FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The Award-Winning, Jazz Vocal Musician, Composer, Lyricist and Educator Lenora Zenzalai Helm and Her Tribe Jazz Orchestra® Nonet Unveil JOURNEYWOMAN,

Her New Album Chronicling the Challenges and Triumphs of Black Women

DURHAM, NC, July 14, 2023 - Hailed by Jazziz magazine as the ”voice of her generation” and a “national treasure,” Chicago-born, Durham, North Carolina-based Dr. Lenora Zenzalai Helm is a top-notch jazz vocal musician, an ebullient composer, an inventive lyricist, an inspiring bandleader, and a dedicated educator at North Carolina Central University (NCCU). Helm encompasses all of the inventions and dimensions of jazz and the African Diaspora on her new recording, Journeywoman, featuring her Tribe Jazz Orchestra® Nonet. Helm’s new CD, her eighth as a leader, is a compelling 65-minute, multi-movement 12-track work, where she sings about the life of an allegorical woman named Journey, and her struggles with abuse, birth, death, self-definition and her victories through self-love, perseverance, and affirmation.

“The songs are all about many women that we know,” Helm says. “Journeywoman is that archetypal woman, every woman. So, the stories that are in it, have happened to somebody you know, once or twice removed, or yourself, in all the ways that the lyrics unfold.”

Recorded in 2022, on her Zenzalai Music Records label, Helm originally composed Journeywoman in 2003, for a commission for Chamber Music America's New Jazz Works grant (the first African American female vocalist recipient,) funded by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, and for the next two decades she augmented and rearranged the work into its current form, buoyed by the perspective of time. “It took me 20 years to really sing all the music,” Helm asserts, “because when I first wrote it, it was fresh off the plate. But [being] the woman that I am now, I’m able to really express and sing the music.”

Helm’s Tribe Jazz Orchestra®, founded in 2019, is configured into a harmonically nuanced and rhythmically nimble, nine-piece nonet consisting of several NCCU educators and local musicians including pianist Ernest A. Turner, II, guitarist Baron Tymas, bassist Natalie Boeyink, drummer Thomas E. Taylor, Jr., tenor saxophonist/spoken word artist, Salome Serena Wiley Bey, soprano/alto saxophonist/flutist Dexter Moses, trumpeter Al Strong, trombonist Robert Trowers and cellist Timothy Holley. “I love the musicians here in the Southeast, where I'm living,” Helm notes, “because they have that combination of the influence of the church, and the whole [Afro] Diasporic value in their approach to anything that they're playing.”

The nonet supports Helm’s soulful storytelling, in ballad, mid and uptempo 4/4 swing, waltz time, Latin and tone poem settings. “Earth Transitions I-II,” are evocative wordless vocals. Older versions of “Beauty,” which is about Helm’s grandmother, the autobiographical “Tears Are a River (That Take You Someplace)” and “Huntress Too,” were originally recorded on Helm’s, 2003 CD, I Love Myself When I’m Laughing… and are reincarnated on Journeywoman. “Sweet Sixteen” is a heartbreaking tale of sexual violation and revenge anchored by Caribbean cadences. “Stay Out,” is powered by an anthemic ostinato, grooving backbeat and complex, shifting time signatures with a spoken word piece penned by 14-year-old Nefertiti Ashanti Martin of Harlem.

“Baby Knows a Secret” moves with an after-hours, “late show” vibe. The stop time swing of “Sister Joy” makes it the perfect bookend to Betty Carter’s “Tight,” “Divine One” rings with a florid impressionism, while “Full Knowing” is a peaceful pastoral instrumental composition. The CD concludes with the title track, complete with bossa nova echoes of the seventies works of Freddie Hubbard, Doug & Jean Carne, and Horace Silver.

Helm draws compositional inspiration from Mary Lou Williams’ earthy blues and Duke Ellington’s “economy of space and complex ideas” on “Divine One.” Helm also took inspiration from her pianist/composer/educator mentor Andrew Hill’s use of time-shifting rhythms on. “Journeywoman,” “Stay out,” and "Baby Knows a Secret.” Another keyboard mentor Stanley Cowell, co-founder of the influential independent Strata-East label, encouraged Helm to fully develop her vocals. “He was always someone who I could turn to for advice, a listening ear, support and encouragement,” Helm recounts.

A lover of literature, Helm is also influenced by writers including Alice Walker and Toni Morrison, and by how poets “work in meter and timbre and tone and the same way that [most] musicians follow a chord structure as improvisers. Whenever I feel at a loss for inspiration, I read poetry. I like the poets who don't try to rhyme, like Nikki Giovanni or Gwendolyn Brooks, who is one of my favorite poets and is also from Chicago. I like when poets tell a story, and the words are these amazing pictures.”

Helm was especially inspired by poet Sam White, whom she met when she won a fellowship to the MacDowell Colony, the oldest art colony in America, where White, showed her his poem, “The Goddess of the Hunt Is Not Herself,” which she adapted to “The Huntress Too.” “That particular poem just struck me …” Helm says, “‘the goddess of the heart is not herself. She's tired. Having waited, having sniffed around surgically, all her arrow’s quiver with nothingness…’ I was like, wow! And I wrote that song in one sitting.”

