Brittany Anjou (born May 17, 1984) is a New York City-based musician, composer, pianist, vibraphonist, and producer from Seattle, Washington.[1] Anjou leads music ensembles, works as a music director and side musician, and produces several projects as a composer, multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, and songwriter.

Brittany Anjou
Birth nameBrittany Anjou
Born(1984-05-15)May 15, 1984
Minot, North Dakota
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Musician, composer, producer, bandleader
InstrumentPiano
Years active2006- Present

As a mixed-methods researcher, she has presented her music psychology research on NYC musicians' mental health and wellbeing at academic and global conferences.

Biography

edit

Anjou studied jazz while growing up in Seattle.[2] She performed with Clark Terry and Wynton Marsalis before attending New York University, where she studied music with Stefon Harris, Don Friedman, Gil Goldstein, George Garzone, Sherrie Maricle, Jason Moran, Ralph Alessi, Vijay Iyer, and Rudresh Manhanthappa.

Anjou also studied music in Prague with Emil Viclicky and Milan Slavický, and studied traditional Gyil in Ghana, with xylophonists Bernard Woma, Jerome Balsab, and Alfred Kpebesaane.[3]

In 2021, Anjou graduated from the University of Sheffield with a master's degree in Music Psychology, Education and Wellbeing with merit. Her dissertation surveyed NYC jazz musicians' wellbeing and mental health in the pandemic. Her data and advocacy involvement with Music Workers Alliance helped New York legislators pass a $200M grant for independent artist workers in 2022. [4][5]

Music

edit

Anjou has self-released nine albums of original music ranging from modern big band jazz, experimental improvisation, electronic experimental vibraphone, hardcore, punk, death metal, spoken word and jazz piano trio.[6]

Enamiĝo Reciprokataj / Reciprocal Love (2019)

edit

In February 2019, Anjou released her debut piano album Enamiĝo Reciprokataj,[6][7] on Origin Records, a phrase in the Esperanto language meaning "falling in love reciprocated" or "mutual breakdown." The album features Greg Chudzik, Nick Anderson, Ben Perowsky, and Ari Folman-Cohen. The album received positive reviews from Downbeat Magazine,[8] Amazon,[9] All About Jazz,[10] NYC Jazz Record,[11] and France Musique.[12] She has been called a "virtuosa" and "highly sophisticated".[13]

Nong Voru / Fake Love (2021)

edit

Anjou produced, co-performed, and released an album with Ghanaian xylophonist Alfred Kpebesaane entitled "Nong Voru", translated as "fake love" from Dagara. Released on Chant Records, it features songs of the gyil, a traditional 14-bar non-western tuned xylophone honoring the dead. The album explores the juxtaposition of the non-traditional Ghanaian tuning of the gyil and Western tuning of the Rhodes, microtonal Casio 1000P synthesizer, drums, microtonal electric bass, and Gleetchlab computer processing effects by electronic musician Michael Clemow.

The album was born out of her studies with Alfred while living in Ghana in 2006, their 2018 residency in NYC at Barbes known as "Ghanaian Gyil Gala", and performances at The Stone, Rockwood Music Hall, and The Owl Music Parlor. [14]

Bi TYRANT / Bisexual Tyrant (2014 - present)

edit

Anjou fronts a hardcore punk band on vocals with drummer Laura Cromwell and guitarist Rich Bennett (drag name Valerie Vetere) called Bi TYRANT. The band promotes bi+, pan, genderqueer visibility, and abortion being legal. They self-released their debut album "Bisexual Tyrant" at LPR in 2016, and are currently working on a second album with Martin Bisi.

The Shaggs and The Dot Wiggin Band

edit

In 2012, Anjou began performing with members of The Shaggs,[15] and helped to form, record and tour The Dot Wiggin Band,[16] of which she is the co-vocalist, and frequently interviewed about.[17] At the invitation of American band Wilco, The Shaggs performed at the 2017 Solid Sound Festival at Mass MoCA. Anjou supported as the stand-in bassist and vocalist with Dot and Betty Wiggin for their second time onstage together in over 46 years. The backing band included guitarist Richard Bennett (Friendly Bears), drummer Laura Cromwell, and guitarist Jesse Krakow (Time of Orchids, Shudder to Think).

