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News,
Reviews and Articles
SAN DIEGO CELEBRATES SUE PALMER DAY
Tuesday,
March 25 was declared Sue Palmer Day in San Diego. Sue,
with proclamation, and Councilmember Toni Atkins, celebrate
the day. BLUSD nominated Sue's "Sophisticated Ladies"
CD into the Blues Foundation's worldwide competition
where it earned the title of Best Self-Produced CD
of 2007. |
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SUE
PALMER ROCKS BLUES WORLD WITH BEST CD AWARD!!!
Sue Palmer, whose piano has graced the San Diego music scene
for more than 2 decades, is getting some long overdue recognition.
Sue's "Sophisticated Ladies" CD was chosen by
BLUSD as the best self-produced CD in San Diego last year
and nominated into the Blues foundation's worldwide competition.
In front of 2500 people at the Orpheum Theatre in Memphis,
Sue won the best self-produced CD at the International Blues
Challenge on Feb 2nd. Sue celebrated at the event with long-time
band member Sharon Shufelt, friends, and BLUSD board members.
To honor Sue, San Diego Councilmemeber Toni Atkins has proclaimed
March 25th as "Sue Palmer Day in San Diego" and
will present her proclamation to Sue at the City Council
meeting that day. Sue is not a newcomer to the blues. She
spent 12 years leading the swing group Tobacco Road, and
another five years traveling the world as part of the band
of North County diva Candye Kane. It seems that Sue's CDS
or bands get nominated or win at the San Diego Music Awards
nearly every year. This is a working musician with a vision
and a commitment to stick to it. No one plays the piano
like Sue Palmer, and she's earned wide-ranging respect in
the local music community."
--Blue Ink, March 2008, San
Diego |
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Gal Band Sue Palmer Takes a Look at Musical
and Family History
"St. Louis Woman.....with all her diamond rings......"
Some of my earliest memories are of hearing strains
of W.C. Handy's "St. Louis Blues" being played
by my mother's very musical family: my Aunt Arlene blowing
alto sax, Auntie Sallie's smoky voice, and Aunt Toot
playing the sexy blues on piano. I was lucky enough
to have cool musical role models to grow up with. Unfortunately,
they all died over 20 years ago and the memories ended.
Or so I thought.
Last year, being a band leader myself now,

Jerrie now

Jerrie 1945 I added a very gifted sax player
from L.A., Carol Chaiken, to one of my shows at Dizzy's.
To make a long story short, she introduced me to a wonderful
woman who had toured for years with my aunts. She's
90 years old and still playing drums and singing at
the famed El Cid Restaurant in the Silverlake area of
L.A., where she has been a fixture for years. She has
a wonderful memory and filled in lots of the blanks
about my aunts' lives. Her name is Jerrie Thill.
Born in Dubuque Iowa in 1917, Jerrie Thill began making
her living as a performing artist, singing, dancing,
and playing her drums in the Chicago area, at the age
of 18. She was the leader of an all-girl swing band
that toured on the Pantages and Gus Sun Times Circuits
during the tail end of the vaudeville era throughout
the mid to late 1930's. West coast tours with the Ada
Leonard All-Girl Orchestra and the Biltmore Girls during
the 50's places her among the ranks of women instrumentalists
who have contributed to jazz and blues for more than
half a century. Twenty years with Peggy Gilbert's Dixie
Bells, women musicians in their 60's to 80's, included
guest appearances on a number of television shows including
The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, Golden Girls, Married
with Children, and Trapper John.
My aunt, Arlene Turner, also played with Ada Leonard.
Both my aunt and her girlfriend, Sallie Davis, were
integral members of the Biltmore Girls. While my aunts

Sallie retired from the music business in the
'60's, Jerrie has continued until the present. Auntie
Arlene offered Jerrie her first job in Hollywood at
Mickey Cohen's Continental Club. She says if they wanted
to work elsewhere, they had to ask his permission first!!!
