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Nancy Kelly: A Dynamic And Determined Voice

Courtesy Janis Wilkins
There is a sound that comes out of Upstate New York. We have a completely different sound...we tear it up.
Nancy Kelly - jazz singer
Nancy Kelly
vocalsb.1950

The Beatles
band / ensemble / orchestraNancy Kelly and I talked in the fall of 2020 shortly after she celebrated her 70th birthday and over six months into COVID. The first thing she shares with me is about her early start in music. "At age four, I started playing piano and taking piano lessons. I was a classically trained pianist and I was at 'college entrance' at age thirteen. At that precise moment, the Beatles arrived. I threw it all away to be 'a Beatle'" she says with a hearty laugh. "I got a guitar and I started a band...I started a band at around 14 or 15... and I was the only one in the band that would sing. They were all too scared to sing" Ms. Kelly says kiddingly. "So I was the singer! That's where I started singing. From there, I was asked to front a rock band in Rochester, New York and one thing turned into another."
She eventually realized that she could develop to a higher level if she got a little extra professional training. "After ten years of singing with very loud bands, I had trouble controlling my voice so I signed up with what is now called the Community School" remembers Ms. Kelly. The school was and still is affiliated with one of the definitive music schools in the United Statesthe Eastman School of Musicin her hometown of Rochester. "I studied with a wonderful classical teacher there, Nancy Kennedy, and she was tremendous. She got me straightened out in a jiffy." Although Kennedy taught classical singing, she eventually told Kelly "'I have to let you go because I'll ruin you.' In other words, to instill classical singing on a 'stylist,' it's so hard for them to undo it... She was very smart, a very hip woman and I learned so much from her. I'm so grateful to her for her insight."
By now Kelly had embraced 'speech singing' which, as she tells me, "all jazz is pretty much 'speech singing,' done with your speaking voice. (Kennedy) didn't want to take that away from me." Ms. Kelly was drawn to singers who would incorporate spontaneous, improvisational scat singing into their presentation including

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971

Ella Fitzgerald
vocals1917 - 1996

Annie Ross
vocals1930 - 2020

Mark Murphy
vocals1932 - 2015

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959

Sarah Vaughan
vocals1924 - 1990

Nancy Wilson
vocals1937 - 2018
So how and when did she decide it was time to see the world? She pauses for a moment to reflect and then mentions her friendship with arranger, conductor and Grammy award-winning producer " data-original-title="" title="">Conductor: Jeff Tyzik who was, and still is, based in Rochester. "I became friends with Jeff Tyzik. Jeff took some little recording of meI don't know where he got it fromto Lenny Silver at Amherst Records in Buffalo New York. He had a revered independent record company" Ms. Kelly recalls of Silver. "He put

Spyro Gyra
band / ensemble / orchestra
Ernie Watts
saxophone, tenorb.1945

Doc Severinsen
trumpetb.1927

Paul Butterfield
harmonica1942 - 1987
The album, Live Jazz, was produced by Tyzik and released in 1988. "It was recorded in Hollywood California can you imagine how exciting that was when you open the door of the studio and look down and see Paramount Studios was right there and you could see the big archoh my little heart was all a flutter -it was great. The record did really well. I was Number 11 on Billboard" Ms. Kelly remembers. Ernie Watts kicked things off with his potent sax. Drums and percussions were handled by former

Weather Report
band / ensemble / orchestra
Peter Erskine
drumsb.1954
But as work offers began to come in, Ms. Kelly conceded that she did not tour as much as she would have wanted. She chose to remain based in Western New York since she had, and still has, a daughter and family in the area. When her daughter was older, Ms. Kelly and her daughter were based in Philadelphia for several years. "It was one of the best parts of my career...Philly was very cool" Kelly reminisces. She also lived in Albany New York, just a couple hours north of New York City. "I always played in New York. Johnny Valenti, who owns Birdland, has always supported me and still does to this day. I spoke to him not too long ago but, of course, nobody is open or doing much. And I was booked right before the COVID thing" she laments." Valenti has pledged to honor the date, as a way to help keep her visible in the city. As with so many artists born to perform Ms. Kelly longs for the days when someone would reach out to her and invite her to perform in a far-off place such as Japan where she has been popular for years. "Yeah, I'll be right there! Send me a ticket in the mail" she says with a knowing laugh.
It took almost a decade but when it came time to release her second Amherst Records album, 1997's Singin' and Swingin', Ms. Kelly was even more involved. She was co-producer, chose many of the musicians and, as the liner notes proclaim, it was mostly 'her selections, her arrangements and her musicians.' "Funny how the public loved that record the most. There was an awful lot of 'poppy' stuff on there but it is what it is" she remembers. One of the people she wanted to record with was Buffalo native and veteran saxophonist

