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cover of episode Cécile McLorin Salvant Performs Live In-Studio

Cécile McLorin Salvant Performs Live In-Studio

2025/5/23
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The New Yorker Radio Hour

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David Remnick: Cecile McLaurin-Salvant的音乐风格非常独特,融合了多种元素,总能给人带来惊喜。她的选曲范围非常广泛,既包括像Barbra Streisand那样广为人知的歌曲,也包括一些鲜为人知的古老歌曲。我对她的表演总是感到惊喜,并好奇她是如何做出选曲决定的。 Cecile McLaurin-Salvant: 我希望我的表演能给观众带来惊喜,我在选择歌曲和与音乐家合作时,都非常注重这一点。我喜欢通过歌声与他人交流,分享故事和秘密。我觉得自己像一个电台DJ或策展人,想为听众制作一张只有冷门歌曲的混音带。我想找到那些不为人知但我们可能会爱上的歌曲。我选择演唱《Don't Rain on My Parade》这首歌,是因为它充满了乐观和力量。

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This chapter introduces Cécile McLorin Salvant, a jazz singer praised by Wynton Marsalis as a rare talent. Her performances are eclectic, spanning various eras and musical styles, often surprising audiences with unexpected song choices. The chapter highlights her unique approach to selecting and performing songs.
  • Wynton Marsalis called Cécile McLorin Salvant a once-in-a-generation talent.
  • Her repertoire includes a wide range of songs from various eras and cultures.
  • She is known for surprising audiences with her song selections.

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This episode is brought to you by Progressive Insurance. Do you ever find yourself playing the budgeting game? Well, with the Name Your Price tool from Progressive, you can find options that fit your budget and potentially lower your bills. Try it at Progressive.com. Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and Affiliates. Price and coverage match limited by state law. Not available in all states. This is the New Yorker Radio Hour, a co-production of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker.

This is the New Yorker Radio Hour. I'm David Remnick.

are completely her own. A standard from the American songbook might be followed by a tune from hundreds of years ago in Across an Ocean. I once went to see her expecting, you know, How High the Moon. But the first thing out of her was a century-old murder ballad. And it lasted about a half an hour long. Wynton Marsalis called her the kind of talent who comes along only once in a generation or two.

Cecile McLaurin-Salvant is performing at jazz festivals all over the country this summer. I got a chance to talk with her last summer, and she came to perform at our studio at WNYC. Right, sir. Ooh, life is juicy, juicy, and you see, I've got to take my bite, sir.

Get ready for me love, 'cause I'm a comer I've simply got to march, my heart's a drummer Don't bring around the cloud to rain on my parade

I'm gonna live and live now. Get what I want, I know how. One roll for the whole shebang. One throw, that bell will go clang. Eye on the target and wham. One shot, one gunshot and bam. Hey, Mr. Four, he

And if I'm fanned out, your turn.

I'm a drummer. Nobody, no, nobody is gonna rain. I'm a drummer.

Oh, man. I don't know what I did there. Wow. I am so excited to have you here today. And I have gone to see you at any number of places around New York and just and not enough because every time I go, I leave so happy and so surprised by what you've decided to sting on a given night. What goes into those decisions?

It's very nice to hear you say that you're surprised because that's my first priority, I think. I just love to be surprised in life in general by people, by the musicians I play with, by myself. That's huge for me when I'm looking for songs or listening to songs.

and even just as a fan of art and artists. Well, this song is so associated with one singer in particular, maybe Barbra Streisand, and you take it on head on. Then on another night, I'll go see you, and you're singing, I don't know how many verses that was. We were just discussing this before we came in. It must have been a 40-verse long blues song that no one had probably heard.

Yeah, I did. I think it was like a half an hour long. It was a half an hour long blues called Murder Ballad that Jelly Roll Morton did for Library of Congress years ago. Let me tell you one of the things that I've said. This woman who murders her boyfriend's lover and then goes to prison and dies.

There's a lot of profanity, and I had always wanted to sing it. So I sat on it for 10 years thinking, where could I ever possibly do it and who would I do it with? And then I had a Valentine's Day concert at Jazz at Lincoln Center, and I thought, wouldn't that be for date night? Wouldn't that just be great? A date night with a little murder involved. Yeah. Well, let's start from the beginning. You grew up where? I grew up in Miami, Florida.

And what were you listening to at home and who was filling the home with music?

