One of the many straight-ahead jazz vocalists who emerged in the '90s,
Karen Francis got a lucky break when she met veteran hard bop/post-bop pianist
Stanley Cowell during the summer of 1994. The two of them met at a party in the Washington, DC suburb of Silver Springs, MD, where they were introduced by one of
Cowell's students. After hearing
Francis sing,
Cowell (who was 53 at the time) felt that she had a great deal of potential -- and he was surprised to learn that she had only been singing jazz for two years.
Francis had been studying jazz singing since 1992, although she had been playing several instruments since high school.
Cowell had enough faith in
Francis to feature her extensively on his 1995 release
Mandara Blossoms, which came out on the independent SteeleChase Records (a well-known Danish jazz label that is based in Copenhagen, and was named after a famous
Charlie Parker standard). In fact, the acoustic pianist featured
Francis on six of his own compositions, as well as on the classic
Duke Ellington/
Billy Strayhorn standard "Daydream." And
Mandara Blossoms wasn't the end of
Francis' relationship with SteeleChase, which released her first album as a leader,
Where Is Love?, in 1996, and her sophomore disc,
Little Sunflower, in 1998. The latter includes some arrangements by pianist
Larry Willis, who
Francis studied with extensively in the late '90s.
Francis' influences have included, among others,
Sarah Vaughan,
Dianne Reeves,
Carmen Lundy,
Dinah Washington, and
Billie Holiday -- and even though she is jazz-oriented,
Francis doesn't consider herself a jazz snob. In fact, she has cited
Oleta Adams and
Barbra Streisand as two of her favorite singers;
Francis has also expressed admiration for R&B singers
Chaka Khan and
Jill Scott. Although
Francis now lives in Newark, NJ, just outside of New York City, she actually grew up in the Deep South; the singer went to high school in Augusta, GA (home of Soul Godfather
James Brown) before attending Tuskegee University in Alabama. But she ended up moving to the Northeastern part of the United States and spent most of the '90s in that region. In 2003,
Francis' third album,
Better Days (which employs the ubiquitous
Christian McBride on acoustic bass) was released independently on Virgo Rising Records.
–
Alex Henderson, Rovi