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I keep on singing

Eva Olmerová & the Prague Big Band – Zpívám dál
from 7″ single “Georgia”, 1980, Panton 81430053
conducted by Milan Svoboda, produced by Josef Novotný
OlmerovaEva_Georgia_ZpivamDal_aSP_128
original SP sleeve
It wouldn’t be appropriate to simply call Eva Olmerová a jazz singer, although the majority of her recorded material falls more or less into that category. But she also loved to sing blues, gospel, pop and even country & western music. Born in 1934, in her teen years she began to sing with dixieland groups in Prague’s coffee houses. Her professional career started relatively late in 1962, when she’s been discovered by composer Karel Mareš, the dramaturge of the Semafor theatre, who was looking for an Eva Pilarová replacement. At that time Olmerová recorded her first hit Jsi jako dlouhý most (You’re Like A Long Bridge) which eventually won the popular song contest “In search of a song for the weekday”.
However, Olmerová’s career probably had more downs than ups. The communist regime always kept an eye on her family, particularly because her grandfather used to be an assistant of the last democratic president Edvard Beneš. In the 1960s and 1970s she’d been regularly prohibited from performing. She also spent more than two years in jail: in 1958 for smacking an insolent police officer and in 1972 for a car accident while driving drunk. And the latter incident reveals that her other enemy was her own lifestyle; alcohol and medicament abuse often turned her unreliable both on stage and in studio…
Olmerová’s undisputed highlight was the debut album Jazz-Feeling, recorded in 1968 for Supraphon’s export subsidiary Artia, which made her quite popular abroad. (I will revisit it more thoroughly in a future Funky Czech-In entry next year.) In 1969 she’s been even asked by Ella Fitzgerald to join her world tour after both ladies jammed together on a river boat party in Prague! Yet the communist regime didn’t allow Olmerová to travel, not even inside the Eastern Bloc. Nevertheless, in 1974 Supraphon/Artia released another English-sung export album with traditional dixieland tunes, recorded between 1969 and 1972 in numerous sessions. But afterwards she slipped into obscurity for the rest of the decade.
She’s been “rediscovered” in the late 1970s by a young generation of jazz-rock musicians. Her new mentors were the keyboarders and bandleaders Milan Svoboda and – particularly in the early 1980s – Michael Kocáb, who both obviously appreciated Olmerová’s dirty voice as well as her untamed attitude. In 1979 she recorded two singles with Svoboda’s Pražský big band (Prague Big Band). Her later collaborations with Kocáb’s studio orchestra or with JOČR were documented on further 45s as well as on two nice pop-jazzy comeback LPs: Zahraj i pro mne (Play It For Me, Too), which in fact was her debut album (!) for the Czech market in 1981, and Vítr rváč (The Wind The Thug) two years later.
I’ve chosen Zpívám dál (I Keep On Singing) not only for its funky atmosphere, but especially because of its programmatic Czech title. While Olmerová likely didn’t deliver her best vocal performance ever from the technical point of view, in her voice you can truly feel the pain as well as the heavy weight of life that she had to carry on her shoulders. The tune is an arrangement of Clive Westlake’s ballad Only Once with Czech lyrics by Ronald Kraus: I keep on singing / Even through the veil of tears / My song is my medicine / My song is a soft muffler / I keep on singing / For all who wander aimlessly through the dark / For the love that I know / For those who are alone / I keep on singing for myself. As for the backing band, an article about the Prague Big Band is in the works and I will post it later this fall, so stay tuned.
Czech music critics have often compared Eva Olmerová to afro-american singers like Bessie Smith or Billie Holiday – not only for the blues in her voice but also for the blues in her life. One of the critics even wrote that she was the only Czech world-class female singer in the pop/jazz genre. But in any case, at her zenith she was never given a chance to introduce herself to the world in the first place.
She passed away in 1993 of liver cirrhosis. Jitka Zelenková sang at her funeral. And now, go and get her records. You’ll find Zpívám dál on the CD compilation Blues samotářky (Blues Of A Loner).

Posted in Cover Czech-In, Funky Czech-In

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5 Comments

  1. sermo

    Ahoj Loukash,
    I agree very much about what you wrote about the painful feelings that are discernible in her singing and the funkyness of the big band. But one other thing about your post really astonished me: You already know what you’re going to post next year??? How long do you plan in advance? That’s amazing…

  2. Lou Kash

    Re: “You already know what you’re going to post next year?”
    Sort of. While I certainly don’t write truly encyclopedically, I know what I still want to post in the future to cover the kind of music that matters to me, so that my blog becomes a kind of archive, as complete as it can get. And since I’ve written about Olmerová yesterday, it’s likely that I won’t write another article about her within the next, say, 4 months. There’s a lot of other stuff I didn’t post yet: Gustav Brom, Václav Zahradník, Karel Černoch, Matadors, Fermáta, Miroslav Vitouš, Pražský výběr, Karel Velebný, Jazz Cellula, Šest strýců, Luděk Hulan, Petr Novák and many more…

    Re: “How long do you plan in advance?”
    In the beginning last year: about 6-8 weeks in advance. But after a friend of mine passed away last February I’ve been very busy sorting his heritage and stuff, so the advantage got used up pretty fast, well, within those 8 weeks. So maybe since May I just post an article when I’ve finished it, without any precise plan. Through the summer I didn’t even have the time to keep pace with my weekly schedule because I had to spend a lot of time in Prague due to family reasons.

    Actually for most parts I still continue to post from a bunch of 50-60 songs which I’ve digitalized more than two years ago. I’ll have to record a new batch quite soon…

  3. Anonymous

    I stumbled across Eva on a YouTube search for performances of “It Might As Well Be Spring” and was deeply touched by her rendition- her mispronunciations only became more charming with each playback, and the wistful and beautiful voice thoroughly enchanting

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