Jamie Leonhart: Press & Reviews
Jamie Leonhart
The Truth About Suffering
Jamie Leonhart's soulful voice carries The Truth About Suffering (her debut album), and the title couldn't more apt. The songs here see truthfully into the dark corners of the human spirit. There are no maudlin platitudes to be found on The Truth About Suffering, an album whose songs are lonely, intricate portraits of sadness and regret (yes, even in her cover of "Rainbow Connection"), as opposed to by-the-numbers expressions of knee-jerk angst. You get the impression that whatever Jamie Leonhart is professing here, there's a great deal more that she's not saying, like there's a long-harbored secret under the surface of every song. To maintain such a thing over the course of an album is no less than remarkable, which is exactly what The Truth About Suffering is as an album. Adam Goran
There’s been a recent trend in pop music of resurrecting a more evocative and more intellectually creative kind of diva, the likes of which we saw in artists of the early to mid-20th Century, such as Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday. Currently, Norah Jones and Feist are the most popular examples of this renewed musical artist, but there are also lesser known names that deserve just as much attention. One of these is Jamie Leonhart, a multi-talented musician from New York City whose debut album The Truth About Suffering shows why modern pop music doesn’t have to be built upon the foundations of hip-hop or rock.
In fact, it’s very reassuring to hear catchy pop tunes with a strong jazz influence. Jamie Leonhart shows that the so-called “old school” way of doing things is not as out of touch as one might assume it is. She crafts songs that are just as catchy as any tune you might hear on the radio, yet they sound much more unique due to the jazz blueprint from which they are crafted. I would also argue that this touch of jazz allows The Truth About Suffering to have a much wider range of creativity than many other pop albums.
The album’s title track is a perfect example of why Jamie Leonhart and her album stand out amongst their contemporaries. It is typical pop in its structure, but the implementation of that structure is unique. The song starts off with very gentle piano playing until it slowly builds towards the peak of the chorus where it adds the beginnings of an orchestra. The brass and woodwind instruments in the background create a more symphonic ambience that in turn produces a more moving listening experience. This wide variety of atypical instrumentation provides a very fresh perspective on the pop format and makes the song that much more engaging in this regard.
In fact, the whole album can be viewed in the terms I previously described: typical pop structure with a unique implementation. The technique varies from song to song. For example, there is a cover of “Rainbow Connection,” which we all remember being sung by Kermit the Frog (I could never figure out how a fake frog could be the voice behind such a great song). Anyway, Jamie Leonhart takes a very innovative approach to the tune. It has a very 60’s vibe to it as well as a semi-psychedelic quality evoked by the waltzy rhythm of the organ mixed with the rattling tambourine and the dreamy brass section. It certainly is an unexpected take on the song, one that I had to listen to a few times before I could admit to liking it due to stubborn devotion to habit. But this song does what a good cover should do in my opinion: it takes a great song that everyone knows and completely reinvents it into a completely different great song.
I highly suggest checking out The Truth About Suffering if you enjoy some variety in your pop music and if you want to support divas with a little more to offer in the talent department. Jamie Leonhart is not only a talented lyricist and a soulful vocalist, but she also plays the glockenspeil, the harmonium, the violin, the drums, and the melodica on this album. Shouldn’t someone like that be a lot more interesting than Paris Hilton?
Idiosyncratic singer-songwriters are so much in vogue right now that a free-thinking talent like Jamie Leonhart has a shot at mainstream crossover success. Leonhart's songs can be smart, whimsical or atmospheric, and her strong melodic sense and soulful feel can handle jazzy downtempo or folk-pop (imagine Feist, Laura Nyro and Corinne Bailey Rae on a bicycle built for three). Those who breathe heavily whenever Joanna Newsom strums her harp should note that Leonhart plays both the glockenspiel and the harmonium.
