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In Music
Award-winning jazz singer Sutton returns home
 
By Bobby Tanzilo RSS Feed
Managing Editor

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More articles by Bobby Tanzilo

Published Jan. 16, 2006 at 5:14 a.m.
Tags: tierney sutton, pabst, hal leonard, toots thielemans, figueroa, clayton-hamilton, jazz

Six CDs into her career, jazz singer Tierney Sutton, a Milwaukee area native, is finally coming home.

Sutton, who released her debut disc, "Introducing Tierney Sutton," in 1999, was soon snatched up by Telarc Records, which has released all of her music since, including her latest CD, "I'm With the Band," a live set released in August and recorded over two nights a New York's legendary Birdland night club.

Sutton's discs have notched impressive spots into most jazz charts and she's even appeared (at least her voice has) in films like William H. Macy and Alec Baldwin's "The Cooler" and Samuel L. Jackson and Ashley Judd's "Twisted."

JazzWeek magazine named Sutton "Vocalist of the Year" for 2005 and she has been nominated for a Grammy for "Best Jazz Vocal Album." We recently asked her about her Wisconsin origins and her music.

OMC: Can you tell us about your Wisconsin roots?

Tierney Sutton: I grew up in Wisconsin and went to school there through high school. I went to Nicolet High in Glendale. My parents both went to Marquette and my father still lives and practices law in Milwaukee. My first "professional" gig was as a singing cocktail waitress. (I was) a "Heidel honey" at The Heidel House Resort in Green Lake. Now THAT'S some Wisconsin roots.

OMC: How did you launch your career? Did you start out here?

TS: I discovered jazz mostly after leaving Wisconsin while I was a Russian student at Wesleyan University in Connecticut.

OMC: Do you come across other Wisconsinites at all out there in the world of jazz? It seems like there haven't been that many to really emerge from here. Al Jarreau, Sonia Robinson, Brian Lynch are a few, of course.

TS: There's a singer who lives in Seattle now named Kelley Johnson and she grew up in Milwaukee and, in fact, her first CD was produced by my dad's old law partner. We met at a jazz convention a few years back. She wrote the lyric I sing on a Joe Henderson song, "Recordame" on my first Telarc CD.

OMC: Do you get back to Milwaukee much -- personally or professionally?

TS: I rarely come to Milwaukee. My dad is my only family there and he's in California visiting me a lot. Also, this is the first concert I've really ever done in Milwaukee. We spend most of our time performing in New York and on the East Coast.

OMC: Tell us a bit about the new record. Was it a thrill to record at such a fabled venue?

TS: We love Birdland. Everyone there is terrific and it's a beautiful venue -- regardless of the history. One of the wonderful things about the jazz world is that the history is so deep. Last year we played at Carnegie Hall with The New York Pops and it was just a magical event for us. We always feel the spirits of our heroes when we play those venues.

Tierney Sutton returns to Milwaukee to perform at The Pabst Theater, Saturday, Jan. 21 at 8 p.m. as part of the Hal Leonard Jazz Series, which kicked off earlier this month with a performance by Latin jazz percussionist Sammy Figueroa and The Latin Jazz Explosion.

Future concerts include: The Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra, Saturday, Feb. 11 at 8 p.m.; Toots Thielemans, Saturday, March 18 at 8 p.m.; and James Carter, Saturday, April 15 at 8 p.m.

Tickets for Sutton's show range from $26.50 to $51.50 and may be purchased via The Pabst's Web site pabsttheater.org.

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