Basia

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Singer, songwriter

"A potent cosmopolitan cocktail," wrote Cathleen McGuigan in Newsweek, Basia "sings a brand of jazzy Brazilian-flavored blend that could melt ice." Born and raised in Poland, Basia—who lives in London, and writes and records in English—shows influences of samba, Brazilian bossa nova, and American soul in her music. "Such creative poaching," though, commented Andrew Abrahams in People, "has left her with her own unmistakable style." Basia flaunts a "rich, freewheeling voice" and "stylish urbanity," according to McGuigan; hers "is music for grown-ups, but it’s not too smooth—no one could sit still through its irresistible bossa nova beat." Basia’s solo albums, Time and Tide and London Warsaw New York, have been hits on both contemporary jazz and pop listings in the United States and Europe, and the singer holds the distinction of being the first Pole to appear on U.S. top-forty charts.

Basia grew up in the southern Polish industrial city of Jaworzno, where her parents ran an ice cream enterprise. She was influenced early by recordings of various American artists. "I was hungry for everything," she told Abrahams. Among her favorites was Aretha Franklin’s Greatest Hits. She also listened to Stevie Wonder, Carole King, James Taylor, Pink Floyd, and King Crimson. At 15 Basia won a national talent contest and joined an all-girl group named Alibabki, which toured Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union for two years. At the age of 18 she made her way to Warsaw, where she joined a group that came to the attention of an agent, who signed them to perform at Polish-American centers in the United States. In 1980 Basia sang pop music—in both Polish and English—at the Polonia club in Chicago, and frequented the city’s blues and jazz establishments. The singer was homesick for Poland, however, and in 1981 moved to London to be nearer her family.

In England Basia met keyboardist Danny White and worked briefly with a jazz-funk group, Bronze, before joining Matt Bianco, a pop trio that sported a smooth jazz style, classy designer suits, and a name contrived to give the group an Italian feel. Matt Bianco was very popular throughout Europe and Basia was able to further develop her samba style while with the group. Her love affair with the bossa nova and samba came from her admiration for Brazilian singer Astrud Gilberto, who provided vocals on the original recording of "The Girl from Ipanema." Basia told Abrahams that she particularly liked Gilberto’s "very light feel." In fact, Basia’s "Astrud" pays tribute to the singer’s influence: "One-note samba will never be the same," the song goes.

Basia longed for more autonomy, however, than she found with Matt Bianco and in 1985 she and White

broke away to do their own music. "All I had to do was record my parts in the studio and look pretty onstage," she told Abrahams about her role with the band. "I even had to get permission to wear a certain kind of shirt or dress." Basia and White began to collaborate on songs that would eventually comprise her 1986 debut solo album Time and Tide.

A contributor to Melody Maker called the release a "cool, classy concoction of Latin, funk and jazz rhythms," while other reviewers similarly praised it as one of the year’s most stylish releases. Two songs, "Promises" and "New Day for You," were number-one hits on the adult contemporary charts, while the title track was a top pop single. On the strength of the album—which turned platinum in 1989—Basia and her band, led by White, embarked on a successful 22-city tour of the United States.

In 1989 Basia released a second album, London Warsaw New York, which contained a collection of jazz-influenced pop songs. That effort turned gold and generated two new hits, "Cruising for Bruising" and "Until You Come Back to Me," a remake of Aretha Franklin’s 1973 hit. "Overall, popular music doesn’t get much better than this," wrote a contributor to Stereo Review. He added: "As before, Basia and White have collaborated as writers and arrangers, coming up with a delightful group of original compositions. Basia performs the vocals in styles ranging from the pensive to the teasing, but she is always irresistible…. The melodies flow naturally yet evolve into all sorts of unexpected shapes." Basia explained the message behind the songs on London Warsaw New York: "All the songs on this album share a common theme. People have the same hearts, the same needs and desires. They all want to love and be loved, wherever they live, be it Europe, America, or Asia."

While some critics have dubbed Basia a jazz artist, she disagrees: "I’m a pop singer, not a jazz singer," she told Angie Danieli in Melody Maker. "I like elements of Fifties jazz which I put into my music because I feel comfortable with them, but it’s a million miles away from [legendary jazz singers] Sarah Vaughan or Ella Fitzgerald. I could never be in the same league as them." Some have compared Basia to the singer Sade, but, as talent agent Muff Winwood commented to Janice C. Simpson in Time, "Sade has a more soulful, laid-back style…. Basia is much more vibrant and up front."

