Why is life less ordinary for saxophonist/vocalist Mindi Abair? Ask her fans from around the world — there’s not much ordinary about her. On Life Less Ordinary, her playful and sophisticated third release from GRP Records, Mindi Abair catapults her supercharged mix of pop, soul and
Her 2003 debut CD, It Just Happens That Way, debuted in the Top 5 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz Chart and remained in the Top 10 for 19 consecutive weeks. The hit single “Lucy’s,” was #1 on the airplay charts for a record-breaking eight weeks and Abair was hailed for leading a new movement in contemporary music. Abair has not only set sonic trends, but has broken all the boundaries as she continues to define the less traditional future of
For Abair, named the Best New Artist at 2003’s National Smooth Jazz Awards, it’s been a wild few years, and her 2004 follow-up disc Come As You Are — which dug into deeper emotional and stylistic territory while spawning two more hit singles — kept the momentum jetting skyward. Her songs have been featured on everything from Aaron Spelling’s hit “Summerland” to a Women in Jazz feature at the Grammys to Panasonic’s Jumbotron in
Abair says, “The title comes from my feeling that a record should be a snapshot of where you are in your life at a specific time. This year was nothing less than extraordinary, and I think the music reflects that.” Abair’s own words from the CD liner notes covey this sentiment perfectly. “Life continues for me less ordinary, from unexpected hurricanes, to the similar unexpected power of love, to the passing of idols and friends to the new beginnings of families, from feeling on top of the world to feeling far away from it, to growing and learning and having fun through it all there is nothing ordinary about any of it. This music represents my journey over the last year, in a life less ordinary.”
Once again helping Abair convey the emotion, groove and sparkle that puts her music over the top is Matthew Hager (John Taylor of Duran Duran, Simply Red, Scott Weiland, Mandy Moore), her friend from their days at the Berklee
College
Production-wise, Abair and Hager complement her core vocal-and sax-driven sound with contributions from a series of top L.A. session and touring players, a few personal heroes, and a couple of famous friends. First the famous friends: R&B vocal great and Abair’s old pal from Berklee College of Music, Lalah Hathaway, and Keb’ Mo’, whom the world knows as a Grammy®-winning blues superstar but who also once played dive clubs in L.A. with Abair when the two were starting out. Both contribute in unique ways to Abair’s poignant and sensual reading of Rickie Lee Jones’ classic pop-
To further help them achieve the homespun, organic and soulful vibe they were aiming for on Life Less Ordinary, Abair and Hager recorded much of the CD in Hager’s
producer for such artists as Joni Mitchell and the lesser known but one of Mindi’s favorites The innocence
Life Less Ordinary launches its seduction of the listener’s senses with the cool, clubby/soulful chill of “Do You Miss Me,” a track that, for Abair, captures the mood of the whole project. “The reason it’s first is that if you like it, you’ll like the rest of the album,” she says. “It’s got a little of everything, it always makes me want to dance, and the title is a perfect sentiment about me being on the road all the time.” With its swirling mix of nouveau-old school percussion, trippy atmospheres and energetic horns, the next song chronicles her “Long Ride Home” perfectly. “It’s a great driving song, a Euro-inspired tune we had a lot of fun with,” she says.
“The Joint” is a down and dirty, rock/soul jam that’s both retro and raucous; Robinson keeps it swinging, while Abair’s alto takes a sexy low road over Peterson’s Wurlitzer and organ harmonies. “I’ve come up the ranks playing in so many little dives. There’s an energy to being in a broken down vibey club and feeling like you’re one with the audience. I wanted to capture that feeling of a smoky dark room filled with people shaking their bodies to the beat.”
Abair takes a 180-degree turn emotionally for the next track, the darkly ambient and emotionally wrenching ballad “Rain,” which was inspired in part by the victims of Hurricane Katrina. “It starts out with a melancholy air, but as it emerges, it becomes more optimistic,” she says. “It captures the way we respond to a tragedy of that magnitude, with sadness that gives way to determination and strength to survive.” Songs like the peppy and playful “True Blue” (which features some of Abair’s most catchy and mouthwatering wordless harmony vocals ever) and the boldly produced, jangly pop-rocker “Bloom” have the joyful feel of Abair’s most familiar pop hits, while the percussive, crunch-funk hip-hop grooves of “Slinky” propel her further into a new sound that will no doubt become the standard for the ever evolving fusion of instrumental
Perhaps more than any other track, the sweetly-rendered Brazilian-tinged vocal track “Ordinary Love” sums up Abair’s attitude towards love. Where most love songs address the intense passion at the beginning or the heartbreak at the end, Mindi pens a playful and endearing song which celebrates the sustaining beauty and freedom of every day, or ordinary, love. In what is now a Mindi Abair signature, she ends the CD with a lonely heartfelt ballad “Far Away”. “It started out with me singing the melody and playing it on piano to demo the song. I always envisioned it with soprano saxophone as the main instrument, but when we recorded the saxophone track, we forgot to mute the “guide” vocal that I had put down. The two were so haunting together. We kept it!”
When asked about their childhoods and musical influences, many artists look back fondly on a certain album or song they heard, or certain moment of epiphany where their future came clear. “Not me,” says Abair, a
Abair was never handed success, though. After graduating from Berklee College of Music, she moved to
“I sincerely believe that we are all the sum of our musical experiences, and every person I played with along the way affects the music I make now,” she says. “I didn’t know that this would happen when I started out, but suddenly I had this really cool, diverse resume and it made total sense. I grew up listening to so many different kinds of music. It should reflect on who I am now as a writer and player. It’s a very honest portrayal of who I am and what I’ve lived up to this point. This CD is a very honest portrayal of the past year of my Life Less Ordinary.”