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Jenny Scheinman: Unfurling One's Wings

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By: Dennis Cook





Jenny Scheinman by Michael Wilson


It's hard not to fall in love with Jenny Scheinman. The violinist's raw talent, boundless creativity and ability to dovetail with a startling range of musicians and styles marks her as a singular talent. But there's an X-factor to Scheinman's appeal, a wondrous undercurrent that reminds one why music matters, why it stirs us to tears and laughter, why we hold it close to our chest and let it whisper in long shadows of our lives. Scheinman taps into all the bright and heavy things of this world and channels them through her instrument and her thoughtful, adventurous compositions. While perhaps not a household name to Joe Six-Pack, Scheinman is a go-to player for the likes of Bill Frisell, Lucinda Williams, Norah Jones, Danny Barnes, Madeleine Peyroux, John Zorn and she's currently on tour with country great Rodney Crowell.



Her status in the music industry would be secured purely as a master session musician and side person but her intellect and terrifically searching nature have increasingly found her carving out her own space in the great canon. In 2008, she released two amazing albums, the instrumental Crossing The Field (currently available digitally and out on CD on October 14 through Koch Records), and her debut vocal release, Jenny Scheinman, where she mingles her own tunes with Jimmy Reed, Tom Waits, Mississippi John Hurt and a stunning read of Lucinda Williams' “King of Hearts." What's revealed in the vast spaces covered by this pair of albums is the blossoming of the great musicians of our times. While a loaded thing to say about any player, Scheinman reaffirms that notion again and again, and her legions of top flight musician fans only grows year after year.



“It takes quite a lot of discipline to limit the possible. I'd have to work a lot harder not to have that scope. I'm always amazed at how musicians are able to limit themselves. This is just my whole life out on two records, but it wasn't intentional," says Scheinman. “I didn't realize they'd both be done at the same time but when I found out I was thrilled. It poses the questions, 'What is an American musician? What are musicians now after growing up in an era when almost anything was available to listen to?' This is more and more the case with the Internet. There's been so many influences in my ear, so all this stuff just comes out."



Jenny Scheinman by Wendy Andringa


“You can't expect everybody to like everything, and nobody's wrong for not liking or liking something; it's just a matter of taste. I just try to follow my ear, and it led me to these two records. There's a whole group of people that don't even like vocals, and the reverse, too. I sometimes play a vocal show and the jazz Nazis come and ask, 'When are you going to play your instrumental music again?' And definitely the reverse when I'm playing a jazz show! People are longing for the clarity and impact of a song with words," continues Scheinman. “So, it's been a fun social experiment to do both in the same town, often for the same audience. I'm really impressed and heartened by how people like both. I have no expectations that many people will like both. Either it's a sign that the music is connected and related in a deeper way than by category and bin and genre, or it's just a sign that peoples' ears are open, and if delivered honestly people respond to music."



Both albums very welcoming, and like the artist behind them, they aren't hard records to fall for, though they couldn't be more different from one another in many ways. A subliminal bond occurs through a number of musicians that play on both releases, including Frisell, bassist Tim Luntzel and drummer Kenny Wollesen.



“The personnel is similar, which is a sign that this community of players shares this love of a broad range of music. It's not just me, it's not just some loony in Brooklyn that came from a small town and grew up on cowboy music. It's a movement, I think, as evidenced by the two records," says Scheinman, whose latest material is expressly melodic but has dabbled in more avant sounds, getting downright out there, which she loves. “Some of the gigs I've done with Nels [Cline] have been just my favorite. Being able to tangle and unify with somebody like that is pretty thrilling. I think my next record will be with Nels, Jim Black [drums] and Todd Sickafoose [bass], which is a band I toured last year with my music. Nels is after the ecstasy; he's a very sentimental player. If my records sound sentimental in a literal way - because of the melodicism and lyricism of it - his are sentimental purely on an energy level. I don't mean sentimental in any sort of romantic love scene in a movie way. It comes from a very deep sentiment, and he's after something ecstatic."











