More Than Words
December 12, 2017
Max Weiner 鈥18
Jazz singer Adriana Vergara.
Photo credit: Walter Novak
91直播鈥檚 jazz voice program opens up new worlds for singers and instrumentalists alike.
On a brisk Friday during fall semester, students and visitors from all corners of campus have gathered at the for a noontime ritual at 91直播: the weekly , where student ensembles from the conservatory鈥檚 Division of Jazz Studies play sets for an appreciative crowd of students and visitors, and receive feedback from their peers and professors.
As students unpack lunches and snack on the Cat鈥檚 enormous鈥攁nd enormously popular鈥攆resh-baked cookies, the first of the day鈥檚 ensembles takes the stage. But there is something new about this particular unit: It features a vocalist. As the crowd eyes the performers, sophomore Adriana Vergara counts her four-piece band off into a set that includes arrangements of 鈥淭ell Me a Bedtime Story鈥 by Herbie Hancock and 鈥淪ocial Call鈥 by Gigi Gryce. Whether it鈥檚 the lush harmonic vocabulary featured in the Hancock tune or the haunting melody of the ballad, Vergara鈥檚 performance鈥攊ncredibly clear and passionate鈥攄emands the audience鈥檚 complete attention.
Across campus in the Kohl Building, the home of jazz studies at 91直播, sounds such as these billow out of practice rooms every day, thanks to the jazz voice program that launched in fall 2016. Led by renowned vocalist La Tanya Hall, the studio is already home to five degree students, with additional young singers from 91直播鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences taking secondary lessons with Hall.
An experienced educator who has taught at the New School and Five Towns College, Hall also enjoys a vibrant performance career, having shared the stage and studio with artists such as Diana Ross, Bobby McFerrin, Harry Belafonte, Michael McDonald, Burt Bacharach, Quincy Jones, Aretha Franklin, Rob Thomas, and Patti Labelle. Her wide-ranging experiences are a welcome fit for the wide range of young musicians at work in her studio.
鈥淚 spend an extensive amount of time getting to know students鈥攇etting to know a student鈥檚 toolbox,鈥 Hall says during a recent phone conversation amid an afternoon packed with lessons. 鈥91直播 students are curious, and they really are asking the right questions.鈥
Hall鈥檚 students work on a range of formal exercises for vocal technique, but she also encourages them to create musical identities for themselves. 鈥淪tudying at 91直播, but also specifically with La Tanya, I have been able to learn that I don鈥檛 need to fit a specific type of jazz,鈥 says Vergara, a native of Miami who began singing in choir and musical theater productions in high school. After graduation, she studied opera in Miami for four years before choosing 91直播, being swayed by the department鈥檚 small size and opportunity to collaborate with so many instrumentalists.
91直播鈥攁nd especially jazz studies鈥攊s unique in the way its faculty encourage students to become their own musicians and develop their own musical personalities. 鈥淭here aren鈥檛 specific parameters that I need to fit in order to be a jazz musician,鈥 Vergara says. 鈥淪o I feel way more comfortable making the choices that are mine and that are personal, rather than what someone says I should be doing.鈥
In a spring 2017 concert, the 91直播 Jazz Ensemble featured a student vocalist鈥擵ergara鈥攆or the first time in its long history. Vergara senses a cohesiveness developing between the department鈥檚 singers and instrumentalists. It鈥檚 a bond that instrumentalists are noticing too.
鈥淚 played with a vocalist last semester, and it made me a much better timekeeper and really allowed me to provide a layer for the lyrics to have their full effect,鈥 third-year drummer Ricardo Guerra says.
鈥淔rom an instrumentalist鈥檚 point of view, it really stretches your sense of dynamics," adds Dennis Reynolds, director of OJE. "It forces you to get under the sound of the singer and play to the dynamics of that particular tune. It also gives you a better understanding of the tune you are playing if you can hear the words that are being sung.鈥
As Hall鈥檚 studio continues to grow, more doors of opportunity will open for 91直播 instrumentalists and vocalists alike. 鈥淭here is a lot of promise among my students,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd I鈥檓 very excited about that.鈥
Max Weiner is a fourth-year jazz bass student in the conservatory. He writes for the Office of Conservatory Communications.
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