That was the beginning of the Biltmore Girls and several
years of touring work. She has fun stories that fill
in lots of gaps that my family never told me, and probably
didn't know either. It is an interesting cultural phenomena
of life on the road, as a musician, as a woman, and
as gay women. Jerrie's experiences weren't so different
from mine, 50 years later. They were hipsters of the
'40's and '50's, playing music, partying, and having
a creative and rewarding life.
Check out Jerrie's website: www.jerriethill.com
and find out where she's playing next. Maybe you'll
hear "St. Louis Woman, with all her store-bought
hair.........."
~ Sue Palmer |
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Watch
a clip from the CD Release for "Sophisticated
Ladies" |
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Sue
Palmer and Her Motel Swing Orchestra “Sophisticated
Ladies”
Blues Lovers United of San Diego (BLUSD) congratulates
Sue Palmer and Her Motel Swing Orchestra after their new
CD, “Sophisticated Ladies”, was selected by
BLUSD to be considered for the Best Self-Produced CD award.
The award is given each year by the Blues Foundation in
Memphis TN.
“Sophisticated Ladies” was chosen by BLUSD’s
selection committee from among several CDs entered by San
Diego area blues artists.
BLUSD is the San Diego affiliate of The Blues Foundation.
Affiliates around the world are permitted to send one CD
to the Foundation for consideration.
CDs are evaluated on Musical Performance, Audio Quality
of the Presentation, Cover Art and Design, and Credits and
Liner Information. The award has been given each year since
2005 by the Blues Foundation.
The winners will be announced during the festivities of
The International Blues Challenge (IBC), which will take
place January 30 – February 1, 2008 in Memphis.
--Ken Boozer, Vice President
From Blue Ink, BLUSD Newsletter, November 2007
"It's
hard to imagine a blues scene without Sue Palmer. San Diego
is most fortunate to have such a talented and committed
blues player; someone who appreciates and respects tradition
and finds a way of delivering the past to today's doorstep.
On 'Sophisticated Ladies,' Sue reaches deep into her arsenal
to make certain we understand that the swagger of Hadda
Brooks wasn't for nothing and that blues doesn't have to
rock to work, that it can swing away, and be just fine.
In New York, Paris or Istanbul, Sue Palmer would be celebrated
as a cultural icon. Sadly, even after she turns out an album
as delightfully seductive as this, she won't get her proper
due in her hometown. She won't be discouraged, though. Sue's
piano playing and arranging skills are first class. She's
got Deejha Marie to sing and April West and Jonny Viau to
drive their horns through the heart of the music. San Diego's
Queen of Boogie Woogie is way more than just another working
musician. She's a bright light ready to take chances and
retrofit the past into a vibrant, classy version of what
blues should be. 'Sophisticated Ladies' is proof of that.
--Michael Kinsman, President of the
San Diego Blues Society, "Blue Ink," June 2007
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"Sue
Palmer, the self-styled "Queen of Boogie Woogie"
and her Motel Swing Orchestra is on the loose again with
a new cd that's the best she's recorded since forming the
jazz band seven years ago. The San Diego pianist's seven-piece
group has been labeled a blues band, but when you listen,
it becomes apparent that putting the band in a blues box
is a disservice to the orchestra. It swings hard, bites
into odd harmonics with a vengeance and is far more disciplined
than the typical blues band. You need only to sample the
first track, "I'll Cry Over You," featuring songstress
Deejha Marie, to discover a swing gem, whereas "Queen
of the Boogie" finds the leader keeping the Freddie
Slack tradition alive. And the venerable ballad, "As
Time Goes By" is given a dramatic reading by guest
vocalist Dayna Carroll with Palmer as her sole accompanist.
The fact that Palmer varies the combination of instruments
to suit the mood is one of the elements that makes the disc
appealing. Palmer has dedicated the album to women who have
played important roles in her personal or professional life,
or both. "I Feel So Good" is done in memeory of
Hadda Brooks, the original "Queen of the Boogie,"
while the previously mentioned song "Queen of the Boogie,"
is a role reversal song that Janell Rock wrote with Palmer
in mind. Amid the very good performances are several that
stand out: One is "Sophisticated Ladies," which
showcases the talents of oboist Scott Paulson and trombonist
April West; another is the flute and tenor sax work of Jonny
Viau on "Interlude," a Palmer original that's
as modern as a 2010 Mercedes; and "Ladies Shoes,"
a blues tune that Viau and Marie turn into a musical sex
symbol."
