Joan Morris (born February 10, 1943) is an American mezzo-soprano[1] and cabaret singer.
Life and career
Born in Portland, Oregon, her musical partner and husband is composer/pianistWilliam Bolcom.[1] The couple specializes in older popular songs, primarily from the first half of the 20th century, but extending beyond that to include both contemporary cabaret, popular songs of the Gay Nineties, and a number of songs dating back to the 1860s.[2]
Their recordings for Nonesuch, RCA, Columbia and Arabesque include songs by the great songwriters of the 1920s and 30s such as Kern, Gershwin, Porter, and Rodgers and Hart. They also have performed and recorded songs by the rock-and-roll team of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller.
Together, they have taught at the University of Michigan for many years. Morris' performance style is nuanced and vibrant, and she is noted for honoring original versions of songs with historical accuracy. In early 2015 she announced that she and Bolcom would begin to curtail both the length and number of their concerts, offering the next year as an ad hoc "Farewell Tour" after which they would limit performances to "cameo appearances".[citation needed].
2018 saw the publication of "Let Me Sing and I'm Happy," a brief memoir of her singing career and handbook of her approaches to song interpretation and performance.
Select discography
After the Ball: A Treasury of Turn-of-the-Century Popular Songs, Nonesuch Records, 1974, H-71304 (Grammy Nominated)
Who Shall Rule This American Nation? (with Clifford Jackson and The Camerata Chorus, Nonesuch, 1976
Vaudeville: Songs of The Great Ladies of The Musical Stage, Nonesuch, 1976
Wild About Eubie (With Eubie Blake), Columbia, 1977
These Charming People (with Max Morath), RCA Red Seal, 1978
^Braun, Richard (1976-03-21). "They're Rediscovering the Songs of the Gay 90 's". The New York Times. Retrieved 2021-09-22. Last year, the two produced their second Nonesuch album (with Clifford Jackson, Miss Morris's teacher), "Who Shall Rule this American Nation," a collection of Civil War‐era songs by Henry Clay Work.