Artist

April Barrows

Genre: Jazz ,Swing ,Standards ,Contemporary Jazz ,Contemporary Singer/Songwriter
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
April Barrows distinguishes herself through her dual role as a skilled jazz vocalist and a composer of fresh material whose vintage swing flavor recalls standards from earlier eras. Although she openly credits the influence of Ella Fitzgerald, the Boswell Sisters, Mildred Bailey, Louis Armstrong, Ivie Anderson, Bing Crosby, Ruth Etting, Annette Hanshaw, and Cliff Edwards, she avoids direct imitation in either her vocal delivery or her songwriting. Her introduction to music came through her mother’s collection of boogie-woogie 78s featuring Meade "Lux" Lewis, Albert Ammons, and Pinetop Smith; by singing along she absorbed phrasing and structure. As a teenager she began collecting records herself and gravitated toward earlier idioms.

Raised in the San Francisco Bay area after her family relocated there when she was five, Barrows absorbed jazz alongside Bob Dylan, country music, and 1960s rock. She studied violin briefly, then sang and played rhythm guitar during high school. Additional experience came from duets with a country singer that emphasized roots repertoire, during which she acquired steel guitar and electric bass. While holding a daytime position as a chemist, her primary ambition remained a career in music.

In the late ’70s she abruptly left her job and drove to Nashville. Recognition arrived swiftly, leading to six years of electric-bass work across multiple ensembles that included the Judds’ first band, the Memphis Horns, Vassar Clements, and Woody Herman. By 1985 her focus shifted to songwriting. Although she placed material in country, bluegrass, and blues markets, her deepest interest lay in creating and interpreting original swing pieces. While maintaining activity in commercial songwriting, she has released two collections of her own lively swing originals—My Dream Is You and All You Need Is the Girl—and is preparing a third project that features clarinetist Evan Christopher and cornetist Duke Heitger.