|


to Regina Carter
|
 |
REGINA
CARTER
Biography
Violinist
Regina Carter combines dazzling technical proficiency and profound
compositional and improvisational gifts with a fresh, aggressive approach
to her instrument and a multicultural perspective - and she challenges our
preconceptions regarding the instrument. "People are only used to
hearing violin in European classical music or country music," says
the Detroit-born violinist, "and so we get stuck in this idea that
this is what a violin is supposed to do. And it's such a precious
instrument and such a delicate instrument... That's what people think:
it's such a small, delicate little thing. Even sometimes I play with
classical players in a quartet and part of the piece might call to use the
back of the bow, the wood, to hit on the string to get a percussive effect
or to get a different sound, and they'll say, 'I'm not going to bang on my
instrument like that. This violin cost way too much money.'They don't
think of it as another way of playing the instrument. They don't really
want to go beyond what we think of; so even the musicians themselves
sometimes are stuck into those old ways of thinking."
In
Carter's hands, the violin reveals both its melodic side and its potential
for percussive expression. Perhaps more significantly, Regina Carter
demonstrates the violinist's eagerness to explore musical combinations and
contexts both familiar and unexpected.
The
ease with which Carter is able to switch musical idioms derives from a
lifetime spent immersed in music. She began playing the piano at the age
of two, then switched to violin at four. Carter considers the Suzuki
method of instruction - which emphasizes learning by doing, to play by ear
rather than by sight - to be a significant factor in her subsequent
ability to improvise since, as she says, "it freed us up from the
paper - from reading a lot."
At
first, she listened to classical music. Then, as she got older she
discovered R&B. "There was just a lot of different music going on
there [in Detroit]," she observes, "because we had Motown
happening and Parliament and Funkadelic, and the Symphony, so there was
some of everything. When I went to school I took a class in East Indian
music and the history of India, and then African music." Her original
goal was to become a soloist with a major orchestra, and in her youth she
studied and performed with the Detroit Civic Symphony. Jazz wasn't a big
part of her life until she heard Jean Luc Ponty as a high school student.
"I just immediately fell in love with it and started studying jazz a
little bit in high school," she recalls. As a college student at the
New England Conservatory, she studied both classical and jazz before
deciding to pursue jazz fulltime. After two years at the Conservatory,
Carter transferred to Oakland University in Michigan, and gigged
constantly around Detroit with many of the local musicians, including
trumpeter Marcus Belgrave. In 1987, she joined the all-female jazz quintet
Straight Ahead and recorded two albums with them before deciding to step
out on her own. Now based in New York, she has worked with the likes of
Oliver Lake, Max Roach, and the Uptown String Quartet, and she also
records with the String Trio of New York.
Back to top of page |