In interviews Basia has been quick to comment about being close to her Polish heritage. "Did you ever meet a Polish person who wasn’t emotional?" she was quoted by Abrahams. "Chopin? The Pope? We start talking about our country or our mothers, and all of a sudden everyone’s crying!" She enjoys her success outside of her native country, yet one day hopes to return to Poland—where she also enjoys a large popular following. "I miss the passion of Poland," she told Abrahams. "If something is wrong, the British won’t tell you what it is…. I know I’m doing well now, but when I stop someday and I’m old, I will go back to Poland. There’s no superficial politeness there. They tell you exactly what they feel."

Selected discography
Time and Tide (includes "Promises," "Run for Cover," "Time and Tide," "New Day for You," "Astrud," and "Miles Away"), Epic/Columbia, 1986.
London Warsaw New York (includes "Cruising for Bruising," "Best Friends," and "Until You Come Back to Me"), Epic/Columbia, 1986.
Also appeared on several recordings with group Matt Bianco under WEA label, including the album Whose Side Are You On, and sang lead on the hit single "Half a Minute." Released video collection A New Day, CBS, 1990.

Sources
BMI: Music World, winter 1989.
Glamour, June 1990.
Jazziz, April/May 1990.
Los Angeles Times, February 11, 1990.

Melody Maker, December 13, 1986; July 4, 1987; July 18, 1987; February 6, 1988.
Newsweek, August 22, 1988.
People, January 30, 1989.
St. Petersburg Times (Florida), March 9, 1990.
Stereo Review, June 1990.
Time, April 23, 1990.
  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Polish vocalist Basia Trzetrzelewska spent several years in the pop band Matt Bianco, an offshoot of Blue Rondo à la Turk, before launching a solo career in 1987. With the musical assistance of Matt Bianco's Danny White, she developed a subtle cocktail jazz-pop first showcased on her 1987 debut album, Time and Tide. Supported by the singles "New Day for You" and "Time and Tide," the record became a hit in Europe and America, where the album went platinum. Basia's second record, 1990's London Warsaw New York, was just as successful, but her third effort, 1994's Sweetest Illusion, failed to find an audience. Clear Horizon: The Best of Basia followed in 1998 and proved to be her only release for several years, as the deaths of her mother and several close friends temporarily sapped Basia's drive to make music. Urged by her former bandmates Danny White and Mark Reilly to join the reunited Matt Bianco, however, she eventually returned to music in 2004 and issued Matt's Mood with the band. Basia then returned her focus to her solo career, releasing It's That Girl Again with White's help in early 2009. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
Basia
Background information
Birth name Barbara Trzetrzelewska
Born (1954-09-30) September 30, 1954 (age 57)
Jaworzno, Poland
Genres jazz, pop, soul, adult contemporary, sophisti-pop
Occupations Singer-songwriter, record producer
Years active 1983–present
Labels Epic, Koch
Associated acts Matt Bianco, Peter White, Perfect
Website www.basiasongs.com

Basia Trzetrzelewska [ˈbaɕa tʂɛtʂɛˈlɛfska] ( listen) (born September 30, 1954)[1] is a Polish singer-songwriter and record producer. She established a successful international recording career featuring characteristically Latin-flavoured jazz-pop crossover songs during the late 1980s and early 1990s and the late 2000s and 2010s, particularly in the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Japan. She is noted for possessing a wide vocal range, approximately three octaves that span from contralto to soprano tessituras, as well as her singular jazz-influenced stylings and multi-layered harmonies.

Contents

Biography

Basia was born in Jaworzno, Poland. In 1969, she debuted as a guest of local amateur rock band Astry and performed with them on Polish Festival of Beat Avangarde in Kalisz, where they won. Thanks to this performance, she was a member of the popular Polish all-female vocal group Alibabki from 1972 to 1974. From 1977 to 1979, she sang with the rock band Perfect.

