Elisabeth Kontomanou profile picture

Elisabeth Kontomanou

Champagne for the band please!

About Me

"All the great singers I've been listening to, got so familiar and so close to me through the power of their art.I feel I know each one of them personaly.They are family.These wonderful spirits were able to fill the emptiness of my heart and soul and gave a meaning to my life."
E.K
Picture by
Philippe Lévy-Stab When people ask where I come from, I say I’m a child of the universe. I normally feel at home anywhere so long as I’m free to move around and explore! —Elisabeth Kontomanou
Back To My Groove is a major albeit hard won breakthrough for vocalist/composer Elisabeth Kontomanou. Born in France to a father from Guinea (West Africa) and a mother from Greece, Elisabeth has put it all on the line on this album. Nothing she has done before this equals what she has achieved here. This is more than a great singer singing great songs. This is literally life.
My new album revolves around personal things like my suffering in the past and my hopes for the future. There are old songs on it as well as more recent material. I’d say that unlike the last two albums I did, which featured covers of jazz classics, this album is simply a lot more personal. The songs I wrote for it tell the story of my life and while the episodes it touches on aren’t always funny, I think there’s an optimistic feel to things overall. —Elisabeth Kontomanou
Everything comes together wonderfully. The songs are more than head tunes. These are full compositions with sections and deep harmonies that move beyond one or two chord vamps. And the lyrics: so honest, so bold, so real. Autobiographical to the bone, on “What A Life” Elisabeth recalls a difficult childhood because she was different. That little vocal vamp at the end of the song giving evidence that she is past the pain and can talk about her scars without bitterness.
Listen to “Where I’m coming From.” It’s an essay. When she asks “was this on earth or some other planet / I haven’t figured this out yet,” man, I said: goddamn, this sister is going all the way there—“there” being the state of self identification of alienation and the realization that just maybe, as Sun Ra always said, just maybe we are not from here; after all here is such an alienating space. When she got to “wait for me out there, turn around to see where I’m coming from” I was utterly convinced: Elisabeth has crafted an seminal statement at a time when most female vocalists are just trying to get a pop hit.
And then the band takes off, exploring all the textures of fearlessly soaring into inner space. It’s collective improvisation at a level smooth jazz can never fathom. That’s a significant part of the total package; the band plays full out. They are not backing Elisabeth. They are accompanying her. Step for step. Significant in this regard is the sturdy foundation provided by long time musical cohort Thomas Bramerie on bass.
“Black Angel” is another burner but this time there are no lyrics, just sounds. Elisabeth’s voice chanting with a harp in the mix complementing Elisabeth’s opening. This sounds like something Pharoah was doing back in the seventies, especially because Sam Newsome on soprano saxophone is exquisite in both his timing and the texture of his notes counterpointing the beauty of Elisabeth’s gritty improvisations. This is cutting edge jazz, jazz of the rarest sort.
Then there is the ghostly “Late Cold Night.” Guitarist Marvin Sewell who has played with oodles of folk including Cassandra Wilson is all up, around and under this tune with those creepy obbligatos that are as sinister as a rattlesnake’s snare.
Elisabeth is no petite, cute, girly sounding ingénue. This is a full-voiced, full-bodied woman, fierce in her determination to make it as a jazz singer. On “Late Cold Night” Elisabeth is singing about New York City where she went to hone her craft. It used to be called paying dues.
You know, I left with a very negative image of the States, not of jazz. They’re two very different things. I’m planning to go back to New York, in fact, not necessarily to live there again, but to continue studying jazz. New York is where jazz is alive, where the people who inspire me are. New York is also where I experienced real poverty and misery, of course. I had to do all kinds of odd jobs to survive. I used to go and get food hand-outs at church, but I hung on in there and I always did my gigs come what may. I had this group back then, the Fort Green Project named after the local neighbourhood in Brooklyn where I was living at the time. They were a bunch of musician friends from Fort Green. I performed with them until I ran away from home with my kids and ended up living in a hostel for the homeless in Harlem. But no matter all the juggling I had to do - because the hostel closed early in the evening - I still managed to get out there and sing at night! —Elisabeth Kontomanou
What we have here is a success at communicating: hiding nothing, revealing all. Writing about more than romantic love—indeed as she declaims in “Late Cold Night”: “here there’s no romance / only one night stands if you get the chance.”
I’m not saying no one else has gone through this but I am saying I don’t hear many other people writing about their experiences at this level, without self pity, without melodrama or sentimental sensationalism. This is clear eyed introspection. Look at her on the cover of her album. She’s smiling. Smiling the survivor’s smile.
A mother of four roaming the entrails of New York City explaining to her children why it is so important that she be here, important enough that they will stay in a hostel for a few days until she can scrap the money together for rent. Smiling self determination. We are going to do this. Regardless. Regardless of whatever.
Check out “Summer.” The arrangement is rhythmically rich and I especially like how her son Gustav has arranged the strings. (Check that harp in the mix again.) Again, the strings are not there as a sweetener to make the music sound "pretty," indeed the strings are used here to give both weight and a rough hewn heft to a song that could easily have easily been a lightly skipping, frothy throwaway piece. And, for that matter, I also really dig the emphatic and inventive drumming of her other son, Donald Kontomanou.
Elisabeth is betting her life on her ability to not only survive but also to thrive in a world that doesn’t really give a damn about art, about serious music—if you can’t shake to it, if it don’t ring the cash register, what the crooks say: forget about it! Elisabeth refuses to disremember her own worth. Elisabeth helps us to remember that our souls should not be for sale.
“Peace On Earth” is the last song on the album. It is the prayer. She chants her “la-la-laaaa” and declares “peace to the world.” It’s a simple but not inconsequential song, simply well sung with a delightful and welcomingly vibrant joie de vivre.
This album has my vote for jazz album of the year. I know there are some other beautiful albums out there but for a vocalist/composer, a mother of four, a grown-ass woman to pull it all together and gift us with this powerful offering, this is an achievement of the highest order.
—Kalamu ya Salaam
150 concerts et une Victoire de la Musique décernée en 2006 séparent le succès de Waitin for Spring et son nouvel album, Back to my Groove, enregistré en décembre dernier (Sortie le 24 septembre 2007).
La Diva nous revient avec un album très personnel qui, comme le révèle son titre Back to my Groove, n’est autre qu’un certain regard de son passé. Dix années de rêve, d’espoir, d’émotion et de réflexion afin d’écrire textes et musiques de ces chansons empreintes de blues, de gospel et de soul...
Entourée des plus grands artistes français et américains, l’exceptionnelle chanteuse Elisabeth Kontomanou nous confie une partie de sa vie, et signe là un des plus beaux albums de la décennie. Un pur bonheur.

