Champian Fulton

Jazz Pianist and Vocalist

Champian's Concert in Ascoli-Piceno Italy Reviewed:

Champian Fulton: piano & vocals   Lorenzo Conte: bass   Andrea Michelutti: drums

Ascoli Piceno – COTTON LAB   15.3.2024   h 21.00

Stasera finalmente incontro Champian Fulton

La conoscevo appena di nome, e neanche in questo suo “Jazz classico” che pure  - bazzicando un po’ di musica - avevo qualche volta incontrato in automatico. Ma quanto poco li conoscevo! Ecco però che al COTTON LAB può capitarti di re-immergerti con gusto nuovo nel jazz di nostalgia e di qualità (quello “in bianco e nero”, oggi un po’ meno suonato se non addirittura lasciato nell’ombra) riproposto uguale ma diverso dalla brava e virtuosa Fulton finalmente incontrata in concerto. 

Non serve andare al BIRDLAND di N.Y. 

Se anche il Champian Fulton Trio del Cotton Lab non è proprio quello del Birdland Theater (con Fugushi Tainaka e Hide Tanaka da Tokio), ne andrebbe realizzato il CD, e cambiare due scritte… 

Anche i “nostri” Lorenzo Conte e Andrea Michelutti sono infatti gli strumenti giusti per la voce-strumento Fulton: si vede da come lei li guida, li ammira, li guarda con gioia. Sono suoi. Il livello è alto. C’è che, mentre lei suona e canta con gioia, guarda chiunque con gioia: la musica la fa felice e lei  esterna. Fulton-fabbrica di gioia. E quando parla – parla tanto – è come se suonasse: parla e canta a due mani, fa le scale, gli arpeggi, le dissonanze,+ i silenzi e i tempi del jazz. La sua voce eclettica è swing e blues. Le sue note sono parole in jazz. Mi ricorda Ray Charles. Canta come parla, parla come suona: non distingui la fonte, la provenienza. Il “solito” jazz classico diventa così una musica nuova, rinfresca perfino certi standard ascoltati troppe volte. La tastiera del piano, mai sotto stress, anche nei virtuosismi obbedisce senza faticare (anche sorridendo…). E mi pare che Champian lasci abbastanza in pace i pedali, le servono poco. Come sospetto che sia lei, sia la sua voce ad “accordare” gli strumenti! che dia lei la frequenza giusta, gli hertz, lei agli altri!

      E quei due? Lorenzo Conte (da Venezia) al contrabbasso: in velocità sembra un silenzioso gradevolissimo motore elettrico ma pare guidare su un binario, quando lento e autorevole sottolinea i fondamentali. Andrea Michelutti con la sua “batteria essenziale” che neanche un piatto in più: è la fantasiosa cremagliera del trio. Sempre presente e vario, sa emergere come eclissarsi. Con classe.



Champian Debuts *New* Show with Jazz at the Ballroom called "Flying High"

FLYING HIGH: BIG BAND CANARIES WHO SOARED

Jazz at the Ballroom salutes the timeless artistry of iconic female jazz vocalist

SAN FRANCISCO (January 2, 2024) – Billie Holiday. Anita O’Day. Lena Horne. Peggy Lee. Rosemary Clooney. Ella Fitzgerald. It’s an impressive, but not complete, list of great vocalists who took swinging jazz standards and added an allusive female perspective. Early in their careers, they were “canaries”—young women singing with the greatest big bands on the scene: the orchestras of Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw, Gene Krupa, Benny Goodman, and others—and went on to create their own sounds and solo careers.

For the first time, the renowned California-based music nonprofit Jazz at the Ballroom (JATB), proudly announces the debut of “Flying High: Big Band Canaries Who Soared.” This extraordinary musical celebration is a tribute to the legendary women who shaped the jazz genre, showcasing their remarkable talent and the timeless classics that defined the era.

Under the skillful music direction of the esteemed New York-based jazz pianist and vocalist, Champian Fulton, the performance takes the audience on a nostalgic journey through the golden age of jazz. The new show launches during Women’s History Month March 8-10, 2024, at the famous Birdland in Manhattan and is set for a national run.

“We’ve chosen Women’s History Month to launch our new show because it is an ideal time to elevate the artistry of these women and educate others about their influence on music in general and the next generation of artists in particular,” said Suzanne Waldowski, Founder, Jazz at the Ballroom. “We are targeting women’s colleges and landmark venues and festivals. Beyond our New York premiere, we hope to present the show at historical spaces where the original jazz canaries themselves left their mark.”