Some uninformed individuals who don't know much about jazz will claim that Joni Mitchell, Norah Jones, Nellie McKay, Leslie Feist and Tori Amos are all examples of full-time straight-ahead jazz singers. Not true--all of them are singer/songwriters who have worked primarily in pop-rock (although McKay's appealing live performances of Tin Pan Alley standards in clubs indicate that she is quite capable of singing jazz when she puts her mind to it). However, all of them have been influenced by jazz and/or cabaret and have used them to their artistic advantage, which is exactly what singer/songwriter Jamie Leonhart does on her first full-length album, The Truth About Suffering. This impressive effort is not straight-ahead jazz any more than Mitchell's Court and Spark or Jones' Come Away with Me are straight-ahead jazz; there is a major difference between what Leonhart does and what hardcore jazz vocalists like Kitty Margolis, Vanessa Rubin and Karrin Allyson have done. But there is no denying that jazz, cabaret and traditional pre-rock pop have had a very positive effect on the dusky pop-rock/adult alternative songs that Leonhart offers on this 57-minute CD. Leonhart brings an intriguing variety of influences to the table, ranging from Mitchell, Amos and Jones to Peggy Lee and Kurt Weill. There are, at times, hints of the Beatles on The Truth About Suffering; the Fab Four certainly did a lot to broaden and expand rock when they incorporated elements of cabaret, torch singing and English dance hall music, and Leonhart gives the impression that she is well aware of that fact. Leonhart wrote or co-wrote most of the material, which frequently has a way of being introspective, contemplative, melancholy and dreamy all at once. The Truth About Suffering, which was produced and arranged by her husband Michael Leonhart, is a consistently impressive outing from this New York City-based singer/songwriter.
Alex Henderson - All Music Guide (Feb 22, 2008)
Blurring the lines between genres, Jamie Leonhart combines her impressive vocal and lyrical talents, along with an extensive background in jazz, to create a peculiar jazz-pop blend that has earned her a good deal of praise. Leonhart will be performing at NYC's Joe's Pub on March 21.
The youngest of three musically inclined children, Jamie Leonhart began playing violin at the age of three. After 10 years of playing in various child orchestras, she discovered her vocal talents singing for a jazz ensemble. It was a discovery that prompted Leonhart to abandon her violin and fully embrace her potential as a vocalist. Following a four-year stint as part of Methuselah Jones, she broke off to start a solo career.
Jamie Leonhart's debut solo album, The Truth About Suffering, combines elements of jazz, pop and gospel to create a very unusual sound. Her clever and poetic lyrics make intimate and personal feelings universally relatable, feeding off the basic truths of the human condition.
As a vocalist, Leonhart's talent is undeniable: her range spans a full three and a half octaves, which allows her a great deal of freedom in crossing back and forth between genres. In keeping with the eclectic mix her music offers, Leonhart features a number of unusual instruments on her album including a glockenspiel, a harmonium and a mellotron, in addition to the typical jazz ensemble.
Sean Lyddon - Aquarian Weekly (Spotlight column) (Mar 26, 2008)
The Truth About Suffering
Sauf exception (Diana Krall), il est surtout demandé à la chanteuse de jazz d'aujourd'hui d'être d'abord un peu folk, un peu soul. Presque nouvelle venue - elle est « dans le métier » depuis une dizaine d'années -, Jamie Leonhart relève partiellement de cette catégorie. Mais The Thruth About Suffering, est bien plus expérimentateur, décalé, que la majorité des productions du genre. La voix de son interprète accroche bien au-delà de l'effet destiné à « séduire un large public en évitant d'être trop jazz ». Grâce aux arrangements sophistiqués du pianiste et trompettiste Michael Leonhart avec des vents peu usités (basson, hautbois, clarinettes, cor anglais...), cela donne une oeuvre dont les détails et l'originalité se révèlent d'écoute en écoute.
Sylvain Siclier - Le Monde (Mar 11, 2008)
This seems to be a new age of the "chanteuse," from k.d. lang to Norah Jones to Madeleine Peyroux. One of the finest to emerge in the current spate is Jamie Leonhart. Classically trained as a violinist, she brings a rich sense of and appreciation for styles from Tin Pan Alley to cabaret to rock. She's also a exceptionally fine songwriter, drinking from the inspirational fount of Jerome Kern, Cole Porter and Rogers & Hart, writing songs that are wonderful little vignettes, and drawing on the rich song structure and playful lyrical style that marked the best of Tin Pan Alley, including such touches as introductory verses.
