USA

Two brand new singles from CLARK & NILSSON out now!

Afro-American jazz vocalist Sharón Clark and Scandinavian pianist Mattias Nilsson have been breaking down racial barriers by touring together, ever since they met at a jam session in New York, 2012. This includes concerts in Europe, Africa and Asia; performing a long list of renowned festivals and clubs. Their two first singles togheter are now releases worldwide.

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YOU TAUGHT MY HEART TO SING [Live] (click to listen)
This is a live recording from the legendary jazz club Montmartre (where they are frequent guests) of McTyner´s and Sammy Kahn´s "You Taught My Heart To Sing". Clark and Nilsson are joined by Danish bassist Jimmi Roger Pedersen, a long time member of the Horace Parlan´s late European Quartet and also a former student of bass legend NHOP. Rod Youngs, an American living in London who have played with Les McCann, Gil Scott Heron and was also featured in BBC´s 625 is playing the drums.

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ANGEL EYES [Live] (click to listen)
An intimate vocal / piano duo live version of the classic “Angel Eyes” written by Matt Dennis and Earl Brent.

Sharón Clark & Mattias Nilsson släpper sin första singel 11 december – Kulturbloggen har lyssnat

Kulturbloggen (SE) - Mats Hallberg / 9 December, 2020

Afrikansk-amerikanska stjärnvokalisten Sharón Clark och Mattias Nilsson från Skåne möttes på en jazzklubb i New York 2012. Första Sverigeturnén genomfördes ett par år senare. Sedan dess har duon årligen turnerat i Europa, Afrika och Asien med uppträdanden på de mest välkända festivalerna och klubbarna. Man kan bara hoppas att de får möjlighet att spela live ånyo under nästa år.

Kulturbloggen fick nöjet att höra Clark på Trollhättan Jazz & bluesfestival ifjol tillsammans med samma kvartett som spelar på den aktuella singeln , vilket renderade i exalterade omdömen i recensionssvep. Vi har därutöver fått exklusiv intervju med Mattias Nilsson med anledning av den genrefria pianistens 15-års jubileum som frilansare. 2016 utdelade Kulturbloggen högsta betyg till hans solodebut.

Låten som redan spelats av Jazzradion är en sex minuter lång livetagning inför publik, från legendariska Jazzhus Montmartre i Köpenhamn av balladen You Taught My Heart To Sing , inspelad månaden före pandemins utbrott i Europa. Musiken är komponerad av McCoy Tyner medan texten har skrivits av Sammy Cahn. 11/12 2020 skulle bop-pianisten McCoy Tyners ha fyllt 82 år. (Undertecknad har sett den berömde musikern – allra mest känd för att ingått i Coltranes klassiska kvartett – i fint framträdande på Skeppsholmen.) Balladen är inte bara den första singel Clark & Nilsson släpper, utan därtill premiärrelease på pianistens egna bolag MN Records.

Förutom Mattias Nilsson precisionsarbete i ledig stil på välljudande flygel, hörs i bakgrunden dansken Jimmi Roger Pedersen på kontrabas och bakom trumsetet sitter Rod Youngs från USA. Undertecknad har skådat basisten med Mwendo Dawa och batteristen i en sprakande sättning anförd av Gil Scott Heron. I Nilssons pressutskick får vi veta mer om denna kvalificerade rytmsektion. Pedersen har ingått i Horace Parlan trio och studerat för basgiganten NHÖP. Youngs å sin sida har lirat med storheter som Jon Hendricks, Natalie Cole, Abdullah Ibrahim (aka Dollar Brand) och i husband hos BBC för hyllningsprogrammet For One Night Only.

