Vocalist Jose James |
Jose James
started his career as a self-styled jazz vocalist for the hip hop generation.
For anybody who’s caught him live during the formative leg of his career
understands that title. He used hand gestures peculiar to rappers and even dress
like them. It was an odd sight because his voice is a mix of vocalists Joe Williams
and Johnny Hartman. James has outgrown that label. That was clear Saturday evening at the Cube in the Max M. Fisher
Music Center in Detroit during his two-hour concert. He traded the baseball
cap fancied by rappers for a retro-seventies inspired look complete with a fierce
Afro. James was in Detroit for the first leg of his tour promoting “Lean On
Me,” his marvelous album celebrating the music of singer/songwriter Bill
Withers. This stop was the first time he's held court as a collective with drummer Aaron Steele, guitarist Marcus Machado,
keyboardist Takeshi Ohbayashi, and guitarist and vocalist Aneesa Strings. They must’ve invested a lot of time rehearsing because
the band mixed well with James’ booming voice which he can change on a dime to be gentle as snow melting on cotton. The set opened with “Ain’t No
Sunshine,” and “Grandma’s Hands,” and it was scary how much James resembled
Withers. Midway through James explained how the album came about, noting he
initially planned to record 60 of Wither’s hits, but the president of Blue Note
Records, Don Was, asked him to whittle the 60 to 12. The songs James went
with are beloved such as “Lean On Me,” “Who Is He,” “Better Off Dead,” and “Just
The Two of Us,” which James sang with soul and panache. James didn’t see it fit
to remake any of the songs. He delivered each as Withers originally conceived
them. Over the years, James has developed a ton of stagecraft. He had the
capacity audience sprung from the first song to the encore. During one song, he walked through the audience and poked fun at a couple who showed up late.
The crowd didn’t seem to mine James' gratuitous cursing one bit. He asked if any children were in attendance, and
then apologized for his choice of words. It was all in good fun. James put on a
terrific concert complete with a few wardrobe changes. His voice was perfectly suited for Wither’s hits. Doing covers
has become James’ forte. A few years back, he released a tribute album commemorating
the centennial of the great Billie Holiday. There were too many awe-inspired moments of the performance
Saturday night to pinpoint a favorite. But if forced to select one at gunpoint it would be James’ handling of “Hello Like Before.”
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