Elana James
Elana James (born Elana Jaime Fremerman, October 21, 1970, Kansas City, MO) is an American songwriter, Western swing, folk and jazz violinist, vocalist, and a founding member of the band Hot Club of Cowtown.
Biography
James grew up in Prairie Village, Kansas, a suburb of Kansas City, Missouri, and began studying Suzuki violin at age four. Her mother, Susan, is a professional violinist who used to play in the Kansas City Symphony and her father, Marvin, ran a commercial recording studio and was the creative director and founder of an advertising agency in Kansas City.
James grew up riding her horse, April, and playing violin in Kansas before leaving for New York City at age 17. In 1992 she graduated cum laude with a B.A. in Comparative Religion from Barnard College, Columbia University, in New York (with a focus on Buddhism and Hinduism) while studying violin and viola at the Manhattan School of Music as a student of Lucie Robert and Karen Ritscher. She studied improvisation and swing fiddle with Marty Laster in New York City and studied Dhrupad, an early form of North Indian Classical music, with Pandit Vidhur Malik in Vrindavan, India.
James is a former managing editor of Tricycle: The Buddhist Review and a former editorial intern at Harper's Magazine. In the early 1990s she worked as a horse wrangler at the Home Ranch in Clark, Colorado where she also played fiddle in the ranch's cowboy band. James also worked occasionally as a packer and horse wrangler in the West Elk and La Garita Wilderness in Colorado in the mid-1990s, punctuated by brief stints in publishing in New York City. James is an alumnus of the Meadowmount School of Music, the New York Youth Symphony, the Columbia University Chamber Music Program, the New York String Orchestra Seminar with Alexander Schneider and the American Conservatory in Fontainebleau, France.
Musical career
Elana met guitarist Whit Smith in 1994 through an ad in the Village Voice while both were living in New York City. They played together for some years, later adding Jake Erwin, a slap bass player, and forming Hot Club of Cowtown. The group plays its own original material as well as a mix of pre-WWII Western swing, a style made famous by Bob Wills and Milton Brown, combined with the hot gypsy jazz of guitarist Django Reinhardt and violinist Stephane Grappelli. Other influences include American swing violinists Stuff Smith, Joe Venuti, and Johnny Gimble, to name a few. Hot Club of Cowtown, which has been based in Austin, Texas since 1998, is not named for any specific "Cowtown," and really just intended as state of mind, or "The Cowtown of the Imagination."
James toured with Bob Dylan in 2004, 2005, and 2006 (James came to Dylan's attention when The Hot Club of Cowtown, the Western swing trio she founded with Whit Smith, opened for him and Willie Nelson during a joint tour of historic baseball parks in the Summer of 2004). She briefly joined Dylan's band in 2005 on a tour with Merle Haggard, Bob Dylan, and Amos Lee, as the first dedicated female instrumentalist to play in Dylan's touring band since Scarlet Rivera in the early 1970s.
The Hot Club of Cowtown briefly separated in 2005. Around this time, Fremerman changed her name to Elana James and released her debut CD, Elana James, forming a trio called Elana James and the Continental Two, featuring Beau Sample (formerly of Cave Catt Sammy) on bass and Luke Hill, on guitar. She joined Dylan again in 2006 as his opening act on another historic ballparks tour also featuring Junior Brown and Jimmie Vaughan.[1]
From 2005 through 2008, James led her own trio, and also played from time to time with Cindy Cashdollar and Redd Volkaert in a trio known as the High Flyers, appearing on A Prairie Home Companion[2] [3] and in various clubs, especially in the Austin area. [4] During this time James also sat in with Heybale, a group including Redd Volkaert, Earl Poole Ball, Tom Lewis, Kevin Smith and Gary Claxton, with other musicians sitting in at different times, including Cindy Cashdollar and Erik Hokkanen.
In 2008 The Hot Club of Cowtown, with James, guitarist Whit Smith and bassist Jake Erwin re-formed, and has continued touring and recording. In 2008, the band released The Best of the Hot Club of Cowtown, followed by Wishful Thinking in 2009, and in 2011, a collection of Western swing songs made popular by legendary Texas bandleader Bob Wills, What Makes Bob Holler. The Hot Club of Cowtown's most recent album, "Rendezvous in Rhythm," (Gold Strike Records, 2013), is a collection of hot jazz standards and gypsy instrumentals performed acoustically, in the style of Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli. James continues to work seasonally in the back country in Montana, most recently in the Bob Marshall Wilderness as a wrangler and cook in 2014 and 2015. She also teaches private students in both Bozeman, Montana and Austin, Texas, leads fiddle workshops from time to time,[5] and has released an instructional video on fiddling and improvisation, Elana James's Hot Fiddle: Introduction to Violin Improvisation.[6]
James continues to tour and perform both under her own name and with Hot Club of Cowtown. In 2013 she was nominated in the Western Swing Female category for the first ever Ameripolitan Music Awards held in Austin, Texas. In February 2015 James was named Western Swing Female 2015 at the Ameripolitan Music Awards. In 2015 the Hot Club of Cowtown also won for Best Western Swing Group at the second annual Ameripolitan Music Awards at the Paramount Theater in Austin, Texas.
