Sunday, July 31, 2005

The New York Times: Premium Archive

The New York Times: Premium ArchiveJune 24, 2005
JAZZ FESTIVAL REVIEW; Elegant Pianism, Poised and Mostly Quiet
By JON PARELES

The last thing Keith Jarrett wants to be known as is a showman. When he led his trio on Wednesday night at Carnegie Hall, he spoke a few times to the JVC festival audience -- complaining about reviews and photographers -- but at the piano, he sought ecstatic communion with the music.

Like someone possessed by inspiration, he moaned along with sustained notes. He wiggled keys with his finger as if he could get vibrato from a keyboard; he half-stood, or sank nearly to his knees, or stared unseeing at the audience. When one tune hinted at bossa nova, he swayed his hips. Yet what came out of the piano was unshakably poised and precise, and mostly quiet.

Mr. Jarrett was leading what has come to be called his standards trio, inaugurated in 1983, with Gary Peacock on bass and Jack DeJohnette on drums. The trio doesn't have to worry about new material, since it can draw on a wealth of ballads and jazz tunes, familiar and obscure; Wednesday's set included ''Tennessee Waltz,'' Bud Powell's ''Budo'' and ''When I Fall in Love.'' Nor does it fuss about form -- the basic theme-solos-theme, with or without some piano-drums trades, served most songs. This trio finds ample room for exploration within.

It was a night of elegant pianism. Stating ballads, Mr. Jarrett made melodies sing with hushed purity over chords so transparent that even a slight change in voicing became an event, following through with improvisations that evolved from long, even runs to quick trickles of sprint and pause. Up-tempo tunes were so light-fingered that complexities sounded casual.

He has the right collaborators. Mr. Peacock's walking bass lines landed unassertively in all the right places, and his solos modestly crooned pizzicato melodies as Mr. Jarrett hung chords above them like Japanese lanterns. Meanwhile, Mr. DeJohnette worked the threshold of sound and silence with discreet brilliance, constantly varying his delicate accents. In ''Somewhere,'' as Mr. Jarrett lingered over the melody, Mr. DeJohnette visited one cymbal at a time to offer a lexicon of rustles, hisses and pings.

The group made two departures from theme-solos-theme, and both were rewarding. Mr. Jarrett started ''On Green Dolphin Street'' with the kind of ostinato he often uses in solo concerts. (He returns to Carnegie Hall on Sept. 26 to perform solo.) He turned one chord into a dancing array of notes, with a melody peeking out of the counterpoint, as Mr. Peacock and Mr. DeJohnette tipped the beat toward the Caribbean. And a brisk version of Thelonious Monk's ''Straight, No Chaser'' opened up to free improvisation: first with Mr. Jarrett's right hand tracing far-flung harmonies, then with a congenial three-way interchange.

Mr. Jarrett's stage antics might look and sound like distractions from such knowing musicianship. The paradox is that they don't. They portray all the effort that isn't heard in the notes, so music that might be heard as expertly pretty, or even dismissed as background music, isn't taken for granted. Mr. Jarrett's adoring audiences listen for the subtleties, pointed there by the spectacle. That's showmanship.

Positive, pure and powerful: Saxophonist Bartz keeps his music free of labels

Positive, pure and powerful: Saxophonist Bartz keeps his music free of labelsPositive, pure and powerful: Saxophonist Bartz keeps his music free of labels

Sunday, July 31, 2005
By Nate Guidry, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Gary Bartz will take you to task for calling him a jazz musician. For him, it's practically an epithet.


Gary Bartz doesn't answer to "jazz musician." He's a musician, pure and simple.

Gary Bartz Quartet
Where: Kelly-Strayhorn Theater.
When: 2:30 p.m. next Sunday.
Tickets: $35 and $45 ($10 for music students); 412-361-3022.

Related coverage
Film puts spotlight back on Gammage case
Duke Ellington didn't think of himself as a jazz musician.

And neither did Miles Davis.

The volatile Charles Mingus would have gone to blows with anyone who addressed him that way.

"It's a negative word, and negative words bring negative energies," said Bartz from his home in southern New Jersey. "People like to pigeonhole you because it makes them comfortable. I don't think Beethoven considered himself a classical musician.

"I'm a musician, and we play music -- all kinds of music."

And that's exactly what Bartz and his quartet will be doing next Sunday at the Kelly-Strayhorn Theater. The band features pianist Barney McCall, bassist James King and drummer Greg Bandy.

The concert, co-presented by the Thomas Merton Center, is a fund-raiser to help support the completion of a documentary titled "Enough Is Enough: The Death of Jonny Gammage."

Gammage was killed in a struggle with five police officers during a routine traffic stop in Brentwood on Oct. 12, 1995.

Producer and director Billy Jackson said the documentary examines the Gammage incident as well as other cases of alleged police misuse of force and racial profiling, and related problems in criminal justice, law enforcement and police-community relations.

Jackson said his goal is to have the documentary ready to premiere on Oct. 12.

"We want this documentary to be part of the solution, to stimulate dialogue and inspire audiences to get involved in positive changes."

Bartz grew up in Baltimore and started playing saxophone by the time he turned 11.

"Charlie Parker was the one who did it for me," recalled Bartz. "I heard his records, and I fell in love with that sound. I made up my mind that's what I'd like to do."

After graduating from high school, he moved to New York to attend the Juilliard School. While there, he developed friendships with fellow students Andrew Cyrille, Addison Farmer, Sir Roland Hanna and others.

"It was a very educational period," said Bartz. "As young musicians, we were all heading in the same direction of music."

After he left Juilliard, one of the first groups Bartz joined was a band led by drummer Max Roach and former wife Abbey Lincoln. He had met Roach years earlier at a club in Baltimore. Bartz sat in with Roach and they played Charlie Parker's "Cherokee" and a few other songs.