--Cam Miller, North County times, July,
2007
"Sue
Palmer's newest CD 'Sophisticated Ladies," shines the
light on the talents of the women who make music with her.
Indeed, the disk's selection ranges from swing standards
and slow, sultry blues to barrel house and full-tilt boogie
woogie. Throughout, Palmer's playing remains right on the
mark, with the right touch for each style. Deejha Marie,
who has worked with Palmer for years, sings with elan; Sharon
Shufelt drums with snap and pizazz; Daniel Jackson, San
Diego's Dean of Cool, (plays) with some hot supreme saxophone.
Palmer and her Motel Swing Orchestra cover "Sophisticated
Lady," with their efforts taking this Duke Ellington
standard to a new level. Scott Paulson plays the lead on
oboe, and the instrument brings out the bits of Ravel, Debussy,
and other 20th century composers who influenced Ellington.
The result is something wonderful, which I've never heard
in any other version of this classic. April West pulls the
composition back to its roots with her full round trombone.
Palmer usually saves the best for the last, wrapping up
her recordings with a real gem, and she does the same here.
She and Dayna Carroll team up for "As Time Goes By."
I feel confident when I tell you that this is the best recording
of "As Time Goes By" that there has ever been."
--Paul Hormick, The Troubador, San
Diego, June 2007
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"Palmer's
piano is excellent..... A collection of great players, including
Jonny Viau on sax and Steve Wilcox on guitar, brings to
life a lovely reading of the Ellington title song, Rodgers&Hart's
"This Can't Be Love," Hadda Brooks' version of
Big Bill Broonzy's "I Feel So Good," a terrific
pair of songs from Camille Howard, and two memorable originals--Janell
Rock's "Queen of the Boogie" and Palmer's smoky
"Ladies Shoes."
--Blues Revue,
Oct/Nov 2007
"As
Queen of the Boogie Woogie Piano, Sue Palmer knows how to
make things happen. With her latest album, she brings her
Motel Swing orchestra in for a romp through the blues that
could very well make the house rock all night long"
--Jim Santella, Southland Blues Magazine,
Southern California, June 2007
"Once known for her mile-high beehive hairdo and wild accordian
solos as a member of blues singer Candye Kane's band, pianist Sue
Palmer struck out on her own in 2000, reinventing herself as San
Diego's queen of boogie-woogie. A loyal following of swing dancers
have taken to Palmer's trademark 'wall climbing jump boogie"--a
combination of boogie-woogie and swing with a slightly punk rock
ethos, as she describes it. "It makes you a slave to the dance
floor," Palmer said with a laugh. The swing aficionados at her
shows seem happy cutting it up, whether on a wooden floor or a
field of grass."
--Pat Sherman, Today's Local News - Sounds
of summer, June 2007
"While Sue's mother grew up in the Texas panhandle, Sue grew up in San Diego
and started playing music with her relatives, who would all get together and jam
at family functions. In the '80's, Sue performed with then-local-now-famous
comedians Kathy Najimy, Mo Gaffney, and Whoopie Goldberg in the feminist groups
"Hot Flashes" and "Ms.B.Haven." She's toured the world, written soundtracks,
and created and performed her own multimedia one-woman show. But we know and
love her as band leader and piano player for one of our most popular TGIF groups.
Wigglin' boogie-woogie, Ellington sophistication, old-time Americana, vintage
blues, a little Hawaiian spice-Sue Palmerand Her Motel Swing Orchestra deliver
it all. While the musicianship is impeccable, it's the warm, expansive,
join-in-don't-be-shy sense of fun that we always remember.
