"BLUF" is a new-ish business acronym, meaning Bottom Line Up Front. It's used to state the conclusive point of an otherwise lengthy communication at the beginning, then add the discussion, facts, information, etc used to come to the conclusion. So...
BLUF: Aubrey Logan Christmas is hands-down one of the best new Christmas albums this season.
From the opening track "Sleigh Ride" through the studio-recorded closer "What Are You Doing New Year's Eve" and the bonus live performance of "Blue Christmas" with the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, Aubrey Logan Christmas commands the spirit of Christmas music.
Labelled the "Queen of Sass", Aubrey Logan is either an immensely talented jazz trombonist who is also an incredible jazz singer, or a generationally talented jazz singer who also has world class chops as a trombonist. Take your pick. Aubrey has been a featured performer with Dave Koz and with Postmodern Jukebox, and has released three albums as a solo artist/bandleader. All of her talents - singer, trombonist, scat singer, arranger, songwriter - burst forth from Aubrey Logan Christmas. This is one of those records that I'll keep playing, and playing, and playing....
Photo by Amy Gawlick |
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Q&A with Aubrey Logan
Merry & Bright:
Hi Aubrey! Thanks for taking some
time to answer a few questions about your amazing new album Aubrey Logan
Christmas. Let’s start with “Sleigh
Ride”. This is the freshest, most
entertaining version of this song I’ve heard in many years. Can you tell us a little about creating your
take on this Christmas standard?
Aubrey Logan: Thank you for having me on! As for Sleigh
Ride, it was a fine line for me between making it sound familiar, as we all
want because…it’s such a classic…and fresh. The song didn’t need to be tampered
with as Leroy Anderson already wrote in interesting chords complete with a
modulation. But…we tampered with it! Primarily by making it as fast as we could
without it being unplayable. And…we added in some bebop chord changes to the
bridge. Hopefully it comes across familiar AND fresh. That was my intention!
MB: You’re
known as the “Queen of Sass”, a label that I imagine you wear proudly. On Aubrey Logan Christmas, you even
managed so sass up the venerated classic “Carol of the Bells”. How do you apply the Aubrey Logan sass to a selection
like this, and still maintain reverence to the familiar song we all know and
love?
AL: Similarly to Sleigh Ride, I wanted to keep the
integrity of the carol we all have heard over and over again. However, do it
with a twist. Carol of the Bells is meant to be sung by a choir. I realized
why: it’s because there’s no place to breath in the song! The lyrics run into
each other with zero space, so when you inhale, someone else at least is
singing so that it sound seamless. Not so when you do it solo! Adding a little
comedy into my music has always been kinda my thing. So this lent itself perfectly
to that.
Photo by Amy Gawlik |
MB: Your
original composition, “This Is How It Ends” is a strikingly funny Christmastime
breakup song. Powerfully bluesy, I might
call it an anti-torch song - not about
unrequited love, but about ‘there ain’t no more love here, bud’. Can you share some thoughts about “This Is
How It Ends”?
AL: An anti-torch song! I’m going to steal that one.
Thank you! Ha! Well, I sat down to write an original Christmas song because my
manager wanted me to. I didn’t have any idea what to write. Out of my head came
a melody and chords. That usually happens though. Lyrics take me FOREVER. I had
the melody written for such a long time before brainstorming enough to stumble
upon the lyrics to This is How It Ends. It just kinda flowed out as I was
sitting down one day trying to think of rhymes. As I continued to write the
fictional story about the Christmas breakup, I started to imagine that it was
like an episode of Seinfeld where George Costanza is recalling some lady
breaking up with him over the holidays. “How dare she!” So that’s how the Anti
Torch song was born.
MB: I love the
song selections – from the nearly ancient “In the Bleak Midwinter” from the
Christina Rossetti poem, to the modern hip-funk James Brown classic “Santa’s
Got a Brand New Bag”, to the Christmas canon cornerstone “The Christmas
Song”. What was your approach to
choosing the songs for Aubrey Logan Christmas?
AL: The approach was simply this: I arranged Christmas
songs that I like and avoided the ones that I don’t! (And we all have those!)
For example…you’ll never hear me sing Santa Baby.
MB: Aubrey,
this is one of the best new Christmas albums this year – love it! Thanks for letting us in on a few secrets
about creating this great record! I hope
you bring your show to Kansa City some time soon 😊
AL: I am honored and I cannot wait to get back to KC!
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