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Samara Joy at The Carver

Courtesy Gabriele Bifolchi
Samara Joy
vocals
Sarah Vaughan
vocals1924 - 1990
The musicians in Joy's band are also youngnot yet big namesbut they, too, are serious students of the music on their way to solid careers. Tenor saxophonist

Kendric McCallister
saxophone, tenor
Donavan Austin
trombone
Connor Rohrer
pianoDavid Mason
drums
Jason Charos
trumpet
Paul Sikivie
bass, acoustic
Cecile McLorin Salvant
vocalsb.1989

Evan Sherman
drums
Emmet Cohen
pianob.1990

Ron Carter
bassb.1937
"I'm not doing anything new here," she is quick to point out about her approach. "If anything, I'm trying to capture the feeling of the people who created this music. I never imagined encountering the music in this way much less being able to perform it and do it with such amazing musicians and perform all over the world and sing all these beautiful songs.... Jazz music means feeling, it means swing, it means BlacknessBlack cultureand it means being able to express yourself. And I'm grateful to be able to do that when I sing" (Pace Report, February 2022).
As her press materials declare, "Samara Joy makes her case to join the likes of Sarah, Ella, and Billie as the next mononymous jazz singing sensation." Welcoming her to the stage that evening, Cassandra Parker-Nowicki, Executive Director of The Carver Community Cultural Center, reminded those present that each of these great jazz women (

Ella Fitzgerald
vocals1917 - 1996

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959
Since she graduated from SUNY Purchase in 2021 and released her self-titled debut (Samara Joy, Whirlwind Recordings, 2021), Joy has been touring and performing pretty much nonstop, pausing only occasionally to record an album (Linger Awhile, Verve Records, 2022; Linger Awhile Longer, Verve Records, 2023; A Joyful Holiday, Verve Records, 2023) or a single ("Warm in December"/"Someone Like You," 2022; "Tight"/ "Now and Then," 2023). Living on the roadperforming, writing, rehearsing, hanging with the bandhas no doubt contributed to the remarkable synchrony and close communication within the ensemble. As she has explained, "The main way I have explored and expanded my repertoire is through live performance, because I've been touring since I graduated" in 2021. "I learned a lot while I was in school but being on the road and being onstage nearly every single night, trying out different things..." (Released Live, March 2024).
"The audience is just as much a part of the performance as we are," she continued. "It's important to take people on a journey.... Like last night, I started a capella, and so the first thing that people hearoutside of when the band theme my walk-in musicthe first thing that people hear is my voice. That's it, a capella. Everybody's quiet, you can hear a pin drop. And then we build up into the evening." That is precisely what transpired at The Carver. The band walked her on with "Ad Lib on Nippon" from

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
She does not scat much, but Joy is a superb improviser with a solid vocal technique that easily accommodates the improvisational processes she brings into play. She has carefully studied the great vocal artists with whom she has been compared and, among other things, learned how to create a second chorus that takes things up a notch and/or in a new direction. Her repertoire includes chestnuts and tunes in a classic jazz style that are lesser known, like

Barry Harris
piano1929 - 2021

Ronnell Bright
piano1930 - 2021
She uses melisma quite a bit in her texted improvisations, employing it in not only in blues tonality, but also in passages encompassing multiple chord changes at various tempos. On Nacio Herb Brown and Gus Kahn's "You Stepped Out of a Dream," an upbeat signature classic for her, she improvised melismatic improvisations on the lyric, soloed on neutral vowels and demonstrated her dexterity with scat backgrounds and a shout-chorus, functioning as part of the horn section. By contrast, performing Austin's arrangement of Billie Holiday and

Mal Waldron
piano1925 - 2002
Kay Davis
b.1920In an interview, she was asked to reflect on this quote from "Testimonial," Rita Dove's poem (On the Bus with Rosa Parks, W. W. Norton, 1999): "Back when everything was still to come, luck leaked out everywhere. I gave my promise to the world and the world followed me here." Joy's response was assured, "My promise to the world is that I'll never stop growing. I want to be grateful for the successes and be grateful for all that's happening to me, but always be mindful of what I can do to help others through that. So, I'll never stop growing, I'll never stop listening, I'll never stop taking in all that's around me and the people who are making a difference in their respective fields and how we can work together to, you know, uplift each other" (Amplify, NPR, February 2023). She made good on that last part at The Carver, lifting the capacity audience up out of their seats for multiple vociferous standing ovations.
Tags
Live Review
Samara Joy
Katchie Cartwright
United States
Texas
San Antonio
Kendric McCallister
Donavan Austin
Connor Rohrer
David Mason
Jason Charos
Paul Sikivie
Cecile McLorin Salvant
Evan Sherman
Emmet Cohen
Ron Carter
Terence Blanchard at The Carver Community Cultural Center
Billie Holiday
Mal Waldron
Kay Davis
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