Champian Fulton

Jazz Pianist and Vocalist

Champian Announces European Tour, Spring 2022

On the heels of a successful 2021, Champian Fulton returns to Europe with 27 shows in 6 countries over 7 weeks, including an extended stay in Northern Italy and a return to cities such as Frankfurt DE and London UK, which haven’t seen Champian since 2019. Audiences can expect to hear repertoire from her award winning 2020 release “Birdsong” and 2021’s “Live from Lockdown,” both of which were awarded “Jazz Vocal Album'' of the year in the NYC Jazz Record. In addition to the posted concert dates, Champian will be recording a new album while in Copenhagen which is expected to feature her piano playing with a return to the all instrumental format (Champian is expected to record 2 albums this year). 

Yamaha artist Champian Fulton is a world-renowned pianist and vocalist, considered by many to be “the most gifted pure Jazz singer of her generation” (Mark Stryker, Detroit Free Press) and a “charming young steward of the mainstream Jazz tradition” (The NY Times). She has released 14 albums since 2006 and performed in over 25 countries. 

For tour details visit www.champian.net/schedule 

For inquires email marinachasse@gmail.com 

Champian Featured in the Absolute Sound (February 2022)

“Some musicians want to reinvent the wheel every time they record an album, but not Champian Fulton. With musical heroes like Charlie Parker and Dinah Washington, she stays rooted in the music that’s closest to her soul. “I like things that swing,” she once put it. “I’m a bebopper at heart.” The same could be said of her father, Stephen Fulton, who joins her for a series of duets on Live from Lockdown. A mixture of instrumentals and vocal performances, the album features Champian on piano and vocals and Stephen on flugelhorn and trumpet. Standards like “I Hadn’t Anyone Till You,” “Satin Doll,” “Moonglow,” and “What Is This Thing Called Love” are delivered with a casual late-night air that calls to mind many mid-century Jazz albums. Champian is a soulful singer whose enthusiasm is infectious, and there’s a life-affirming quality to Live from Lockdown. Simply having the opportunity to play the music she loves and share it with other people seems to be all the inspiration she and her father need to record an album that makes listeners feel like they’re part of a small, intimate, and special audience.” - Jeff Wilson, the Absolute Sound

(publicity by Lydia Liebman Promotions)

Christmas with Champian at Birdland reviewed in Broadway World!

by Stephen Mosher, December 24 2021. Read the review & see pics here.

It may be beginning to look a lot like Christmas but it isn't sounding like Christmas at Birdland, even though that is what is being sold in the show title CHRISTMAS WITH CHAMPIAN. Yes. Champian Fulton's current show does have some holiday music in it, but not the way a person might think. Everybody who has had their fill of candy canes and eggnog, of sugary Christmas music and preachy religious compositions can revel in the fact that Ms. Fulton's jazz trio is presenting music you could listen to every day of the year... even if the lyrics occasionally do feature Yuletide verbiage. It doesn't matter what Champian Fulton is singing, honestly; she could be performing "Michael Row The Boat Ashore," "Gregorian Chant" or her "ABC's" and she would still sound like she was singing the most intricate improvisations ever to be heard on the stage of a jazz club or any other stage anyone would care to nominate. When you have a voice like Champian Fulton's you kind of have to sing jazz. It's a rule. It's the eleventh commandment. This is a woman and an artist who was destined to sing jazz, which is exactly what she is doing at Birdland this Christmas, and which is why there are people in a nightclub at Christmastime.

Working alongside her dope drummer Fukushi Tainaka and boss bassist Hide Tanaka, Ms. Fulton is presenting some seventy minutes of casual conversation and sophisticated swing. Oh, it isn't swing in the sense of a "Swing Band" but this band really does swing, and it is a genuine joy to sit in a room and watch them play because it's like watching youngsters on a playground, having fun. That is because Fulton and co. really are having fun. Without benefit of any charts, the jazz trio plays off of one another, enjoying each other's company and artistry, even taking out opportunities to stop and watch each other, sometimes laughing out loud as they marvel at the skills on display by their colleagues. At times laid back and cool, others boisterous and exciting, Champian rides a slow boat back and forth between her jazz-infused holiday classics like "The Christmas Waltz" and a significantly wonderful "Winter Wonderland" and classic standards like "I Cried For You" and evening highlight "The Very Thought of You." A bona fide jazz set, there is no script, no trajectory, no story being told, though Fulton is a very good storyteller, as evidenced by the odd recounting of a backstory here or the off-handed remark about Willie Nelson there, and with each new comment revealing a little more of a who she is and what amuses her, there is a tangible tug of a heartstring or two that informs a growing tendency toward being besotted by the charming Champian.

