Downbeat Magazine "Six String Summit" by Leni Stern

"And my wife, Leni, happened to be in the studio and we asked her to improvise on the spot a couple of preludes to songs, with her doing vocals and playing the n'goni. I don’t know how she does it with the n'goni—I’m still into trying to figure out how to play the same old blues licks on guitar. We were thinking of doing short vignettes in between some of the songs, but what Leni did was perfect."

- Mike Stern - in the FEB/2015 DOWNBEAT MAGAZINE article SIX STRING SUMMIT, about recording his new record 'Eclectic' with Eric Johnson.

American Blues Scene - Leni Stern: Blues Soul, Jazz Mind, African Heart by Leni Stern

By Debra Devi

The blues is a universal language, and electric guitarist Leni Stern’s fluency has lured her into African adventures beyond her wildest dreams — from jamming in Timbuktu to playing Carnegie Hall with Senegalese stars. She has learned another language―Wolof―and has become a griot, a member of the West African class of traveling musical storytellers considered to be the forerunners to American country-blues singers. As Alan Lomax explained in The Land Where the Blues Began, “through the work of performers like Blind Lemon Jefferson [and] Charlie Patton, the griot tradition survived full-blown in America with hardly an interruption.”

Stern, who was born in Germany and lives in New York City, won Gibson Guitar’s Female Jazz Guitarist of the Year Award for five consecutive years and has led ensembles with such musical legends as Dennis Chambers, Bill Frisell, and Michael Brecker–but she began her storied career as a blues guitarist. And it was her blues playing that initially earned her the respect of Senegal and Mali’s finest musicians. In the process, West Africa stole her heart. Stern celebrates that love on her irresistibly upbeat new CD Jelell, recorded in Senegal.

I met Stern at the Crown of the Continent Guitar Festival & Workshop at Flathead Lake Lodge in Bigfork, Montana, where she and her husband, jazz guitarist Mike Stern, were Artists-in-Residence. Mike, who has played with Miles Davis and Jaco Pastorius, released a wonderful collaborative album with Eric Johnson called Eclectic on October 27.

Despite the couple’s heady accomplishments, Leni and Mike both exude what Buddhists call shoshin, or “beginner’s mind”–an attitude of openness and eagerness to learn. In the Main Lodge―a huge log cabin where Artists-in-Residence like the Sterns, Dweezil Zappa, John Oates, Shelby Lynne and Lee Ritenour ate and hung out with faculty and students–you were highly likely to find Mike Stern asking another guitarist to “show me how to play that!”

I was instantly captivated by Leni’s charm, friendliness and obvious deep musical knowledge when she dropped by Matt Smith’s Versatile Guitarist class to demonstrate some African rhythms on the ngoni, a West African ancestor of the American banjo banjo. As she led the class into a slightly complicated yet very funky rhythm, she encouraged each of us to break out with a little soloing over it. The blues scale worked surprisingly well!

Later, she and I sat down for a chat in the Main Lodge, and I asked how her West African adventures began.

“I was a blues musician before I became a jazz musician,” Stern began in her lilting voice, which is still tinged with a German accent. “Growing up in Munich I discovered the blues from my brother’s record collection and from Radio Free Europe. There was a big blues scene in Munich from the American soldiers stationed there – and my brother was a fanatic with his blues collection.

“It was grounds for a severe beating if you scratched his records!” Stern added, laughing.

Stern’s mother was a classical guitarist-turned-lawyer. Stern dug her mother’s acoustic guitar out of storage one day, and tried to jam with her brothers. “I had five brothers and they were all a bit out of hand,” Stern recalled, “so when I tried to play my acoustic guitar with them, no one could hear me! My mother said ‘Well, I guess we’ll have to get you an electric guitar.’ I got a Gibson ES-330 and all she said was, ‘Does it have to be red?'”

Stern chuckled, adding, “It was strawberry red! And very big!”

“The emotion in the blues is its power,” Stern mused. “You can’t teach that. To make somebody feel something, that expressiveness – if they don’t feel it, you can’t make it happen.”