Mitt intryck efter att ha lyssnat ett antal gånger? Låter som en ljuvlig klenod ur 50-talets American Songbook. Fast enligt mina ofullständiga efterforskningar verkar tillkomsten för detta tidlösa alster datera sig till 80-talet. Den enormt framgångsrike textmakaren som skrev odödliga sånger för bland andra Frank Sinatra, har tidigare fått sina ord till You Taught My Heart To Sing tolkade av bland andra Dianne Reeves. Henne och lika fulländade Grammy-belönade kollegor som Cecilie McLorin Salvant och Lizz Wright har jag liverecenserat. Nämns i detta sammanhang för att poängtera att Sharón Clark, tveklöst platsar i en sådan illuster omgivning. Har hört hundratals ballader i samma anda, så ingen kan påstå att liveinspelningen från Köpenhamn präglas av förnyelse.

För förvaltare av en behaglig och lätt igenkännbar tradition gäller att slipa på sina uttrycksmedel, vilket här görs med besked. Denna version besitter exceptionell kvalitet, berör särskilt genom sin återhållsamhet. Utan att bli det minsta jolmigt sötsliskig betonas på så vis en sammetslen skönhet. Duon centrerar låten kring långsamt framplockade ackord och den i gospel rotade sångerskans berömda vibrato och dito tonalitet. Tolkningen symboliseras av en avskalad, framåtskridande värme. Pianots klanger integreras organiskt med den himmelskt vackra rösten. Och efterhand skymtar kompet i en perifer roll med vispar och diskret inlagda bastakter. Man skyr klokt nog lusten att visa sig på styva linan. Istället underordnar man sig den gudomligt svävande rösten, alternativt den sparsmakade långsamt vandrande melodin. Metodiken gör känsliga öron lyckliga, får livet i dessa prövningens tider att kännas avsevärt mer meningsfullt.

The Queen Is In - Vibin´ with Sharón Clark | DEBBIE BURKE (USA)

Debbie Burke - Jazz author (US) / November 1, 2020

Total tonal fluency is attained through hard work and love for the craft, something vocalist Sharón Clark knows a lot about. Her recent collab with Mattias Nilsson had their small but mighty ensemble fill the room with sonic pleasure. On “Sometimes I’m Happy” the way she bends a note is so sublime that you can cloak yourself in its glow. Her scatting is pure expert improv as she explores the edges of a key and pushes beyond to unexpected vistas. On “My Kind of Love” her pacing is elegant and her tone is pure silk. A modern-day Maxine Sullivan with amazing range and repertoire, Ms. Clark embodies what there is to love about jazz: everything.

Why did you decide to collaborate with Mattias Nilsson and how does his sound match your vision for the music?
Mattias and I met in NY in 2012 at various jam sessions. At each session I noticed his playing was very laid back and tasteful, not just a bunch of notes played as fast as he could. I thought he was perfect for my style of jazz.

Where do you go in your head when you sing?
Each song I choose comes from a life experience. I truly believe that there is nothing new under the sun. Love, hate, anger, happiness all come in some form to each individual. I just make sure that the songs I choose are ones that resonant with me.

Why do you think some consider you Washington, DC’s Queen of Jazz?
LOL!!! Maybe it’s because I’ve been on the scene for over 40 years now. In all sincerity, it’s an honor to be considered so. The pressure for me to live up to the title comes mainly from me. I hold myself accountable to keep improving and growing.

Talk about the big lessons learned from your early days with the Bottle Caps to today and beyond.
My biggest lesson came in my early years. It was to keep my eyes on my money and to have a contract. Read the fine print. If you’re not sure, ask. I’ve learned to keep a very small circle of people who tell the truth and are capable of being frank. “Fans” are just that and I appreciate them 100%. Your inner circle will tell you about the intonation slip or if you have spinach on your teeth.

What kinds of collaborations do you enjoy the most?
Less is more in my book. I love duo work be it voice and piano, or voice, guitar and very interesting horns.

What’s up for the rest of 2020-21 with venues severely curtailing live performances?
This has been a real wake-up call. I’ve been out of the traditional work format for eight months now. In order to make myself more marketable, I’m taking medical coding and billing to have something to fall back on. The is a career that can be done almost any place in the world and remotely. Now, I rely on unemployment and good friends and family. I’ve done some live streaming and the good thing is, I’m getting exposure in places that wouldn’t notice me otherwise. Captive audience??