Roach was so impressed that he gave Bartz his phone number and told him if he was ever in New York to look him up.

Which Bartz did.

"I used to go over to his house and have dinner with him and Abbey Lincoln," laughs Bartz. "Sometimes, I see Abbey and I remind her of that and she laughs and says, 'I used to cook.' "

In 1964, Bartz joined Roach's band. The association lasted for about six years.

"Max was very influential in developing my outlook on life," said Bartz. "He taught me about business and nationalism and chess."

After leaving Roach's band, he performed in groups led by McCoy Tyner, Blue Mitchell, and Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers.

Blakey was performing a weeklong engagement at Baltimore's North End Lounge, a jazz club owned by Bartz's father. Bartz got word from his dad that saxophonist John Gilmore was leaving the band, so he went to Baltimore, sat in one night and was hired.

"John Hicks and Lee Morgan were in the band and were my friends, so they vouched for me," said Bartz, who made his recording debut on Blakey's "Soul Finger" album.

In the early 1960s, Bartz joined Charles Mingus' Workshop, regularly rehearsing with other members of the group, including Rashaan Roland Kirk and Eric Dolphy.

"Mingus was very interesting," said Bartz. "He was all about making and performing high-quality music."

But Bartz's best and most enduring apprenticeship occurred in 1970 when he joined Miles Davis Sextet, performing in the historic Isle of Wight Festival in England.

"Miles was the best bandleader I ever worked for," Bartz said. "He cared about you. If you were in his band it was like you were part of his family. I am so grateful for what Miles did for me."

When Bartz received the call from Davis to join his band, there was no rehearsal or drawn-out interview.

"He just called and asked if I wanted to join his band," Bartz said. "He didn't give me an audition, and I think the entire time I was with him the band had one rehearsal.

"When Miles picked musicians, he already knew what you were about. I had worked with Max and Art and the other musicians, so he knew I was ready to join his group."

In between working with Davis, Bartz was busy recording "Another Earth," "Music Is My Sanctuary" and other albums, as well as forming a group called NTU Troop. The group took its name from the Bantu language. NTU means "unity in all things, time and space, living and dead, seen and unseen."

In the mid 1990s, he released several critically received recordings, including "The Red and Orange Poems" and "I've Known Rivers" an album based on the poems of Langston Hughes.

Still, Bartz feels his recordings over the years haven't been promoted well. He's grown increasingly weary of record executives.

"Record labels want to tell you what and who to put on the records, then they don't sell them," Bartz said. "They have decided that it's counterproductive to release material while an artist is still alive. Once a musician passes they open the vaults."

To counteract that, Bartz has started his own label. He now has creative control of his music and, most importantly, he owns the master tapes.

"Record labels are like plantations," said Bartz. "It's like the rapper Chuck D used to say, 'If you don't own the master, the master owns you.' Ninety-nine percent of the musicians in history don't own their masters. A lot of people talk about rap artists, but many of them own their masters. They have learned from our mistakes."

Now, in between tours with his own band and groups led by McCoy Tyner and others, Bartz finds time to teach. Since 2001, he has been helping to shape young musicians as a faculty member at the Oberlin Conservatory in Oberlin, Ohio.

"One lifetime isn't long enough to do everything you want to do and learn how to play all this music," Bartz said. "So you do the best you can."

(Nate Guidry can be reached at NGuidry@post-gazette.com or 412-263-3865.)

Saturday, July 30, 2005

A U.S. appeals court has rejected a lawsuit charging 1960s psychedelic rocker Country Joe McDonald with copyright

recycling time?Fri Jul 29, 9:31 PM ET

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A U.S. appeals court has rejected a lawsuit
charging 1960s psychedelic rocker Country Joe McDonald with copyright
infringement for his 1965 protest song "Fixin' to Die Rag," which became
a rallying cry for opposition to the Vietnam War.

In a decision made public on Friday, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals rejected an appeal from Babette Ory, who said McDonald's song
infringed on jazz standard "Muskrat Ramble," credited to her father, Kid
Ory.

Ory sued in September 2001, claiming that "Fixin' to Die Rag" was
similar to and infringed on "Muskrat Ramble." Kid Ory, who recorded with
jazz great Louis Armstrong, died in 1973.

The appellate judges upheld a lower-court decision saying there was too
long a delay in bringing the copyright lawsuit and awarded McDonald his
attorney fees. Ory obtained copyright to "Muskrat Ramble" in 2001.

McDonald wrote "Fixing To Die Rag" in 1965 to protest the nation's
escalating military involvement in Vietnam and the song's refrain: "And
it's one, two, three, what are we fighting for?" quickly turned into a
rallying cry against the war and figured prominently at the Woodstock
music festival in 1969.

Reuters/VNU

Miles Davis: Year-Long Celebration of Five Decades and Many Miles

Miles Davis: Year-Long Celebration of Five Decades and Many Miles
Miles Davis: Year-Long Celebration of Five Decades and Many Miles
Posted: 2005-07-18


By Chris M. Slawecki
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On October 27, 1955, Miles Davis signed with Columbia Records, where the mercurial trumpeter, composer, bandleader and conceptualist remained through most of his career. After 1955, Davis recorded and released nearly all of his greatest music through Columbia. Now part of Sony / Legacy, the label has embarked on a year-long celebration of the 50th anniversary of that contract signing by releasing a succession of new and newly-remastered titles throughout 2005.

The series began this past January with three releases: The remastered single-CD version of My Funny Valentine, a set of ballads aflame with Davis’ whispered intensity; the Kind of Blue DualDisc, which combines an audio CD of his classic 1958 album (plus the only available studio alternate take) with a DVD that presents the album in 5.1 Surround Sound plus a 25-minute documentary on the making of the album; and the remastered single-CD version of A Tribute to Jack Johnson issued to coincide with Ken Burns’ PBS documentary Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson.