“In 2006,” Stern recalled, “I was invited to play Festival in the Desert three hours outside of Timbuktu in Mali – way out in the Sahara desert. That’s how I met so many African musicians. I loved African music, and had transcribed and studied it. But when I was thrown into the middle of it for the first time, I discovered that they would play their grooves over extended vamps. Everybody jams! I wasn’t sure what to play, so I tried playing my blues licks and they said, ‘Oh, she knows Malian music!’ They were so pleased! ”At first, they looked at me like I was pretty odd – a white woman playing electric guitar in the middle of the desert. I was the only white person in a ten-mile radius. But when I started to play the blues, they said ‘Oh good, she can play! She can play our music, thank God.’

“Initially, I protested! I said, ‘No, I don’t know your music–and I’m really eager to learn it!’ But they insisted that when I was playing the blues, I was playing their music.

“Everybody invited me to play, including Salif Keita [the albino Malian singer known as “The Golden Voice of Africa”], who later hired me for his band. I played with [famed Senegalese singer and guitarist] Baaba Maal, who brought me to play his Blues du Fleuve or “River Blues” Festival in the north of Senegal on the border of Mauritania.

At the Festival in the Desert, Stern became fast friends with ngoni master Bassekou Kouyate and his wife Ami Sacko / (dubbed “the Tina Turner of Mali” by Mojo magazine), who is not only a successful solo artist but also the lead singer of Ngoni Ba, her husband’s famous band.

“I’d go over to their tent all the time during the festival,” Stern said, “and me and Ami would go shopping―the Tuareg jewelers bring amazing things to the festival–and Ami started explaining to me the role of the griot, which is to tell the stories of the people. You put into song what’s going on during your time – like Bob Dylan, or Woody Guthrie! That’s the gig.”

In Savannah Syncopators: African Retentions in the Blues, Paul Oliver noted that “a [blues] singer like Lightnin’ Hopkins is very much a griot in personality, with a similar flair for spontaneous and devastating comment on the passing scene.”

“Ami learned to be a griot from her aunt, Fanta Sacko ,” Stern continued, “one of the first popular female singers in West Africa. The griots in their stories tell the history of their people, like which king conquered who, etcetera. But Ami also creates songs that tell the stories of the people of today. She sang my praise because I was her guest. She sang that I come from America and I am married to Michael Stern.

“The griot is the storyteller who introduces somebody,” Stern continued. “Since I could play, she started taking me with her to ceremonies – weddings, baby namings, funerals. I played electric guitar with a portable amp. I couldn’t play the ngoni well enough yet at that time, but I learned the songs on electric guitar and then eventually I translated the music to the ngoni, which I studied with Bassekou Kouyate.

“I learned how to be a griot from Ami. I saw how she’d send her little brother into the audience to gather information – who’s married to who, what family they come from, what the history of their family is, what special qualities each person has. The little brother would make notes on a tiny piece of paper, small enough to fit in the palm of your hand, and Ami would take that and write a song. The people in the audience know she’s looking for that information so they would tell the little brother: ‘say that she’s everybody’s best friend’ or ‘nobody goes hungry out of her house’ – and then Ami would include that praise in her song.

“In terms of the blues,” Stern added, “what was interesting to me was that the songs Ami taught me had that John Lee Hooker feel to them–that rhythm–and they were such dramatic tales. They felt like the blues to me. One song, for example, was the story of a man who was told by a seer that he was going to be rich, but that he mustn’t take anyone as his wife. Well, of course he does, and then he is poisoned on his wedding night. I mean, that’s just like a blues song!

The crossroads―a concept that looms large in the blues–also came up during Stern’s time in Mali, when she began teaching at a school. In the Malian tradition, Stern explained, “if you don’t initiate the teachers, no one is going to leave their children at the school. So I was taken to the lady who reads the cowry shells. She determined that the spirit that protects me is the spirit in the water; in Nigeria she’s called Yemoja. The lady gave me things to bury at the crossroads. As I was digging a hole to bury these things at sundown at the crossroads, I definitely had an eerie feeling!”

When she returned to New York, Stern found some top-notch musicians among the African immigrant community. “For years,” Stern explained, “I would record in Africa and then go to New York and put a band together with immigrants from Africa to play the music. But when I was going to start the new album, my band in New York said “We’re not good enough? You’ve got to go to Africa to record?”

“They really gave me the guilt trip!” Stern added, laughing, “so I brought my New York band back to where they’re from. It was great because we got to stay with their families. My lead drummer, Alioune Faye is a member of the famous Sing Sing Five Family Orchestra of drummers. So we got six of his brothers to come play and we then had seven brilliant percussionists from Senegal on the record.

