“She beguiles me. She fascinates me. Her knack for hovering right outside a
lyric......reminds me of no one else I know and gets under the skin of my ears
uniquely. Her name is Christine Correa”
—Andrew Hamlin, San Diego Reader
The Civil Rights Movement was a principal fight during the turbulent
1960s. In turn, many artists took up the mantle of progress and/or
revolution. Three of the most righteous voices in jazz music were vocalist
Abbey Lincoln, drummer/composer Max Roach, and composer Oscar
Brown, Jr. Their defiant music on We Insist!: The Freedom Now Suite and
Percussion Bitter Sweet remains as poignant and topical today as it was
upon release.
Vocalist Christine Correa was introduced to the music of these three
icons by her mentor Ran Blake upon her arrival from Mumbai, India.
The music had visceral effect on her that has remained to this day,
especially as the parallels of the Civil Rights and the Black Lives Matter
movements have become more and more focused. Correa’s new recording,
Just You Stand and Listen With Me, revisits the powerful music
of Lincoln, Roach, and Brown to remind listeners that their struggles are
still very much alive.