What are jazz audiences like abroad?
Where would I be without my international support? Probably scratching for work in NYC. The world has a much better grasp of what the idea of jazz is. They study the greats and understand and appreciate the real jazz tradition – “The Roots of Jazz”. They completely expect and respect it coming from me and from someone that looks like me.

Your hopes for this new CD with Mattias?
Mattias and I will offer that classic, soulful, elegant sincerity of the last century. Both in sound and appearance.

For more information visit sharonclarkjazz.com.

© 2020 Debbie Burke

The Road Beckons – Interrupted Tour Gets Artists Mattias Nilsson and Sharón Clark Ready for Fuller Collab | Debbie Burke (USA)

Debbie Burke - Jazz author (USA) / October 2, 2020

Swedish pianist/composer Mattias Nilsson had recently paired up with American vocal powerhouse Sharón Clark [NOTE: feature article on Ms. Clark coming shortly!] to tour throughout Europe right before live performances came to a screeching halt due to the pandemic. Having to pivot, they realized that a future collaboration is inevitable; the joy must go on and people need their live music.

Together, their talents combine to provide a fresh take on some classics while setting a strong mood that embraces a commitment to clear, pure notes and a warm, welcoming spirit. Mattias not only knows when to pull back and let Clark carry the song, but also when to get deep in the weeds and extract every ounce of emotion, letting fly every color possible. In “Theme from ‘Hotel’” which is dedicated to the memory of vocal great Nancy Wilson, Clark conveys the precise pain of a heartfelt story and is complemented by Nilsson who uses a delicate touch to paint a fuller picture. “In a Sentimental Mood” shows off Nilsson’s intuitive ability to embroider a melody like the craftsman that he is and Clark turns the typically energetic “Fly Me to the Moon” into a sweet song of longing. (Special love goes out to sax player Paul Carr whose solo on “For All We Know” was a blistering success.)

In what ways do you incorporate or are you inspired by music of your Swedish heritage?
Since I play a lot of Swedish music in my solo concerts such as more classical pieces, hymns and folk songs I think that I unconsciously get some elements which show in my playing, unaware of what exactly they might be. When composing, I sometimes use a form of a folk melody or the polka in which the emphasis of the beat lies on 1and 3 and with that in mind I would add a more advanced harmony but still try to keep a folk feeling as a foundation. My song “Spirea” from the solo album “Dreams of Belonging” is an example of this. Shifts from major to minor in melody or vice versa is also very common in the Swedish folk songs and is something I like a lot and use when improvising. You get close to the blues but through the Swedish heritage.

Why did you decide to collaborate with the vocalist Sharón Clark and how does her sound match your vision for the music?
Meeting and working together with Sharón Clark is a true blessing for someone like me who grew up listening to mostly Afro-American artists. I believe she is one of the few true authentic jazz voices out there today, at least from growing up listening to my dad’s mix tapes. Ms. Clark and I are on the same wavelength which makes our vision and direction match. She’s a real storyteller and she can really swing too. She also grew up singing in church and with me playing a lot of gospel, it can’t get any better. Well, actually it can, if she just could get the recognition she really deserves back home in the US. That would make me really happy.

We haven’t done an album yet but are planning to do so very soon. 

Talk about your ensemble and how did you meet them; why did you choose to work with them as artists?
As far as the ensemble is concerned, we’re trying out different players from the countries where we are performing which keeps the group versatile and interesting. Last gig we did in Feb 2020, at the legendary Jazzhus Montmartre in Copenhagen, we brought in London-based (originally from Washington D.C.) drummer Rod Youngs and had Jimmi Roger Pedersen (former student of NHOP [Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen]) from Denmark on bass. So at the moment we’re calling musicians we would like to work with rather than having a fixed ensemble. But there’re so many fantastic players in Scandinavia and Europe which we really admire so it’s very hard to choose.

It also depends on where and when we´re touring, but so far they’ve all done amazing work, really listening to the material adding their own personality to the music. They also dress up and look good on stage which unfortunately you can´t say about all European jazz musicians these days.