It is difficult for a stage manager or club owner to pick just the right placement for a piano because, no matter where a member of the audience sits, they will be missing some visual that feels important. If the pianist is singing (as Ms. Fulton is) there is a desire to see their face; if the pianist is exciting (as Ms. Fulton is) there is a need to see their fingers. The Birdland team (or perhaps Champian herself) has done a pretty good job at staging the piano in just the right place, but Fulton herself is constantly aware of the audience and makes sure that the crowd gets a look at her face enough times to appreciate her beauty. More important, though, than the face is the hands. There is a kind of eloquence to the way Ms. Fulton's hands move over the keys - it's not as showy as some of the other pianists we've seen at Birdland, but there is a definite purpose to the movement, giving the audience chances to see a more relaxed fluidity at times, and then some very pronounced key strikes at others, even times when one hand rises into the air and pauses, waiting for le moment juste to come down onto the keys. It is a rather emotional experience, as is the journey of observation to be taken with Misters Tainaka and Tanaka, both of whom play their instruments with a candor and humor that constantly reminds one that they are up there to play, that the audience is the happy beneficiaries of their playtime, not unlike the lives of athletes. These three people are just athletes with music - and it's such immaculate music that this writer had one of those rare moments when the concept of music, the thought that somebody along these centuries had the idea to create music, became clearly appreciable. While listening to all of the layers, the colors, the nuances of the Champian Fulton Trio play this show, I actually wrote in my notebook: "There are times when the miracle of music rings true to you." It was during the performance of "Gracias a Dios" that the notation occurred, just below a scribble that says, "It's like watching a sporting event" that was made during a performance of Oscar Peterson's "Blues Agent" that stood out as the triumph of an evening filled with noteworthy musical moments, particularly a "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" that will redefine the way a person considers the famous holiday composition.

Redefining the holidays - a lot of people could use a little of that right now. It's not that easy these days to get into a Christmas mood, and there are many who don't even celebrate Christmas. But the thing that we can all celebrate every day of the year is music that will make us feel, help us to feel better, remind us of all that's great and good in the world. This is that music.

Read the full review HERE

Champian Hosts Lou Donaldson's 95th Birthday Party

Champian hosted a star studded lineup to celebrate Lou Donaldson’s 95th Birthday Party at Dizzy’s Club Coca Cola, Tuesday November 2, 2021. (Pics by Chris Drukker)

Rave Reviews for Champian's *new* album "Live from Lockdown"

“Live from Lockdown” was ranked #20 among Jazz vocal releases of 2021 in the Annual Jazz Critics Poll!

The NYC Jazz Record included “Live from Lockdown” among it’s BEST vocal releases of 2021!

“Appearing live before a café or concert hall audience calls for a different tone than a remote broadcast to people sharing your experience of being trapped at home. She catches that distinct mixture of sentimental hope and bitterness, in both the choice of titles and delivery. The album feels like a phone call from an old friend, the kind that can shake you back into equilibrium…..There is a maturity and timelessness to this album, and it shouldn’t be dismissed as a lockdown era effort.” - Joe Bebco, The Syncopated Times

“Let this be the music we remember from the COVID-19 era, then, instead of something tatty, haphazard, or unnecessarily negative: a father and daughter facing an uncertain future and opting to have a musical conversation. Thank goodness we get to be a fly on the wall.” - Morgan Enos, JazzTimes

arguably the best piano-playing singer and best singing pianist in jazz…..takes a colorful, sometimes misty, sometimes wry, sometimes joyous line by line approach on the mic and a steady, precise stroll on the piano on the album’s opening cut, I Hadn’t Anyone Till You.” - NY Music Daily

“This partnership [Live from Lockdown] produced empathetic performances that combined Champian’s dexterous pianism and spot-on vocalizing with Stephen who is equally adept at at playing fills behind his daughter and taking expansive solos. They will immediately grab your attention with a fun rendition of “I Hadn’t Anyone Till You.” - NJ Jazz Magazine

“With her strong left hand, mastery of swing standards and distinctive singing, which, while not derivative, could fit easily into ‘40s-50s jazz, one never misses other instruments when she performs by herself. [Champian] has helped keep a tradition alive not by copying the past but by simply being herself.” - Scott Yanow, NYC Jazz Record

Featured on France Musique

“With wit and spontaneity, Fulton's jazz vocals and sprightly playing represent the kind of good times you would have had if you could have gone out to see her. Snappy, snazzy and full of joie de vivre, we need more like her.” - Chris Spector, Midwest Record

“[Champian] has a warm, soprano tone and a sincerity to her vocals that is hypnotic and comfortable…..Ms. Fulton has a great piano technique and its jazz all the way, laced with blues. At times, traces of Erroll Garner’s unforgettable style is evident.” - Dee Dee McNeil, Musical Memoirs

“"Au programme, des standards qui mettent en évidence la maestria vocale de Champian, la qualité hors pair de son jeu de piano en solo et en accompagnement et son sens de la note juste. (...) une maîtrise remarquable. Un disque précieux.” - Alain Tomas, Academie de Jazz