--Carlsbad Jazz in the Park Program, June 2007
"Pianist
Sue Palmer might be best known for her former role as a
member of Candye Kane's band. On "In The Green Room,"
she offers an hour's worth of boogie-woogie, vintage blues,
jazz, old-timey Americana, Hawaiian music, and even a funky
novelty song.
That might sound like a jarring mix, but it's enjoyable
all the way through, even with a blend of studio recordings,
live cuts (with her band, the Motel Swing Orchestra), and
a low-fi family performance. Palmer leaves the vocals to
others, so it's not surprising that she kicks off the set
with a pair of instrumentals, her own "Jakob's Boogie
Woogie Lullaby," and Cy Coben's "The Old Piano
Roll Blues." She introduces her band for a bluesy reading
of Duke Ellington's "Mood Indigo" featuring singer
Deejha Marie that should go over well with the cocktail
crowd.
Things
really get cooking when Palmer recruits Kane's brassy vocals
for "Gertrude&Steins," a salute to bawdy women
who love women, with a piano hook you won't be able to get
out of your head. Kane also sings a cover of "I'm Confessin'"
and contributes background vocals to Killer Tiki Boogie,"
Palmer's wacky album-closer. Tucked into the middle of the
album is a recording of Palmer and her extended family performing
the instrumental "Cottonwood." It's as amateurish
as it sounds, with Palmer's piano cutting through the joyful
noise. (A home movie of the performance is featured on an
enhanced video track.)
A sense of joy permeates the entire disc. Palmer has surrounded
herself with great musicians who love what they do, and
it's infectious."
--BLUES REVUE, Aug/Sept 2005, by Michael
Cote
"Palmer,
San Diego's queen of boogie-woogie, has come into her own
on this wonderful new release, with studio and live tracks
redefining her rep as "just" a gifted pianist-bandleader.
Palmer may now add producer and visionary to her resume.
She, her Motel Swing Orchestra and many notable guests combine
to create an expansive, eclectic album that touches on everything
from Ellingtonia amd trad piano boogie to the sort of giddy-but-musical
tomfoolery that Frank Zappa once defined.
Highlights
include the amusing, Sappho-centric cabaret "Gertrude&Steins"(penned
by local singer-songwriter Janell Rock), Palmer's own sleazy
instrumental stroll "Boogie Noir" and the droll,
new-wavish "Killer Tiki Boogie" - not to mention
an unlikely, uke-and-steel-steeped cover of "Aloha
Oe" (really!)/ The roster of San Diego heavies on hand
include April West, Candye Kane, David Mosby and Adrian
Demain"
--"Blue
Notes"/Buddy Blue/San Diego Union-Tribune, June 2,
2005
**Dot&Roy
Palmer make National News!!!** "This one
is Sue's tribute to the green
room where her family got together to play and sing as she
was growing up. SHe was blessed with talented relatives
and a family that believed everyone should participate in
the family music.....Her mom Dot plays banjo uke on "Cottonwood,"
and her dad is the announcer...The booklet is peppered wiith
nice vintage photos which add to the ambiance intended.
You'll love the one of Sue's Aunt Arlene (a professional
alto sax player)'s girlfriend Sally Davis under the CD!
"Cottonwood" was also videotaped (live in the
green room at Sue's house of course!) and is presented in
the enhanced portion of the cd...."
--Marc Bristol, Blue Suede News, Seattle,
Summer 2005
"CD
IS BOMB: DEAR SUE, YOUR NEW CD IS YOUR BEST YET. WE WERE
AT BUDDY BLUEBALLS A FEW MO. AGO. HE'D JUST GOT A COPY IN
THE MAIL. WE MADE HIM LISTEN TO IT AT GUNPOINT (HIS FAVORITE
SEXUAL POSTION). THE OLD BASTID WAS IMPRESSED(SO FUKINWHAT).
SO MUCH FOR THE LAZY LEFT HAND. APRIL IS MY FAVORITE S.D.