“The album title, Jelell,” Stern noted, “is a Wolof word, and Wolof is one of the languages of Senegal that has seeped into the language of the blues over here. Jelell means “grab it,” and is part of a popular chant, jelell jelels jelell boula neche jelell, which means “go get your own!” or “grab the bull by the horns,” as we might say in English.

“With this album,” Stern added, “we hope to tour some blues festivals and invite blues musicians to sit in with our African band. Because call-and-response is equally important for both African bands and blues bands. If my drummer gets carried away with a solo and doesn’t call me, I don’t come in – that’s an African thing. Call-and-response is in every part of African music–in the drums, in the guitar, in the bass– everybody is talking and throwing musical ideas back and forth. That’s what we do in blues and jazz, too, but this is where it started.

“You know,” Stern continued, “the importation of African slaves to America had an effect rather like how the Greek slaves affected the Roman Empire. The Romans imported many Greek slaves, yet these Greek slaves came from a high culture and contributed a lot to Roman society. Similarly, the slaves who were brought to America were coming to a very young country, but they were from ancient societies with highly developed traditions. They brought ethics, philosophy, religion that had profound influences on America. The Romans were smart; they had those Greek slaves teach their children. And now our children are studying blues and jazz.

“It’s still hard today, though, for some Americans to accept what the Africans brought here, because it involves remembering that the early Americans who brought the slaves here were human rights offenders of the first degree. But as the pain and shame of slavery fades, the awareness of this contribution is increasing–and that is a wonderful thing!”

Metaljazz.com - Words About Music from Greg Burk and Friends by Leni Stern

Live review: Leni Stern African Trio & friends at the Baked Potato, May 7.

Leni Stern is writing out her set lists at a table beside the stage. "I made such nice lists," she mutters to bassist Mamadou Ba, "and then I left them at the hotel."

With Ba in the band for several years now, they hardly need a map. I talked to Ba before the show, and learned that the tall & slim 50-year-old Senegalian (he looks 35) played with Harry Belafonte for 10 years; his delicate right-hand fingerwork and thumb popping are mostly self-taught from observing fusion heroes such as Marcus Miller; and like Stones fans who eventually worked back to Muddy Waters, he rediscovered his African folk roots later in life. I hardly recognized him tonight in his short-billed fedora, heavy bookworm specs and Converse tennies.

Stern sports loose black leatherette pants and four recent tattoos, which she showed off to friends earlier; the one on her right calf reads "Focus" in Japanese, no doubt to center her when she's squatting on the floor of a Malian schoolhouse, showing n'goni riffs to the local kids.

She'll save the n'goni (sorta like a uke or mandolin) until later. She tunes her old Strat, strums a soft chord and drifts into "Baonaan," a rain/love song from her trio's current "Jellel," punctuated by perky stop-start unisons with Ba. The trio has augmented regular hand drummer Alioune Faye with frequent collaborator Kofo the Wonderman on talking drum, and the thumpers' smiles, eye contact and excited interplay show how much they dig the teamwork. The first set focuses on more new stuff -- "Jellel," "Bubbles," "If I Were Crazy" and Ba's signature Arabic-flavored hope instrumental, "Babacar" -- before closing with what has become Stern's theme song for the last decade, the funky "On the Outside" ("Don't try to cage me in, I'm fine where I have always been").

Stern's voice is soothing, but her fingers are on fire. She lets sparks of Albert Collins, Eric Clapton and Jerry Garcia pour through her, shaded with sinewy femininity, challenged by the thrilling chromatic modes she's been expanding on for a few years, and interspersed with harsh chordal bursts. Not many musicians dance this close to the edge, which is what makes Stern's live shows such adventures.

Between sets, Stern greets the faithful and poses for a snap with friend Esperanza Spalding, whose famous hair explosion is tied back asymmetrically tonight.

The second set spreads Stern's history around and widens the sound field with a couple of guest guitarists. Musicians Institute wheel Beth Marlis plugs in for the pensive "City Sing for Me" (from Stern's groundbreaking 1997 "Black Guitar") and tunes in with dead-on feel to some trebly funk/soul/reggae riddims (Stern's "Spirit in the Water" is in there someplace).