Where is your tour taking you and what songs are you doing?
So far we’ve performed in Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Croatia, Belgium, France, Taiwan and South Africa. A tour in Poland and Spain was confirmed when the pandemic broke out. The selection of songs is mainly from the Great American Songbook but the ones that are not so often heard. I know Sharón has a scrapbook somewhere with lyrics written down, so I hope we can put some music to that in the near future. I´m also introducing her to some Swedish music.

With the huge success of our gospel concerts we’ve also started to incorporate some of those tunes, going back to the roots and foundation.

Highlights of producing your three previous CDs, “Dreams of Belonging.” “Peaceful in Dreams” and “Silent Nights”?
“Dreams of Belonging” is my debut album after 11 years as a professional pianist. For me it represents the culmination of a long journey and the discovery of an individual voice. I’m happy that I was finally able to record and release it, since I was all on my own in the process. I´m also very thankful for the attention it got with 26 reviews in many different countries.

“Peaceful in Dreams” and “Silent Nights” are duo albums with Austrian saxophonist Ray Aichinger where we arranged Christmas songs from all over Europe in a less commercial way, sparser, reflective and contemplative. The idea was music you’ve would listen to in the evening when all the noise and expectations were gone; by the fireplace with a nice drink late on Christmas Eve. People really seem to enjoy both of the albums and say they play them every Christmas. We recorded them in Vienna during very hot summer days so we had to slowly work our way mentally into the Christmas mood.

What inspires you when you write?
I often say that music is not my life, but life is my music. So with all the places I’ve played and visited so far (31 countries), there are so many fond memories, so much tasty food and so many wonderful people that go along with that. Once I start writing something, all of that comes to mind in a nice smorgasbord which serves as my inspiration.

Bill Evans put it so well so I’ll just have to quote him: “Music should enrich the soul; it should teach spirituality by showing a person a portion of himself that he would not discover otherwise. It’s easy to rediscover part of yourself, but through art you can be shown part of yourself you never knew existed.”

What are the differences in audiences around the globe that you have noticed in touring?
In general, I think people are more curious and open when you’re performing outside your own country. Humanity needs live music and I think an audience receives the music in pretty much the same way all over the world, but depending on your culture and background you interact differently. Some audiences are listening more and some are more spontaneous. Both are equally important.

Are there universal truths in jazz; a mission or purpose that is inherent to the music?
Absolutely I would say and not only in jazz. I believe it exists in all kinds of music. If you’re being truly honest with yourself and also trying to play that way I think a lot of universal truths can be communicated and that becomes the mission, at least for me.

Has the pandemic impacted your performance schedule?
I came to Brazil on March 4 for a 2-week stay with some concerts in São Paulo before heading back to Europe. Then, I was supposed to be back in Brazil in April to perform at the Blue Note in Rio and São Paulo with Sharón Clark. Everything got cancelled, I got stuck in Brazil in quarantine and I haven’t touched a real acoustic grand piano since March 10. I had one day home in Malmö, Sweden after coming from a tour in Russia to repack and I haven’t been home since. I only came with one carry-on. But it works fine, since I’m used to not carrying much around.

I think I’ve adapted pretty well since I´m used to structure in my days. I still get up and do my computer work in the morning and during these six month I’ve also been able to go through and clean up a lot of private business and things I hadn’t had the time to do before. I’ve also been listening to a lot of music and studying music as well.

Since I’m in Brazil, which is hit pretty hard by the pandemic, I’m also living with people in the risk group (my pregnant fiancé and her mom), we’re pretty much in lockdown. I know my colleagues at least can do some gigs or well-produced streaming concerts with great sound and quality.

What is on the horizon for the rest of this year and for 2021?
Just keep on working as before, focusing on what’s to come. I’m going to be part of the True Blue Jazz Festival Streaming Live Watch Party on Friday Oct. 16th & Saturday Oct. 17th.