It is worth mentioning that Davis himself would have most likely hated these reissues as “been there, done that.” Most likely? Almost definitely! Still, they provide valuable mileposts for devotees and the curious who may be traveling these Miles for the first time.

Index

'Round About Midnight: Legacy Edition
Seven Steps to Heaven
'Four’ & More Recorded Live in Concert
Miles Davis in Europe
Miles in Tokyo
Miles in Berlin
The Best of Seven Steps
The Cellar Door Sessions 1970


New Beginnings

‘Round About Midnight: Legacy Edition (1955-56)
With John Coltrane and Zoot Sims, tenor saxophone; Gerry Mulligan, baritone saxophone; Red Garland and Thelonious Monk, piano; Paul Chambers and Percy Heath, bass; Philly Joe Jones and Connie Kay, drums.

The series’ most recent installment is a deluxe two-CD version of Davis’ first studio album for Columbia at the helm of his first great quintet with Coltrane, Garland, Chambers and Jones.

The beauty and genius of Davis’ balladry on ‘Round About Midnight is justifiably legend. “His playing is characterized by both the nervous, jagged lines of the bop school,” wrote producer George Avakian for its original liner notes, “and the pensive relaxation of the cool period which followed.” It opens with his profound meditation on the Thelonious Monk composition that inspired its title, and its brilliance continues with his muted playing through two pop selections, “All of You” and especially the stark opening to “Bye Bye Blackbird,” where he sounds like a man sad and utterly alone.

Though this reissue provides four new, unreleased studio takes on disc one, its true bonus harvest comes from a previously unreleased 1956 concert by this band—now the first commercially available live performance by the first great Miles Davis quintet—on disc two.

It’s a performance that looks both forward and back, played with so much energy! Its centerpiece is an early recording of the elegant, celebrated “Walkin’” blues, a staple of Davis’ repertoire into the next decade, illuminated with probing, burning explorations from Coltrane, Garland and Chambers. But it also includes rare examples of Davis revisiting with ‘Trane, a more modern player, the bebop style that the leader was resolutely leaving behind: The rhythm section scrambles the opening “Max is Making Wax”; later, the band whipsaws and bounces through “Woody N’You” and “Salt Peanuts,” featuring Davis’ space-walk along Dizzy Gillespie’s upper trumpet stratosphere and hard-rocking beatdowns from Jones. Davis always killed at least one ballad in concert; in this case, the quiet, direct “It Never Entered My Mind,” a remembrance haunted by gorgeous piano and trumpet.

This new concert is prefixed by Davis’ famous performance of “‘Round Midnight” with Monk at the 1955 Newport Jazz Festival: Sitting in with Gerry Mulligan and Zoot Sims from the Mulligan Sextet, bassist Percy Heath and Connie Kay (the Modern Jazz Quartet rhythm section), and pianist Monk, his opening solo to “‘Round Midnight” at Newport sounds as good as anything that Davis ever played. Ever played. It was the strength of this performance that compelled Avakian, who was attending the festival and served on Columbia staff, to sign Davis to his Columbia contract.

Michael Brecker needs your help. :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily

Michael Brecker needs your help. :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily Michael Brecker needs your help.
Posted by: editoron Friday, July 29, 2005 - 03:17 PM
Jazz News FROM: Susan Brecker
Dear Family and Friends,

My husband, Michael Brecker, has been diagnosed with MDS
(myelodysplastic syndrome), and its critical that he undergoes a stem
cell transplant. The initial search for a donor (including Michael's
siblings and children) has not yet resulted in a suitable match.
Michael's doctors have told us that we need to immediately explore ALL
possible options. This involves getting as many people of a similar
genetic background to be tested.

There are some important points to understand concerning this process:

1. The screening involves a blood test only. It can be done very
quickly either at a marrow donation center or at a LOCAL LAB. The cost
is anywhere from $40 to $75 and your insurance may cover it. (In NYC,
you can call Frazier, at the NY Blood Bank, at 212-570-3441, and make
an appointment for HLA typing. It costs $40.00.) Check with your
local blood bank, or go to http://www.marrow.org to find the donor
center nearest you.



2. Your blood typing information can be posted on the international
registry, if you choose, where it would also be available to others in
need of a transplant. BEING ON THE REGISTRY DOESN'T MEAN YOU HAVE TO
DONATE, it just means that you may be ASKED to do so. You can take your
name off the registry at any time.

3. Should you be selected as a potential donor for Michael, please
understand that there have been tremendous advances in bone marrow
transplants and the term itself can be misleading. Bone marrow
donation is no more invasive than giving blood. Stem cells are simply
harvested from your blood and then transplanted to Michael.

4. A match for Michael would be most likely to come from those of Eastern
European Jewish descent. If you or anyone you know are in this category
please make a special effort to immediately get tested. Ultimately, you
would be doing something not just for Michael, but for so many more who
are in a similar situation as my husband.

5. You are now part of our internet-based drive for donor testing. If
everyone who receives this can motivate a bunch of their friends to get
tested, and those friends then forward this email to get their friends
to get tested, we will have rapidly expanded the pool of potential
donors. I urge all of you to get tested AS SOON AS POSSIBLE.

Any local blood center/Red Cross center can assist in organizing a
drive for Michael, although it would be desirable if you can get a
large group, e.g. a synagogue, to sponsor it. Should you have any
questions about this, please don't hesitate to get in touch with
Michael's management office at 212.302.9200 or info@michaelbrecker.com.

Thank you so much for your love and support.

We are so grateful.


Susan xo

Independent Online Edition > Reviews : app3

Independent Online Edition > Reviews : app3 Mavis Staples, Jazz Café, London
By Alasdair Lees
Published: 29 July 2005

"The trouble is, I'm old school. They all want Beyoncé now. Well, let me tell you: I USED TO BE BEYONCE!" At 66, Mavis Staples may no longer be the nubile contralto who had Bob Dylan swooning at the Newport Folk Festival all those years ago. But, she reminds an amused Jazz Café audience, "If Beyoncé keeps on living, she will be a Mavis Staples!"