When omnipresent industry ax (and friend of Mike Stern) Jeff Richman takes over the old Fender Twin amp, Leni switches to percussive high plucking on n'goni and the drummers rock into a heavier thud groove. Richman echoes the chromatic stuff with a bit more restraint, dropping in sharp ping harmonics and bringing a bit more fusion tradition to the proceedings, though he adapts to every variation as Stern gets emotional with "Still Bleeding," darkly playful with "The Cat Has Stolen the Moon" and urgently plaintive with the Afro-reggae waltz "Save Me."

Stern rips a twisting, terrifying Strat lead before grabbing the n'goni again; she slings that aside and slaps into a vigorous drum jam. She's got more energy at the end than at the beginning, and the band has an early flight tomorrow. Well, don't become a musician if you like to sleep.

 

Jazz Weekly Review by Leni Stern

Leni Stern: Jelell

Guitarist Leni Stern continues her foray into mixing jazz and African sounds on this excellent session of originals. She teams up with Mamadou Ba/b and Alioiune Faye/perc as the core foundation, but various percussionists, vocalists and keyboardists pop in like cameo actors in a Shakespeare play. Lithe guitar licks form melodies and rhythms that meld with the enticing percussion on pieces such as “Babacar” and “Bubbles” and a mix of vocals ranging from African chants to American rap contribute to material like “Gnate Yone” and “Jelell.” Through it all, Stern’s use of guitar has an loose and earthy touch, making her one of the few Westerners who has mastered the dancing guitars that permeate sounds ranging from Mali to Malawi. Excellent outing. - George W. Harris

Quotes by Leni Stern

The Los Angeles Times: “Leni Stern’s geographic journey yields spiritual fruit.”

The Washington Post: “Stern doesn't collaborate with the West Africans so much as commune with them, she never sounds out of her element, even when her pop and jazz sensibilities are most apparent.”

Downbeat Magazine: “The integration between Stern's music and the Mali musicians' mastery is nearly seamless.”

Jelell - Somethingelsereviews.com by Leni Stern

Leni Stern – Jelell (2013)

by Mark Saleski

Perhaps like a lot of jazz guitar fans, I came to Leni Stern by way of her husband Mike, the owner of the so-called “Chops of Doom.” But with no Internet as a guide (this was the late 1980s), my method of discovery was to spend far too many hours poking through the jazz bins at Tower Records...

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Santa Fe New Mexican by Leni Stern

Long fascinated by the varieties of music heard across the globe — she’s spent time in India studying that country’s music — Stern embraced the music of Mali and Senegal as part of a progression that has seen her adopting a host of musical traditions....

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Guitar Player - Finally the Rain has Come by Leni Stern

LENI STERN: Drones for Peace


Any musician who uses his or her gift to help the nation come to terms with September 11 is an angel. Having said that, the deluge of post-tragedy works have proven it’s a risky business addressing real horror and loss through pop songs. Th constructs of words and music, verses and choruses, can compromise even the most sincere artistic intentions by being too Sesame Street (such as Paul McCartney singing "Talkin’bout freedom"), too righteous, or too gruesome. The pure sound of instrumental music, however, can express complicated emotions without agitating the listener with an inappropriate word or phrase. Even better, the individual’s imagination is free to interpret how the textures and melodies rouse their feelings.
For Leni Stern, the healing started with a groove. The New York-based guitarist, singer, songwriter, and orchestrator didn’t conceive her Finally the Rain has Come (LSR) as a remembrance of 9/11, but songs such as "For Peace to Come" were formed by her perceptions of living with the aftermath. "That song was inspired by this wild tabla and drum improv between Zakir Hussein and Keith Carlock that, to me, expressed the feeling of September 2001 in NYC" says Stern. "They just started playing, and I rolled tape." However, it took months for Stern to analyze the drum track and develop a song form. "I didn’t really know what to do with the track at first," she says, " but I knew I couldn’t not put it on the album – it was just too amazing. Eventually, I surmised the form was basically a pattern of 4 and 8 bar phrases, and I wrote a chord progression with my Martin that fit the rhythmic structure. Then I used my JamMan to loop layer drones in E, B, Am and D that fade in and out of the progression. That was the ‘peace’ part – a big, calming drone.
The tabla rhythms and drones- as well as Stern’s study Indian music amd her love for guitarist John McLaughlin’s western/eastern hybrids- inspired additional Indian textures.
"I decided to begin the song with an improvisation in the style of an India alap- which is a rhythmless outline of the feeling of a song," explains Stern. "I thought that was the best way to introduce this vibe of peace and calm and people connecting. That was something I needed at the time of tragedy, and I felt that was the right message for the song to deliver. Of course, there’s no guitar tradition in Indian music, but they have a 4,000-year-old improvisational technique that fascinates me. There are all these embellishments, and yet their choice of notes- and how they’ll use a single interval throughout a piece- are very disciplined. It’s a step further from modal improvisation, but I use their school of improvising within a normal western context- which is my tradition."
When the tabla/drum groove enters afer Stern’s intro, "For Peace to Come" builds and intertwines thematic layers with sitar and acoustic parts performed by Larry Saltzman, and fingerpicked lines played by former GP associate editor (and current Norah Jones sideman) Adam levy. "We spent one Sunday just finding ways of creating textures with guitars," says Stern. "It was like arranging an orchestra- you know, lines coming in and lines coming out- except that we really didn’t plan anything. I just said, ‘Let’s take all the guitars we have and see if we can do something with this beautiful percussion duet.’ We were just soloing along. It was a long process, and later I picked the parts that best fit the song."
The work also features violin lines by Jenny Scheinman and ends with what Stern calls "hillbilly" vocal harmonies. "I added the violin to show that we must remain calm in the face of anger and destructive and destructive power of terrorism," says Stern. "And the outro harmonies bring in this truly hopeful American element. With all the textures and emotional layer, arranging this song was like making a film. I found myself giving the players acting instructions more than musical feedback!"