I was listening to whatever my mom was listening to, and she loves everything. Cesaria Evora from Cape Verde. We were listening to Yusun Dour from Senegal. We were listening to Los Tres Paraguayos, which is like Paraguayan folk music. We were listening to French music. We were listening to some jazz, mostly Sarah Vaughan, a little bit of Nancy Wilson, Gladys Knight.

Aretha Franklin. We were listening to folk music, some bluegrass. I could go on and on, actually. A lot of Brazilian music. And that's all due to your mother. She has a huge, wide ear. And she traveled a lot in her childhood. And I think she brought back those travels in some way or that traveling sort of feeling. Where did she grow up?

She grew up in Tunisia. She lived throughout Africa. She lived in Senegal. She lived in Cuba. She lived in Dominican Republic. She lived in Honduras, in Haiti. And what was the lingua franca at home? English, French, or both? Franca. It was Franca. It was French. It was French at home. Yeah. From what I understand, in fact, from a profile in The New Yorker some years ago, there was a time when you were a kid, you thought you were going to study law.

Not so much when I was a kid. It was more after high school. I really didn't know what to do and...

There was this political science prep school in this small town in France. My cousin was going. They had a law option, like first year law. In a beautiful place in Aix-en-Provence. In Aix-en-Provence. And so I said, oh, why not? What a good deal. It was a great deal. My cousin was there. I, you know, I like, I've always liked school. So off you go as a teenager to the south of France to study law, politics, history, and then something happened. Yeah.

I always studied music alongside my other school activities. Did you play an instrument?

Piano. And you were playing classical, jazz, everything. I guess I was playing classical, but I was not really playing much. I was not practicing. I had to be bribed every week with donuts to go to class, to go to piano class. I just didn't like it. But I did it for 15 years. And singing? Singing, I...

It's funny. I think singing for me is so social. I don't sing when I'm alone or I sing very rarely when I'm alone. Not in the shower? Not so much. Walking down the street? No, no, no. It's very social. It's very communicative. It's about being with other people and telling them a story or telling them a secret. So while you're studying in France, at a certain point you start performing as a singer. Yes.

With a jazz quintet. How did that happen? And how did you have the skills and the nerve to do that all of a sudden? It was really my teacher at the music school, Jean-Francois Bonnel. I had sung for him a Sarah Vaughan song. He was adamant that I join the jazz class. I was probably the only native English speaker there. So maybe it gave me a little bit of an edge with singing these standards.

And he was just like, I got us a gig. We're doing a show within like two months of me starting in his class. And it was in a small jazz club. It was a tiny jazz club in Aix-en-Provence with like five people in the audience. But it was horrifying. Tell me about the first night. What'd you sing? I sang It's Only a Paper Moon. Say it's only a paper moon Sailing over a cardboard sea

I sang Body and Soul. I sang Lover Man. I sang You're Just Too Marvelous for Words. In my best and most intense Ella Fitzgerald impression, mixed with some Sarah Vaughan. You're just too

Too marvelous, too marvelous for words like... So I get the feeling that you're, at a certain point early on, you're kind of like a magpie of different styles and voices that your teacher is giving you stacks of CDs to listen to. And one week it's Sarah Vaughan Week, and one week it's Ella Fitzgerald or Billie Holiday or whomever. This is all coming in as kind of information that...

And none of them wins out. You don't become an imitator of any one of them, do you think? I think as I go through the phase with whoever it is, I am trying to sing as best I can like them. I think that's what was happening. But I was failing. You can never really sing like someone. So the failing is becoming yourself. The failing is becoming yourself, yeah. And it's interesting, like the singers that he had me listen to,

Yes, there were those big ones, the famous ones. But what was more interesting was all of the music by people that are completely unknown or not celebrated enough. People like Lil Hart and Armstrong. If you're doing a Lil Hart and Armstrong imitation, no one's going to really know because they don't know who she is, unfortunately. Now, my sources tell me that the song you're going to do next is...

pretty radically different. It's called Can She Excuse My Wrongs? Oh, I would love to talk about this. I want to know everything about it. It was written by an English musician who was born in the 16th century, John Dowland. Tell me about the song. The lyric is attributed to this man named Robert Devereaux. The music is John Dowland. Robert Devereaux, Earl of Essex, who was Queen Elizabeth's, Elizabeth I's favorite, or one of her favorite's

And it's an interesting lyric because he talks about his desire and the desire can be read two ways as a desire for her or a desire for power. And what happened to the Earl of Essex is that he was found out in a plot against her and was then killed. I mean, like executed by the queen for plotting against her.

