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In a remarkable recording career that spans three and a half decades,
Kenny Rankin has established an impressive set of creative credentials,
as an insightful songwriter, a distinctive guitarist and, above
all, a world-class singer possessing an uncanny ability to cut straight
to a song's emotional heart.
While his supple, pristine tenor has earned him status as a singer's
singer, Rankin's songwriting talents have been widely recognized
by his peers. For example, his "In the Name of Love"
inspired a memorable version by Peggy Lee, while his "Haven't
We Met" has been cut by a number of jazz and pop artists including
Carmen McRae and Mel Torme. Other Rankin compositions have been
covered by a diverse assortment of artists.
Growing up in the multicultural hotbed of New York's Washington
Heights neighborhood, he absorbed a broad array of musical influences,
from AfroCuban to Top 40 to Jazz to Brazilian. But he traces his
emergence as a performer to a specific childhood epiphany. "I
was in the fourth grade and sang 'O Holy Night' in a Christmas
play," he recalls. "My teacher, Miss Isabel Pringle,
came over to me and patted me on the head and said 'Kenneth, that
was lovely.' She set me on the path in music that I find myself
on today."
As a teenager, the budding artist signed with Decca Records and
released a handful of singles. A few years later, he signed with
Columbia Records, and found himself playing guitar on Bob Dylan's
landmark 1965 album Bringing It All Back Home. Not long after, he
performed on The Tonight Show, whose host Johnny Carson became such
a fan that Kenny was ultimately invited to appear on the show more
than 20 times. Carson even contributed liner notes to Rankin's 1967
debut LP Mind Dusters, which introduced his much-covered pop standard
"Peaceful." That album's mix of original tunes and outside
material would continue to yield rewarding results on such subsequent
releases as Family, Like a Seed, and Inside.
Rankin's 1975 album Silver Morning featured a popular reworking
of The Beatles' "Blackbird" that so impressed Paul
McCartney that he asked Rankin to represent himself and John Lennon
when they were inducted into the Songwriters Hall Of Fame. 1976's
much-acclaimed The Kenny Rankin Album was recorded live in the studio,
and teamed the singer with a 60-piece orchestra arranged and conducted
by the legendary Don Costa to create what many now consider the
first contemporary "torch" album; Rankin and Costa continued
their collaboration on 1980's After the Roses.
Through much of the 1980s, Rankin largely concentrated on the live
stage, increasingly emphasizing pop and jazz standards using jazz
accompaniment. He ended a long break from recording in 1995 with
a pair of albums: Professional Dreamer, a collection of standards,
and the Brazilian-flavored Here In My Heart, both for the Private
Music label.
However
one may attempt to pigeonhole Kenny Rankin-as jazz vocalist, pop
artist or introspective singer/songwriter-the openhearted emotional
forthrightness of his singing renders such classifications irrelevant.
"My interpretation of the songs is purely emotional,"
he explains. "We've all experienced disappointment and heartache,
and that's what I draw upon. When I sing 'A Song for You'
and 'Where Do You Start?' or 'She Was Too Good to Me,'
I'm really hurting for the people in the song. I never change lyrics,
because when I select a song it's usually because of how the lyric
impacts me. I've been accused of straying from the melody, but when
I sing I'm feeling, not thinking."
"When I started, I was very young and felt like I was the
center of the universe. But over the years I've come to understand
that it's not about me, it's about the work, and about having the
opportunity to do good work. If you do anything for any length of
time, it's inevitable that you're gonna have ups and downs.
You make mistakes, but you learn from that. "I just feel privileged
that I've been allowed to continue in my craft, and I've been encouraged
by all the positive feedback I've gotten from people over the years,"
he concludes. "When someone tells you a song changed their
life, or inspired them to look at things in a slightly different
way, well, you can't ask for a better reward than that."
Miss Pringle would be proud.
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