FOR YOUR GRAMMY® CONSIDERATION

Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer

GILLIAN MARGOT AND GEOFFREY KEEZER

Seeking nomination for the following categories:

Album of the Year

Best Jazz Vocal Album

Best Jazz Performance

“Blame It on My Youth” 

Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals

“Here Comes the Flood”
Gillian Margot, arranger

Best Album Cover

Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer

Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer

The self-titled new album from acclaimed vocalist Gillian Margot and piano virtuoso Geoffrey Keezer presents an intimate musical conversation that spans the breadth of the American Songbook and beyond, with masterful interpretations that showcase their remarkable artistic chemistry. Recorded at Brooklyn’s Bunker Studio, the album features sublime renditions of jazz standards like “Lush Life” and “The Peacocks,” alongside thoughtfully reimagined works by Hermeto Pascoal, Peter Gabriel, and Chick Corea. Blending technical brilliance with emotional depth, Margot and Keezer—partners in music and life for over a decade —create a performance environment of boundless flexibility and mutual responsiveness, allowing each song to unfold with spontaneity while honoring the rich traditions from which they draw inspiration.

Praise for
“Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer”

CATEGORIES: Album of the year, BEST JAZZ VOCAL ALBUM

“The scope of the album covers a wide breadth of iconic selections as, Billy Strayhorn’s 1940’s classic, “Lush Life,” Peter Gabriel’s late ’70s ballad, “Here Comes the Flood,” to Chick Corea’s circa mid-1980’s masterpiece, “Eternal Child,” where Margot vocalizes as the lead instrument gorgeously over the the track (which was originally only an instrumental). All in all, the album resonates as a big breath of fresh air in the midst of plethoric amounts of instrumental-only 2025 jazz music releases this year.”

TONE Scott, Goldmine Magazine

Praise for
“Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer”

CATEGORIES: Album of the year, BEST JAZZ VOCAL ALBUM

“The scope of the album covers a wide breadth of iconic selections as, Billy Strayhorn’s 1940’s classic, “Lush Life,” Peter Gabriel’s late ’70s ballad, “Here Comes the Flood,” to Chick Corea’s circa mid-1980’s masterpiece, “Eternal Child,” where Margot vocalizes as the lead instrument gorgeously over the the track (which was originally only an instrumental). All in all, the album resonates as a big breath of fresh air in the midst of plethoric amounts of instrumental-only 2025 jazz music releases this year.”

TONE Scott, Goldmine Magazine

“Give the couple ten pieces of magic to work on and the resulting product is beyond perfection.”

Lance Liddle, Bebop Spoken Here

“…not merely a collection of covers, it is a reverent, reimagined body of work, shaped by memory, skill, and deep musical empathy. For the right listener, it will feel like falling gently into a kind of wistful poetry, one that lingers long after the final note.”

Thierry De Clemensat, Paris-Move

“Gillian Margot gives a supreme masterclass in how to make every word count, particularly in the verse before a melody, I don’t think I’ve ever heard the words ‛one relaxes on the axis/ of the wheel of life” from Strayhorn’s ‛Lush Life’ enunciated and conveyed with such meaning, gentle pacing and ease.”

Sebastian Scotney, UK Jazz News

“[Keezer] is a brilliant soloist and a sensitive accompanist. Paired with the sincere and masterful vocalist, Gillian Margot, they make an outstanding duo.”

Dee Dee McNeil, Making a Scene

“…an album plush with spontaneity, while always honoring the composer’s song melodies. The duo presentation is wonderful, with each artist interjecting their own creativity and style in a cozy, harmonious way. There is a comfort level they radiate and share with us, like the warm, welcoming smile of a close friend.”

Dee Dee McNeil, Making a Scene

“From jazz to classical, [Margot and Keezer] combine transcendent technique and emotional expression.”

— Jazz Life, Japan

“Margot’s got one of those voices you don’t forget — rich, smoky, and totally in control, gliding across registers with ease. Keezer stays out of the way when she’s singing, then jumps in with the perfect turn of phrase, like he knows exactly where the story needs to go next.”

Tim Larsen, Jazz Views

“Within the first few seconds of the first song from Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer, …I had the glorious sense of having had my expectations fulfilled, the feeling that everything that would happen thereafter – and there was a lot – would come as a bonus.”