Helm’s multivariate gifts have enabled her to be one of the most vibrant and vital artists in the last four decades. Her previous recordings include Spirit Child (1999), Precipice (2002), Voice Paintings (2003), and For the Love of Big Band, with the Tribe Jazz Orchestra (2020). A native Chicagoan with Louisiana Creole roots, Helm grew up in a musical family listening to everything from soul, jazz and R&B, rock, and pop. She started singing and later learned to play organ, piano, guitar, and trumpet at the age of eight, sang in choirs and played all types of music in bands in high school.

Helm matriculated at the Berklee College of Music, where she completed four years of undergraduate study in three years and was the first African American vocal jazz woman to receive a B.M. in Film Music Composition and Vocal Performance when she graduated in 1982. She later earned a Master of Music in Jazz Performance degree at East Carolina University in 2010, and her Doctor of Musical Arts in Music Education degree from Boston University in 2021.

Helm moved to New York in 1987, and worked with a myriad of musicians including Michael Franks, Branford Marsalis, Wallace Roney, Ron Carter, Andrew Hill, Freddie Jackson, Dave Liebman, Antonio Hart, and Stanley Cowell. In the two decades she lived in New York, Helm served as a United States Jazz Ambassador for Southeastern Africa for the State Department. She joined NCCU in 2005.

Throughout her career, Helm has received many fellowships and appointments. She served as the Mellon Foundation John Hope Franklin Digital Humanities Fellow, Duke University – NCCU Partnership from 2017 to 2018; a Fulbright Senior Music Specialist, Denmark, and South Africa, 2013 to 2018 and a Global Citizen Fellow, Salzburg Global Seminar, Salzburg, Austria, 2014. She’s also won a plethora of awards, including the 2022 Jazz Educator Award of Distinction from WCLK-FM’s inaugural Jazz Music Awards in Atlanta.

 Turning the oft-quoted cliché, “those who can’t do, teach” on its head, Helm’s exceptional work as an educator has enriched her as a musician. “When you teach, you learn twice,” Helm declares. “I learned more about my voice. I learned how to execute the ideas with my voice. I learned how to execute the ideas I had harmonically because I had been teaching them. I had been teaching improvisation, I had been teaching composing. I had been teaching being a bandleader. And so being an educator, helped me to hone my skills so that my musicianship could be more expressive and have clarity.”

Which brings us to Journeywoman, Lenora Zenzalai Helm’s moving and masterful Magnum Opus. As she wrote in her poem for the CD:

“I sing, I compose, I teach, I write.

I am the ancestral daughter of slaves,

of healers, of survivors, of dreamers

who were entrepreneurs and sage leaders.

I am a stepmom, godmother, auntie-mom,

grandmother, great-grandma, Wife,

Sibling, Aunt, Friend, Woman, Human….”

Lenora Zenzalai Helm is all that and more. http://www.lenorahelm.com

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Media Contact: Carolyn McClair Public Relations

(212) 722-3341 | Info@CarolynMcClairPR.co

Lenora Zenzalai Helm & Tribe Jazz Orchestra™ 

For The Love of Big Band 

Tribe Jazz Orchestra™ is a jazz orchestra led by vocalist Lenora Helm Hammonds with a unique approach to the music of the big band tradition. Featuring a diverse amalgam of the top men and women musicians in Jazz today, the instrumentation comprises a combination of jazz orchestra with a modern chamber ensemble perspective. The new recording, For The Love Of Big Band is due March 9, 2020. This is Lenora’s seventh commercial release, and her first big band record to date after an eight-year hiatus taken from recording to finish a Doctor of Musical Arts degree.

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The album was recorded live over two days (with a live audience!) at an historic old church near downtown Durham, Hayti Heritage Center, a favorite recording spot for saxophonist Branford Marsalis. The music is a mix of jazz standards arranged by winging and soulful concert full of groove and excitement. Guest conductor, Brian Horton and Lenora guide the band through the new arrangements by Stanley Cowell, Cecil Bridgewater, Brian Horton and newcomer, Maurice Myers. Other selections include new big band arrangements of Nina Simone’s compositions, Mississippi Goddam and Blues for Mama. Lenora’s penned lyrics to John Coltrane’s composition Dear Lord is a feature of the recording with Myers’ vocal arrangement featuring the North Carolina Central University Vocal Jazz Ensemble, directed by Helm. 

Guests artists on the record include pianist Joey Calderazzo, bassist Ameen Saleem, drummer Kobi Watkins and saxophonists Brian Miller and James “Saxmo” Gates. Some of the notable North Carolina based members are saxophonist/flutist Ira Wiggins, guitarist Baron Tymas, pianists Ed Paolantonio and Ernest Turner, trumpeters Al Strong and Lynn Grissett, cellist Timothy Holley and drummer and percussionist Thomas Taylor. Lenora presents several outstanding young instrumentalist newcomers, including saxophonist, Sam King, who recently won Outstanding Soloist in the Jack Rudin Jazz Competition at Jazz at Lincoln Center. 