 
I'm not adherent to any particular idea of spirituality, but music is definitely magic and spiritual and a gift you're giving back to something. Because we don't make it up; we couldn't, it's too good for humans to have come up with.

-Jenny Scheinman

 





Crossing The Field finds her working with a full string section, brass and more in service of twelve compositions that hold their own against the one guest composer in the bunch, Duke Ellington. Her eloquence and sense of play echo Ellington's own, and Scheinman is one of the few instrumental musicians extending Ellington's creative line. She shows equal boldness on her vocal record, where she sings for the first time in the studio and puts her originals up against very strong cover material



Jenny Scheinman by Michael Wilson


“That was a very brave idea [laughs]. Basically, I was picking my favorite songs from my entire life - from my family and playing with singers - and I picked ones that I wouldn't be here without. To add originals to that I really had to be confident about them; I hope they match," offers Scheinman, who's assembled a very full, very together song cycle that carries the listener along on her personal journey. “I put a lot of energy into sequencing. To be honest, I'm sequencing after I've written two songs for a twelve song record. I think, 'If I have these songs, what other flavor am I craving now?' I'm trying to create a good story. I don't put all the good ones up front, and if they aren't all favorites I don't have a record."



The vocal album begins with Bob Dylan's inspired arrangement of the traditional “I Was Young When I Left Home" further elevated by Scheinman's immediately captivating voice - a warm, natural and wholly musical thing - and then goosed nicely by the following track, “Come On Down," a road dust kickin' rocker penned by Scheinman. It's not a tune even longtime fans likely saw coming but she's a natural electric blues-rock queen.



“Someone came up with a good phrase for it, 'a mystic rocker,' and I feel like they really got it. It is about God and sex, which is rock 'n' roll, at its best. It's the subject matter of the tune as well as the feel," says Scheinman, who often asks questions of the listener, stirring debate in what is often a one-sided conversation. It is part and parcel of her gift for engagement, a tactile reach within her music that draws one closer, whether she's singing or playing her instrument. “Songwriting is so intuitive that I'm not thinking strategy. I just wait till I feel like I have a song. But, I'm sure you're right. When Lucinda [Williams] or Dylan asks a question it's interesting in the context of the music because there's not a silence after the question; there's still music and the audience is there really responding in some way. I've written a bunch more songs, and my next [vocal] record will have to be all originals I think. And a couple of my new songs do have questions as their main theme. One goes, 'When you gonna pack your suitcase and run, run, run away from me? When you gonna give your final farewell?' and there's “Who's gonna get your money when you're gone? Who's gonna have your children if you don't?'"



The vocal release weaves the music with the lyrics, the meaning and mood marbled together, notably on “The Green," which possesses incredible sensitivity on every level.



Jenny Scheinman by Michael Wilson


“There's a moment near the end where I always get this sort of out-of-body experience. I'm talking about 'The Green,' which I never really defined. When [guitarist/producer Tony Scherr] plays this response to the line, 'The green will take her some time or another,' he plays this ascending, blurry, angelic thing that disappears into the stratosphere. And it really is the ascending of a soul or something really spiritual, and it made me understand that word in a very deep way. We write things that we don't know how to fully explain, and he explained it the best way possible, with music, without words."



This spiritual element resides in the ground water of Scheinman's work in total. There's a soulful bent to her playing and composition that's much more effective and moving than the majority of what's delivered from most pulpits.



“I'm not adherent to any particular idea of spirituality, but music is definitely magic and spiritual and a gift you're giving back to something. Because we don't make it up; we couldn't, it's too good for humans to have come up with. Like we can't make plants; they're too beautiful and genius. And if you just give this gift back it gets deep and transcendent," says Scheinman. “That's what everybody is trying to do. There's nothing new about that idea, but I've been blessed to work with players that are going after something beyond human. It's a miraculous event to go to a concert and be moved with a bunch of strangers by a bunch of strangers onstage either singing about something or just playing something that has emotions you can connect with intimately."

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