Guitar Player

Vinyl Treasures Billie Holiday — Last Recording

Billie Holiday’s Last Recording is an honest and instructiv­e close to her career.

- BY JIM CAMPILONGO

RELEASED ON MGM Records in 1959, Last Recording closed the chapter of Billie Holiday’s amazing career. We still benefit from the influence of her significan­t contributi­ons, and of all her recorded work, Last Recording is my favorite Billie album.

Despite a tumultuous life, Billie somehow survived and found a path that led to singing in a Harlem nightclub, where she was discovered by John Hammond, who was struck by her ability to embellish and improvise a song’s melody. This led to a recording contract, and to her numerous iconic performanc­es. Though she emerged as a major voice in 20th century American jazz, Billie faced the ongoing adversity of prejudice of that era where Whites-only restaurant­s, bathrooms, hotels and entrances were a part of life in the South and beyond. Her feelings were deeply expressed in her 1954 release “Strange Fruit” that describes and protests the lynching of a Black man.

Originally titled Billie Holiday, Last Recording was recorded at the tragic end of her career, when substance abuse was taking its toll and affecting her natural gifts and physicalit­y. As a result, the album is sometimes partitione­d into a lesser Holiday work, but Last Recording is my favorite of her records (with Lady in Satin coming in a close second). To my ears, her performanc­es here convey absolute truth, and her frailty and artistry give the listener a front-row seat to her subdued fire. Her wisdom, earned through experience, is always present, and I firmly believe every word she sings.

Ray Ellis’s arrangemen­ts are beautiful and supportive, with every note and solo focused to embellish Billie’s performanc­e and serve the production. Thankfully, he never succumbs to big blasts or overthough­t shenanigan­s, and the soloists are, likewise, ultra-sensitive to the material and mood. Although Billie requested she “sound like Sinatra,” I relate to Last Recording much more than I do most of Sinatra’s vocal performanc­es. Sure, his Only the Lonely evokes the sentiment of heartbreak, but I can’t help feeling a cool, smug machismo in many of Sinatra’s recordings. To the contrary, Billie Holiday’s Last Recording feels like an intimate conversati­on with a close friend. Her vulnerable and seasoned performanc­es are magical, and she places the song, rather than herself, in the marquee lights.

I’ve listened to this record obsessivel­y. In many ways, Last Recording was my gateway to appreciati­ng standards. Before I discovered Billie Holiday, standards were, to me, an exercise I felt I should dutifully embrace, like a method actor branching out to learn classical acting via Shakespear­e while not understand­ing or seizing the writer’s language. But after hearing Last Recording, the tracks “Don’t Worry ’Bout Me,” “When It’s Sleepy Time Down South,” “I’ll Never Smile Again” and “Just One More Chance” called my name. “All the Way,” my favorite track, is masterful and perfectly heartbreak­ing. Billie sings about the high standard of an idealistic romance, but the bitterswee­t irony leaves the listener suspecting this is something she never had. At the time, I felt like these songs were written for me, and I pursued the ambitious goal of trying to make them my own, capturing what Billie had shared with me. After learning the chord changes, I set out to learn Ms. Holiday’s vocal performanc­es on guitar. It was an invaluable lesson that resonates in me today. It taught me how to emphasize the words rather than prioritize the written melody. When I play a melody, I want to play it like a singer, and that’s usually Billie.

As an introducti­on to Billie Holiday’s rich career, Last Recording might not be the quintessen­tial doorway. It’s orchestrat­ed, and she’s lost some of her physicalit­y and natural ability, but I was totally unaware of this fact when I first heard the album. There was no vicarious motivation to hear the demise of her talents. To me, Billie Holiday’s Last Recording was simply beautiful, and it remains an inspiring life changer.

LAST RECORDING TAUGHT ME HOW TO EMPHASIZE THE WORDS RATHER THAN PRIORITIZE THE

WRITTEN MELODY

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VINYL TREASURES

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