I’m also turning 40 in October and expecting a son on my birthday so I’m sure that will take some of my focus, happily.

Next year I’m planning to record another solo album as well as an album with Sharón Clark, which I want to follow up with concerts. I hope all cancelled concerts will be rescheduled for next year. Can’t wait to hit the road again.

Other comments?
I just want to say thank you for what you´re doing and for doing it so well. I´m very thankful I was given this opportunity to share and express my thoughts.

For more information visit mattiasnilsson.com.

Photos courtesy of and with permission of Mattias Nilsson.

© Debbie Burke 2020

ALL ABOUT JAZZ (USA) - ‘Dreams Of Belonging‘

ALL ABOUT JAZZ (USA) - C. Michael Bailey / 2018.03.18

In the 1970s and '80s, Windham Hill and Narada made scores of solo piano records that ranged from near sublime to the maudlin, all under the name of "New Age." I listened to hours of it and had my favorite artists. That said, I cannot say that I ever experienced the soul of that music. It was a satisfying, if empty-calorie ear confection that was pleasant enough, but did fall into my thoughts on criticizing contemporary pop art, which I always thought should be consumed but never considered. There has been a recent resurgence in pleasant solo piano music that expresses a greater gravity and storytelling capability. Recordings by pianist Steven Schoenberg, What's Going On? Solo Piano (Quabbin Records, 2017), Christmas Reimagined (Sonic Veil, 2014), and Live: An Improvisational Journey (Quabbin Records, 2009) are examples of quasi-improvisational recordings with a rare depth and message to be teased out from listening to them.

Enter Swedish pianist Mattias Nilsson who has qualitatively the same creative outlook. On Dreams of Belonging Nilsson spins fine gossamer from his 88 keys over nine songs, eight original and one time honored "standard." Nilsson's playing is sharply defined and pastorally plaintive. In his playing, particularly the title piece and "Spirea" I hear wisps of natural light sonically capturing dust motes floating. The pianist slides in a perfectly crepuscular "Gentle on My Mind" among his lightly tethered melodies. Nilsson does not clutter his playing with unneeded ornament, preferring to capture the melody in a gently raised harmonic architecture. "Folkmelody from Vastmanland" is somber and reflective, proceeding like a slow walk on a fall day in familiar environs when all is almost well. That is how music is supposed to strike you.

JAZZ WEEKLY (USA) - ‘Dreams Of Belonging‘

JAZZ WEEKLY (USA) - George W. Harris / 2018.03.01

Here’s a gorgeous solo album with Mattias Nilsson at the grand piano, delivering well thought-out renditions of material ranging from original compositions to folk melodies. His touch on the ivories is warm, patient and thoughtful, ruminating and yearning on his own title pieces and relaxed and sensitive on “Hymn To Love” while giving an Old World parlor feel to his “Spirea”. His textures are rich and classical leaning on the traditional “Folk Melody From Västmanland” and he exudes romance on “Serenade” and grace on a creative take of “Gentle On My Mind”. You can feel the light peering through the stained glass window on “At Frösö Church” and his lyricism exudes during “Södermalm”. Perfect moods for genteel moments.

JAZZ RIGHT NOW (USA) - ‘Dreams Of Belonging‘

JAZZ RIGHT NOW (USA) - Marc Edwards / 2017.03.29

Dreams Of Belonging is a solo piano performance by Mattias Nilsson. The album consists of nine heartfelt offerings. Mattias has a strong melodic and harmonic sense and a talent for laying into the melody of each of these short compositional pieces, exploring them at his leisure. This entire record seems to be geared for a classical setting as opposed to an improvisational environment. Mr. Nilsson is quite adept at playing these compositions at length. The use of the piano adds to the grandeur of these folk songs. The music gently washes over listeners like soft ocean waves.

