"I had a huge voice when I was
just eight years old," says Mary Stallings about her
beginnings as a singer. It was a voice too big to ignore -
spanning almost four octaves. Few could. By the time
she was 11, she had made her first solo recording and
while still in high school she joined Louis Jordan's
Tympani Five. She came of age in the big band era,
and was invited to tour as vocalist with most of the major
names of the time. "It was the best musical
education I could have had," explains Mary, "I
was fired from lessons for playing everything from
memory." Instead, her education came a bit more
unconventionally, including stints with the Grover
Mitchell - Earl "Father" Hines band, three years
touring the U.S. and Europe with Count Basie, and sharing
the bill with Joe Williams, Tony Bennett and Ella
Fitzgerald. "I met all the heroes of the music
and then got a chance to work with them," she says.
Although Mary took time off from touring and recording
during the '70's, she never stopped singing. So when
she re-emerged back onto the jazz scene reinvigorated,
with a sound that gave homage to her past but held a
freshness and vigor, she immediately caught the attention
of the music press, who called her "stunning"
and a "jazz vocal sensation." During this
period, she released several critically acclaimed CDs, one
which made many of the year-end "best-of" lists,
another that went to the top 10 on the Gavin Jazz
Chart. Today, Mary Stallings combines the grace and
grandeur of experience with an undiluted passion for
performing in her Live At The Village Vanguard
release. With its blend of old and new, smoky
standards and take-your-breath-away ballads, the CD, in
many ways, reflects this current milestone in Mary's
career. "This is the right time for me to be
singing these songs," she says. "I pick
songs that feel delicious to me, songs that I relate to at
the time, songs that I love. That's what you'll find
here."
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