As a pianist I have always wanted to accompany vocalists other than myself, and I am so thrilled to be able to do that with this project and recording. It was a ball to be able to step into that role and just focus on the sound of the piano and the rhythm section.
— Champian Fulton

Partial Artist List

Carmen Bradford – Vocals, Champian Fulton – Vocals/Piano, Jane Monheit – Vocals, Lezlie Harrison – Vocals, Gretje Angell – Vocals, Olivia Chindamo – Vocals, Vanessa Perea - Vocals, Nicholas Payton – Trumpet, Willie Jones III - Drums, Charles Ruggiero – Drums, Mike Gurrola -- Bass

About Jazz at the Ballroom

Jazz at the Ballroom is a California-based non-profit that celebrates America’s truly original music – classic jazz. They are dedicated to showcasing the greatest jazz artists in unique settings. Through their concert series, scholarship program, workshops and performances at schools, senior living centers, and hospitals, JATB works to enhance the appreciation of jazz in the larger community. For more information: www.jazzattheballroom.com Facebook: jazzattheballroom  Instagram: @jazzattheballroom

Media Contact:

Stacie Fasola (650) 703-2753

Stacie.fasola@wnwnpr.com

Champian at the Arcachon Jazz Festival in France (December 2023)

Champian Fulton invite André Villéger : Un cocktail d’élégance, de charme et de swing

Changement de décor pour la seconde partie de soirée. Le public a été invité à rejoindre la salle de spectacle du théâtre Olympia où se produisait Champian Fulton.
Musicienne incontournable de la scène new yorkaise, chanteuse et pianiste, elle s’inscrit dans la lignée de grandes voix féminines telles Sarah Vaughan ou Dinah Washington. Sa musique met à l’honneur les racines afro-américaines du jazz et son jeu au piano est influencé par Errol Garner, Bud Powell ou Sonny Clark. Considérée comme l’une des étoiles montantes de la scène jazz, elle a été nommée pianiste et voix féminine de l’année 2019 lors de la cérémonie des NYC Readers Jazz Awards.


Bercée par la musique depuis son plus jeune âge puisque son père est trompettiste de jazz, elle s’est essayée à la batterie, la basse et la trompette avant de jeter son dévolu sur le piano. Elle envisage le jazz comme un langage qui favorise la liberté d’expression et la recherche du bonheur.


Dès son arrivée sur scène, Champian Fulton a éclaboussé l’Olympia de son sourire et de son élégance naturelle. Toute de bleue vêtue, elle a pris possession du clavier avec autorité et vélocité, sa voix au timbre clair se mêlant admirablement aux arpèges.


Elle est accompagnée d’Alex Gilson à la contrebasse et d’Armando Luongo à la batterie, 2 musiciens brillants, élégants, au swing plein de vitalité. Le saxophoniste André Villéger a été invité à partager la scène avec eux. Ce dernier a une longue et belle carrière derrière lui. Il a su s’adapter au jeu d’autres musiciens exigeants tels Milt Buckner, Harry « sweets » Edison, Claude Bolling. Après avoir longtemps joué de l’alto en s’inspirant du style de Sidney Bechet, il s’est par la suite tourné vers les sonorités plus graves du ténor et du baryton.

Champion Fulton est-elle plus talentueuse au chant qu’au piano se demande le spectateur subjugué ? En fait, on ne peut dissocier les deux. Elle nourrit de sa pétulance et de sa virtuosité chaque interprétation et entretient un lien presque physique avec son instrument. Elle parvient à le faire vibrer avec une main gauche qui est tout sauf indolente. Son jeu regorge de swing. Elle joue en permanence sur les tonalités avec une aisance déconcertante, caressant, survolant les touches avec souplesse et une apparente désinvolture alors que les morceaux sont sophistiqués. Elle maitrise à la perfection les techniques du piano jazz, le toucher est percussif, virtuose, les longs chorus toujours inspirés, rythmés et harmonieux.


Quant à sa voix légèrement acidulée, claire et affirmée, elle a une belle tessiture qui sied parfaitement à son répertoire et lui permet de « scatter » avec décontraction.


Tout au long du concert, l’improvisation a primé, sollicitant en permanence le talent des instrumentistes. André Villéger a su brillamment trouver sa place et colorer avec beaucoup de fraicheur et d’impétuosité chaque morceau du timbre mat, feutré et inimitable de son ténor rutilant.


En professionnelle accomplie, Champian Fulton a su mettre en valeur ses musiciens. Sur le standard pop et jazz de Gus Arnheim et Abe Lyman, « I cried for you », Alex Gilson a exécuté un époustouflant chorus rapide et très rythmé.
De même, sur la belle balade « PS, I love you », chacun a pu poser ses notes dans un tempo parfait, par touches légères autour de la voix lumineuse de la chanteuse, les solos s’enchainant naturellement, rythmés par les balais délicats d’Armando Luongo.