During the sixties, a recording such as this would have gotten considerable play on the radio, such as Vince Guaraldi’s song Cast Your Fate To The Wind. At the time, it appealed to many non-jazz audiences. Unfortunately, we have moved away from that era when instrumentalists were appreciated to a much greater degree. The fourth song, Södermalm, I can hear Wynton Kelly swinging on it with Miles’ earlier bands. While most of this music comes across on the ballad side, the album as a whole touches base on the feeling of Vince Guaraldi’s famous composition. This record is the perfect record to listen to at the end of the day after getting home from work. I wasn’t familiar with Mattias Nilsson before this recording. I will keep an eye on his future efforts with great interest. Dreams Of Belonging is available now online.

JAZZFLASHES (USA) - ‘Silent Nights‘

JAZZFLASHES (USA) - Anton Garcia-Fernandez / 2016.12.20

The more recent release is Silent Nights, a seven-song album by the duo of Swedish pianist Mattias Nilsson and Austrian saxophonist Ray Aichinger. It was originally issued on CD in 2015, and now it's being made available again as a digital download by the Stockholm-based Fog Arts label. It's a very interesting collection because it couples two standards with a few carols from the European tradition that show how rewarding the relationship between the folk music of the Old World and jazz can be. The standards are a very lyrical reading of "I'll Be Home for Christmas" that echoes the style of Lester Young and Ben Webster, and an unlikely recasting of "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning" as a Yuletide song. One of the carols is "Stille Nacht, Heilige Nacht," which is none other than "Silent Night," and the other three ("Karl-Bertil Jonssons Julafton," "Macht Hoch Die Tür," and "Under Rönn och Syren") are pensive tunes that lend themselves perfectly to Nilsson and Aichinger's intimate approach. As a bonus, this digital reissue includes an original composition by the duo, "Blue December," which will also be featured in their forthcoming new holiday album, Peaceful in Dreams (European Jazz Records), which is actually slated to be released today.

ARTS JOURNAL / RIFFTIDES (USA) - ‘Dreams Of Belonging‘

ARTS JOURNAL / RIFFTIDES (USA) - Doug Ramsey / 2016.12.09

I heard pianist Mattias Nilsson briefly at the 2015 Ystad Jazz Festival in Sweden as part of the rhythm section accompanying singer Sharón Clark and was intrigued. His solo album Dreams Of Belonging arrived a few weeks ago and intrigued me further. It opens with Folk Melody From Västmanland and includes three other pieces with folk-like melodies incorporating major/minor harmonic aspects that make so much Swedish music – well - intriguing. I don’t know whether Thore Swanerud’s Södermalm came to Nilsson equipped with the bluesy turns he gives it or they are his own, but he makes it compelling. Touch, phrasing and blending with keyboard and pedal are among Nilsson’s strong suits.

JAZZFLASHES (USA) - ‘Dreams Of Belonging‘

JAZZFLASHES (USA) - Anton Garcia-Fernandez / 2016.05.30

Born in Karlskrona, Sweden, in 1980, pianist Mattias Nilsson turned down the offer of a place at Malmö Academy of Music, to his parents' dismay, in order to follow a career as a professional jazz musician. In a recent interview with the website Friends of Jan Lundgren, Nilsson briefly explains his reasons: "My argument was that things were already looking as though they might work out, and I didn't want to halt my progress by taking four years off to study. I think it was Branford Marsalis who said 'If you've got something to fall back on, you probably will.'" This career-defining decision took place over a decade ago, and all these years later, time has proven Nilsson right: he's one of a select group of full-time jazz musicians in Scandinavia who don't need a second occupation to support themselves, has received several of Sweden's most prestigious awards and scholarships, and has done his fair share of touring throughout Europe and even as far afield as South America. What's more, Nilsson just released his first album as a leader—Dreams of Belonging. Cut precisely in Malmö over the course of two sessions on January 8 and 9, 2016, this is a solo effort partly inscribed within the long-standing Nordic tradition of blending jazz and folk music that goes back to the great Jan Johansson in the 1960s.

