Rachelle Ferrell Headlines CAU Jazz Under Stars

By Special to the Daily World
Rachelle Ferrell headlined the Clark Atlanta University (CAU) Guild’s 19th annual Jazz Under the Stars Benefit Concert  recently at 7 p.m. on the Harkness Hall Quadrangle on CAU’s campus, 223 James P. Brawley Drive, S.W.

Hosted by the CAU Guild with UPS as the presenting sponsor, the concert, held  Saturday, May 5, provided scholarships to CAU students in the performing arts. The CAU Jazz Vocal Ensemble and the Jazz Orchestra also performed.

Rachelle Ferrell is a recent arrival on the contemporary jazz scene, but her visibility on the pop/urban contemporary scene has boosted her audience’s interest in her jazz recordings.  Born and raised in Philadelphia, she started singing in the second grade at age 6.  This no doubt contributed to the eventual development of her startling “six-and-change” octave range.

She decided early on, after classical training on violin, that she wanted to try to make her mark musically as an instrumentalist and songwriter. In her mid-teens, her father bought her a piano with the provision that she learn to play at a professional level. Within six months, Ferrell had secured her first professional job as a pianist/singer.  She first performed as a violinist and subsequently as a pianist and vocalist.  At 18, she enrolled in Boston’s Berklee College of Music to study composition and arranging.

Her classmates included Branford Marsalis, Kevin Eubanks, Donald Harrison and Jeff Watts.  She graduated in a year and taught music with Dizzy Gillespie for a while for the New Jersey State Council on the Arts.  Through the 1980s and into the early ’90s, she’d worked with some of the top names in jazz, including Dizzy Gillespie, Quincy Jones, George Benson and George Duke.

Ferrell’s debut, “First Instrument,” was released in 1990 in Japan only.  Recorded with bassist Tyrone Brown, pianist Eddie Green and drummer Doug Nally, an all-star cast of accompanists also leave their mark on her record.

They include trumpeter Terrence Blanchard, pianists Gil Goldstein and Michel Petrucciani, bassists Kenny Davis and Stanley Clarke, tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter and keyboardist Pete Levin.  Her unique take on now-standards like Sam Cooke’s “You Send Me,” Cole Porter’s “What Is This Thing Called Love,” and Rodgers & Hart’s “My Funny Valentine,” captured the hearts and souls of the Japanese jazz-buying public.

In 1995, Blue Note/Capitol released her Japanese debut for U.S. audiences, and the response was similarly positive.  Her 1992 self-titled U.S. debut, a more urban pop/contemporary album, was released on Capitol Records.  Ferrell was signed to a unique two-label contract, recording pop and urban contemporary for Capitol Records and jazz music for Blue Note Records.

For four consecutive years in the early ’90s, Ferrell put in festival-stopping performances at the Montreaux Jazz Festival.  Although she has captured the jazz public’s attention as a vocalist, she continues to compose and write songs on piano and violin.  Her work ethic has paid off, and Gillespie’s predictions about her becoming a “major force” in the jazz industry have come true.

Her prolific songwriting abilities and ability to accompany herself on piano seem only to further her natural talent as a vocalist. “Some people sing songs like they wear clothing, they put it on and take it off,” she explains in the biographical notes accompanying “First Instrument.”  “But when one performs four sets a night, six nights a week, that experience affords you the opportunity to present the song from the inside out, to express its essence.  In this way, a singer expresses the song in the spirit in which it was written, the songwriter then translates emotion into words, and the singer’s job is to translate the words back into emotion.”  Ferrell has made her mark not as a straight-ahead jazz singer and pianist, but as a crossover artist who’s equally at home with urban contemporary pop, gospel, classical music and jazz.

Since 1992, the CAU Guild, which includes some of Atlanta’s most influential women, has raised nearly $2 million in scholarships.  Corporate tables and sponsorships are available.  Individual tickets are $60 each.  A table for 10 is $600.  For additional information and tickets, call 404-880-8136.

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