And the song basically is, it's just, everything is there. Now, how did you learn about this song? Flipping around on Spotify? Yeah.

Car radio? What? I was taking lute lessons years ago. I thought that I would maybe learn a little bit of lute just for fun. And this is like a very, this is like a classic. This is a standard classic. This is Don't Rain on My Parade. In the 16th century. In the 16th century. Lute. That's what they were playing at the Vanguard in the 16th century. Exactly. Exactly. He says, better a thousand times to die.

Then for to live thus still tormented. Dear, but remember it was I who for thy sake did die contented. And he does die. It's crazy. Well, let's give it a go. Okay. Let's see if I remember. Can she excuse my wrongs with virtues close? Shall I call her good when she proves unkind? Are those clear fires which vanish into smoke?

Must I praise the leaves when no fruit I find? Oh, know where shadows do for bodies stand. Thou mayst be abused if thy sight be dim. Cold love is like two words written on sand, Or two bubbles which on the water swim.

Will thou be thus abused still, seeing that she will right thee never? If thou canst not overcome her will, thy love will be thus fruitless ever. Will thou be thus abused still, knowing that she will right thee never? No, but remember it was I who for thy sake did thy contented.

Was I so base that I might not aspire unto those high joys which she holds from me? As they are high, so high is my desire. If she this deny, what can granted be?

If she will yield to that which reason is, it is reason's will that love should be just. Dear, make me happy still by granting this, or cut off delays that if I die must.

Better a thousand times to die than for to live the still tormented, dear, but remember it was I who for thy sake did die contented. Better a thousand times to die knowing that she will write me never, dear, but remember it was I who for thy sake did die contented.

Better a thousand times to die than for to live the still tormented dear. But remember it was I who for thy sake did die contented.

I screwed up some lyrics. We're good. Okay, this is what happens after each song? The recriminations begin? In the studio? You screwed something up? In the studio, always. I was, it was, it's funny enough. I'm speaking with the extraordinary singer Cecile McLaurin-Salvant, a three-time Grammy winner for Best Jazz Vocal Album, and Sullivan Fortner accompanies her on piano. Our conversation continues in just a moment. This is the New Yorker Radio Hour.

WNYC Studios is supported by Focus Features and Indian Paintbrushes, The Phoenician Scheme, an epic comedy adventure from Wes Anderson, the director of Grand Budapest Hotel and Asteroid City, and starring Benicio Del Toro, Mia Threeperton, Michael Cera, Tom Hanks, Scarlett Johansson, and Jeffrey Wright.

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Don't miss The Phoenician Scheme, rated PG-13, in select theaters in New York and Los Angeles, May 30th, everywhere June 6th. It might be enticing to try and sleep through the next four years, but if you're wondering how to survive a second Trump term while staying fully conscious, Pod Save America is here to help you process what's happening now and what comes next. I'm Jon Favreau and Tommy Vitor, Jon Lovett and Dan Pfeiffer and I wade hip deep into the week's political news and fish out some political analysis you can trust.

Yes, Tommy's shoes get ruined. Yes, he'll do it again tomorrow because the endeavor is worth it. And so is your sanity. Tune into Pod Save America wherever you get your podcasts and on YouTube. This is the New Yorker Radio Hour. I'm David Remnick, and I've been speaking today with the singer Cecile McLaurin-Selvan. She's emerged as one of the great jazz artists of her generation. I interviewed in this room, in this studio at WNYC years ago, Rhiannon Giddens.

And she, to me, she does a lot of things, but she does two things at once in the sense that she's a great performer, but there's an element of her that she's also a scholar. She's a musicologist. She is an evangelist for all kinds of music.

It seems to me with different music, you're doing a similar thing that Rihanna and Giddens does, is that you're introducing all kinds of things to the stage. You're not just, of course you do standards and Broadway show tunes and things that we associate in our minds with what Sarah Vaughan did or Ella Fitzgerald. But so many other things are on your mind to give us.

It's funny you mention her. Rhiannon Giddens is somebody who I have to thank so much for a lot. I first heard about her through Carolina Chocolate Drops. Her first band. Her first band.

And it felt affirming in a way as somebody who had always loved that music but thought, oh, this is just some white music that I like. Much like the grunge is white music that I like. And then realizing through her in large part that, no, this is not just white music. This is actually music that originated with black folks and with a mixture of

So she's huge to me. I actually sing one of her songs in my shows. Which one is that? It's called Build a House. Oh, yeah. I love that song. But do you feel that you have that in mind, too, that there's a...