In fact, the opening track, "Folk Melody from Västmanland" (incidentally, the Swedish national anthem, also known as "Du Gamla, Du Fria"), is a beautiful traditional tune played with delicacy by Nilsson, who approaches "Serenade" and the title track, "Dreams of Belonging" in the same wistful, introspective sort of way. The latter is one of the three Nilsson originals on the album; the other two are "Hymn to Love" and "Spirea," two very personal pieces taken at a slow pace that are good examples of Nilsson's talent as a composer of semi-classical jazz. "At Frösö Church" is an equally relaxed take on "Vid Frösö Kyrka," a melody by the noted Swedish composer Wilhelm Peterson-Berger, and "Södermalm" comes from the pen of another important 20th-century composer, Thore Swanerud. Nilsson looks back even further on the album closer, "Day by Day," an old hymn originally titled "Blott en Dag" and written by the revered 19th-century songwriter Oscar Ahnfelt. Though the influence of Johansson and his epoch-making LP Jazz på Svenska is undeniable, in his interview with the Jan Lundgren fan club website, Nilsson says that he's tried to put his own personal stamp on the music: "The album centers around the kind of traditional Swedish music I've always been drawn to, and although I use plenty of jazz techniques, I hope I've been able to find my own 'voice' in the material." This he definitely does achieve on his version of John Hartford's country tune "Gentle on My Mind" (a major hit for both Glen Campbell and Dean Martin in the '60s, but hardly a common choice for jazz recordings), possibly the most light-hearted track on the album, and generally throughout the whole CD. Overall, this is a very satisfying solo piano effort that is well worth playing more than once, since it gets better and better with each listen.

Jazzsångerska direkt från Ryssland | YSTADS ALLEHANDA (SE)

YSTADS ALLEHANDA (SE) – Ulf Mårtensson / 25 Oktober, 2014

 Jazzsångerska direkt från Ryssland

Ystad. Hon landade sent på torsdagskvällen, den amerikanska jazzsångerskan Sharón Clark. På tisdag gästar hon Ystad och spelar på den intima scenen i teatercaféet tillsammans med Malmöpianisten Mattias Nilsson med band.

Det är första gången som Sharón Clark uppträde i Sverige. Och hon kommer inte direkt från USA utan flyger in från Sankt Petersburg efter att ha varit på turné i Ryssland. En udda jazzscen, kan man tycka.
  - Men jag har spelat mycket i Ryssland. De senaste fem åren har jag gett 200 konserter där, berättar jazzsångerskan som är bosatt i Washington DC.
  Den politiska situationen i Ryssland eller det spända läget i Europa märkte hon inte av under sin senaste turné.
  - Folk är folk. De vanliga människorna i Ryssland har lika lite med Putin att göra som jag med Barack Obama. Men folk i Ryssland älskar jazz och vill dansa när vi spelar. Det finns också många duktiga musiker.

Samarbetet med Mattias Nilsson kom till av en slump.
  - Vi träffades på jazzklubben Smalls i New York. Det är två och ett halvt år sedan. Det var under en jam session. Vi blev vänner och har pratat länge om att jag skulle komma till Sverige. När jag nu var i Ryssland så bestämde vi att jag skulle komma hit för en liten turné.
  Bandet, som också består av danske basisten Bo Stief, som har spelat med stjärnor som Miles Davis, Dexter Gordon och Stan Getz, och trummisen Janus Templeton, spelar i Lund på fredagskvällen. På söndag har turen kommit till Bergakyrkan i Bjärred.
  - Då blir det gospels medan jag sjunger jazzstandards i Ystad, säger Sharón Clark.

Hon berättar att hon växte upp i Alexandria i Virginia, en liten bit utanför Washington DC.
  - Min far lirade piano och saxofon. Han spelade alltid jazz. Vi lyssnade på jazz, gospel, tidig rhythm and blues.
  Men Sharón Clark, född 1961, ville sjunga opera.
  - Men min lärare sade att jag hade en jazzröst, så det blev jazz som jag satsade på.
  Hon har gett ut flera plattor och sjunger allt från gospels till samba till jazz. Musikalisk inspiration hämtar hon från stjärnor som Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald och Doris Day.