Settling temporarily in Chicago in 1979, she later relocated to London in 1981. It was there she met Mark Reilly and longtime collaborator Danny White (brother of jazz guitarist Peter White). In 1983, the trio performed as the jazz-pop group Bronze but later changed their name to Matt Bianco and recorded their debut album Whose Side Are You On?, released in 1984. The album was a hit across Europe, selling more than 1.5 million copies[2] and then bringing two top 30 hits on the UK Singles Chart: "Get Out of Your Lazy Bed" and "Half a Minute".[3]

In 1985, Basia and Danny White left Matt Bianco to launch her solo career. In 1987 her first album Time and Tide was released selling almost two million copies.[2] As a solo artist Basia achieved greatest success in the United States, where she sold over one million units of her debut album. It brought her the U.S. top 30 track "Time and Tide" on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and also such hits as "Prime Time TV" and "New Day for You". In 1989 her second album, London Warsaw New York, repeated that accomplishment. It also sold almost two million units including more than one million in the U.S. and featured another Top 30 hit on the Billboard Hot 100, "Cruising for Bruising". London Warsaw New York also included Stevie Wonder's "Until You Come Back to Me" and "Baby You're Mine", another hit song. Both albums topped Billboard's Top Contemporary Jazz Albums,[4] but her second album also became Top Contemporary Jazz Album of the Year even beating the Grammy Award-winning Album of the Year, Back on the Block, from Quincy Jones. While achieving great success in the U.S. market Basia also became a very popular artist in Asia (mainly in Japan and the Philippines) and Europe, especially in France. In 1991 she released her first long-form video A New Day containing all her videos and an interview.

Her third studio album, The Sweetest Illusion, was released in 1994 and was a moderate success in the U.S. market selling over half-million copies but globally it became another million-seller. Mixed by the then-highly sought after David Bascombe (who had contributed to Oleta Adams' debut effort) the project marked the end of a ten-year working relationship with mixmaster Phil Harding and a step into more sophisticated territory. The Sweetest Illusion included a number-one hit on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart, "Drunk on Love". Her next album, Basia on Broadway, was a live set recorded at the Neil Simon Theatre in New York City and was released in 1995. In 1996, Basia was featured on Peter White's album Caravan of Dreams with vocals on the single "Just Another Day". In 1998 a retrospective compilation album Clear Horizon – The Best of Basia was issued and contained all the notable hits plus some new material including a cover of "Waters of March", written by Brazilian composer Antonio Carlos Jobim.

Despite a successful international career and faithful fan base she withdrew from the recording industry in 1998, with the sole exception of a guest appearance on Taro Hakase's cover of "So Nice (Summer Samba)" in 1999. She would later cite the deaths of people close to her, including her own mother, as the reason.[5] After some persistent efforts from Danny White and Mark Reilly who had started working together again, she agreed to join a re-formed Matt Bianco.[5] They released the album Matt's Mood in 2004 to critical acclaim. After touring to promote the album Basia and Danny White began work on a new Basia project while Reilly continued with Matt Bianco.

In 2009, after nearly fifteen years, Basia returned with her fourth studio album, It's That Girl Again, released globally between March and June, depending on territory. The album met with critical as well as commercial success, placing in top 10 of the U.S. Jazz Albums chart[6] and going Platinum in her native Poland.[7] It was promoted by "Blame It on the Summer" in American market and "The Gift" in Europe. The album was also promoted on Basia's world tour, whose first leg began in 2009. In Spring of 2010 Basia was participating in the World Rhythms Tour with Bernie Williams and then embarked on the second leg of her own tour. She toured the U.S. twice in 2010. In 2011 Basia made a guest appearance on the Polish edition of X Factor.[8]

In September 2011, Basia released her second live album From Newport To London: Greatest Hits Live... And More with two new studio recordings, including a duet with the most popular Polish soul singer Mieczysław Szcześniak. This album was recorded in Poland. Basia recorded one more duet with Szcześniak, this time for his album Signs released in November 2011. They sang cover of Vanessa Williams' hit "Save The Best For Last", produced by its original co-writer Wendy Waldman. In the fall of 2011 Basia embarked on a five week, coast to coast American tour.

Discography

References

External links


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Mentioned in

Whose Side Are You On? (1984 Album by Matt Bianco)
Basia on Broadway (1995 Album by Basia)
Clear Horizon: The Best of Basia (1998 Album by Basia)
Basinski (family name)
Baskin (family name)