CHAMPIAN FULTON
Champian Fulton: Engaging Singer and Swinger
by Ken Dryden
.jpeg)
Champian Fulton knew early on that she wanted to pursue both piano and singing. The Norman, Oklahoma native was exposed to jazz early by her father, the late trumpeter and flugelhornist Stephen Fulton and she was already singing with enough skill at age ten to help celebrate Clark Terry’s 75th birthday in 1995.
Many vocalists influenced Champian: “My favorite vocalist when I was a little girl is Dinah Washington. Then later, I fell in love with Billie Holiday, Sarah Vaughan, Joe Williams and Jay McShann. I love the blues; I'm from Oklahoma.” As a pianist, she has many inspirations. “I always loved the block chord players, Red Garland, Errol Garner, Fats Waller, and Count Basie.” Yet her approach to performing draws from many of them without mimicry. “I wanted to take all those things that I loved and smoosh them together. Even though I feel like some of them don't naturally go together.”
Champian enrolled at SUNY Purchase at 17, where she studied with Dena DeRose and Hal Galper. “I was an odd student; I was from Oklahoma and already working professionally, playing and singing. I had a clear idea about what I wanted to do.” But she is much more than a ballad singer; she is known to include instrumentals by Charlie Parker, Earl Hines or Gigi Gryce and others in her sets.
To read more, visit https://mags.hothousejazzmagazine.com/9d16209c4d.html#page/6.