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Suzanne Pittson

Suzanne Pittson is an accomplished jazz vocalist, pianist and lyricist living in New York. She grew up in a musical family and began piano studies at age 8. She subsequently earned a Bachelor of Music and Master of Arts in Music (as a classical pianist) from San Francisco State University, before turning her attention to jazz voice. Suzanne has been recognized for her musicianship and improvisational skills, called by All About Jazz ”more than just a singer, but a jazz musician. With a fluid phrasing and stunning tone, she uses her voice as another instrument, improvising and playing with the melodies.” Jazz Inside New York says: “Some controversy exists over just what makes a jazz vocalist. Listen to Suzanne Pittson and you’ll know.”

Suzanne considers herself an improvising musician, however her phrasing and style have developed from very diverse musical influences including jazz, classical, pop, R&B and rock. She grew up in a family of artists and musicians, hearing jazz in her home while also focusing on classical piano studies and immersing herself in the popular music of the time. Choosing to pursue training as a classical pianist, she completed a BM and MA at San Francisco State University, where she played repertoire for solo piano, two pianos and chamber ensemble, and wrote a master’s thesis entitled “Developmental Techniques in the Late Piano Pieces of Johannes Brahms.” This training created a structure for her overall artistic development; however, when a hand injury forced her to seek other means of musical expression, she embarked on a career as a jazz vocalist. With years of piano study under her belt, she moved toward intensive study of the jazz instrumental language, transcribing and assimilating solos by great jazz instrumentalists and working to hone her style. In a personal conversation with the great jazz educator, David Baker, he said: “You’ve set a huge mountain for yourself, so you’re going to have to keep going.”

While continuing to perform and develop her craft as a jazz artist, Suzanne also did regular pop music performances as a solo singer/pianist as well as with a band. She also studied classical voice for ten years, presenting recitals of such diverse repertoire as Schubert and Schumann lieder, Handel arias and “The Ten Poems of Emily Dickinson” by Aaron Copland.

These diverse elements have over the years merged into a unified and authentic musical concept, enabling Suzanne to freely move from simple melodies to complex phrasing, to burning scat solos, to such difficult jazz compositions as “Blues and the Abstract Truth” and “A Love Supreme.”

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6
Album Review

Suzanne Pittson: Emerge Dancing

Read "Emerge Dancing" reviewed by Nicholas F. Mondello


Emerge Dancing is a fascinatingly intriguing album from New York vocalist (and pianist/composer) Suzanne Pittson and her husband, pianist Jeff Pittson. Primarily a duo album, the pair is joined on a trio of tracks by their son, violist Evan Pittson. Team Pittson has delivered a buffet of jazz, pop, rare-find and well-known standard fare that emerges as 24k performance and production gold. The frequently-recorded John Lennon and Paul McCartney gem “Blackbird" opens this session with the duo ...

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Album Review

Suzanne Pittson: Out of the Hub: The Music of Freddie Hubbard

Read "Out of the Hub: The Music of Freddie Hubbard" reviewed by Wilbert Sostre


The vocalese and scatting tradition is alive and well in singer Suzanne Pittson. With Out of the Hub: The Music of Freddie Hubbard, Pittson continues to establish herself as one of the best singers on today's jazz scene. Out of the Hub includes tunes written by or associated with trumpet legend Freddie Hubbard, with Pittson writing or co-writing five lyrics, which Hubbard approved just three months before his passing in 2008. To honor Hubbard, Pittson recruited ...

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Album Review

Suzanne Pittson: Blues And The Abstract Truth

Read "Blues And The Abstract Truth" reviewed by AAJ Staff


Billy Eckstine once said to an aspiring vocalist “Use your natural chops, never affect an accent that is not your own" and to her credit there is not one iota of affectation in Suzanne Pittson's vocal style. She sings with clarity and never loses the essence of the song with useless histrionics. Pittson's instrument is her voice. No Saxophones, Brasses, Strings or Percussion can duplicate the human voice, it is an entity unto itself capable of twists, turns and innuendo ...

