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Veronica Swift at the Newman Center
ByNewman Center
Denver, CO
November 19, 2021
I don't know about you, but I love to watch pigeonholes explode. Not with pigeons in them of course, that would be too messy. No, the fun stuff is when those small boxes that the human mind loves to construct turn out to be way too small and the things you stuffed in there suddenly blow up leaving splinters, shards and expectations scattered all over the floor. And, assuming no pigeons are harmed in the explosion, clean up's a snap!
In the couple of years I've been aware of singer Veronica Swift, she's occupied the pigeonhole in my mind labeled "Excellent new jazz singer who performs standards." Having not seen her in concert, that classification came about from hearing her 2019 album Confessions (Mack Avenue, 2019) and this year's This Bitter Earth (Mack Avenue, 2021). The material on those albums generally falls into the Great American Songbook category, more or less.
Friday night at the Newman Center's elegant Gates Auditorium, she and her band nestled comfortably in their predetermined slot for the first 45 minutes or so of their 90 minute concert. It happened slowly at first. In hindsight, maybe the first whiff of a burning fuse came from keyboard man

Mathis Picard
pianob.1995
Swift took the stage in a snug, floor length black gown that adhered nicely to the superstructure beneath. It had silver sequined stripes down the sides and sleeves; perfect for revisiting classic songs from the mid-20th Century. The material for the first half of the concert was drawn primarily from her most recent album, starting with the title track. She comes from a musical family and she's been recording albums since she was nine years old. Now 27, she not only possesses one of the strongest, clearest voices in jazz today, but she deploys it with style, wit, and expert phrasing and nuance.
A comparison to

Cecile McLorin Salvant
vocalsb.1989

Burt Bacharach
composer / conductor1928 - 2023
"How lovely to be a woman, and have one job to do
To pick out a boy and train him, and then when you are through
You've made him the man you want him to be
How lovely to be a woman like me.
That song appears on Swift's latest album and is part of a broader commentary on current societal ills. "How Lovely" is a crack at sexism while "You've Got to be Taught" (from South Pacific, strangely), which also appeared Friday night as a straight-up protest song, addresses multi-generational racism. "He Hit Me (And it Felt Like a Kiss)" protests domestic abuse and the late

Dave Frishberg
piano1933 - 2021
The big difference between the two was Swift's exploding pigeonhole.
Had the audience been paying attention, we may have guessed what was coming because she dropped a strong hint part way through the first half of the concert. She confessed to having been in a metal band when she was in college. In the midst of all the (mostly) straight ahead jazz, it was easy to chalk that up to a youthful dalliance. As it turned out, it wasn't.
The first sign of serious pressure on one side of the pigeonhole came when guitarist
Alex Heffron
guitarThe next tune pushed even harder on the opposite side of the pigeonhole. Heffron, who had helped with the "Severed Heads" on a hollow body electric, put that axe aside and picked up a solid body electric guitar as Swift announced the next number,

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
The band returned to the middle of its assigned pigeonhole with the next tune, a version of the tender standard "The Nearness of You." Most of the tune was delivered in standard jazz standard style, but the tempo picked up toward the end, some guitar power chords started to come through and the burning fuse got closer to the dynamite.
The energetic coda to "The Nearness of You" provided the segue to the subsequent drum solo. Swift said drummer Dylan Elise was playing his first gig with the band and was recently with

Blood, Sweat & Tears
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1967
Drum solos, by their nature, are usually pretty bombastic, so the energy level was already rising, but then, the pigeonhole was blown to smithereens when Swift bounded back on stage dressed as a biker chick in full leather, wide belt and bell bottom leather pants. The drum solo never really stopped. The other musicians joined in including

Philip Norris
bassNext up was "Hey Big Spender," a mid-century song, but heavily metalized so that it paired nicely with the new biker chick motif. "Hey Big Spender" is from the 1966 musical "Sweet Charity" and was first performed by

Peggy Lee
vocals1920 - 2002

Shirley Bassey
vocalsMotown was the next stop with the Temptations' "Papa Was a Rolling Stone." But instead of a soulful version like the original, Swift rocked this one too. During the song, she encouraged the audience to clap in time, exhorting, "It's a rock concert now!" The closer of the main set was "Sing" by the Dresden Dolls, a band that was active mainly in the early 2000s and was classified as "dark cabaret." The song was quieter than the previous three and featured a nice melody. Swift encouraged the audience to sing along on the chorus which was pretty simple, "Just sing!" Finally, for the encore, Swift and band performed "Keep Yourself Alive," a song written and performed by Queen, which was their first single from 1973. Now, nearly 50 years later, in these COVID times, that seems like good advice.
As I left the concert hall, pieces of the pigeonhole formerly inhabited by Veronica Swift crunched beneath my feet. And it felt good.
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