Her CD "The Truth about Suffering" was produced and arranged by her husband Michael Leonhart, known for his trumpet work with Steely Dan, and a distinctive singer-songwriter in his own right. The arrangements can be intimate or playful, can evoke cabaret or at times hint at a slightly melancholy circus. Through it all, Ms. Leonhart's warm, charming vocals serve as the glue to hold this wonderful pastiche together.
George Graham, host of "Homegrown" - WVIA Radio (Aug 15, 2007)
Je suis Jamie Leonhart depuis un bon moment et je dois admettre que j'apprécie tout particulièrement son univers... et sa personnalité. Alors, je peux vous garantir que le jour ou j'ai appris que Jamie travaillait sur son nouvel album "The Truth About Suffering", mon impatience et ma curiosité furent immédiatement titillées... D'autant plus lorsque Jamie m'a indiqué qu'elle se dirigeait vers "more explorations, more risks..". Et quelle heureuse surprise, ce nouvel opus est effectivement assez différent, à la fois dans la continuité sans l'être.. Plus intime peut-être, plus profond sans doute, plus pointu c'est sur... Jamie a su se renouveler, étendre son univers pour le plus grand plaisir de nos oreilles... et de nos émotions. Une artiste, une vraie.
I’ve reviewed an ep by Jamie Leonhart and here’s her full-length debut. It includes songs from the ep and the jazzy feel is intact. I’d call it lounge music but it’s not just relaxed, it has real soul.
Opener Take Your Time is languid and has impeccable vocal.
Forward Motion from the ep is still great and could give Norah Jones a run for her money. Leonhart has wonderful phrasing and technique that makes her a natural for this kind of a song.
Rainbow Connection is a song from the Muppets, which fits right in and feels like a jazz standard from the forties.
The title song gives a lovelorn view of life, and Leonhart’s precision with her singing really works. The subtle instrumentation neither drowns nor overwhelms her, but works with her.
Jamie Leonhart’s debut is a class act all the way.
'Forward Motion' propels singer's career
Jazz vocalist makes first West Coast appearance
By Paul Freeman / Entertainment Writer
Great music pleases the ear in any setting. And New York jazz-soul-pop vocalist Jamie Leonhart is certain to captivate audiences this week at two University of California, San Francisco, locales: the library and Pub Lounge.
The spellbinding Leonhart will sing original tunes for 50 minutes at the noon concert. In addition to songs from her wonderful "Forward Motion" CD, she'll preview material from her upcoming album, due in June.
Leonhart be joined by her husband Michael, who will play the Wurlitzer. Leonhart will chime in on Indian harmonium, toy piano and glockenspiel. The two are not traveling with their bassist and drummer. But Jamie needs little accompaniment to mesmerize a crowd, especially in such an intimate setting.
"I'll exercise my quieter, more contemplative side in the library," she said, and added, "Maybe a little more of the bawdy, ironic side of me will come out in the pub."
During the longer pub set, Leonhart might include reconfigured standards, including songs penned by her inspirations, such as Laura Nyro or Elvis Costello. Michael might pull out his trumpet, an instrument he has played with such luminaries as Lenny Kravitz, Wynton Marsalis, Natalie Merchant, Mos Def and Joshua Redman. He also tours with Steely Dan.
Michael is a remarkably gifted and versatile musician. "Within his own music and as a producer and sideman in more contemporary, less jazz or brass section-oriented things, he has shown himself to be an amazing piano player, and even branches into multi-instrumental stuff, like guitar and bass. He's a vocalist, too," Leonhart said.
She and her husband met when he was playing music with some of her friends. The two subsequently teamed on various projects.
"We realized not only how much we enjoyed working together, but just spending time with each other," she said. And each grew musically through the interaction.
Trained as a classical violinist from age 3, Jamie had eclectic tastes that were expanded by her older siblings.
"My interests weren't genre-based. It came down to - was it good, interesting, thought-provoking?" she said.
Michael came from a jazz background, influenced by his mother Donna, a vocalist, and his father, a bassist.