 
LARCENY Chamber Orchestra's Tribute to Portishead, live at Le Poisson Rouge, NYC, 2017

L.A.R.C.E.N.Y. (2013-2017)

edit

In 2013, Anjou founded and led the LARCENY Chamber Orchestra, a 30-member chamber ensemble that performed Anjou's arrangements and transcriptions. Instrumentation includes trumpet, trombones, flute, alto flute, saxophones, violins, viola, cello, turntables and rhythm section. The group was known for an annual live recreation tribute concert of Portishead's Roseland NYC Live album at Le Poisson Rouge in NYC, complete with strings, horns, turntables, rhythm section, guest vocalists, using original sourced samples. [18]

Other appearances

edit

Anjou has recorded and toured as a pianist, keyboardist, vibraphonist, and background vocalist for The Shaggs, the Dot Wiggin Band, Ravens and Chimes, Elysian Fields, Oren Bloedow, Sophie Auster, Christeene Vale, Boshra Al Saadi, Brittain Ashford, and others. She performed at the Women Rock Rhodes Festival in LA in 2020 and 2021.

In 2016, Anjou composed a live score for the theater piece In the Eruptive Mode: Hijacked Voices of the Arab Spring, by Sulayman Al Bassam. The work premiered in Kuwait, followed by tours in Beirut, Tunis, Metz (France), Antwerp, and Boston from 2016-2018, and was reviewed positively by French and Arab press.[19]

From 2018-2020, Anjou was the director of jazz and artist in residence at the JACC music school located in Kuwait’s Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Cultural Center opera house.[20]

References

edit
  1. ^ Records, Origin. "Origin Records Artist Brittany Anjou - Piano". originarts.com. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  2. ^ "Brittany Anjou - Le Poisson Rouge". LPR. Archived from the original on 2022-01-09. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  3. ^ Miller, Bruce. "Alfred Kpebesaane & Brittany Anjou / a RootsWorld review". www.rootsworld.com. Archived from the original on 2021-07-01. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  4. ^ "Brittany BH Anjou | The University of Sheffield - Academia.edu". sheffield.academia.edu. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  5. ^ "CV". brittany anjou. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  6. ^ a b Anjou, Brittany. "Enamiĝo Reciprokataj". Origin Records. Origin Arts.
  7. ^ "Brittany Anjou on Bandcamp". Brittany Anjou. Archived from the original on 2018-03-07. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  8. ^ Freeman, Phillip. "DownBeat Magazine Review: Brittany Anjou's Enamiĝo Reciprokataj" (PDF). www.downbeat.com. Downbeat Magazine.
  9. ^ Bibel, Debra Jean. "Brittany Anjou music review by Debra Jean Bibel". Origin Arts. Amazon.
  10. ^ Bilawsky, Dan (2019-01-26). "Brittany Anjou: Enamiĝo Reciprokataj". All About Jazz. Archived from the original on 2019-03-21. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  11. ^ Elfman, Donald. "Music Review of Enamiĝo Reciprokataj". NYC Jazz Record.
  12. ^ Dutilh, Alex (27 January 2019). "Brittany Anjou, une new-yorkaise en version esperanto". France Musique. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  13. ^ Freitas, Filipe. "Brittany Anjou: Enamiĝo Reciprokataj album review". Origin Arts. Jazz Trail.
  14. ^ The album earned "Best of Jazz" and reached the top 5 most streamed categories in African, roots, and world music on Bandcamp in 2021.
  15. ^ "How to Solve a Riddle Like The Shaggs". pastemagazine.com. 2016-10-14. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  16. ^ "How to Solve a Riddle Like The Shaggs". pastemagazine.com. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  17. ^ Klein, Eric (17 April 2015). "Dot Wiggin of the Shaggs is Back". Medium. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  18. ^ Interview, LPR (19 July 2013). "Brittany Anjou shares her thoughts on Portishead". LPR. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  19. ^ Al-Bassam, Sulayman. "In the Eruptive Mode". Sulayman Al-Bassam Theater. Sabab Theater.
  20. ^ "14 Pop, Rock and Jazz Concerts to Check Out in N.Y.C. This Weekend". The New York Times. 2019-02-21. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-01-09.