James's musical influences include Mildred Bailey, Kay Starr, Doris Day, Blossom Dearie, Peggy Lee, Frank Sinatra, Willie Nelson, Johnny Gimble, Frankie McWhorter, Stuff Smith, Joe Venuti, Bob Wills, Nat Cole, and Tchavolo and Dorado Schmitt.
James's second solo album, Black Beauty (Snarf, 2015), is a collection of eclectic folk and pop songs and original material. In a Wall Street Journal article including Black Beauty as one of "Six Retro Roots Albums to Jump Start Your Summer." Barry Mazor writes, "Ms. James is more a singing, swinging Grappelli- and Venuti-influenced violinist than a breakdown fiddler, which serves her well on this set. Her smooth, sweet string-vocal combination is applied—along with jazz piano here, steel guitar there—to material ranging from the Grateful Dead’s 'Ripple' to Goebel Reeves’s 'Hobo’s Lullaby' and the Peggy Lee/Benny Goodman 'All I Need Is You.' Genre distinctions collapse. The rootsier songs all become entries in the jazzy Great American Songbook."
Music columnist and blogger Bill Bentley (Bentley's Bandstand) wrote, "The way that Elana James balances her rural background with big city smarts for a rich and surprising sound is the real beauty of Black Beauty. Both influences are pervasive throughout each song, but their blend turns everything into a personal glimpse of what assimilation can be. There’s even a song that features a word-for-word final letter home to his wife from US Staff Sgt. Juan Campos, who died in Iraq in 2007. There hasn’t been anything quite like this before, and in putting it to music Elana James has shown the world a glimpse into eternal love. Forever."
James has been a featured guest on A Prairie Home Companion,[7][8] the Grand Ol' Opry, the Women in Jazz series at Jazz at Lincoln Center, and at festivals and concerts throughout the world, including the Glastonbury Festival in England, the Fuji Rock Festival in Japan, Australia’s East Coast Blues & Roots Music Festival, the Rochester Jazz Festival, Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival, the Kennedy Center Millennium Stage and the Cambridge Folk Festival. In 2004 she was inducted, with her Hot Club band mates, into the Texas Western Swing Hall of Fame. James has recorded with a wide array of folk, country, and Americana artists including Bob Dylan, Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Slaid Cleaves, Denny Freeman, Dave Stuckey, Eliza Gilkyson, Heybale, Tom Russell, The Hoyle Brothers, Kerry Polk, Beatroot, Bruce Anfinson, and many others.
Discography
Solo
- Elana James (2007)
- Elana James's "Hot Fiddle": Introduction to Violin Improvisation DVD (2011)
- Black Beauty (2015)
With The Hot Club of Cowtown
- Swingin' Stampede (1998) HighTone/Concord-Rounder
- Tall Tales (1999) HighTone/Concord-Rounder
- Dev'lish Mary (2000) HighTone/Concord-Rounder
- Hot Jazz (Japanese release, 2002) Buffalo
- Hot Western (Japanese release, 2002) Buffalo
- Ghost Train (2003) HighTone/Concord-Rounder
- Continental Stomp (live) (2003) HighTone/Concord-Rounder
- Four Dead Batteries Soundtrack (2005) HighTone/Concord-Rounder
- Best of the Hot Club of Cowtown (2008) Concord-Rounder
- Wishful Thinking (2009) Gold Strike
- What Makes Bob Holler (2010) Proper American
- Rendezvous in Rhythm (2012) Gold Strike
- Midnight on the Trail (2016) Gold Strike
Additional credits
- Dave Stuckey: Get a Load of This! (2000)
- Lullabies from the Axis of Evil (2004)
- Bob Dylan: Tell Ol' Bill (from North Country Soundtrack) (2005)
- Willie Nelson/Ray Price/Merle Haggard: Last of The Breed (2007)
References
- ↑ Caligiuri, Jim (3 March 2006). "Elana James, Picks 2 click". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ↑ "A Prairie Home Companion: Photo Album". Prairiehome.publicradio.org. 2006-06-10. Retrieved 2011-09-10. and "A Prairie Home Companion: Performers, Music Sources and Credits". Prairiehome.publicradio.org. 2006-06-10. Retrieved 2011-09-10.
- ↑ "A Prairie Home Companion from American Public Media". Prairiehome.publicradio.org. Retrieved 2011-09-10.
- ↑ "High Flyers Land at Susanna’s Kitchen". VisitWimberley.com. September 2006. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ↑ "ELANA JAMES (HOT CLUB OF COWTOWN) FIDDLE WORKSHOP Thursday, Sept 8, 7-9pm". Boulevard Music. Retrieved 10 September 2011. and "Event: Elana James, Thu., September 8, 7:00pm-9:00pm". LA Weekly. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ↑ "Elana James's Hot Fiddle: Introduction to Violin Improvisation". Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ↑ "A Prairie Home Companion: Photo Album". Prairiehome.publicradio.org. 2006-06-10. Retrieved 2011-09-10. and "A Prairie Home Companion: Performers, Music Sources and Credits". Prairiehome.publicradio.org. 2006-06-10. Retrieved 2011-09-10.
- ↑ "A Prairie Home Companion from American Public Media". Prairiehome.publicradio.org. Retrieved 2011-09-10.
External links
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