Auteur compositeur Elisabeth Kontomanou
Arrangements Gustav Karlström
Concert le 22 novembre 2007 au Casino de Paris
Pictures by Stephanie Vaughn

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 2/3/2007
Band Members:
Back to my groove Elisabeth Kontomanou vocals, lyrics and composition | Gustav Karlström arrangements and vocals | Orrin Evans piano | Marvin Sewell guitars | Sam Newsome soprano saxophone | Thomas Bramerie double-bass | Donald Kontomanou drums | Leon Parker percussions | Quatuor Elysée string quartet | Isabelle Olivier harp | Pierrick Pédron alto sax | David El Malek tenor sax | Daniel Zimmermann trombone | Yoann Loustalot trumpet
Moanin' low
Elisabeth Kontomanou voice - Laurent "Barloyed" Courthaliac piano
Influences:
Of Greek and African origin, singer Elisabeth Kontomanou has worked with musicians on both the European and American scenes: Leon Parker, Michel Legrand, Mike Stern,Jim Beard, Jon Hicks,Alain Jean-Marie and Toots Thielemans to name but a few. She first gained recognition at French ‘Concours de La Défense’ and was nominated for a Django d’Or Award in 1999. As well as performing across several continents, Elisabeth has also played at such world-renowned New York jazz venues as the Blue Note, Village Vanguard, Sweet Basil and the Knitting Factory. Not limited to purely musical endeavours, she has branched out to both musical cinema ("Masque de Lune" by Michel Legrand) and musical comedy ("Rag Time" in 2003).
Awarded "Best Jazz Vocalist of 2006" in France (Les Victoires du Jazz), Elisabeth reaches the peak of her art with her new album "Waitin' For Spring". Assisted by world-class players -- multi-Grammy winner John Scofield, outstanding soprano saxist Sam Newsome, brilliant French keyboarder Laurent Coq, Monk Competition winner Darryl Hall and young talent Donald Kontomanou --, she delivers vocal renditions totally fresh and yet deeply rooted in the tradition of classic jazz singing. A collection of attractive originals and indestructible standard songs -- among them Hebb's "Sunny", Distel's "Good Life", Mingus' "Duke Ellington's Sound of Love", Arlen's "I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues" and others --, this album presents a great jazz vocalist with an approach that is all her own. "You think of Billie Holiday, Cassandra Wilson, Edith Piaf… yet all the time of Elisabeth Kontomanou", La Terrasse (Paris) read. "She is on her way to becoming one of the great voices of the next decades" (Rap Mag).
Sounds Like: Click on a record to order: Back To My Groove 2007
"Back To My Groove"
Arrangements & Vocals - Gustav Karlström
Soprano - Sam Newsome
Piano - Orrin Evans
Guitar - Marvin Sewell
Double-bass - Thomas Bramerie
Drums - Donald Kontomanou
Percussion - Leon Parker
String-quartet - Quatuor Elysée
Harp - Isabelle Olivier
Horn section - Pierrick Pédron alto sax, David El Malek tenor sax,
Daniel Zimmermann trombone, Yoann Loustalot trumpet Compilation of Midnight sun & Waitin' for spring 2006 Waitin' For Spring 2005 "Waitin' For Spring" Soprano Sax - Sam Newsome Guitar - John Scofield
piano - Laurent Coq Bass - Darryl Hall Drums - Donald Kontomanou Midnight Sun 2004
"Midnight Sun"
Jean-Michel Pilc - piano
Thomas Bramerie - bass
Ali Jackson - drums
BOOKING GiantSteps
Record Label: Nocturne
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

Interview

Elisabeth KontomanouBack to Her GrooveParis  11/10/2007 -  "When people ask where I come from, I say I'm a child of the universe. I normally feel at home anywhere so long as I'm f...
Posted by Elisabeth Kontomanou on Thu, 14 Feb 2008 11:47:00 PST

Back to my groove Lyrics

Go to Back to my groove lyrics
Posted by Elisabeth Kontomanou on Mon, 31 Dec 2007 10:12:00 PST

Cadeau

Ce matin,j'ai recu ce magnifique cadeau que je voudrais partager avec vous.E.KDIVINE DIVA (à Elisabeth Kontomanou)L'enceinte se teinte et les oreilles de l'assistance se tendentLes instuments sans vi...
Posted by Elisabeth Kontomanou on Sat, 24 Nov 2007 07:26:00 PST