Le quartet nous a gratifié d’une belle reprise de « All of me », coécrite par Seymour Simons et Gérald Marks et interprétée en son temps par Billie Holiday. Le chorus de la contrebasse en introduction aura marqué les esprits par son raffinement rythmique. Quand cet instrument casse les codes et devient leader avec un pizzicato inspiré, on assiste à des moments magiques.


Champian Fulton a publié un album consacré aux chansons de Noël et en ce début décembre, le moment était choisi pour interpréter une « Christmas song » au son jazzy délicieusement désuet avant d’enchainer sur un morceau beaucoup plus enlevé, prétexte à de multiples chorus valorisés par son talent pianistique et enrichis de la créativité de chaque musicien.
Il aura fallu deux rappels pour que le public, venu en nombre, accepte de quitter la salle !
Ce concert a consacré l’essence même du jazz en laissant une large place à l’improvisation, à la liberté d’inventer des plages musicales singulières. André Villéger nous a même confié à la fin du concert qu’une partie de la set list s’était confectionnée au fil de la soirée. Cette information nous a laissé songeurs et admiratifs tant l’interprétation était fluide d’un bout à l’autre.

Il est d’ailleurs à noter qu’en improvisatrice hors pair, Champian Fulton a publié l’album « Meet me at Birdland » en 2022. Pour ce faire, elle a passé 4 soirées sur la scène du légendaire club de jazz new yorkais, sans répéter un seul morceau et tout en enregistrant ce qui allait devenir son futur album Live et son seizième en tant que leader.
Cette première soirée a brillamment lancé la seconde édition du festival du jazz d’Arcachon !

Champian in Eskilstuna Sweden, December 2023

Champian Fulton Quartet appears in Eskilstuna Sweden, December 2023. With Kristian Leth on drums, Hans Backenroth on bass, and Klas Lindquist on alto and clarinet.

Champian Hosts Lou Donaldson's 97th Birthday Party !

On October 30 Champian hosted Lou Donaldson’s 97th Birthday Party at Dizzy’s in New York City. Attendees included Akiko Tsugara, Nick Hempton, Peter Bernstein, Fukushi Tainaka, Kenny Washington, and many members of the Donaldson family. Scroll through the pictures below!

Champian's Trio was a "Festival Highlight" at the Litchfield Jazz Fest this summer

Published in the October issue of the New York City Jazz Record

Champian Fulton’s trio was a festival highlight. Equally adept and fiercely experimental as a singer and pianist, she plays aggressively with tempo and a wide vocal range (sans scat singing). Fulton shifts dynamics rapidly without ever losing touch with a song’s melody: a Fulton trademark is a jump to the top of her range at the end of a line. Her all-standards program featured ace support from Hide Tanaka (bass) and Fukushi Tainaka (drums), a formidable rhythm section that’s been with Fulton for two decades. When not singing or playing during her set, Fulton offered historical tidbits about songs from the Great American Songbook such as the Silver/Lewis/Sherman “Every Now and Then”, recorded by Helen Humes half a dozen times. “Too Marvelous for Words” got an especially delicate treatment. And any thought that Fulton couldn’t make it as just a pianist were dispelled by a spirited take on Phineas Newborn Jr.’s “Theme for Basie”. Arguably best heard live, that’s indeed the format for Fulton on her latest release, Meet Me at Birdland (s/r).

Reviews are coming in for "Meet Me At Birdland!"

Champian’s new album “Meet Me at Birdland” is OUT and available where ever you stream / download / purchase music.

NAMED BEST VOCAL ALBUM AND BEST LIVE ALBUM OF 2023 IN THE NYC JAZZ RECORD

Read the extensive feature interview in London Jazz News with Morgan Enos HERE.

“Meet Me at Birdland” featured on WBGO, read / watch the interview with DJ Brian Delp here.

“While Fulton is full of cheer and known for it, it's on heartfelt tunes such as "It's Been A Long Long Time" where she so earnestly unveils her intimidation factor-at once, she narrates two points of view as a singer and pianist, both without sacrifice.” - Broadway World

Meet Me at Birdland will be a wonderful addition to any jazz vocalist collection. The live energy is captured on the recording, and Fulton’s phrasing is something special.” - Jazz Sensibilities

Champian featured on WBGO for “Meet Me at Birdland”