Old school she may be, and a little ragged of voice, but Mavis has lost none of her vim. She's joined by her younger sister Yvonne, the only other active member of the Staples Singers, with Pops dead, Pervis retired and Cleotha struck down by Alzheimer's. "You can sit this out," Mavis tells a clearly relieved Yvonne, as she sings the title track from her most recent solo album, Have a Little Faith.

Yvonne needs the rest. The opener, "If You're Ready (Come Go with Me)", has the crowd trying to catch up with Mavis: "Is everybody ready? I KNOW you're ready... Go with me!" The voice - what the jazz writer Stanley Crouch called the "joy and thunder" of the Staples Singers - has lost its higher register and developed an alarming staccato tic, but what Mavis now lacks vocally is made up for by enthusiasm and warmth.

"I know you been waiting for this!" she says as she dedicates a poignant "The Weight" to its creators, The Band: Robbie Robertson, Levon Helm, Richard Manuel, Rick Danko and Garth Hudson. "We were so happy to share The Last Waltz with them," she says of Pop Staples and Mavis's duet with The Band for the farewell concert, filmed by Martin Scorsese.

It's the first highlight of the evening. The second is a Latin-tinged acoustic "God Is Not Sleeping" from Have a Little Faith. "It's one of my favourites," says Mavis at the end. "It's one of my favourites now!" someone pipes up at the back. The Carter Family's "Will the Circle Be Unbroken?", a standard in the Staples Singers' gospel years, is dedicated to "Pops, Mom and Cleotha" and is introduced with a sweet anecdote about Pops' Mississippi boyhood, when he and his 14 siblings learnt the song.

We're reminded of her father again in the jamming session by Mavis's band, which at first appears to be a chance for the sisters to take a breather. But, in its guitar-led instrumental blues, it echoes parts of Jammed Together, the guitar album that Pops - an influential guitarist who learnt his trade from the Delta bluesman Charley Patton - made with Steve Cropper and Albert King. It's a reminder of how many of the Singers' biggest hits originated from impromptu jam sessions with the Muscle Shoals rhythm section.

Once the band are done noodling, Mavis and Yvonne bounce back with two of those Stax hits, "Respect Yourself" and "I'll Take You There". By the closer, "Touch a Hand Make a Friend", the sisters are showing their spiritual roots, holding hands with the front row. Mavis may not be Beyoncé, but she's still every inch the star.

"The trouble is, I'm old school. They all want Beyoncé now. Well, let me tell you: I USED TO BE BEYONCE!" At 66, Mavis Staples may no longer be the nubile contralto who had Bob Dylan swooning at the Newport Folk Festival all those years ago. But, she reminds an amused Jazz Café audience, "If Beyoncé keeps on living, she will be a Mavis Staples!"

Old school she may be, and a little ragged of voice, but Mavis has lost none of her vim. She's joined by her younger sister Yvonne, the only other active member of the Staples Singers, with Pops dead, Pervis retired and Cleotha struck down by Alzheimer's. "You can sit this out," Mavis tells a clearly relieved Yvonne, as she sings the title track from her most recent solo album, Have a Little Faith.

Yvonne needs the rest. The opener, "If You're Ready (Come Go with Me)", has the crowd trying to catch up with Mavis: "Is everybody ready? I KNOW you're ready... Go with me!" The voice - what the jazz writer Stanley Crouch called the "joy and thunder" of the Staples Singers - has lost its higher register and developed an alarming staccato tic, but what Mavis now lacks vocally is made up for by enthusiasm and warmth.

"I know you been waiting for this!" she says as she dedicates a poignant "The Weight" to its creators, The Band: Robbie Robertson, Levon Helm, Richard Manuel, Rick Danko and Garth Hudson. "We were so happy to share The Last Waltz with them," she says of Pop Staples and Mavis's duet with The Band for the farewell concert, filmed by Martin Scorsese.

It's the first highlight of the evening. The second is a Latin-tinged acoustic "God Is Not Sleeping" from Have a Little Faith. "It's one of my favourites," says Mavis at the end. "It's one of my favourites now!" someone pipes up at the back. The Carter Family's "Will the Circle Be Unbroken?", a standard in the Staples Singers' gospel years, is dedicated to "Pops, Mom and Cleotha" and is introduced with a sweet anecdote about Pops' Mississippi boyhood, when he and his 14 siblings learnt the song.

We're reminded of her father again in the jamming session by Mavis's band, which at first appears to be a chance for the sisters to take a breather. But, in its guitar-led instrumental blues, it echoes parts of Jammed Together, the guitar album that Pops - an influential guitarist who learnt his trade from the Delta bluesman Charley Patton - made with Steve Cropper and Albert King. It's a reminder of how many of the Singers' biggest hits originated from impromptu jam sessions with the Muscle Shoals rhythm section.

Once the band are done noodling, Mavis and Yvonne bounce back with two of those Stax hits, "Respect Yourself" and "I'll Take You There". By the closer, "Touch a Hand Make a Friend", the sisters are showing their spiritual roots, holding hands with the front row. Mavis may not be Beyoncé, but she's still every inch the star.

The Capital Times > A bumper crop of excellent jazz recordings has arisen in recent months

The Capital Times Moran tops new jazz releases

By Kevin Lynch
July 29, 2005

A bumper crop of excellent jazz recordings has arisen in recent months, and here's the pick of the harvest:

• Jason Moran. "Same Mother" (Blue Note). At my age (54) I agree with controversial jazz critic Stanley Crouch that jazz is adult music. That doesn't mean it shouldn't deal with issues of youth.