MUSICIAN. HER BONE PLAYIN BRINGS A TEAR TO MY BLOODSHOT
EYE"
--MR.FLEENER, May 26, 2005
"cowabunga dewd! GREAT job! Not only do I love that
wild, eclectic, adventurous spirit of playing music you
love and shitcanning musically confining concepts like "cohesion,"
or adhering to people's expectations, but it takes massive
chutzpah to pull it off. Yer playing is fantastic, your
songs are wonderful and your taste in co-conspirators impeccable."
--With admiration, Buddy, May 22, 2005
"If
pressed, Sue Palmer could hold her own with some of music's
greatest when dropping the names of green rooms in which
she's bided her time. From posh Parisian dressing rooms
stocked with caviar and champagene to lackluster lounges
in Duluth, Minn., it is from these backstage areas she has
emerged to whip crowds into submission with her sultry piano
stylings. As a longtime musical colllaborator of blues diva
Candye Kane, Palmer has traveled throughout Europe and the
world with her beehive harido, outrageous outfits and trademark,
left-hand boogie-woogie blues. On her fourth solo recording,
the San Diego Music Awards-winner finds herself back "In
The Green Room," albeit in a retro, personal sort of
way. Paying homage to both family tradition and her musical
roots, Palmer's new CD includes an impromptu jam session
recorded in her Talmadge home. A video of the living room
session is included as an enhanced track on "In The
Green Room." The low-fi video includes inveterate Palmer
collaborators such as trombonist April West, drummer Sharon
Shufelt, guitarist Steve Wilcox and vocalist Deejha Marie.
Alongside them are Palmer's mother, Dot Palmer, strumming
a ukelele, and longtime friend Chris Kehoe, known more for
her tenure as State senator from San Diego than as the next
Chrissie Hynde..... (Highlights include) "Killer Tiki
Boogie," a sort of Peter Gun meets psychedelic B-movie
mind-trip, a complete departure from Palmer's trademark
sound. Lending his deep, bass chops to the tune is vocalist
David Mosby. Candye Kane goes wild on backing vocals,while
Scott Paulson uses a Theramin to infuse the piece with science-fiction
flair (Paulson is known to many as curator of toy pianos
at UCSD's Gisel Library). "Gertrude&Steins"
is an infectiously campy homage to bawdy women, beer, creativity
and good friends. Kane croons the salacious tune, which
garnered (songwriter Janell) Rock a 2004 "Just Plain
Folks" award in the Best Cabaret category......
--Pat Sherman, Gay&Lesbian Times,
April 21, 2005
"Along
with various manifestations of her own Motel Swing Orchestra,
Palmer does not try to recreate the passions, adrenaline,
and excess that drove these American music forms while they
were in their prime. "In The Green Room" is a
disk of blues and standards for family fun times. ..The
mood is best summed up by the DVD disk of Palmer playing
the old country classic "Cottonwood" in her living
room with friends and family. What could be sweeter or simpler?
And the montage of old family photos just puts the icing
on the cake. Besides such classics as "Saint Louis
Blues" and "Mood Indigo" are a couple new
tunes. "Gertrude and Steins" is the one song on
the disk with a bit of a wink and a nod. And if my life
couuld have a soundtrack, I'd want it to be the last number
on this disk. "Killer Tiki Boogie," a tune Palmer
penned while fighting breast cancer during the buildup for
war on Iraq, is clever, unworried, and about as hip as it
gets."
--Paul Hormick, The Troubadour, May
2005
"The
idea is to finish a song before your legs fall asleep,"
said Sharon Shufelt, who played a toy drumset to accompany
boogie-woogie pianist Sue Palmer...., on toy piano.
--San Diego Union, August 15, 2004
"......Game
over, 6-5 Padres. We all sat there blinking in the sun,
and gradually, sadly, it dawned on us that we had to leave.
I stepped next door, paid a $10 cover charge and was admitted
to an alcohol-free club called Dizzy's, where I sat up front
for an evening of rollicking jazz from boogie-woogie pianist
Sue Palmer&Her Motel Swing Orchestra. (The world needs
more left-footed trombone solos like the one I heard here)"
--Christopher Reynolds, LATimes, Travel
section , May 9, 2004
"Sue
Palmer was leader and wonderful boogiewoogie pianist who
seemed to put the room into motion. I didn't see anyone
not moving to the music. April West's outstanding trombone
playing left me speechless, especially when she removed
her right shoe and played it with her foot for one tune!
