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Georgia Cécile's Brand New Timeless Classics

Courtesy Monika S. Jakubowska
So many men have told me I’ve made their wives cry.
Georgia Cécile
Gregory Porter
vocalsb.1971
Glasgow-born singer and composer

Georgia Cecile
vocalsUntil 2018, she was plain old Georgia Smith, and then along came the English r&b singer Jorja Smith. "My songs were starting to get on radio and it was very confusing," she explains. Cécile is her middle name.
To anyone who has already heard her sing, it should come as no surprise that she is winning fans. Aged 29, she has a smoky, controlled vocal style that sounds as if it can barely contain the volcanic emotions seething beneath the surface. There is neither ego nor irony in her performances: you get the impression that everything she sings is sincere, straight from the heart. She has been compared with both

Melody Gardot
guitar and vocalsb.1985

Nancy Wilson
vocals1937 - 2018

Julie London
vocals1926 - 2000
Jazz is in the blood. Her grandfather Gerry Smith was a well-known jazz pianist in Scotland in the 1960s and 1970s, and her father's older sister Ann was a talented jazz singer. She and Georgia would play together. "Growing up as a wee girl, I would hear this music in the house and at family parties. I was always intrigued by itmesmerised by it. If you didn't play an instrument or sing, you weren't allowed in the party. If you brought a boyfriend home who wasn't musical, then.... good luck to him!" She laughs. "Every weekend there would be something, and you had to do your party piece."
Studying music at Napier University in Edinburgh, she learned the Estill voice training method. "It's not enough to have this one wall of sound as a vocalist," she explains, "It's important to create different colours and textures which portray or serve a particular emotive intention." Estill enables the singer to make physiological changes to the body's vocal mechanism. "An example would be retraction, where you open the false vocal folds to create a yawn shape. And what it does is create lots of deeper, darker overtones in the voice, you get a retro sound, more of a sob quality."
Integrating Estill techniques into her existing singing style was difficult at first. "But the more I've been singing in front of an audience, then I'm realising, Oh, that's where I can use twang, or cry, or sob, or falsetto, or belt. It isn't until you're in the depths of a gig that you realise the context whereby you can use the quality., these onsets/offsets, and you're thinking, I'll never use that, but when you get on the gig you see the point of it."
But what has really made Cécile stand out from the pack is her songwriting collaboration with pianist
Euan Stevenson
piano
Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Aretha Franklin
vocals1942 - 2018

Stevie Wonder
vocalsb.1950
"So many men have told me I've made their wives cry," says Cécile, hurriedly explaining that a lot of people have been moved by the songs. "It's got to be universal," adds Stevenson. And Cécile continues, "I think that's why there's two of us. A writing partnership only exists when you can put ego aside and concentrate on the greater good of the message and the connection of the song and the lyric. That's what we always aim for." It is this cool, professional focus that has made the partnership so strong and enduring. The album includes two waltzes ("The Month of May" and "Goodbye Love"), a tango ("Harpoon"), and another song in 5/4 ("Bittersweet"). But one barely notices: in every song the rhythmic style and time signature is seamlessly integrated into the harmonic structure and the melody. As Stevenson puts it, "Good art conceals art."
Cécile mentions God twice on the album. Is she religious? "I'm a very spiritual person, yeah. I'm from a Catholic family. I like to meditate, and I like to think there's a higher power, a higher being. And I feel like the songs are the gift I have. I can't take credit for it because the source is from the higher power and it's my duty to share it with the world." This belief is not new: it is shared with performers of all kinds, including

Jon Hendricks
vocals1921 - 2017

Mahalia Jackson
vocals1911 - 1972
Leslie Bricusse, the writer most often associated with Anthony Newley, died recently, leaving behind such timeless compositions as "What Kind of Fool Am I?," "Who Can I Turn To?," and "Feeling Good," as well as the James Bond themes "Goldfinger" and "You Only Live Twice." The quality, power, and emotional punch of the Cecile-Stevenson songbook bears comparison. "I want to write a Bond song," declares Cécile, "Our next goal is to write the next Bond song. Like, a hundred per cent serious. And to be a Bond girl, but that's not going to happen!" Well, stranger things have been known. Over to you, Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson...
Tags
Interview
Georgia Cecile
Peter Jones
Gregory Porter
Melody Gardot
Nancy Wilson
Julie London
Euan Stevenson
duke ellington
Aretha Franklin
Stevie Wonder
Jon Hendricks
Mahalia Jackson
Leslie Bricusse
Anthony Newley
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Georgia Cecile Concerts
Dec
10
Wed
A Georgia Cécile Kinda Christmas!
Ronnie Scott'sLondon, UK
Dec
11
Thu
A Georgia Cécile Kinda Christmas!
Ronnie Scott'sLondon, UK
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