Sebastian Scotney, UK Jazz News

“…inconceivable that this duo recording would be anything other than the triumphant coming together, musically speaking, of two like-minded souls.”

Lance Liddle, Bebop Spoken Here

“There is an unfiltered chemistry between the Margot and Keezer that is evidently enhanced by their personal relationship, but moreover, a seemingly equally blatant love for the American Songbook — both by way of classic era material and more modern compositions. Their musical symbiotic synergy is equal to such iconic examples as Johnny Hartman with John Coltrane, Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown, to even Tuck & Patti.”

TONE Scott, Goldmine Magazine

“Margot sings like she’s got skin in the game, making you feel you’re getting the story behind the story of a tune.”

— George Harris, LA Jazz Weekly

“A sublime pairing—two musicians doing what they love, and letting us listen in.”

Tim Larsen, Jazz Views

Praise for “Blame it on MY Youth”

CATEGORY: Best Jazz Performance

“Like a siren song, Gillian Margot’s opening swoop on ‛Blame It on My Youth’ lures you into this recording. Unlike a siren song, however, there is nothing dangerous about this session of pure joy and beauty performed by Margot and piano playing husband Geoffrey Keezer. The two are perfect for one another and perfect for this set of ten tunes of familiar and some unfamiliar melodies.”

Abe Goldstein, Papatamus Redux

“Here comes the flood”

CATEGORY: Best Arrangement, instrumentals and vocals

 

Gillian Margot and Geoffrey keezer 

CATEGORY: best album cover

 

Album Notes

by Ted Panken

Album notes

by Ted Panken

This sublime duo recital by singer Gillian Margot and pianist Geoffrey Keezer is the fourth release on MarKeez Records, their eponymous imprint label. Recorded in December 2024 at Bunker Studio in Brooklyn, it marks a felicitous inflection point in the discographies of both musicians, each an erudite master of their instrument.

Partners in music since 2014 and in life since 2016, both Margot and Keezer share a predisposition to address, in Margot’s words, “different styles, genres, or grooves and feels, and harmonic implications.” Imperatives of excellence, elegance, and stylistic versatility infused Margot’s accomplished debut, Black Butterfly (Hipnotic), where she placed her supple contralto at the service of various signpost late-20th century tunesmiths, including Joni Mitchell, Curtis Mayfield, and Jimmy Webb, with a dash of Brazil and two self-penned lyrics, including a blues that served as the album’s penultimate track, preceding a crisply swinging rendition of “I Wish I Were in Love Again” by Rodgers and Hart. Margot named her 2020 follow-up, Power Flower, for Stevie Wonder’s late 1970s classic, which she renders with a fresh approach, as she does the 1980s Crusaders hit, “One Day I’ll Fly Away”; the folk song “Black Is The Color of My True Love’s Hair”; and four originals, including two songs co-composed with Keezer, who plays keyboards and piano throughout.

Margot performs on five selections on Keezer’s On My Way to You, from 2018. His instrumental treatments of songs by Thelonious Monk, Stevie Wonder, Jerome Kern, Jimi Hendrix, and Earth, Wind and Fire showcase the pianistic wizardry that the late David Sanborn, his one-time employer, once responded to by stating, “I didn’t know that was humanly possible.” The Keezer-Margot collaborations include an orchestral version of the title track (a Michel Legrand-Alan and Marilyn Bergman ballad on which she inhabits the tenderly sensuous lyric) and a ravishing duo on the Roberta Flack-associated “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face”.

In recent years, Margot and Keezer have addressed a similarly capacious range of repertoire in their duo performances. “We’d be signing CDs and LPs at our merch table, and people inevitably asked, ‘So where is the duet album?’,” Margot says. “We finally took the hint. We decided to pull out a variety of songs we like, and whatever came to mind, we’d do it.”

A spirit of freedom judiciously balanced with collective consciousness pervades the proceedings, as Keezer and Margot mind-meld on a half-dozen ‘Standard’ standards – “Lush Life” and “The Peacocks” from the Jazz Songbook, and Great American Songbook chestnuts “Blame It on My Youth,” “Thou Swell,” “Day In, Day Out,” and “All My Tomorrows” – along with authoritatively interpreted songs by Hermeto Pascoal (“Joyce”) and Peter Gabriel (“Here Comes the Flood”), a virtuosic voice-as-instrument treatment of Chick Corea’s “Eternal Child,” and a possible future standard titled “The Greatest Story Ever Told”, by Donald Brown – Keezer’s early mentor – and his wife Dorothy Brown.