Drummer Sharon Shufelt drove the band and vocalist Deejha
Marie captured the audience with her first note and didn't
turn them loose until the set ended. This San Diego based
band with vocalist was one of the highlights of this festival,
and a must see feature."
--Harvey Barkan, LA Jazz Scene, August,
2003, re: Glendale Kiwanis Jazz Festival 2003
"If
you want to enjoy a truly dynamic set of rhythm and blues,
swing era jazz, and even the occasional torch ballad played
with virtuoso skill and most importantly, real fervor, then
nothing will beat this show. Even in a city with as many
musical treasures as we have, Sue Palmer truly stands out."
--La Jolla Light, June 19, 2003, F.Chester
"While
"Live at Dizzy's" is a document of a theatre piece
called "Soundtrack to a B Movie," the disc also
stands on its own as a fine collection of swing and boogie-woogie
tunes. This San Diego collective has a bright future if
they want it; the sophisticated music and musicianship on
"Live at Dizzy's" outclasses many swing-revival
pretenders. Palmer, especially, is an important find--a
gifted piano player and top-flight band leader........
--Jeff Calvin, BLUES REVUE, Apr/May
2003
"Unless
you live in San Diego County, Sue Palmer&Her Motel Swing
Orchestra may just be the best band you've never heard of.
This isn't Palmer's first disc, but the issue is her best.
Like most musicians, Palmer and her 8-piece band feed off
the presence of an appreciative audience and it shows."
--Review of "Live at Dizzy's,"
by Cam Miller, The American Rag, February 2003, Sacramento
"We
had so much fun at Dizzy's, and really enjoyed the show.
The stage looked great and your guitar player was on fire
- that big Stevie Ray Vaughan sound. The Tiki song you wrote
was too cool. It was great to hear the band play a more
bluesy, harder sound. You guys were kickin' it up another
notch at Dizzy's!"
--Mary Fleener, underground cartoonist,
rock star, Tiki queen, Halloween night, Sue's CD release
party, 2002

"As
usual, things were hopping on Halloween in downtown San
Diego. Parking was a bear but we found a lot with a single
remaining spot, parked our car, and followed costumed merrymakers
making their way towards the music, booming from the Gaslamp
District. But we weren't going there. Turning down a side
street next to the new ball park we found the dim lights
of Dizzy's and walked inside. We entered a tropical scene:
Tiki heads, palm thatch, hula girls and costumed dancers
bouncing to the sound of Sue Palmer&Her Motel Swing
Orchestra.
The event marked the release of Sue's most recent CD, "Live
at Dizzy's," and the crowd was clearly enjoying itself.
The band was joined by musical friends and collaborators.
Everyone was having a swinging good time moving through
the repertoire of standards and Palmer originals including,
of course,many of the tunes on the new CD. The grand finale
("Deejha's Boogie") was a driving fantastic trip
that blew everyone away."
--Mike Almer, Bon Vivant, Patron of
the Arts, Love Boy, Downtown Sleuth, Halloween night, 2002

As
Swing bands go, Sue Palmer and Her Motel Swing Orchestra
represent the kind of undercurrent we recall from the organizations
of Count Basie and Woody Herman: big bands that swing the
Blues. Based in San Diego, Palmer and her orchestra sizzle
with incredible chops and express with a genuine feel for
the Blues".........
--Southland Blues, August 2002
"I just want to say these are the most wonderful Boogie Woogie players I've heard in a long time."
--Hadda Brooks, on the night of the Boogie Woogie Extravaganza show at Dizzy's, July 7, 2002, with Hadda Brooks, Sue Palmer, Wendy Dewitt, and Philippe Lejeune.
