Got the world in her strings
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Young Chang
Breaking a string is nothing unusual for violinist Regina Carter. But
there was that one incident.
A couple months ago, at a performance venue she can’t specifically
recall, a string popped and the peg that held it flew across the stage. A
teacher from her youth had always told her that if a string snaps, she
should just keep playing the ones she had left.
So she did. After the number, Carter knelt on stage to search for the
missing peg. The percussionist spotted it.
“The audience probably thought I had lost my contacts,” Carter
laughed.
It’s surprising that they don’t snap more often -- enduring her
passionate, almost aggressive and furious performance style. Carter, 33,
can’t help it. The emotions that travel through her have to surge through
the instrument, she said.
“I just think, when you play music or you do something that you love,
that’s your passion already, and you can’t help but be passionate about
it,” Carter said.
The violinist, who plays everything from jazz to classical to pop and
funk, will perform at the Orange County Performing Arts Center today and
Saturday as part of the J.P. Morgan Jazz Club Series.
The Detroit native began training in classical music starting at the
age of four. She learned to play the violin using the Suzuki Method --
where you imitate someone playing rather than reading notes -- and now
mixes sounds and styles with an instrument that is not traditionally seen
as versatile.
Her percussionist comes from Cuba, her pianist from Germany and the
bassist plays outside gigs with an African group. Musical medleys, in
other words, aren’t hard to come by when it comes to Carter and her band.
“It just kinda happens,” she said.
Carter’s experience is just as varied. She studied music at the New
England Conservatory and Oakland University in Michigan. She was a member
of the Detroit Civic Symphony Orchestra and performed on the bandstand,
learning from trumpeter Marcus Belgrave and organist Lymon Woodard.
She has performed with such artists as Wynton Marsalis, Lauryn Hill,
Max Roach, Mary J. Blige, Billy Joel and Dolly Parton.
Her fourth CD release, “Motor City Moments,” is a tribute to her
hometown Detroit and its rich outpouring of musicians -- Belgrave,
pianist Barry Harris and saxophonist James Carter, to name a few.
“There’s a lot of music that comes out of Detroit,” she said. “A lot
of different cultures that live there [are] close together. There’s a
huge Latino community, Greek community, Arab community. Then you have the
symphony orchestra and a huge jazz scene.”
Jazz vocalist Carla Cook, a friend since high school and fellow
Detroit native, considers Carter an innovative musician who suffers no
shortage of musical ideas.
“Because she uses all of her music,” Cook said. “Any music that has
ever influenced her comes out in her music, so it makes it fresh and
alive.”
Carter was a featured soloist for a track on Cook’s recent
Grammy-nominated album, “It’s All About Love.”
While she has been called a jazz violinist, Carter said she thinks of
herself simply as a violinist who plays everything from country-western
to pop. She would never restrict herself to one musical genre.
“I think most people think of the instrument as just a classical
instrument, but if you listen to any kind of music, you can hear it in
everything,” she said.
FYI
WHAT: Regina Carter
WHEN: 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. today and Saturday
WHERE: The Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa
COST: $44 or $38
CALL: (714) 740-7878
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