LA WEEKLY - live at Rocco by Leni Stern

LA WEEKLY
Aug. 30 - Sept. 5, 2002 - by Greg Burk


Leni Stern Is Real

LENI STERN GOT A NEW AUDIENCE. That was part of what she was shooting for several years back when she stopped being exclusively a fusion-rooted electric-guitar plucker and stepped out as a singer and a balladic songwriter as well. Of course, she also hoped to tug her old audience along. Which hasn't happened so much.

It was like when a friend suddenly finds Jesus; the old fans weren't ready for Stern to start bearing unfamiliar fruit in her 40s. The fruit has been unusual, too: satisfying and sustaining, very fresh, but darkly colored and not overbred. Stern's voice, while rangy, projects an impression less of virtuosity than of urgent conversation, breaking and straining here and there. Her songwriting complements that: naked lyrics set to gently leaping, can't-get-'em-out-of-your-head melodies. And she still plays the subtlest, most expressive guitar this side of Bill Frisell. (Yes, she's recorded with him.)

Such numerous strengths had to draw new listeners, who couldn't believe they'd bumped into a musician who stood up to the kind of expectations they'd built on Leonard Cohen and Joni Mitchell. And she was sort of new.

German-born but based in New York, Stern often gets to Europe and Asia, not skipping L.A. She was in Hollywood last month at Rocco, a club with a different (and good) feel, as if some of the world's head-turningest musicians have wandered into your rec room and started jamming. On this night, Fender bassist Paul Socolow, who's backed Stern for a long time, walked up in his untucked T-shirt and plugged in; young drummer Keith Carlock, whom she picked out of class when she was teaching music at the University of North Texas a few years back, was muss-headed and jet-lagged.

Stern smiled warmly when she talked, and didn't when she played. In her eyes, down-slanted and naturally dark-aproned, there was seriousness and the memory of pain. Her hair was a white bird nest with a little pink in it. On her lean left arm, a black tattoo -- the Tibetan character for Om -- accented her quiet vitality and determination.

She likes the Stratocaster, a guitar that can stretch, and she sat, lightly wringing it for Latinate strums, pungent blues punctuations, butterfly flutters up and down the neck -- even rock-out power chords as Carlock went Moon-crazy behind her. Her singing was direct, vulnerable, unpretentiously beautiful.

But it was the songwriting that made the biggest impact. The ballads "Love Lightly," "I Call You" and "Love Everyone" sounded eternally familiar. "Empty Hands" defined loss, "Love Is Real" built passion, both coming off as not-yet-acknowledged classics. Just to place herself in the tradition, Stern whispered through the standard "I'll Be Seeing You," and its recollections and shades of emotion plainly came from the place where she lives. When she sang "Where Is God?" she spoke for everybody. Who else does that?

