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NORA JEAN WALLACE
Blueswoman
Severn Records
By
Robin Zimmerman
After a long hiatus from recording, Nora Jean Wallace is back in action
with some hot tracks packaged up in a succinctly titled CD called
Blueswoman. While it might
seem a bit bodacious to brand your music in such a forthright manner,
Wallace has the pipes, presence and personal experiences to back up her
Blueswoman credentials.
Music has infused every aspect of Wallace’s life dating back to when she
was coming up in Mississippi.
Her dad worked as a sharecropper on a farm near Greenwood and
moonlighted as a professional blues musician. Meanwhile, Wallace’s
mother served up the sweet sound of spirituals by singing gospel
standards to Wallace and her fifteen brothers and sisters.
If
that’s not enough Magnolia-state based blues cred, Wallace’s grandmother
ran a lively little juke joint. Here, Nora Jean’s dad, Bobby Lee Wallace
and Uncle Henry “Son” Wallace would belt out the blues while Wallace and
her many siblings secretly soaked it all in from various vantage points.
With
that kind of DNA, it’s not surprising to hear that Wallace was covering
Howlin’ Wolf at age five, winning high school talent contests and making
the move to the Windy City. It was in the bicentennial year of 1976 that
her red-hot brand of blues came to the attention of the Chicago music
community.
After singing with the likes of Scottie and the Oasis and being mentored
by Mary Lane, Joe Barr and others, Wallace’s big break came in 1985 when
she signed on with Jimmy Dawkins after he heard her singing at a Chicago
club. The then Nora Jean Bruso toured and recorded with Dawkins for
seven years and developed an international fan base thanks to passionate
performances at festivals all over the globe.
Wallace’s rise through the blues world culminated with her 2004 BMA
nomination for Going Back to
Mississippi. But, when her mom took ill in her native Mississippi,
Nora Jean headed back south to care for her.
While her mom has since passed, Wallace feels her spirit in her music
and her newly-renewed mission to sing the blues. Although she’s been out
of the business for a while, Wallace hasn’t lost a beat when it comes to
busting out old and new blues standards.
On
Blueswoman, Wallace’s music
is also infused with the spirit of blues pioneers like Koko Taylor, who
once famously told Wallace that she sounded just like her at the same
age. The CD’s title track,” Blueswoman” is an homage to Taylor complete
with the powerhouse vocals that the “Queen of the Blues” was known for.
While Wallace certainly is a tour de force on this Severn Records
release, she is well-supported by a stellar cast of musicians including
label head, David Earl, who also plays guitar on four tracks. They’re
joined by veteran Severn session players including guitarist Johnny
Moeller, Steve Gomes on bass, organist Kevin Anker, harpist Steve Guyger,
Stanley Banks on keyboards and Robb Stupka on drums. Multi-blues award
winner Kim Wilson contributes his always-inspired harp work on “Rag and
Bucket.”
“Rag
and Bucket” was penned by Stanley Banks who lent his lyrical talents to
three other tracks on the CD including the opening number, “Martell.”
This intoxicating tune features a full round of alcohol-fueled
references enhanced by Wallace’s delivery that includes a Koko-style
shout-out to the bartender. This pairs nicely with Moeller’s opening
riffs and solid harp work by Guyger.
Wallace segues into a Syl Johnson number on the second track. On “I
Can’t Stop” she goes from good time party girl to an unstoppable,
soulful songstress who puts her own spin on Johnson’s classic.
Wallace knocks it out of the park on the next number, “I’m a Blues
Woman.” On this Banks-penned salute to the “Queen of the Blues,”
Wallace’s big voice conjures up visions of a blues woman bringing down
the house at a steamy juke joint in the Mississippi Delta. She doesn’t
let up on the next track either. When it comes to laying out the
“Evidence,” she unloads with just the right touch of a woman wronged
persona.
In
addition to her powerful vocal performances, Wallace shows that she’s no
slouch as a songwriter. She takes a plaintive turn on “Victim” before
saying good riddance to a “no good” man in “Look Over Yonder” and giving
another guy a wicked tongue lashing in “I’ve Been Watching You.”
She also sashays and sings away
on her own “Dance with Me” composition.
Blueswoman
concludes with another Stanley Banks number called “I Don’t Have to Beg
You to Love Me.” On this track and throughout the course of the CD, the
steady rolling Severn session players are more than up to the task of
keeping up with this dynamic blues woman.
Wallace’s life has been characterized by career highs and life-changing
lows, but her experiences have added an extra element of pain, pathos
and personal connection to her performances. This is evident on all ten
tracks of Bluewoman, which
hopefully is the first of many more releases from this Mississippi-bred,
Midwest-based songstress. While 2020 has certainly had its share of
lows, the blues world has high hopes for a Nora Jean Wallace resurgence
in 2021 and beyond.
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