Jen Chapinโs appearance at 2004โs Rollinโ on the River, after the release of her debut album, Linger, is one of her most memorable. After that show, she and her band were invited on a moonlight raft down the river.
โIt was great until we got to a section where there were some rapids,โ says Chapin with a laugh. โAll but one of usโmy husbandโfell off the raft. But even he got bruised and wet, and he lost his glasses.โ
Once back in Wingfield Park, where the movie on the lawn was Grease, the sopping wet group tromped through the crowd during the middle of โSummer Lovin.’โ
A growing and supportive local fan base gives Reno a special place in Chapinโs heart. And now, with two critically acclaimed albums under her belt and her third, a CD/DVD set titled Light of Mine, barely released and already making waves, Chapin returns to the river to play selections from all three. Joining her is the Rosetta Trio, comprised of her husband, Stephan Crump, along with Liberty Ellman and Jamie Fox. Son Maceo, now 2-and-a-half, will be in tow.
Music is all about family for Chapin. Even though her father, folk icon Harry Chapin, died when Jen was just 10, both he and her mother, Sandyโa poet and artist in her own right, who wrote the lyrics to โCatโs in the Cradle”โdemonstrated that a life of music was not only possible, but also an honorable and viable way to earn a living.
โWhen Dad was home, he built dollhouses, played ball with us, fixed things around the house,โ she says. โIt wasnโt all about music. But I suppose I had a permission slip. I didnโt have to do this big coming-out-to-my-family thing, like, โIโm sorry, Iโm not going to law school.โ Everybody knew that it was a very challenging but worthwhile thing to do.โ
Like her father, Jen is not only aware of the world and its problems, she also strives to say something about it.
โI wanted to make music that was about more than just teenage romance,โ she says.
Although her formal training at Bostonโs Berklee College of Music taught her the fundamentals, much of her โschoolingโ came from listening to what she lovesโfunk, soul and especially jazzโand incorporating them into what she dubs โurban folk.โ
โItโs folk in that itโs searching for community and meaning, but itโs urban, with a groove, with some tension and intensity,โ she says.
Part of that tension is captured in the Rosetta Trioโs fascinating and rich instrumentation, which includes everything from bass to ukulele.
Whereas Linger highlighted Chapinโs poetic talents and vocal range, Ready deals with lifeโs bigger realities, such as preparing for the birth of her son. In Light of Mine, Chapin explores her feelings and fears about many of the worldโs troubles. The album blends covers of Radiohead, Van Morrison, Bruce Springsteen, John Lennon and other notable artists with some of her own songs to make a number of important statements. For instance, โLullabye,โ also written for Maceo, is a sort of warning to the worldโs young people about how many of problems there are to fix, while โInsatiableโ compares the United States to an adolescent, petulant girl.
Yet, as powerful and angry as her lyrics can sometimes be, so many of them are filled with hope and joy. And always, when sung in Chapinโs silky voice to unexpectedly sweet melodies, theyโre as relaxing as the warm summer sun on a rolling river.