STERN'S SONGS AREN'T BACKGROUND music. Her words about watching someone sleep, or hearing her own footsteps on a city street, or weeping and praying, will remind you of people you have loved and of those who have died. Compelling as she is, and as easy as she is to hear, she's not easy listening. Facing real emotion is challenging and uncool. But once you've done it . . .

It's been an inspiration to watch Stern's artistic progress. When she couldn't get re-signed in the mid-'90s, she got going with her own label, Leni Stern Recordings (www.lenistern.com). When she wanted to sing, she just did. And after a period when she collaborated with songwriter Larry John McNally, who wasn't always a perfect fit, her last two CDs -- the elegantly orchestrated Kindness of Strangers and the star-bedecked Finally the Rain Has Come -- have witnessed the full flowering of her art, with nearly all the compositions attributed to herself, and the consistency level at Olympian heights. Which is not to diminish the value of her other LSR releases: Black Guitar offers gems like "One Day" and "Can Joe Cocker (Hit the High Notes Tonight)," while Recollection is a bridge between her two audiences, featuring great recent songs and a selection of her best earlier instrumentals.

One feels obliged to add, if only to reinforce the image of a woman who takes nothing lying down, that Stern is an activist for cancer survivors. And that she holds belts in Shaolin martial arts. But she doesn't have to get near you to kick your ass.

Billboard review: Kindness of Stangers by Leni Stern

Billboard
October 28, 2000 by Steve Graybow


Continuing her remarkable transformation from jazz guitarist to folk/jazz chanteuse, Stern turns in a beautiful set of songsand adds another feather to her cap, that of orchestrator. The album's centerpiece, the 19 minute "Vedo Il Tuo Viso (I See Your Face)" is a moving mini-comcerto for guitar, voice, and orchestra commemorating the 20th anniversary of a terrorist attack in Italy, commisioned by the town where the atrocity took place. Stern's music and lyrics reflect the sorrow, longings, and passions of life, painted in universal blue-toned hues that bring a commonality to her experiences. Plus, she continues to be a notable jazz guitarist, spinning beautifully crafted lines within her folk-influenced songs. The fact that Stern records for her own independent label makes the depth and creativity of her music all the more commendable.

 

Jazztimes - Recollection by Leni Stern

Jazz Times
4/99 Currents column by Hilarie Grey


Those who haven't discovered the poignant writing and excellent guitar work of Leni Stern are given a great gift with Recollection (Leni Stern Recordings, LSR 042;74:57) This collection, released on Stern's own label, is a thoughtful tour of some of her earlier work, along with some vibrant and often heartrending new material. Stern's range of voice and influences is shown at every memorable stop - from the ringing, dreamy tableaus of "Shooting Star" and the wild, raging jazz drumming and piano rolls knuckling under her skillful slide on "Talk to Me" (both from 1992), to an eerily beautiful, spindly guitar duet with Bill Frisell on "Someday My Prince Will Come," reaching back to 1985. Stern's 1996 recording of "Something is Wrong In Spanish Harlem"---a gentle, smokey and fragile duet with Wayne Krantz -- underscores her beautiful, genuine approach to song craft. This emmotional openness is related in bittersweet new tracks "Love Lightly" and "Love is Real," with prickly neo-folk undertones and trmulous vocals recalling a more weathered Suzanne Vega or Carly Simon. Stern, a cancer survivor, always infuses her music with a tough sense of hope (evidenced in the poignant "Wondering Why" and worldy blues tale "Richie"), making her Recollection some of contemperary music's greatest teachings.

Billboard - Leni Stern Gathers A Folk Jazz-Tinted 'Recollection' by Leni Stern

Billboard
October 31, 1998 Jazz - Blues Notes column by Steve Graybow


Leni Stern Gathers A Folk Jazz-Tinted 'Recollection'

Journeywoman: Two years ago, guitarist Leni Stern decided to form her own record label. "With all the media available, the computers, the online record stores, it's opened up a lot of opportunities for independent artists and labels," explains the ebullient Stern. "As an artist, it is nice to see the product through from the beginning to end. I have a say in the music, the packaging, and the way my music is marketed. Simply, I have control."

