known number, "Both Sides Now."

The latter song was Z's introduction to Mitchell, when, in kindergarten at
River View School, her teacher, Mrs. Windish, had the children sing it.
"She also put on pageants twice a year, like doing 'Oklahoma,' getting
little kids to sing and dance," recalls Z, who is a graduate of the New
England Conservatory of Music. "She was really hip."

Later, when Z was a student at Morris Knolls High School, she performed
Mitchell's tunes at Tavern On The Green and The Greenhouse in Morristown
with her friend, Lynne Harrison (now a holistic health specialist who lives
in Verona). Z came to see the deeper meanings in the music. "Joni'd get
through a relationship, wasn't afraid to reveal her pain and go on," Z
says. "I felt I could do the same."

The idea for the Mitchell project came after Z's previous album, 2000's "On
the Milky Way Express," which is all Shorter tunes. "I wanted to do another
concept album," says Z, who had met Mitchell briefly in the mid-'90s on a
visit to her Bel Air, Calif., home with the saxophonist-composer. "And as I
was in a singer/ songwriter phase myself, I also have a rock band called
Peace Box, I started listening to Joni's 'Blue' again and realized I knew
all these songs. It became clear what a big influence she'd been in my life."




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Deb Messling  -^..^-
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