Pianist Jason Moran, in his late 20s, deals out mature, tough-minded stuff in the CD-opening "Gangsterism on the Rise." He frames the subject with a larger cultural perspective -- the blues-jazz tradition as a mother lode of minority expression ("all from the same mother"). The opening and closing tracks prod gangsterism in a high-spirited way that I read as valuing its youthful defiance rather than its stupid, misogynist aggression.

Yet Moran, already our most important young jazz pianist, has learned capably from elders such as Andrew Hill. On "Jump Up" -- a very muscular, contemporary boogie-woogie -- guitarist Martin Sewell adds searing blues riffs to Moran's powerful piano work.

This is red-meat music that I'm eating up these days. It's leavened by beautiful and rather profound stuff: the wistful "Aubade," the snappy cubist dance of Mal Waldron's "Fire Waltz" and the crystalline yet cloudy "Field of the Dead," from Prokofiev's "Alexander Nevsky," with Sewell's mournful slide guitar.
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This opens a three-tune sequence of similarly moving thematics. "Restin' " is utterly haunted. Like Wayne Shorter, Moran is admirably influenced by film music, transmitting depth and dimension with efficient artfulness. Moran rarely wastes notes, sculpting ideas into poetic percussion and unsentimental expressiveness. Moran sounds as if he understands what it means to have lived several lifetimes.

• Fred Hersch Ensemble. "Leaves of Grass." (Palmetto). One of the more ambitious jazz records of recent years is a labor of love. These are not all complete poems of Whitman's masterwork. Hersch often plucks and weaves passages with the help of literary consultant Herschel Garfein.

The performed text is included, but I recommend you listen with Whitman's Deathbed Edition. Hersch's lyrical piano accompaniment is judicious but could've used a little more dissonance, given Whitman's often gutsy twists of imagery.

Vocalists Kurt Elling and Kate McGarry are among the most creative and sensitive singers in jazz. Elling's sweet, ardent baritone and tender falsetto find the perfect text for his apt background as a divinity student. He often imbues the words with spiritual longing that never loses touch with earthliness. Accordingly, Whitman's sometimes heady sentiments embrace humanity's deepest connections and contradictions.

In "The Mystic Trumpeter" McGarry's voice mixes Ralph Allessi's horn with a smiling knowingness. Several passages caught me unawares and teary-voiced, music and verse melding in a vortex of inspiration.

Here and elsewhere, McGarry's jazz-folk singer sensibility captures the text's exultation of nature's mysteries, wondering how to answer a child who asks, what is grass? "Fetching it to me with full hands; how could I answer the child? I did not know what it is any more than he ... I guess it must be the flag of my disposition. Or I guess the grass is itself a child, and now it seems to me the beautiful uncut hair of graves."

• Roberto Magris Europlane. "Check-In" (Soul Note). Most European jazz remains undiscovered by many American listeners, and this Italian pianist's CD invites you to experience an Italian sensibility that reaches back to the Renaissance with its sense of craft and muscular beauty while dwelling in the depths of classic modern jazz. It's especially apparent in the conversational brilliance of saxophonists Tony Lakotos and Michael Erian, who both play soprano and tenor.

Right from a deliciously swinging "I Remember You," the tenors trade fours like Coltrane and Rollins on "Tenor Madness." The pianist's originals are imaginative and moving, especially "Blues From My Sleeping Baby," 12-plus minutes of a sauntering melody gorgeously harmonized and extemporized by the saxes and the pianist's Cecil Taylorish cluster harmonies and bounding runs across the keyboard. Available at www.blacksaint.com.

• Dave Douglas. "Mountain Passages" (Green Leaf Music). Another musical adventure of sorts from jazz's most ingenious all-around musical artist.

Dave Douglas hauled his band and instruments (including a tuba) up a mountainside to record this music in the elevated realm his father once communed with. Douglas' playing recalls the splattered notes of Don Cherry, and clarinetist-saxophonist Michael Moore adds folk-dancing ethnic color. As with much excellent music, "Mountain Passages" traverses technical challenges that lead to a fresh sense of space and time, a discovery of unusual forms with their own inherent beauty. This is the first release from Douglas' own new label and available from www.greenleafmusic.com.

• Charles Lloyd. "Jumping the Creek." (ECM). Saxophonist and flutist Lloyd is a sort of jazz guru, having turned many onto spiritualized modern jazz at the Monterey Jazz Festival in 1966 (also the national debut of Keith Jarrett). A discriminating musician friend of mine once referred to him as "Coltrane lite."

Today, Lloyd is celebrated as a modern master. But at times he betrays a precious sweetness, a quality that some trace to Lester Young. Occasionally on this recording he sounds like a man rapt in his own musical presence. Other times, he attains cascading ecstasies that justify Coltrane comparisons.

But the real cargo puller on this train is pianist Geri Allen. Each time she emerges, the music surges with her fluent, sharply sculpted phrases that sometimes recall Herbie Hancock's stunning accents and dramatic swells. Now she's a master worth following.

E-mail: klynch@madison.com

Al McKibbon, 86; Bassist With Shearing, Gillespie Fused Latin Influences and Jazz

Al McKibbon, 86; Bassist With Shearing, Gillespie Fused Latin Influences and Jazz July 30, 2005 latimes.com :

California

Al McKibbon, 86; Bassist With Shearing, Gillespie Fused Latin Influences and Jazz
By Jon Thurber, Times Staff Writer

Al McKibbon, a bassist who was an early participant in efforts to merge jazz and Latin rhythms, died Friday at Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles. He was 86.

A key member of pianist George Shearing's quintet in the 1950s, McKibbon had been in declining health for several months, according to Gary Chen-Stein, a close friend of McKibbon and the owner of the music store Stein on Vine.

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McKibbon became interested in Cuban jazz while playing with Dizzy Gillespie's band in the late 1940s.

