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 Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley

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pinhedz
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PostSubject: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Tue Jul 15, 2008 5:25 am

Here's who she was:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A58841-2005Feb27.html

I knew her in the early 1980s, before she started singing at blues alley. She killed herself in 2005.


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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Tue Jul 15, 2008 3:14 pm

Wow.

That's an amazing video; I'd love to know more about where it takes place. She's fantastic and the band is brilliant. The guitarist is terrific, and for some reason almost never shown.

The Washington Post obituary frames it all in an odd melancholy.

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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Wed Jul 16, 2008 12:02 am

I'd like to read the story but the Post is covering it up with a Radio Shack ad that won't go away.

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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Wed Jul 16, 2008 12:46 am

Radio Shack? scratch Here's the article pasted. If you search for her name on youtube, there's a little more info about where the video was shot. There are also videos shot at Blues Alley and in a recording studio. Has anybody heard "Lebanese Blonde" from the "Garden State" sound track?

"By Adam Bernstein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, February 28, 2005;"

"Pam Bricker, 50, an eclectic singer whose repertoire ranged from playful jazz interpretations to her ethereal vocals for the electronica group Thievery Corporation, was pronounced dead Feb. 21 at her home in Takoma Park."

"A spokeswoman for the Maryland medical examiner's office said that Ms. Bricker hanged herself and that the death was ruled a suicide. Ms. Bricker's husband, Gareth Branwyn, said his wife struggled with clinical depression."

"Ms. Bricker was a presence in the Washington music scene since the early 1980s, when she joined the swing vocal group Mad Romance. That provided an enduring musical partnership with founder Rick Harris and led to several well-reviewed albums."

"She played at clubs with such notable musicians as guitarist Charlie Byrd, taught at George Washington University's jazz department and, in recent years, joined Thievery Corporation. Her best-known Thievery recording was "Lebanese Blonde," which appeared on the Grammy Award-winning soundtrack for the 2004 film "Garden State."

"Thievery Corporation brought her the worldwide notice and booking schedule for which she had longed. She toured European clubs and festivals and was pleased to find an audience that did not view her as, she often put it, "a living jukebox" providing background sounds in a bar."

"Ms. Bricker's early musical life was filled with disappointments, which fueled her insecurities. She had a nervous breakdown at age 25 after being told by a recording executive that she was "a little bit old" to start her music career."

"After a period of withdrawal -- "I hated music and all art" -- she slowly nursed her way back to performance, first as a guitarist and then as a singer. In one of her earliest engagements in Washington, at the Shoreham Hotel, the jazz critic W. Royal Stokes noted her "remarkable [vocal] range, excellent control and impressive rhythmic surety."

"Frequently nominated for Washington Area Music Association honors, she won five times: as best contemporary jazz vocalist in 1999, 2000 and 2001; best contemporary jazz album in 2001 for her release "U-topia," named after the District club where she sang; and, with Harris, for best duo or group in 1993."

"Pamela Carroll Bricker was born in Richmond and raised in Summit, N.J. Her father was a research psychologist who played trombone on the side. Her stepfather was a trombonist who had played with Woody Herman's band."

"Ms. Bricker played piano and clarinet as a child, and her siblings played other instruments. Her mother suffered from manic depression and was later institutionalized, a fact that haunted her."

"Ms. Bricker described herself as a "loner" as a young child, but music brought her pleasure. She attended ballets in New York, saw Broadway musicals, went to Jimi Hendrix concerts and was infatuated with the Beatles."

"She attended Hampshire College in Massachusetts and fell in love with a music teacher, who introduced her to classical composers, Duke Ellington and the Randy Newman composition "You Can Leave Your Hat On."
"The sort of perverse sexuality of that tune, for me as an 18-year-old, that was the cat's meow," she told Stokes, who profiled Ms. Bricker in his new book "Growing Up With Jazz."

"She read B.F. Skinner's "Walden Two" when she was 12 and later left college for a semester to research a paper on utopias. She traveled to the Twin Oaks commune in Louisa, Va., which was known for producing rope hammocks."