The first release on Lent Stern Recordings (LSR) was 1997's "Black Guitar." It was a first for Stern in more ways than one, in that it was also her first album to feature predominantly vocal, folk-influenced songs. "I think every guitarist likes to sit down and sing with their instrument," she explains. "It is also a way to get closer to your listener. It's more of a direct conversation because you are expressing something, addressing the subject of your songs in a very direct way."

"Recollection" Stern's latest outing (due Tuesday [27] from LSR) is a compilation of tracks culled from her past 13 years as a recording artist. Several instruments that originally appeared on the Lipstick and Enja labels are featured along new material recorded specifically for the project. True to her indie aesthetic, Stern fills the package with her own extensive liner notes, providing remarkably candid insight into the often fragile, emotionally charged stories behind her music. "I always liked to sing the blues," explains Stern. "I'm German, and Germans have an incredible fondness for the blues. But since my life experience is so different from that of [blues man] Lightnin' Hopkins, I sing blues that reflect my own life and generation." Those reflections include meditations on Stern's childhood in Germany, where she grew up just miles from the remains of the Dachau concentration camp, and instrumentals that reflect her battle with breast cancer a number of years ago. Stern's voice perfectly compliments her guitar; both are equally clear-toned, honest and direct.  "Somebody recently called my music 'folk jazz' and I liked that," Stern relates. "I always thought that folk music got its name because it was music for the folks, for the people. I think jazz used to be that, but we've gotten away from that. Hopefully, what I'm doing [with my music and with the label] is a move away from the kind of huge mega-stardom that jazz really doesn't lend itself to." Among Stern's collaborators are Paul Motion, Bill Frisell, and vocalist/songwriter Larry John McNally. Saxophonist Dave Binney, a member of Stern's current band, solos with a probing lyricism on several new tracks, adding further depth to the guitarist's playing and song craft. "I struggled with the idea of a compilation album for sometime," Stern explains, with a hint of lingering reluctance. "But after listening back to the material, I realized that it was in many ways a tribute to not only where I've been in my life, but more importantly to great musicians I've befriended and played with."

Ultimately "Recollection" chronicles both an artistic and a personal journey, allowing the listener to share in Stern's joy of self-expression and musical interaction. "I hope that having my own label and control over my musical direction will bring me even closer to my listeners," she says. "I encourage the fans to E-mail their comments and feedback. I want my audience to be as much a part of the music as possible." Stern will be on tour throughout the remainder of the year, in addition to her almost-weekly gig at New York's 55 Bar. Look for her to host a jazz guitar panel at this year's Jazz-Times convention.

Washington Post - Kindness of Stangers by Leni Stern

Though Leni Stern's previous recordings have been pointing toward a stylistic leap, from award-winning fusion jazz guitarist to contemporary singer-songwriter, "Kindness of Strangers" still comes as something of a revelation. As accomplished as it is accessible, Stern's latest CD suggests that she's finally found her true voice in the studio - writing, arranging and performing original material.

Beginning with the dreamy ballad "I Call You," Stern creates a series of evocative soundscapes that compliment her fragile but soulful voice and subtly integrate her guitar skills. Her keen pop instincts are readily apparent throughout the album, to the extent that some of the tunes, including "Rescue My Heart" and the title track, wouldn't sound out of place on a Paul Simon album. Yet the combination of Stern's wistful voice, smart lyrics and orchestral designs are distinctive enough to make comparisons pointless. While fans of Stern's more subdued guitar work won't be disappointed with the gentle lyricism she conjures on the touchy "You Won't Forget Me" and other tracks, the emphasis here is on textured arrangements, not six-string artistry. By the time Stern finishes unveiling the Cd's most ambitious and moving piece, "Vedo Il Tuo Viso (I See Your Face)," a nearly 20-minute orchestral suite commemorating a terrorist attack in Italy, her multifaceted talent is shining in ways it never has before.

 

Guitar Player - Kindness of Strangers by Leni Stern

Guitar Player
June 2001 by Adam Levy


Orchestral Maneuvers/Leni Stern Plays with Symphonic Textures Leni stern's latest album, Kindness of Strangers, features the guitarist/songstress in a setting she hasn't explored on any of her previous albums. Her evocative songs and crystalline, jazz-meets-blues guitar lines are still the main attraction, but, this time out, she has surrounded herself with orchestral textures. Her interest in this new approach began in 1998, when she was commissioned to write and perform a piece for guitar and orchestra. While working on this project, stern became enchanted by the richness and depth of the symphonic sounds, and decided to include the commissioned song, "Vedo Il Tuo Viso ( I See Your Face)," on Kindness.