“On se souvient d’avoir découvert Champian Fulton en concert quelques années auparavant dans un club lyonnais qui a fermé depuis. Nous avions noté son aisance pianistique et ses capacités vocales pour le moins convaincantes. On la retrouve ici en trio, enregistrée en public au Birdland, avec les qualités précitées. Comme à son habitude, elle se permet des parties instrumentales où s’affirme son sens du swing et une approche personnelle fort bienvenue. Quand elle chante, elle le fait avec une précision et un savoir-faire qui la classe dans le panier des musiciennes de jazz accomplies. C’est toujours clair et concis, cela module à la perfection et le phrasé dans son ensemble est très efficace. Nous l’avons dit plus haut, elle sait ce que swinguer veut dire. Sa rythmique fait le job avec rigueur et détermination. Les soli sont tous de très bonne facture. C’est du jazz fait par des amoureux du genre et, ma foi, plutôt bien fait. On ne révolutionne pas le jazz dans cet album mais on le met en lumière avec habileté et goût. Cela parait toutefois normal car elle a été bercée au jazz par des parents musiciens qui avait pour pote des gens comme Clark Terry, entre autres. De quoi satisfaire bien des oreilles.” - Culture Jazz FR

“Meet Me at Birdland” proves that [Champian] has deservedly earned her place as a featured performer at one of the premier jazz clubs…” - Joe Lang, New Jersey Jazz Society

“The album captures the energy of a live recording, especially the depth of Fulton’s sensual vocal style and elegant piano playing.” - NiteLife Exchange

Champian featured on Neon Jazz

“No matter what song she takes on, Champian has fun, and her joy is infectious.” - Marc Myers, JazzWax

“Shows off Fulton’s playing and inventive phrasing.” - Downbeat

Featured in Broadway World: A 10 Video Retrospective of Champian

“Stylized singing brings out attitudes, manifested in distinctive pronunciation and note-stretching, evoking a few jazz and blues stars of yore–a blended homage…. and the trio dazzles with muscularity–going for fierce fleetness, not pastel pretty sweetness. So, as things build, the reaction is more a gasped "wow!" than an emotion-triggered sigh.” - Talking Broadway with Rob Lester

“Meet Me at Birdland” is DISQUE DU JOUR on TSF Jazz, Paris

“In addition to being an excellent piano soloist, Fulton is an outstanding self-accompanist. The recording levels put the piano and vocals on equal ground, which emphasizes the little motives she plays between phrases as well as the countermelodies she devises to support her vocals……With her wide-ranging repertoire and her engaging vocal and instrumental personas, Champian Fulton is playing an important role in the preservation of classic, swinging jazz.” - Tom Cunniffe, Jazz History Online

Champian in the Absolute Sound, 2023

“Her gentle yet knowing vocal sound is ideally suited to her choice of songs and she interprets lyrics with mature understanding.” - Bruce Crowther, Jazz Journal UK

“A sensational set from a consummate professional.” - Pierre Giroux, The NYC Jazz Record


5 STARS for music / 4.5 STARS for audio sound

“The smile on Champian's face floats through the speakers as you listen to this live recording! You hear the occasional amused giggle with the artist expressing her sense of joy in performance with bassist Hide Tanaka and drummer Fukushi Tainaka. Champian is equally an exceptional vocalist and pianist, and it can be surprising to realize she's doing both at once at such an elevated level of artistry.

Incredible multitasking, and she makes it sound casy! On the opening track "Too Marvelous for Words," it's a pleasure hearing the word "much" extended as she lingers and plays with the ending of the word. The whisper sound when she sings "Could you care?" in "I've Got a Crush on You" is breathtaking. There is such musical beauty when Champian sings and plays rubato verses before the trio breaks into collective tempo. Vocally there are kittenish swoops and bends which have become part of her vocal style. She drives the energy with the trio catching various rhythmic shots and motifs with glissandos, rolled chords, flourishes, and punches to lean into those swing grooves. A stunning arrangement of "Just Friends" begins as a ballad waltz and then digs into a punctuated swing groove. Champian is a charmer!” - Karin Plato, Absolute Sound


Meet Me at Birdland, recorded in September 2022 in the legendary club finally brought back to life, offers a striking contrast and proclaims the artist's need to physically reconnect with the public. In trio with her faithful Hide Tanaka and Fukushi Tainaka, the pianist-singer performs the standards (which come according to inspiration) with naturalness and again in total complicity with her partners. Or a Champian Fulton as we appreciate it, blossoming in the warmth of live performance and to the sound of applause. The swing is present from start to finish, the themes tastefully chosen (“Theme for Basie” by Phineas Newborn, “It's Been a Long, Long Time”, “I Don't Care” by Ray Bryant…) and the original by the singer, “Happy Camper” with Latin colors, is not to displease either.
Here are two more good records to be put to the credit of Champian Fulton, a musician of remarkable consistency. - Jérôme © Jazz Hot 2023

“While she displays a variety of influences (such as Dinah Washington and pianists Wynton Kelly and Red Garland), Ms. Fulton has always essentially sounded like herself” - Scott Yanow, the Syncopated Times

© Champian Fulton