Bobby McFerrin
@ the Barbican Centre
14 November 2018
(Photographs taken from the booth at the back of the lower hall)
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
For decades Bobby McFerrin has broken all the rules.
The 10-time Grammy winner has blurred the distinction between pop
music and fine art, goofing around barefoot in the world’s
finest concert halls, exploring uncharted vocal territory, inspiring
a whole new generation of a cappella singers and the beatbox movement.
His latest album, “spirityouall,” is a bluesy, feel-good
recording, an unexpected move from the music-industry rebel who
singlehandedly redefined the role of the human voice with his a
cappella hit “Don’t Worry, Be Happy,” his collaborations
with Yo-Yo Ma, Chick Corea and the Vienna Philharmonic, his improvising
choir Voicestra, and his legendary solo vocal performances.
It’s been the quietest and most polite of
revolutions. Bobby McFerrin was always an unlikely pop star. He
created a lasting ear-worm of a #1 hit early in his career. Then
he calmly went back to pursuing his own iconoclastic musical journey,
improvising on national television, singing melodies without words,
spontaneously inventing parts for 60,000 choral singers in a stadium
in Germany, ignoring boundaries of genre, defying all expectations.
Most people don’t know that Bobby came from a family of singers.
McFerrin’s father, the Metropolitan Opera baritone Robert
McFerrin, Sr., provided the singing voice for Sydney Poitier for
the film version of Porgy & Bess, and his mother Sara was a
fine soprano soloist and voice teacher. Bobby McFerrin grew up surrounded
by music of all kinds. He remembers conducting Beethoven on the
stereo at three, hiding under the piano while his father and mother
coached young singers, dancing around the house to Louie Armstrong,
Judy Garland, Etta Jones and Fred Astaire. He played the clarinet
seriously as a child, but he began his musical career as a pianist,
at the age of 14. He led his own jazz groups, studied composition,
toured with the show band for the Ice Follies, played for dance
classes. Then one day he was walking home and suddenly he understood
that he had been a singer all along.
Bobby’s McFerrin’s history as an instrumentalist
and bandleader is key to understanding his innovative approach to
mapping harmony and rhythm (as well as melody) with his voice. “I
can’t sing everything at once,” he says, “but
I can hint at it so the audience hears even what I don’t sing.”
All that pioneer spirit and virtuosity has opened up a great big
sky full of new options for singers; so have McFerrin experiments
in multi-tracking his voice (Don’t Worry, Be Happy has seven
separate, over-dubbed vocal tracks; Bobby’s choral album VOCAbuLarieS
(with Roger Treece) has thousands). But virtuosity isn’t the
point. “I try not to “perform” onstage,”
says Bobby. “I try to sing the way I sing in my kitchen,
because I just can’t help myself. I want audiences to leave
the theatre and sing in their own kitchens the next morning. I want
to bring audiences into the incredible feeling of joy and freedom
I get when I sing.”
|