The members of Tribe Jazz Orchestra™ have performed together in various configurations and have appeared in noted concert halls and international music festivals in The United States, Europe, Asia, Africa and South America. The musicians have each garnered an international audience of followers and critical and professional acclaim for the last few decades and will release a new recording this summer. Lenora Helm Hammonds, (currently the Director of the NCCU Vocal Jazz Ensemble and an Assistant Professor of Vocal Jazz at North Carolina Central University), and the members of Tribe Jazz Orchestra™ are internationally acclaimed concert performers. Lenora amassed over three decades of accolades, including receiving the inaugural Javett International Jazz Scholar award from Javett Foundation and University of Pretoria, South Africa, being a former U.S. Jazz Ambassador and Who’s Who Lifetime Achievement awardee. Her discography touts six previous commercial recordings and has performed with some of the biggest names in Jazz leading her groups in renowned jazz festivals and venues worldwide, including Jazz Standard, NYC, Dizzy Club Coca Cola Women’s Jazz Festival, Schomburg Center's Women in Jazz Festival, Blues Alley, Aruba International Jazz Day & Carlos Bislip’s J.A.M., JVC Jazz Festivals, Clifford Brown Jazz Festival, Cape Town Jazzathon, South Africa,, University of Pretoria Jazz Festival, Essentially Ellington Regional Festival at Brigham Young University, Fiji Jazz & Blues Festival, NCCU Jazz Festival, Art of Cool Jazz Festival, Durham, NC. 

Release Date: March 9, 2020 | Photo By Chi Brown

Release Date: March 9, 2020 | Photo By Chi Brown

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CROWDFUNDING SUPPORTERS

This recording project would not have been possible without the generosity of the following beautiful souls

from our crowdfunding campaigns on Kickstarter and EventBrite:

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CD & Concert Supporters

Purchase of CD: A Big Band Supporter. Anon, Ask The Good Doctor, Quisontro Anderson II a.k.a. DJ B-Syde, Jay Attys, Jawan Audè, Donald & Sharon Baker, Frank Bauroth, Chi Brown, The Creative Fund, Dot Doyle, Denise Eicher, Hilary Klein, Katja Klobas, Susan and Steve Prushkin, Glenn Tenney

Purchase of CD and/or live concert support: Cindy Bachinsky, Phillip Bailey, Courtney Bailey, Donald Baker, Marc Banka, Roy Barnes, Steve & Holly Barnett, Anna Rose Beck, karen bordeaux, Kristen Bromley, Derrick Clemons, Dewanda Dalrymple, Matthew Furtick, Sue Guptill, Stephanie Hamilton, Meka Hargrove, Stephanie Harris, Eric Hirsch, Nelson Johns, Benita Johnson, Joshua Johnson, Bruce & Janet Knott, Tyrone & Grace Ligon, Victor Moore, Virginia Lowe, Jonathan Markow, Naya-Joi Martin, Taylor Merryman, Keenan McKenzie, Ikea Morgan, Deena Murrell, Kathy A. Perkins, Martha Pritchett, Miriam Sluis, Ayanna Smith, Tracye Smith, Nancylee Spears, Andrea Stephensor, Michael Stewart, Jeff & Mary Stillwagon, Thomas Taylor, Norma Tesch, Irina Tkachenko, T.J. Usiyan, KHW, Barrie Wallace, Keisha Williams, Pamela Williams, Samantha Williams, Andrea Wolper

Jazz Education Pledgees

Purchase of CD, big band tee, live concert attendance and support of student musicians: Kim Arrington, Scotta Barsella, Toni Ballard, Regina Carter Garnett, Mia Gassi, Loleater Casey Gibson, Gale Perkins, Sandi Haynes, Sharon Hill, Gunther Lallinger, Antonio Maynard, Denise Patterson, Jeannette Stokes, Ann Trigg, Richard Welsh & Leah Kraus, Fred Marquis Hammonds, Denise Patterson

Recording & Project Supporter

Purchase of CD, big band tee, live concert attendance, support of student musicians and total project costs: Peter Axilrod, Stephen Barefoot, Benjamin F. Boddie, Natalie Bullock Brown, Peter Burke, Leonard Casey, Sr. & Janis Coutee-Casey, Lana Garland & Kaj Jensen Cindy Hospedales, Lois Deloatch, Holly Ewell-Lewis, Nnenna Freelon, Edward Furtick, Jr., Phyllis Gould, Donna Grant, Thomas Hammonds, Savi Horne, Brian Lawson, Adia Ledbetter, Willie Ledbetter, Kate McGarry, Dereck and Yolanda Rabun, Mary Jane Rivers, Alicia Robey, Ron Scott, Joye Speight, Treat Harvey, Alexandra Valladares, Ontario & Kimberly Wooden, George & Darcel Wilson

Associate and Executive Producers

Scott Adams, Jeannette Stokes, ISConSol 


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