"I began to feel that the Cubans were as close as you could come to African culture because they still practiced the roots of our music," McKibbon wrote in the afterword to "Latin Jazz: the Perfect Combination" (2002) by Raul Fernandez.

McKibbon particularly admired the well-known Cuban musician Machito, who, along with Chano Pozo, performed with the Gillespie band at Carnegie Hall in a September 1947 performance that critic Leonard Feather called "the first serious attempt to combine jazz and Afro-Cuban rhythms."

Fernandez, a professor of Chicano/Latino studies at UC Irvine, said McKibbon frequently went to hear Machito play and "really absorbed the style."

McKibbon brought his Latin sensibilities to the Shearing quartet from 1951 to 1957.

Shearing, in his autobiography "Lullaby of Birdland," said that McKibbon was "laying down as fine a Latin bass line as anyone ever has" and that he seemed to have an intuitive sense for the rhythms. "I never had to write a bass part for Al on those Latin numbers," Shearing wrote.

Born in Chicago, McKibbon grew up in Detroit in a musical family. His father played tuba and guitar, and his brother was a professional guitarist. As a youngster, Al was a dancer in local vaudeville shows.

At his brother's urging, he decided to learn the bass, which was beginning to replace the tuba as a rhythm section instrument in jazz. While in high school, he started playing in Detroit's thriving club scene.

During World War II, McKibbon joined Lucky Millinder's band and moved to New York. He played with leading names in jazz, including saxophonist Coleman Hawkins, and established himself as a player with a strong, full tone and a metronomic beat.

After the war, he went on tour with Norman Granz's Jazz at the Philharmonic, with J.C. Heard's band at the groundbreaking Cafe Society in New York City and with Gillespie's big band.

He also played on Miles Davis' seminal "The Complete Birth of the Cool" recordings, arranged by Gil Evans, and was influential in bringing the Latin sound to vibist Cal Tjader's group.

He found steady work in studio and network bands, including NBC, after moving to Southern California in 1958.

In the early 1970s, McKibbon joined Gillespie, Thelonious Monk and others in the Giants of Jazz group and played on Monk's last recording in 1971.

He later recorded with Benny Carter, Herbie Nichols and Sammy Davis Jr.

He had continued to work steadily — most recently at a club in Claremont — until his health started to decline.

Survivors include his daughter, Allison; and his sister, Geraldine, of Detroit.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Open Source Blog Archive Miles Davis: Early, Late, Real, Your

Open Source Blog Archive Miles Davis: Early, Late, Real, Yours

Miles Davis: Early, Late, Real, Yours

Chris, July 25th, 2005

"The trouble started when the first guitar player plugged into an amplifier and played the blues really loud, and rock and roll was created. … because jazz was always related to popular music until that point. …When rock and roll happened, jazz lost its best friend, …and melody took a back seat to rhythm."

Marcus Miller

[aired Monday, July 25]

24 MB MP3


We are talking tonight about Miles Davis: Early Miles… Late Miles… Real Miles… Your Miles. With musicians and others who knew him, it would be easy to do an hour just of impressions of Miles’ rasping voice and lightning wit. Charlie Davidson of the Andover Shop in Cambridge, who tailored Miles’ and the band’s Ivy League clothes in the ’50s and ’60s, is a storehouse of casual Milesiana, like this from Charlie: “One day I asked him: ‘Miles, do you really like Frank Sinatra?’ ‘Do I like him?’ he said. “If he had one tit I’d marry him!’”

The hook of our conversation tonight, as if we needed one, is the 50th anniversary summer of Miles’ breakthrough performance of “Round Midnight” with Monk at the second Newport Jazz Festival. (”Monk plays the wrong changes,” Miles complained to the Newport impresario George Wein. “Miles, what do you want?” Wein shot back. “He wrote the song!”) The other critical anniversary is of the Isle of Wight concert of 1970, now on a brilliant DVD, when the recently electrified Miles performed for 600,000 Europeans on a bill with Jimi Hendrix and The Who, and with yet another new band on stage, including Jack DeJohnette on drums and both Chick Corea and Keith Jarrett on keyboards.

With protean Miles (as in the Greek myth of the waterborne Proteus who could change his shape at will) the spectacle of self-reinvention goes well beyond the mere matter of late-60’s electrification. Miles came onto the scene chasing Charlie Parker in the late ’40’s. If he’d lived, not died, in 1991, he might have made his last recordings with Prince! In between, through cool jazz, the ineffable highs with Coltrane and the modal revolution, the ’70s fusions with rock, Sly, Santana and Hendrix, and the “chromatic funk” of his comeback in the ’80s, Miles was the biggest star — and star-maker — in the story of jazz. And the subject still of the most heated arguments.

The hope tonight is not to be definitive or even adversarial, but passionate about the essential Miles, who seems so much alive in music to this day.

NPR : For Eddie Palmieri, a Golden Anniversary and New CD

NPR : For Eddie Palmieri, a Golden Anniversary and New CDFor Eddie Palmieri, a Golden Anniversary and New CD

Listen to this story... by Steve Inskeep

Morning Edition, July 25, 2005 · Host Steve Inskeep speaks with Jazz musician, Eddie Palmieri, about his new CD Listen Here! which celebrates Palmieri's 50 years as a professional musician.

Jazz great Sonny Rollins -- 9/11 survivor :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily

Jazz great Sonny Rollins -- 9/11 survivor :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily Jazz great Sonny Rollins -- 9/11 survivor
Posted by: editoron Monday, July 25, 2005 - 10:17 AM
Jazz News JUAN-LES-PINS, France (AFP) - American jazz legend Sonny Rollins survived 9/11 but cannot forget it, the septuagenarian told a press conference ahead of his sole European concert this summer.

"I was in my rehearsal studio six blocks away from the World Trade Center when the explosions occurred," said Rollins, who turns 75 in September and dedicated his latest album to the day in 2001 that changed the world.