"Today,
Sue Palmer&Her Motel Swing Orchestra is much more than
a band capable of playing some of the best boogie-woogie
in the country. It's a band that swings gracefully and fearlessly
and gets downright rollicking when Sue cuts loose on the
piano or guitarist Steve Wilcox (another refugee from the
Candy Kane days) jumps off with his own high-energy guitar
runs that whip the crowd into a frenzy.......All of this
is Sue Palmer&Her Motel Swing Orchestra. There is no
sense trying to pigeonhole Sue or her music. She'll play
what she feels and, most likely, she will find an audience
that is just as inspired by her music as she is."
--from the program for the San DIego
Blues Fest 2002, Michael Kinsman, producer.
"Top place of honor for the show's first half easily goes to Sue Palmer&Her Motel Swing Orchestra. The former pianist for
Candye Kane's band, is known for her amazing boogie-woogie keyboard work, as well as a winning, bouyant personality. Her performances are never
less than highly recommended!"
--F.Chester, La Jolla Light, June 2002
Review of "Soundtrack to a B Movie", a theatre presentation
"PALMER NOIR"

That something so complex and so unique could take place in a tiny alcohol-free, smoke-free dive known as Dizzy's should, I
suppose, come as no surprise. Palmer and Dizzy's proprietor Chuck Perrin, who wrote and performed some of the work's "noir" narrative, packed
them in, folks diverse of race, age, and gender preference. The Diva herself, Sue Palmer, presided at the piano, her voice mute except for an
occasional, subtle vocal backup and for one wild piercing scream. From a strictly theatrical standpoint, Palmer is like a one-woman mime-troupe, an
engaging, slyly clownish presence. Others thrown into the film noir narrative soup provided vocals as well. Bass-baritone David Mosby oozed hot
sex, blues singer Deejha Marie provided bluesy sauce, and outstanding song stylist Romy Kaye, a touch of sass and class. Whether scat or tight
harmony, the two women together were a steamroller, a scream-evoking cacophony of pleasure. Add Mosby, as Palmer does in the climactic
number, and hair levitates from heads. Palmer's Motel Swing Orchestra boasts the talents of Sharon Shufelt on drums, Oliver Shirley on bass, April
West on trombone, Jonny Viau on sax and bongos, and Steve Wilcox on guitar. Each , individually, is an incomparable artist. West's trombone
wah-wahing, body movements and mesh stockings were a treat in and of themselves. She is personality plus...
--Charlene Baldridge, Gay and
Lesbian Times, February 28, 2002
Replete
with appropriately noir-ish notes by Chuck Perrin, one longs
for a whole B Movie or stage play to go with this fine music."
--Blue Suede News, Seattle, Winter
2001-02
"Palmer
is one of the best piano players in San Diego - period.....(Her)
brand spanking new album, "Soundtrack to a B Movie,"
is a recording that not only highlights her rich and versatile
pounding of the 88 keys, but also taps her flair for vintage
cinema and pulp novels with its gritty and grainy overall
scheme...Palmer's piano is an appropriate counterpart to
vocals and musicianship that is like a who's who of the
San Diego boogiewoogie blues scene. Grand Dame Candye Kane
makes an appearance as does the smooth-as-silk vocalist
David Mosby, but the most prominent voice on "Soundtrack"
is the bluesy and beautiful Deejha Marie. Marie has a vocal
style that takes listeners right up on stage with her. Combined,
Marie and Palmer are a pair of divas whose work together
should continue for many years (if San Diego is lucky).
--Lance Vargas La Jolla Light, November
8, 2001
Sue
Palmer's CD release party was one of the top ten musical
experiences of my life. Some of the others: Front rows at
Chuck Berry & Tina Turner concerts, and the symphony
at Carnegie Hall. Sue and her friends know how to swing.
Buy her album and check them out.
--E. Paul Henderson, Music Critic
and Funk Dancer
"Just
when you thought every original idea in the world had been
snatched up, along comes Sue Palmer and her new disc...The
result is a "concept album," that's so cutting-edge
you get paper cuts just thinking about it."