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Album Review

Suzanne Pittson: Resolution: A Remembrance of John Coltrane

Read "Resolution: A Remembrance of John Coltrane" reviewed by Dave Hughes


One of the most adventurous vocal CDs to come around in a long time is Suzanne Pittson's Resolution: A Remembrance of John Coltrane. Pittson achieves her goal of molding her voice into saxophone-like solos. She's bold and daring, very much in the spirit of the CD's honoree. The occasional slight lapse in intonation can be forgiven in settings like this where caution is thrown to the wind and Pittson immerses herself into the song. Her husband, Jeff Pittson, proves to ...

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Album Review

Suzanne Pittson: Resolution: A Remembrance of John Coltrane

Read "Resolution: A Remembrance of John Coltrane" reviewed by Jack Bowers


Resolution is a “concept” album whose cardinal purpose is to reshape the music of saxophonist John Coltrane, especially from his seminal work A Love Supreme, for vocalist Suzanne Pittson and her accompanists. As one who was never a partisan of Trane’s later “spiritual” period, I find it difficult to appraise with confidence those aspects of the session. Besides two sections from A Love Supreme (“Resolution” and “Pursuance” with lyrics added by Suzanne and husband Jeff Pittson) they include Trane’s “Liberia” ...

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Album Review

Suzanne Pittson: Resolution: A Remembrance Of John Coltrane

Read "Resolution: A Remembrance Of John Coltrane" reviewed by Jim Santella


Scat singing and original lyrics mark Suzanne Pittson’s second release, which is centered on John Coltrane’s landmark A Love Supreme album. With a piano trio and tenor saxophonist, altering her voice at times as if it were a trumpet, Pittson sings of life and love, the deep feelings we have buried inside, and how the music can help us find our way. From Northern California, the singer holds Bachelor and Master of Music degrees from San Francisco State University, where ...

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Interview

Seeking the Essence of Freddie Hubbard: Suzanne Pittson "Out of the Hub"

Seeking the Essence of Freddie Hubbard: Suzanne Pittson "Out of the Hub"

Source: The Independent Ear by Willard Jenkins

Vocalist Suzanne Pittson previously accepted the challenge of lyrically interpreting John Coltrane's opus “Resolution" from “A Love Supreme." With Alice Coltrane's consent she did so with all due humility... and with gusto! Her latest effort is a loving tribute to an artist whose legend appears to be growing slowly in ancestry, the late NEA Jazz Master trumpeter Freddie Hubbard. For “Out of the Hub" Suzanne addresses compositions credited to Freddie and songs he indelibly enhanced through his artistry, and she ...

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Performance / Tour

Vocalist Suzanne Pittson Presents the Music of Freddie Hubbard at Sweet Rhythm, Wednesday, January 24th Sets at 8 & 10PM

Vocalist Suzanne Pittson Presents the Music of Freddie Hubbard at Sweet Rhythm, Wednesday, January 24th Sets at 8 & 10PM

Source: Jim Eigo, Jazz Promo Services

The Suzanne Pittson Quartet will present the music of trumpeter Freddie Hubbard with original lyrics on Wednesday, January 24 at Sweet Rhythm in New York City. The Quartet includes: Suzanne Pittson, vocals Jeff Pittson, piano Harvie S, bass Anthony Pinciotti, drums Suzanne will perform such Freddie Hubbard compositions as “Birdlike," “Crisis," “Cunga Black," “Jodo," “Hub-tones" and “The Intrepid Fox" with original lyrics, as well as “Up Jumped Spring," with lyrics by Abbey ...

“When you listen to the lovely Ms. Suzanne Pittson, you are being made privy to the artistry of someone who is setting the pace and creating new standards for those who follow and dare to call themselves ʻjazz singers.ʼ” –Buster Williams

Primary Instrument

Vocals

Location

New York City

Willing to teach

Beginner to advanced

Michael Brecker
saxophone, tenor
John Coltrane
saxophone
Irene Kral
vocals

Music

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