"The whole area was evacuated. I left my studio with my horn under my arm," he said, adding he could now "reckon the horror of war. I can imagine being in a war seeing people who ... kill other people."

Rollins, whose age has brought a limp and trouble walking, had to rush down 40 flights of stairs in his apartment building on Chambers Street, six blocks north of the World Trade Center, sources in his entourage here said.

The result was what Rollins called "a very personal record", music he was working on when the terror attacks hit then recorded live that same week, in the heat of emotion, to try to forget. He has since gotten rid of the lower Manhattan flat.

"My wife convinced me to do the concert in Boston, four days after the explosions," Rollins said, referring to his long-time spouse and agent Lucille who died in November last year.

The sources here said Rollins had planned to do a studio album with another name, but used the live Boston gig instead, in memory of Lucille, calling it "Without a Song (the 9/11 Concert)".

A jazz great for six decades, Rollins' white hair and beard now give a patriarchal look to the man known for his powerful on-stage improvisations that won him the 2004 Grammy Award for Lifetime Achievement.

His performance Friday night at the 45th edition of one of the French Riviera's biggest summer jazz festivals, "Jazz at Juan" at Antibes and Juan-les-Pins is his only stop in Europe this summer.

A regular in years past, he said this trip had not been easy.

"It's the first time I come back here since I lost my wife Lucille.

"I try not to think about it. We have to live and keep surviving as best as we can," he said.

Sunday, July 24, 2005

Dizzy Gillespie - A Night In Havana - Dizzy Gillespie In Cuba Movie Info - Yahoo! Movies

Dizzy Gillespie - A Night In Havana - Dizzy Gillespie In Cuba Movie Info - Yahoo! MoviesDizzy Gillespie - A Night In Havana - Dizzy Gillespie In Cuba (1988)

Dizzy Gillespie - A Night In Havana - Dizzy Gillespie In Cuba (1988) Poster

Jazz history was irrevocably altered when Dizzy Gillespie helped form the burgeoning "bebop" movement in the 1940s. This film offers a glimpse of a trip to Cuba from the legendary trumpet player, where he provided entertainment for the audience at Havana's Fifth International Jazz Festival. Cuban music provided a great inspiration for Gillespie, so it was a fitting location in which to film the star. With a full band behind him, Gillespie performs a series of songs that draw on the traditions of Cuban music, while some intimate footage captures some priceless offstage moments with the talented musician.
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Cast and Credits
Starring: Dizzy Gillespie

The Epoch Times | Jazz Trumpeter Promotes New CD at J&R Music

The Epoch Times | Jazz Trumpeter Promotes New CD at J&R MusicJazz Trumpeter Promotes New CD at J&R Music
By Maiysha Campbell
The Epoch Times
Jul 21, 2005


Jazz trumpeter Sean Jones plays at J&R Music in Manhattan on July 19. Part of his jazz quintet, Tia Fuller plays the saxophone with Jones. (Maiysha Campbell/The Epoch Times)

NEW YORK - At J&R Music, jazz trumpeter Sean Jones, did us the honor of playing a five-song set with his jazz quintet on a sweltering Tuesday afternoon, promoting his new album Gemini. This up and coming musician has already received accolades from such notables as Wynton Marsalis, who recently chose Jones as lead trumpet for the esteemed Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra.

At only 27 years old, Jones has exceptional musical maturity and grace. Jones enjoyed his break from the orchestra and played pieces that told a story, had a conversation, answered back, and waited for you to respond. Jones played us the good stuff. The band seemed to enjoy themselves as much as the crowd. The audience joined in with thigh tapping and stolen dances in the back.

Jones’ major influences are Miles Davis and Wynton Marsalis. He was first inspired by jazz in the fifth grade when his teacher gave him a jazz CD. After hearing Miles Davis at an early age he said to himself, “This is where it’s at!” Jones credits the many teachers and musicians he has had over the years. In particular he credits the tutelage of William “Prof.” Fielder, professor of Trumpet and Jazz Studies at Rutgers University, where he studied.

After playing a one-hour set, the crowd clambered to the shelves to get a copy of Jones’ new CD Gemini and complained about the closed registers. Jones autographed CD’s for a line of smiling fans- the biggest smile on Jones himself.

I picked up a copy of the CD for myself. The thirteen-track album will not let down jazz lovers. With a variety of moods, the songs gracefully marinate together for easy listening or for head-on deep listening- whichever you desire. It is the audience after all that Jones is most interested in.

When asked, “what do you play for?” Jones responded, “I just want everyone to feel love. I’m not one of those [artists] who try to educate their audience and put themselves above their audience- I want the audience to feel good.”

You can catch the Sean Jones Quintet July 22 and 23 at Cecil’s Jazz Club in West Orange, New Jersey and July 29 and 30 at Zanzibar Blue in Philadelphia. Complete performance dates for the Sean Jones Quintet as well as his performance and tour dates with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra are available online at
seanjonesjazz.com.

Sean Jones’ quintet consisted of Orrin Evans on piano, Kenny Davis on bass, Jerome Jennings on drums, and Tia Fuller on saxophone and flute.

The Japan Times Online

The Japan Times OnlineLISTENING POST

LIVE
Ryan Kisor Quartet

By MICHAEL PRONKO

The "young lions" was a phrase used (in fact, overused) to describe the resurgence of young jazz musicians in New York that started in the 1980s. More marketing tool than stylistic category, young lions still felt like a term of respect, all things considered. One of the best, and youngest, of this generation of well-schooled, market-savvy musicians was trumpeter Ryan Kisor, who brings his band to Japan this week.

News photo

Since his first release in 1992 at age 19, Kisor has pursued his career his way. Like the other young lions, Kisor works with post-bop seriousness, and is respectful of, though not confined by, past conventions. He has played with the Mingus Big Band and Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, two of the more preservation-minded groups in New York, yet started his own quintet earlier than most jazz musicians would dare.