With the lush, 19-minute piece serving as the album's cornerstone, Stern decided to use orchestral textures throughout the album to shade, color, and highlight her already resplendent songs and guitar playing. To keep her recording budget from going overboard, Stern opted to use sampled orchestral sounds instead of live players. But because she and coproducer/coorchestrator George Whittey took pains to make sure the counterfeit cellos and oboes behave like their acoustic counterparts, the album never sounds less than luscious. Stern's voice and guitar tracks - and her rhythm section's animated bass and drum tracks - all meld perfectly with the orchestrated samples, and the album maintains a live-in-thestudio vibe, even though it was crafted in two different studios over a two-month period. Using a fusion of big-studio and home-studio environments, and high-tech and low-tech tools, Stern and Whitty crafted Stern's most ambitious album to date - and managed to have a little fun in the process.

Billboard - Finally the Rain has Come by Leni Stern

Billboard
June 8, 2002


FLAG WAVING: Guitarist/vocalist Leni Stern brings forth another genre-hopping exercise with the June 18 release of Finally the Rain Has Come on her own eponymous, Ryko distributed label.
The new album, Stern’s 12th, is the fourth on which the Munich-born performer, who got her start in the jazz business, has sung her own compositions.
Stern says of her move into the vocal realm, " I had sung when I was in Germany, but I didn’t know what to sing. I didn’t want to sing standards, and I didn’t want to perform other people’s songs. I was a composer, and I didn’t know how to write my own lyrics…I just very organically started writing lyrics."
The collection includes some striking songs, including "Empty Hands" and "Bury Me Standing," but the high point of the album is "Where Is God," a powerfully affecting song the New York-based musician wrote in response to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks there.
"I was pretty incapacitated," she recalls. "We couldn’t play. Every time the amplifier would make a little sound, we would jump two feet in the air. I was speechless for a long time…The whole mind-set was so troublesome. I started to write about it."
Backed by bassist Paul Socolow and drummer Keith Carlock, both members of her working band, Stern gets valuable assists from some well known friends on the album. Saxophonist Michael Brecker is featured on "Where is God," and guitarists Bill Frisell and John Mclaughlin make guest appearances. Stern says of Frisell, who was her guitar teacher and a member of her first band, "It was Bill who told me that I should record my first record. He made me feel like I would insult him if I didn’t record it." She met Mclaughlin early in her career ("He was very gracious-after every concert, he talks to all the little guitar players," she recalls) and reconnected with him when she was studying in India recently. Stern and her group begin a U.S. tour June 21 at the Living Room in New York.

The Washington Post - review of Finally the Rain Has Come by Leni Stern

Leni Stern's Welcome 'Rain' Thursday, August 15, 2002

Anyone who has heard "Finally the Rain Has Come," Leni Stern's new CD, was aware of the challenge facing the singer-guitarist at Blues Alley on Tuesday night. The music on "Rain," much of it richly atmospheric, is laced with cameos by such top-tier jazz artists as John McLaughlin, Bill Frisell and Michael Brecker. Conjuring a similar sound onstage, in a stripped-down quartet setting, is no easy task.

Stern and her core band worked small wonders, though, by emphasizing the album's entrancing melodies and the always sincere aspects of her songwriting. Stern's warm embrace of pop, jazz and world-beat influences was also well served by her band mates -- fiddler Jenny Scheinman, bassist Paul Socolow and drummer Keith Carlock.

Beginning with "By the Stars Above," modal passages were adorned with exotic tones and surprisingly colorful textures. At one point, Socolow even played bottleneck-style with the drink he had brought onstage, and during the reprises of the album's raga-like title cut and the Gypsy-inspired "Bury Me Standing," the band covered a lot of territory without ever sounding out of its element. Carlock deftly underpinned the moods with everything from droning pulses to chattering syncopations, and Scheinman's fiddle provided stirring counterpoint to Stern's mostly fingerpicked Stratocaster.

While Stern's soprano isn't imposing, it is an emotionally powerful instrument in the right setting. A case in point is "Where Is God," a song inspired by the events of Sept. 11. It's the standout track on "Rain," and in concert Stern infused the ballad with a compelling mixture of tenderness and outrage.

- Mike Joyce