“The standards still hold up,” Keezer says. “They’re interesting songs. They have interesting forms. There’s a lot more happening harmonically and melodically than in most of the popular music out there now. The stories that are being told in them still happen today. I mean, you fall in love, you fall out of love. The same stuff is going on.”

“Geoffrey provides such a great harmonic and rhythmic landscape that I don’t feel I’m missing a drummer or a bassist,” Margot says. “There’s constant stimulus that feeds all the creativity. We’re not stuck in a box. If he takes us in one direction, I’ll go with him if I want, or if I change directions, he goes with me if he wants. Within an instant, we can switch from something dense to creating a huge amount of space to change the mood. Having that flexibility and elasticity allows us to explore.”

“When I play solo piano, the number-one priority – in music that is supposed to have a groove – is that it has a strong groove,” says Keezer, whose previous solo recordings are Zero One, from 1999, during his tenure with the Ray Brown Trio, and the protean Heart of the Piano, from 2013. “I try to generate a strong beat, a lot of energy and all of the sound, but lately I’m interested in doing it not as loudly, trying to find a more delicate way to play the instrument so there’s room for Gillian to be heard.

“We have diverse musical interests in common. Gillian can dip into an almost classical vibe on one tune, and more of a gospel or R&B style on another, and straight down the middle jazz, if she wants to scat sing. I’m the same way. I like a lot of different kinds of music, and I like to mix it all up. Also, her voice has a very wide range, and she has tremendous pitch control, so she can pick and choose the vibe she wants to get from a tune based on whether she wants to sing it in a higher, lower, or middle part of her voice.”

Margot concludes: “I’ve been performing the older standards for a long time, and I love to sing them. In the past, especially in the studio, I was often directed to sing in a very particular way, and I worried, ‘I’m supposed to do it like this,’ because it’s forever, it’s on record. Even Power Flower, which I produced myself, was more about the arranging and the music than showcasing what I can do with my voice. I’ve reached a point where I’m not letting people tell me how to sing anymore. For me, this album was about singing the way I want to sing, experimenting more, the way I do on stage.” — Ted Panken

REVIEWS

Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer at Ronnie Scott’s

UKJazz News – Sebastian Scotney

GILLIAN MARGOT AND GEOFFREY KEEZER

Paris Move

GILLIAN MARGOT & GEOFFREY KEEZER

Paptamus Redux – Abe Goldstien

Goldmine’s second quarter Jazz round up

Goldmine Magazine

Gillian Margot & Geoffrey Keezer

Making a Scene

Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer

Jazz Views

Album Review: Gillian Margot & Geoffrey Keezer – (MarKeez Records)

BeBop Spoken Here

Credits

GILLIAN MARGOT and GEOFFREY KEEZER
“Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer”

Release date: May 23, 2025

 

Blame It on My Youth
2  Thou Swell 
3  The Greatest Story Ever Told 
4  Joyce (Viva o Rio de Janeiro) 
5  Lush Life 
6  Eternal Child
7  A Timeless Place (The Peacocks) 
8  Day In, Day Out 
9  Here Comes the Flood 
10  All My Tomorrows 

 

All songs arranged by Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer
Gillian Margot – voice
Geoffrey Keezer – piano

Special Guests
Rogério Boccato pandeiro on “Joyce”
Peter Sprague guitar on “Here Comes the Flood”

Produced by Gillian Margot
Recorded at The Bunker Studio
Brooklyn, NY in December 2024
Recording Engineer Aaron Nevezie
Additional Engineer Todd Carder
Mixed by Aaron Nevezie
Mastered by Alex DeTurk

All vocals recorded without the use of any pitch correction technology.
Piano Technician James Carney
Photography by John Abbott
Gillian Margot’s Hair by MariamstouchLLC
Makeup by Sade Hazard
Graphic Design – Kathy Jimenez

Geoffrey Keezer is a Yamaha artist.
Lessons with Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer
at openstudiojazz.com
gillianmargot.com | geoffreykeezer.com

 

Thank you for your consideration.

© 2025 Gillian Margot and Geoffrey Keezer