Rebecca Martin profile picture

Rebecca Martin

THE GROWING SEASON in stores on August 12th 2008

About Me

I met Rebecca about ten years ago, sitting upstairs at a club with guitarist John Scofield and bass player Larry Grenadier. She and Larry were just married, or about to be…they couldn’t stop looking at each other. No one mentioned that Rebecca was a singer. They didn’t have to. It wasn’t just the soft lilt of her voice, but the way she held onto words for an extra beat and then let them tumble out in a rush of soft exclamations. Even when she was in the background, it was hard not to see her as being center stage.I found out more later. She had come down to New York from rural Maine and had a band called ONCE BLUE with singer guitarist Jesse Harris. Their album on EMI still sounds playful and timeless, as if Blossom Dearie had recorded with Steely Dan. But the confines of a band, even a casual one, was out of character for Rebecca, just as it would be out of character for Georgia O’Keefe, Amelia Earheart or Joni Mitchell. She moved out of the band the way you’d move out of an apartment that was too small or too noisy and moved into a new space.Rebecca’s first solo album THOROUGHFARE was filled with gorgeous melodies and songs that were mysterious and chilling, evocative of lost childhoods, lost loves, lost moments. Her voice had a new strength coupled with a new vulnerability, a letting go, that takes the songs beyond language into a place of half-remembered dreams coupled with the mineral fact of being alive in this life right now.A series of projects followed: an album of standards, MIDDLEHOPE, which the NY Times named one of the ten best jazz albums of 2002; a lovely album of her own songs, PEOPLE BEHAVE LIKE BALLADS; a collaboration with legendary drummer Paul Motian, that led to a fine cd, ON BROADWAY VOLUME 4 OR THE PARADOX OF CONTINUITY.At the same time, Rebecca began hosting songwriter evenings at her home, encouraging writers (solitary and cranky, at the best of times) to get together in a safe and nurturing environment to try out new material. Her living room was filled with people like Larry John McNally, Timothy Hill and Frank Tedesso, and the air was filled with songs that were still taking shape. Rebecca’s songs usually stole the show -- they had a quiet grace that made them stand out, not to mention a strength and power that belied their casual presentation. At first a melody would seem amorphous and random, until you’d realize that Rebecca was following an impulse, the way you’d follow a fish, twisting and turning through the waters, until she’d arrive at the very heart of a song.And now Rebecca has brought all of her strengths together for THE GROWING SEASON, an album I’ll be listening to for a long time. It’s an album of songs about motherhood, about living in the world, about living in your body and about living in your dreams. There is an effortlessness about it, buoyed by the lighter-than-air rhythms of drummer Brian Blade, the supple rightness of Larry Grenadier’s beautiful bass, the otherworldly chordings of guitarist Kurt Rosenwinkel, all anchored by Rebecca’s elegant songs and smoky, generous voice and guitar work.Listen…..Brian Cullman May 2008

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 2/11/2006
Band Website: rebeccamartin.com
Influences: Larry and Charlie Grenadier, Mark Turner, Jeff Ballard, Bill McHenry, Dexter Gordan, Billy Higgins, Charles Lloyd, Dorothy Darr, David Cronenberg, Tom Hulce, Bill Stewart, Steve Cardenas, Alan Watts, Ben Monder, Henry Miller, Kenny Wollesen, Marlon Browden, Pete Rende, Sidsel Endreson, Chris Difford, June Christy, Joni Mitchell, Duke Ellington, Rickie Lee Jones, Jorge Rossy, Guillermo Klein, Turley wines, Black and White Truffles, Italy, Ben Ratliff, Paul Motian, The Village Vanguard, Jennifer Gilson, Toninho Horta, May Sarton, PJ Harvey, A Tribe Called Quest, Jenny Laden, Orvieto, Kirsten Coppolo, Bill Murray, my Acadian heritage, Cole Porter, Gary Karr, Marc Johnson, Andrew Hill, Herbie Hancock, Paul Chambers, Documentary Films, Bill Frisell, ECM, Il Cena Cola, Musicians who create opportunities for other musicians. Those who know, respect and teach all that is historic. Animals. Our elders. Home.Get to know your local elected officials and become involved in your community. You have a great deal of power as a constituent.
Sounds Like:
Record Label: Sunnyside
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

The Right To Vote

Primary Elections occur tomorrow in Kingston. I've been very active in local politics - and with the decline in voter turn-out here, and everywhere, I thought it would be helpful to share a brief hist...
Posted by Rebecca Martin on Tue, 18 Sep 2007 09:33:00 PST

’The Growing Season’

I've finished the basic tracks of a new record called 'The Growing Season'. It's all original music that Kurt Rosenwinkel produced. It features Kurt, Larry Grenadier and Brian Blade. Still more to do....
Posted by Rebecca Martin on Tue, 18 Sep 2007 09:24:00 PST