Kandace Springs
@ the Union Chapel
14 November 2015
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Biography
Every so often a new singer emerges who’s able to assimilate
multiple musical touchstones and still come off sounding remarkably
fresh and unburdened by the past. Kandace Springs is one of those
artists. The 27-year-old, Nashville-based singer, songwriter and
pianist counts such stylists as Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald,
Nina Simone, Roberta Flack and Norah Jones as her heroes, but as
evidenced by her sparkling full-length Blue Note Records debut,
“Soul Eyes,” Springs mimics none of them.
Instead Springs allows her comely alto to become a conduit that
touches upon soul, jazz and pop while transforming those aforementioned
influences into a personalised sound that reveals itself effortlessly.
“The artists who have inspired me the most all sang so
naturally,” Springs says. “That helped me find
my own sound.”
Springs’ journey to discovering her uniqueness didn’t
happen overnight. In fact, her 2014 self-titled debut EP had a decidedly
contemporary R&B/hip-hop bent with production by Pop & Oak
(Rihanna, Nicki Minaj, Miguel). The EP was incredibly well-received
and led to TV performances on Late Show with David Letterman, Jimmy
Kimmel Live and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, as well
as appearances at the Afropunk and Bonnaroo festivals.
As amazing an experience as that was, as Springs got ready to record
her album she couldn’t shake the feeling that she wasn’t
yet singing her true self. Conversations with her long-time producers
Carl Sturken and Evan Rogers led to soul searching and rethinking
her musical direction. Eventually Springs returned to a more spacious,
organic sound that channels her earlier jazz influences as well
as her Nashville upbringing.
Also during this period, Springs attracted the attention of Prince,
who heard her makeover of Sam Smith’s “Stay With
Me” on the website Okayplayer. The music icon invited her
to perform with him at Paisley Park for the 30th anniversary of
Purple Rain. “He encouraged me a lot before I recorded this
new record, especially during the time in which I was trying to
figure out my sound,” Springs says. “He told
me that I needed to do what comes naturally to me. He was absolutely
right.”
For “Soul Eyes,” Springs continued working closely
with Rogers and Sturken, but they also recruited Grammy-winning
producer Larry Klein (Lizz Wright, Melody Gardot, Joni Mitchell,
Herbie Hancock) to help the singer bring out her distinctive artistic
traits. “Larry wanted me to be free in the studio,”
Springs recalls. “I’ve been through a lot of other
sessions in which the producer tries to take control of your sound.
Larry was just like, ‘Go in and play what you feel.’
That ultimately led to the best outcome; he captured this record
perfectly.”
Klein praises Springs as a “natural.” “In
this era, in which flash and hunger for fame is often equated with
talent, she’s that rare person who sings and plays because
that is what she needs to do in life,” he says. “When
I first heard Kandace, I was sold after hearing one song. Her smoky
voice coupled with a sense of phrasing way beyond her years, and
her angular way of accompanying herself on piano grabbed me right
away.”
The eleven songs contained on “Soul Eyes” all feature
Springs playing piano alongside an illustrious cast of musicians
that includes trumpeter Terence Blanchard, guitarists Dean Parks
and Jesse Harris, drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, organist Pete Kuzma,
bassist Dan Lutz, percussionist Pete Korpela.
Through much of “Soul Eyes,” Springs sings about romantic
affairs of the heart, starting off with the effervescent, country-laden
“Talk to Me,” penned by Harris, who also wrote the gentle,
life-affirming “Neither Old Nor Young.” The ruminative
“Place to Hide” is a song by Judie Tzuke that Rogers
has kept in the back of his mind for some time just waiting for
the perfect singer to deliver it. “Every time I play that
song, the room goes silent,” Springs says.
It was Sturken who introduced Springs to Mal Waldron’s signature
jazz classic, “Soul Eyes.” “When I first heard
it, it blew my mind,” she enthuses. “That song
means so much to me.” Klein suggested the mesmerizing
makeovers of two Shelby Lynne songs (“Thought It Would Be
Easier” and “Leavin’”) as well as War’s
haunting funk classic, “The World Is a Ghetto.”
Springs co-wrote the melancholy ballad, “Fall Guy”
with Rogers and Sturken, as well as the searching, observational
mid-tempo gem “Novocaine Heart.” She co-wrote the smouldering,
cinematic slow-burner “Too Good To Last” - which features
a soaring trumpet solo by Blanchard - with celebrated songwriters
Greg Wells and Lindy Robbins. Springs composed the gorgeous solo
album closer “Rain Falling” by herself. Featuring just
voice and piano, the song dates back more than a decade ago to Springs’
late-teens.
“This new record is just right where it should be,”
attests Springs, who draws much of her inspiration from her father,
Scat Springs, a respected session singer in Nashville. It was due
to him that Springs grew up surrounded by music, and he encouraged
her to take piano lessons after he watched her peck out melodies
on the instrument when she was 10. Yet as a girl, she was equally
interested in other creative outlets, especially visual art and,
more unexpectedly, automobiles. “My dad gave me a Matchbox
car, a Thunderbird or something like that, and my mom gave me
a Barbie,” she says. “I drew a moustache on
the Barbie and never played with it again, and I still have the
Matchbox car.” (Her obsession with cars, which she collects,
rebuilds, and resells, continues to this day.)
It wasn’t until later that a friend of her father’s
sparked something deeper in the young musician by giving her Norah
Jones’ 2002 Blue Note debut, “Come Away With Me.”
“The last song on the record is ‘The Nearness of You’
and that song really inspired me to learn to play piano and sing.
It was just so soulful, simple and stripped down. That really moved
me and touched me. It's when I realised, ‘This is what I wanna
do.’”
Springs did her own arrangement of “The Nearness of You”
and performed it at a music camp in Nashville, which led to her
gaining more professional gig experience in the city. An early demo
Springs recorded caught the ears of Rogers and Sturken, who have
written hits for the likes of Shakira, Christina Aguilera, and Kelly
Clarkson, and are best known for discovering and signing Rihanna
as a teenager. Rogers flew down to Nashville with an offer to sign
Springs to their production company SRP. Still only 17 years old
at the time, she and her family decided that it wasn’t the
right time to pursue a recording career, instead taking a job at
a downtown Nashville hotel where she valet parked cars by day and
sang and played piano in the lounge at night.
A few years later, Springs was talking about going to automotive
design school, but her mother suggested that she get back in touch
with Rogers and Sturken. She instead moved to New York and started
working seriously on new songs and demo recordings. She eventually
landed an audition with Blue Note President Don Was at the Capitol
Records Tower in Los Angeles, winning him over with a stunning performance
of Bonnie Raitt’s “I Can’t Make You Love Me”
(the original of which he had coincidentally produced). “That
song is so soulful. When I first heard that song, it almost moved
me to tears,” Springs says. “I wrote my own
arrangement for it a few years before I played it for him.”
Now as Springs continues to develop as singer and songwriter in
her own right, she’ll surely win over many other hearts. “I
would like to be known as one of the younger people that are keeping
jazz and soul alive and vibrant,” she says. “I
love the realness of jazz and soul.” |