"I lived there for 2 1/2 years until I was just sort of overwhelmed by the desire to become a musician," she told a reporter. She alternated between Massachusetts and Virginia, auditing classes, singing in coffeehouses and working her way into the Copley Plaza Hotel lounge in Boston. She returned to Twin Oaks after her nervous breakdown."

"In 1981, she settled in the Washington area with Branwyn, a freelance technical writer whom she met at the commune. With her guitar, she was soon playing folk-heavy music at a health food restaurant called Food for Thought, where she met Mary Chapin Carpenter."

"We got together a few times to sort of jam and pick and grin, and then she became the world's most famous folk and country crossover artist," she told Stokes.

"Increasingly interested in jazz, she began expanding her songbook. After Harris spotted her at Charlie's Georgetown, they formed Mad Romance, which played at Blues Alley, the Monterey Jazz Festival and the Blue Note in New York. After the group disbanded in 1987, she and Harris continued to sing duets at area clubs and made several inventive, sprightly albums.
A musical restlessness persisted, though, and she later moved in other directions."

"As the '90s wore on," she told Stokes, "I felt an urge to break out of such a straight-laced jazz frame of mind and repertoire. I said: 'Jazz, like crime, doesn't pay. You have to mix it up and modernize it.' "

"Survivors include her husband, from whom she was separated, of Arlington; a son, Blake Maloof of Arlington; her father, Peter Bricker of Pine Knoll Shores, N.C.; a brother; and a sister."

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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Wed Jul 16, 2008 3:32 am

Here it is--Lebanese Blonde:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04bg9IC9N6w&feature=related

Plaza of Nations, 28 May 2004:


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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Thu Oct 16, 2008 3:53 pm

U-topia--the samples here are worth a listen:

http://www.amazon.com/U-Topia-Pam-Bricker/dp/B00005Y94V/ref=sr_1_1/103-7981075-7347831?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1224168517&sr=1-1



GOODBYE, PORK PIE HAT
Music by Charles Mingus
Lyrics by Joni Mitchell
Jazz Workshop Inc (BMI)
Crazy Crow Music (ASCAP)

When Charlie speaks of Lester
You know someone great has gone
The sweetest swinging music man
Had a Porky Pig hat on
A bright star in a dark age when the bandstands
Had a thousand ways
Of refusing a black man admission
Black musician, in those days
They put him in an underdog position
Cellars and chitlins

When Lester took him a wife
Arm and arm went black and white
And some saw red
And drove them from their hotel bed
Love is never easy
It’s short of the hopes we have for happiness
Bright and sweet
Love is never easy street
Now we are black and white
Embracing out in the lunatic New York night
Its very unlikely we’ll be driven out of town
Or be hung by a tree
That’s unlikely

Tonight these crowds are happy and loud
Children are up dancing in the streets
In the sticky middle of the night summer serenade
Of taxi horns and fun arcades
Where right or wrong under neon
Every feeling goes on
For you and me the sidewalk is a history book
And a circus, dangerous clowns
Balancing dreadful and wonderful
Perceptions they have been handed day by day
Generations on down

We came up on the subway
On the music midnight makes
To Charlie’s bass and Lester’s saxophone
In taxi horns and brakes
Now Charlie’s down in Mexico with the healers
So the sidewalk leads us with music
To two little dancers
Dancing outside a black bar
There’s a sign up on the awning
It says “Porkpie Hat Bar”
And there’s black babies dancin’
Tonight...

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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Fri May 08, 2009 10:55 pm


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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Fri May 08, 2009 10:56 pm


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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Sat May 09, 2009 12:41 am

Pam is the low voice on this one:


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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Sat May 09, 2009 12:42 am

Morbid, but that's how it goes:


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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Mon Aug 31, 2009 5:44 am

High voice on this one. This pays better than jazz:


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PostSubject: Re: Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley   Thu Nov 05, 2009 7:35 pm

Scroll down, play the video on the left:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Bricker-Band/62124213960

This was before she came to Virginia.

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Pam bricker--used to sing at Blues Alley

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