Bobby Militello
saxophone, altob.1950

Dave Brubeck
piano1920 - 2012

Maynard Ferguson
trumpet1928 - 2006
Together, Militello and Ms. Kelly played a number of gigs at the Bijou, a club he owns in Buffalo. "We put together a lot of arrangements -which is what we do which is the beauty of having a group of people that you see every week. You start developing arrangements on the bandstand, live, and that was a lot of what we put on Singin' and Swingin'. Ms. Kelly opens the disc with a confident snap and just a touch of sass. Militello stays for the first two cuts, takes a break, comes back for two more and tag teams with saxophonist
Joe Carello
saxophone, tenorLooking back at records such as Singin' and Swingin', Ms. Kelly says: "I put my records together like I do a set in a show. That's the way I do it. I want a flow. That's assuming...a jazz listener listens to a recording from top to bottom." While conceding that more and more people select 'singles,' she is still committed to offering the complete package to listeners. When it came time to start focusing on a new CD, she immediately thought of friend, mentor and Syracuse native Mark Murphy. When Murphy first started recording in the mid-1950s, his first record producer stated that he was "every bit as good as (Mel) Torme, and that first record he made would scare

Frank Sinatra
vocals1915 - 1998
Increasingly, many of the major record labels of the 20th century were competing with either boutique labels or a growing number of self-released discs. Ms. Kelly ultimately raised part of the money to launch the Murphy project herself and then, at a certain point, simply said "That's enough, let's go! Let's book the studio time, man!" Now confident that the rest of the funds would materialize, she proclaimed with a smile "God will provide!" She enlisted an A-List of collaborators including Militello and trumpeter

Randy Brecker
trumpetb.1945
Beyond the applause of a live audience or strong record sales, there are various other ways to acknowledge success. For example, early in her career, several Downbeat Magazine readers' polls put her into their Top Ten for several years. More recognition followed in the 1990s including from the regional music hall of fame in Syracuse (her adopted hometown where she maintains one of her teaching studios in addition to her Rochester studio). To bring things full circle, she will be inducted into the Rochester Music Hall of Fame in 2021. In the decade that the Rochester Music Hall of Fame has existed, it has inducted a variety of artists including Eastman School alumni

Tony Levin
bassb.1946

Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Cab Calloway
composer / conductor1907 - 1994

Steve Gadd
drumsb.1945

Son House
guitar, slide1902 - 1988
As for the Rochester Music Hall of Fame honor, Ms. Kelly says "I was born in Rochester, my mother was born in Rochester. I love Rochester. Rochester formed who I was. Rochester is known all over the world for their music school and the people who have come out of it. The people whose lives have been affected by itme being one as well." When I mentioned that vibraphonist

Joe Locke
vibraphoneb.1959
So, what is next? Ms. Kelly has pledged to continue teaching. "When I look at how many people's lives I touched with teaching, it's a stunning, stunning thought that just fills me with joy," she proudly states. Her 'to do' list also includes a return to the recording studio. "When I was very young, late 20s/early 30sthat seems very young to me now I was writing a lot. I was very much influenced by one of my heroes

Joni Mitchell
vocalsb.1943

Al Jarreau
vocals1940 - 2017
Tags
Interview
Nancy Kelly
Scott Gudell
Beatles
Louis Armstrong
Ella Fitzgerald
Annie Ross
Mark Murphy
Billie Holiday
Sarah Vaughan
Nancy Wilson
Jeff Tyzik
Spyro Gyra
Ernie Watts
Doc Severinsen
Paul Butterfield
Weather Report
Peter Erskine
Bobby Militello
Dave Brubeck
Maynard Ferguson
Joe Carello
Frank Sinatra
randy brecker
Tony Levin
Ron Carter
Cab Calloway
Steve Gadd
Lou Gramm
Son House
Joe Locke
Joni Mitchell
Al Jarreau
Roberta Flack
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