"I got a lot more education about jazz being with him," Leonhart said, "and he about weird popular or fringe music from me."
While earning an English literature degree at Barnard College of Columbia University, New York, Jamie sang in local clubs and theaters. The first song she co-wrote won a prize in the first International John Lennon Songwriting Contest.
"I write the worst when I'm trying to write something that has rules to it," Leonhart said. "I write the best when I'm just trying to have fun and express and see what comes next ... and then editing will make it listenable."
She recorded with a band called Methuselah Jones, then performed as a soloist with the Metro Mass Gospel Choir at such prestigious venues as Carnegie Hall.
"I've been singing for a really long time and always had an easy time shifting to whatever vocal quality is needed for each genre," she said. "Hopping from something that requires an emo, no-vibrato, wispy kind of thing to a big R&B kind of thing to more of a jazz feel, it's helped me discover the little places in my voice or my writing that I want to blow up a little more.
"Whenever I'm working on other things, I pay close attention to what it's bringing out in me - maybe something I haven't discovered about myself yet - and see if I can put it authentically into my own writing and singing."
Leonhart's had similar experiences as a vocal coach. "A lot of times, I have these 'Aha!' moments, by witnessing someone else work through a struggle or making a discovery."
Gradually, Jamie has found the right musical direction, blending jazz, pop and cabaret into a style distinctly her own. Now it is just a matter of widening the public's awareness.
"There's such an ability now to get self-released and self-published music all over the Internet. It's wonderful that I have that ... but everyone else has that, too," she says, "So there's still the question of how do I get myself heard by an audience that's receptive, curious and hungry for my music?" She admits, "I'm not totally sure yet."
Her dates at UCSF, her first on the West Coast, are a good start. Leonhart hopes to tour more extensively when the new CD is released.
"What I love about performing is, whatever happens is unexpected and exciting. There's so much room to play with things."
Leonhart says, "I feel like I know more now where I want to go. I feel really connected to the music I'm writing, how I'm performing it and who I'm associating myself with as a performer. It's a really cool, interesting place to be, in this kind of new hybrid of music."
Jamie Leonhart’s ep is a very nice record. I’d say it’s a little bit loungey with some jazz thrown in. Her vocals are sassy and relaxed and the songs well arranged.
The title song sounds like something familiar, its jazzy tone is instantly likeable. "After the Rain" is a lovely song with a smoky late nite vibe to it. "Rainbow Connection" with its Hammond organ harks back to the sounds of the sixties. Peggy Lee might have sung it.
This ep is over way too soon. It’s addictive in its charming way. More, please.
Endless music tastes found on MySpace
JAMIE LEONHART
New York's pop/jazz singer extraordinaire Jamie Leonhart entrances with a silky, soulful elegance. Four of the six tracks from her breathtaking EP, "Forward Motion," can be previewed on her MySpace page. Her original numbers are beautifully crafted, offering intoxicating melodies and involving lyrics. Her brother (sic) Michael Leonhart, a prominent trumpeter/arranger, subtly helps make the songs magically magnetic. A touch of blues adds depth to the title track. The resplendent "After The Rain" resonates like a pop classic. "Simple Day" is simply sublime. She transforms the Muppets' "Rainbow Connection" into a cabaret tune that's simultaneously lovely and intriguingly off-kilter, with its darkly carnival-like organ. Leonhart, an amazing talent, hopes to be performing in the Bay Area early in 2007.
Jamie Leonhart : Forward motion
(a french review)
Quand on lui demande ce qui l'inspire, elle répond Gainsbourg ! Un bon point pour une new-yorkaise non ? Elle.. Elle s'appelle Jamie, Jamie Leonhart et son EP "Forward motion" illustre parfaitement son gout pour l'émotion et pour la bonne musique tout simplement... un univers jazzy-folky-pop arrangé à sa sauce (facon années 50 dit-elle). Jamie nous propose ainsi 6 titres très prometteurs.. au point qu'il ne faut que quelques mesures pour tomber sous le charme de la demoiselle... le charme de sa voix bien sur mais pas seulement.. Ecoutez plutot ! vous m'en direz des nouvelles..