--Maureen DelGrosso Blues Revue, September,
2001
"Sue
Palmer paints images with her piano, gracefully filling
her canvas with notes that soothe and seduce...She is a
polished and professional musical artist worthy of attention.
--Michael Kinsman San Diego Union,
September 27, 2001
"On
'Soundtrack to a B Movie,'......Sue Palmer continues to
ignite the ivories with the dynamic sound and style she
promisingly exhibited on her debut, "Boogie Woogie
and Motel Swing."
--Joann D. Ball SLAMM, September 6,
2001
"One
of the great swing orchestra leaders of yesteryear must
have possessed Sue Palmer's body because she delivers some
wicked boogie woogie that transports any listener to that
little Harlem jazz cafe in 1932. No wonder San Diego has
warmly coined Sue Palmer the "Boogie Woogie Queen."
Palmer can tickle the ivories like no one's business on
tracks such as "The Boogie and the Blues," "Walkin',"and
"Left Bank Boogie" so what are you waiting for?
Get your boogie shoes on and dance the night away with one
of San Diego's best kept secrets."
--Heidi Hudson Lesbian News, September
2001
"A
sidewoman no more, keyboard queen Sue Palmer has taken her
rightful place as headliner and leader of her own band.
The beehive-coifed Candye Kane Band pianist simply has a
musical fire that burns too brightly. She's shed her beehive,
let her hair down and allowed her fire to erupt. And she
loves following her own path.
Her wicked left hand, especially potent on "Room Service
Boogie" and "Sue's Boogie," induces listeners to dance their
troubles away. Her explosive right hand shimmers with brilliant,
perfectly executed melodic riffs, performed with no hint
of difficulty.
The San Diego-based Palmer has chosen some of the West Coast's
finest to accompany her on this collection of blistering
boogies, big-band tunes and blues. Ten of the 13 cuts are
instrumentals; vocal tracks on the others are provided by
singers hand-picked by Palmer. A gospel boogie version of
"Do Lord"--the song a 10-year-old Palmer first heard at
her Baptist vacation Bible school that awakened her musical
interest--is also included.
Boogie Woogie and Motel Swing is an album of sheer piano
artistry; there's not a single misstep. It's one to savor.
Five stars."
--Maureen Delgrosso Blues Revue Magazine,
November 2000
"If
you've been around San Diego a while, you've seen Sue Palmer.
Banging on her piano with the vigor and liveliness of a
little boy on a toy xylophone, she plays jump boogie like
no one's business. Unlike some of the newer aficionados
of the style who treat the music like some sort of lodestone,
Palmer knows her music for what it is: a friend to be embraced,
enjoyed, and occasionally knock about a little bit."
--Clark Novak SLAMM, February 16,
2000
"Her
beehive is gone from her Candye Kane days, but pianist Sue
Palmer hasn't lost any of that boogie-woogie in her soul."
--Michael Kinsman San Diego Union, January
2000.
"From the opening track, "Room Service Boogie," to the cocktail-nation
groove of "Blue and Tan" to Palmer's swinging take of the
gospel standard "Do Lord, Do Remember Me," Motel Swing ranks
among her finest work."
--Pat Sherman Gay & Lesbian Times, January
20, 2000
"Versatile enough to move comfortably from blues to jazz
to swing„ and tasteful enough to consider the ensemble sound,
Palmer knows the boogie groove inside and out and has such
fun in the process that she actually makes it look easy.
When she cuts loose, her fiery, attention-getting, right-hand
licks bristle with energy, imagination and technical skill.
And her dazzling rolling-boil rhythms are courtesy of a
muscular left hand that moves with the startling accuracy
of an Oscar De La Hoya uppercut."
--Maureen Del Grosso Blues Revue, December
1998
"There
are clearly not enough rockabilly, blues-swinging, beehive-wearing
accordionist/pianists to go around. We caught a rare sighting
of Sue "Beehive" Palmer working the keys with solo artist
and ex-porn star Candye Kane."
--Keyboard Magazine October 1997
"This
woman is a wailer of the first degree with or without her
beehive."
--Marc Gallo, Beach News, Encinitas, CA 1993
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