Chris McNulty
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (February 2015) |
Chris McNulty (born 1953) is Australian-born jazz vocalist.[1]
Career[]
McNulty began her professional career singing in pop bands in hotels and clubs in and around Melbourne, Australia. She toured Australia and SE Asia as a member of all the girl band Daughters of Zeus and several pop, funk, & R&B bands. She arrived in the United States in 1988, having been awarded an international study grant from the Music Board of the Australia Council.[2] Two years later, her first U.S. album, Waltz for Debbie, was released. McNulty's original vocalisations for Miles Davis's "Blue in Green" became the song's official, published lyric (Warner Chapell, 1990).[3][4][5][6]
She has worked with Paul Bollenback, Gary Bartz, Igor Butman, Tim Garland, Billy Hart, John Hicks, Ingrid Jensen, Peter Leitch, Mulgrew Miller, Ugonna Okegwo, Tony Reedus, Gary Thomas, Anita Wardell, and Matt Wilson.
She has performed at Smoke Jazz Club (2002), Jazz Standard (2006, 2007), Sweet Rhythm (2005, 2006, 2007), The Blue Note (2006), Jazz at Lincoln Center, Dizzy's Coca-Cola Club (2007), Kitano (February, 2008, June 9, 2010, August 2013), The Bar Next Door (2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014), and 54 Below (2015). In 2006, she co-produced the first Belize Jazz Festival. From 2003–2010, she performed at venues in Russia and Ukraine with Paul Bollenback and Andrei Kondokov's trio. She has toured throughout the UK and Australia.[citation needed]
As an educator, McNulty has been invited to present clinics and workshops at Monash University (Melb), Griffith University (Bris), West Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA- Perth), Australian Institute of Music (AIM-Syd) and University of SA (Adelaide). McNulty's repertoire includes the great jazz standards, modern jazz classics and original compositions.[7]
Awards and honors[]
Australian Bell Award, Best Australian Jazz Vocal Album, The Song That Sings You Here, 2013[8]
Critical reception[]
"McNulty applies poignant jazz chops to the vocal, while accomplishing the impossible, the expression of her story through song...making listeners rethink the meaning of why we love jazz. Eternal is both easy to love, and profoundly touching" – 5 stars, All About Jazz NYC, July 2015
"McNulty has put all she has learned over half a lifetime of jazz singing and songwriting into this exquisite chamber jazz CD. A veteran performer on the international jazz scene, she has many gifts as a performer and a direct channel to the emotional core of a lyric. On this CD, McNulty bares her soul, and one doesn't dare look away." – 4 1/2 stars, DownBeat, June 2015
Discography[]
- Waltz for Debbie (Discovery, 1990)
- Time for Love (Amosaya, 1996)
- I Remember You (MopTop, 2002)
- Dance Delicioso (Elefant Dreams, 2005)
- Whispers the Heart (Elefant Dreams, 2006)
- The Song That Sings You Here (Challenge, 2012)
- Eternal (Palmetto, 2015)[9]
References[]
- ^ Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music in 6 volumes, 2nd ed. 1995, Enfield Guinness Publishing, Ltd., Vol. 4, p. 2648
- ^ "Chris McNulty's Magic Trio Comes to the Healdsburg Jazz Festival". BeyondChron. 1 August 2008. Retrieved 12 December 2012.
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2] Roseanna Vitro JazzTimes "Chris McNulty: Voice of Beauty and Truth" 5 February 2013
- ^ "Jazz Planet" – Miriam Zolin -The Song That Sings You here
- ^ "All About Jazz" – A Siren From Down Under – Ludwig Van Trikt
- ^ The Encyclopedia of Popular Music in 8 volumes, 3rd ed. 1998, Muze U.K. Ltd (distributed in United States of America by Grove's Dictionaries, Inc.), Vol. 5, pp. 3596 and 3597, ISBN 0-333-74134-X
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 11 November 2013. Retrieved 2013-11-29.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ "Chris McNulty | Album Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
- 1953 births
- Australian women singers
- Australian jazz composers
- Australian jazz singers
- Living people
- Singers from Melbourne