It ain't just by chance that there's a project that you're building over time of introducing certain kinds of music to your audiences, whether it's in French or it's in English. I think I have the spirit of like a kind of a radio DJ slash curator. Like I want...

It's almost like making a mixtape for someone and only putting deep cuts. That's sort of how I feel a lot of times. If someone is to ask, oh, can you do a Cole Porter tribute? I'll be like, okay, sure, I'll do a Cole Porter tribute. But I want to find the gems that haven't been...

sung and sung and sung over and over again and that we might love and fall in love with. And yet we began our conversation or your being here with Don't Rain on My Parade. Yeah. Huge, huge hit. Why do you want to do something that's so familiar and so associated with one singer? You know, a lot of the decisions are very intuitive decisions.

But that song for me is not about the fact that it's associated with Barbra Streisand. It's just such an optimistic kind of... Make them happy. Yeah. And also she's just like so strong in that lyric. It's not enough that you sing across the centuries and so beautifully. You also write extraordinary songs. Oh, thank you. Tell me about the beginning of...

songwriting and how you went about it and what you were after. I first started writing songs, well, I think as a kid I wrote one song in my own invented language with my cousin. Can you sing it? And how old were you?

Who knows? Did you have a sense of what the lyrics meant? Maybe at the time we knew what it meant. Now I don't know what it means. Lost to the mists of time. Lost, yes. And I heard Abby Lincoln. I heard an album of hers called Holy Earth. And it made me want to write. The earth's a mural seen from way up high. Abstracted natural heat. Witness from the sky.

The very first song I wrote or that I remember writing is a song called Woman Child. That was the title track of my second album. And then, yeah, ever since then I've been writing. And you're writing them with the piano, with not the lute. Not the lute, not yet. I'm writing with the piano. Why do I have a feeling that that's coming? No, no, no, no. With the piano and with a window. I like to look out a window. How do you spend your days?

A long walk, a lot of writing in the morning, and then eventually get to the piano at some point, and then embroidery, a lot of embroidery. It's a lot of alone time. Yes. And how does that inform the music? Wow, that's a great question. It is very introspective music, and it is music about solitude, a lot of it, about solitude, about yearning. Yeah.

About desire. And I think all of those feelings are clearly coming from the fact that it's so much alone time, which I need. I think I may be pressing my luck, but I'm hoping you'll sing Moon Song, which is on the album Ghost Song from, I think, two years ago. Tell me about the song before we hear it. It's a song I wrote about wanting to want something.

And loving that feeling of desire and that feeling of before, before the big thing happens. And almost not wanting the big thing to happen, just wanting to be in that, in that prelude of it. Because that's where all the excitement is. Being far away from the object of affection and looking at them longingly.

So different than a 16th century lute-based song. Maybe exactly the same as a 16th century. Maybe it's exactly, can she excuse my wrongs? Yeah, they had desire in the 16th century. Okay. If you should love me, don't ever tell me. Show it, that's how I'll know it. In fact, it's better not to show me at all.

Let me pine, me yearn. Let me crawl, me write you a song. And long to belong to you. Write you a song from a distance. Let me love you like I'm the moon. Let me love you like I'm

I want to thank you so much for being here. Thank you. Thanks for having me. This was great. Thanks for having both of us. Cecile McLaurin-Salvan joined me in the studio at WNYC in May of last year, along with the pianist Sullivan Fortner. She's playing at the Spoleto Festival in South Carolina this week, and later this summer she'll be at the Newport Jazz Festival, the DC Jazz Festival, Springfield Jazz and Blues, and many other venues.

That's The New Yorker Radio Hour for today. Thanks for listening. See you next time.

This episode was produced by Max Balton, Adam Howard, David Krasnow, Jeffrey Masters, Louis Mitchell, Jared Paul, and Ursula Sommer. With guidance from Emily Botin and assistance from Michael May, David Gable, Alex Parrish, Victor Guan, and Alejandra Decat. The New Yorker Radio Hour is supported in part by the Cherena Endowment Fund.

Hey, it's Anna Sale, host of Death, Sex and Money, the show from Slate about the things we think about a lot and need to talk about more. Many of us have something going on behind closed doors. Like a listener we called Elizabeth, who told us she's a hoarder. I see mess beyond probably what most people think of when they think of mess. We'll work through it all together on Death, Sex and Money. Listen wherever you get podcasts.