This is one of those albums on which every track has something to appeal to the attentive listener, a reminder that we shall get through this pandemic by keeping attention fixed on more positive matters.” - The Rehearsal Studio

Featured in the JAZZIZ “This Week in Jazz”


A new album from Champian Fulton is always cause for celebration, and when she’s joined by her father, the outstanding flugelhorn and trumpet player Stephen Fulton, you can be assured of a warm, complex, and golden-toned musical experience. As a singer, Champian acts as a sort of prism: through her brain and her voice, the melodic playfulness of Billie Holiday and the impeccable intonation of Ella Fitzgerald and the strutting confidence of Sarah Vaughn are all refracted and emerge as a unique expressive identity; as a pianist, she’s like a history book come to life, switching between (and sometimes blending) stride, bebop, boogie-woogie, and cool styles seemingly without effort. This latest album is, as its title suggests, the product of the Fultons’ forced shift from live-in-person performance to livestreamed concerts produced at home. It consists almost entirely of standards, mostly ballads and mid-tempo swingers like “You’ve Changed,” “Satin Doll,” “Look for the Silver Lining,” and “Moonglow,” with a couple of lovely originals thrown in as well. As always, both Fultons play not only with skill but with heart, and with a rare level of interpersonal communication. For all libraries. - The CD Hotlist


“Mais cette chronique ne lui rendrait pas justice sans mentionner quelle chanteuse touchante et articulée se confirme ici la Miss. Le genre d’album intimiste, cosy et soulful à se repasser en boucle au coin du feu tout l’hiver: un authentique baume au cœur!” - Patrick Dallongeville, Paris-Move

“Pianist and singer Champian Fulton is one of many musicians who have kept active during the pandemic by doing a regular series of streaming performances from home. This album continues that concept, featuring Fulton accompanied only by her father, trumpeter Stephen Fulton. As both a singer and player Fulton comes off relentlessly upbeat, but with a knowing worldliness. She is far more out of Dinah Washington than Billie Holiday. She gives a coquettish sass to sad songs like "You've Changed" and "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" and really swaggers on "Blow Top Blues" and "Look For The Silver Lining." Her piano playing is a full-bodied blues and stride style that fits snugly against her father's trumpet. Stephen Fulton can play jolly and bright or lowdown and bluesy as needed and is not adverse to the occasional nod to Dizzy Gillespie or Clark Terry.” -Jerome Wilson, All About Jazz

Champian Releases *New* Album: "I'll See You in My Dreams" on August 25 (Venus Record)

I’ll See You in My Dreams / Release Date August 25, 2021 / Venus Record

Available on all digital platforms 

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Somewhere over the Atlantic, en route to a two week tour of Scandinavia, Champian Fulton received news that Sweden was closing its borders and going into lockdown, drastically changing her plans. With some unexpected time on their hands, Champian and her Scandinavian Trio (Kristian Leth on drums and Hans Backenroth on bass) took their new tour-ready repertoire and headed into the studio. The resulting album, “I’ll See You in My Dreams” (Venus Record) showcases the trio with instrumental numbers such as the title track, Horace Silver’s “Opus De Funk” and Champian’s original composition “Happy Camper.” Standout vocals include the unearthed gem “Every Now and Then” and the swinging Ahmad Jamal-esque arrangement of “I Don’t Want to Set the World on Fire.” This cohesive and swinging trio plans to tempt fate by celebrating their first release with an 8 show tour of Sweden in September 2021. 

Champian Fulton - piano / vocals

Hans Backenroth - bass 

Kristian Leth - drums 


Produced by Tetsuo Hara 

Recorded on November 23 & 24, 2020 at FinlandStudio, Aarhus Denmark 

Recording Engineers: Jacob Worm and Rune Hauge 

Mixed and Mastered by Tetsuo Hara 

Venus Hyper Magnum Sound Direct Mix Stereo 

Photos by Jens Peter Engdal 

Designed by Artplan 


Track Listing: 

  1. All of You 5:22 (C. Porter) 

  2. Baubles, Bangles and Beads 3:55 (R. Wright, G Forrest) 

  3. Blues for J McShann 5:38 (Fulton) 

  4. Body and Soul 4:41 (J. Green / E. Heyman, R. Sour, F. Eyton) 

  5. Every Now and Then 4:59 (A. Silver, A. Lewis, A. Sherman) 

  6. I’ve Got a Crush On You 3:58 (G. Gershwin, I. Gershwin) 

  7. Happy Camper 3:48 (Fulton) 

  8. I Don’t Want to Set the World on Fire 3:49 (E. Durham, E. Seiler, S. Marcus) 

  9. I’ll See You in My Dreams 3:48 (I. Jones, G. Khan) 

  10. I’ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm 5:33 (I. Berlin) 

  11. Opus De Funk 5:44 (H. Silver) 

  12. Pennies from Heaven 8:01 (A. Johnson, J. Burke) 

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© Champian Fulton