Like a precocious youth, he wedges his voice into the conversation of past trumpeting greats. He lets bits and pieces of Miles Davis, Chet Baker and his near-contemporary, Wynton Marsalis, come through in his tone and technique, but Ryan's voice remains loud and clear amid the giants.

Recently, as on his aptly named "This Is Ryan," he takes on challenging classics from Dizzy Gillespie and Kenny Dorham. Amid those tricky numbers, though, he includes originals that flow with the natural, organic vitality of a musician much older and wiser. His lack of ego, though, nicely distinguishes him from many of his cohorts. One of the best of the new generation of jazz musicians, Kisor's approach to jazz strikes rare artistic balances -- hip yet unpretentious, warm but very intense.

The Ryan Kisor Quartet plays July 29 at JZ Brat, Tokyo; July 30 at Meiho Jazz Festival, Gifu; July 31 at Erde Hall, Himeji, Hyogo; Aug. 1 at Jazz on Top, Osaka; Aug. 3 at BrickBlock, Oita; Aug. 5 at Club J, Tokyo; Aug. 7 at Mamo, Gifu. Information on all shows from Mon Productions, tel. (03) 3470-0427.

The Japan Times: July 24, 2005

Wednesday, July 20, 2005


James Doohan "Star Trek's Scotty"

I met James Doohan in the spring of 1993. I was producing a jazz series at the Atlanta Penta/Rennaisance Hotel. The series was held in the 25th floor lounge. When I arrived to set up the event on that evening Mr. Doohan was seated on a coach in the lounge. I introduced myself and chatted briefly with him. He was in Atlanta for a Star Trek Convention. He ended up staying for the show. I later introduced him to the audience as the house rhythm section; Ted Howe piano, Layman Jackson bass and Jimmy Jackson drums, played the Star Trek theme song. Mr. Doohan was both warm and gracious. He seemed to enjoy the show. May he journey to the final frontier in peace.

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | TV and Radio | Star Trek's Scotty dies aged 85

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | TV and Radio | Star Trek's Scotty dies aged 85 Star Trek's Scotty dies aged 85
Actor James Doohan, who played the chief engineer Montgomery Scott in Star Trek, has died at the age of 85.

Doohan, whose role was immortalised in the line "Beam me up, Scotty", had been suffering from pneumonia and Alzheimer's disease, his agent said.

His wife of 28 years, Wende, was by his side, Steve Stevens added.

Doohan was a popular character actor when he auditioned for the part in 1966. When the series ended in 1969, he found himself typecast in the role.

The Canadian-born actor was a master of dialect, developed during his years on radio.

When asked what accent he thought his Star Trek character should have, he said: "I believed the Scot voice was the most commanding."

'Go with the flow'

Doohan's character Scotty manned the Star Trek enterprise with Captain James T Kirk, played by William Shatner, and Mr Spock, played by Leonard Nimoy.

They starred together for three seasons before US network NBC cancelled it because of weak ratings.

But the team was reassembled when the franchise hit the big screen. Star Trek: The Motion Picture was released in cinemas in 1979.

Doohan appeared in seven big screen episodes of Star Trek, and continued to voice the franchise's video games into the late 1990s.

Initially he was concerned about being typecast as Scotty.


HAVE YOUR SAY
May you continue to boldly go where no man has gone before
Joe Doody, Glasgow

In 1973, he complained to his dentist, who advised him: "Jimmy, you're going to be Scotty long after you're dead. If I were you, I'd go with the flow.

"I took his advice and since then everything's been just lovely."

He came to embrace his Scotty character and attended Star Trek fan conventions into his 80s, before falling ill.

Doohan became a father again at the age of 80, when his wife Wende gave birth to daughter Sarah.

His last public appearance was in October 2004 when he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Paris Jazz: A Guide :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily

Paris Jazz: A Guide :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily Paris Jazz: A Guide
Posted by: editoron Tuesday, July 19, 2005 - 07:21 PM
Jazz News About the early days of jazz in Paris, violinist Stéphane Grappelli said, “That was the best time for musicians, you know—no radio, no gramophone. If you want music, you must go to the musician!” These first days—when an all-African American infantry ragtime marching band returned from World War I to a weary city eager for some fun, when Josephine Baker shimmied onstage in skirts of satin palm leaves and Montmartre was a collection of windmills, vineyards, and rickety huts home to a raucous bohemian community—were the seeds of a vibrant tradition of jazz in Paris. Following decades would see American musicians of the likes of Louis Armstrong, Benny Carter, and Miles Davis cross the ocean to jam late into the nights in a city refreshingly free of racism, and the music would evolve into astonishing new forms.
Through anecdotes and quotes from the musicians themselves, PARIS JAZZ: From the Jazz Age to the Present: A Guide leads readers to hallowed jazz sites in four neighborhoods in Paris: Montmartre, Montparnasse, Saint-Germain-des-Prés, and the area around the Champs-Élysées. Many of the famed historic clubs remain open today. With this entertaining, elegant book in hand, jazz lovers will discover:


Moulin de la Galette, principal venue of guitarist Django Reinhardt’s Quintette du Hot Club de France, one of the most influential jazz groups to emerge from French soil. Raised by gypsies, Django spent much of his life in caravans on the outskirts of Paris. He was a notoriously fickle band member, causing a fellow musician to say of him, “In spring when leaves reappear, Django disappears.” (pp. 42)


The site of the Blue Note, the famous club immortalized in Bertrand Tavernier’s film, ’Round Midnight, about the lives of Lester Young and Bud Powell. (pp. 104)


The Salle Pleyel, where Dizzy Gillespie first bowled over the French public with the explosive sounds of bebop, and host to a dazzling range of jazz musicians from Louis Armstrong to Coleman Hawkins, Gerry Mulligan to Thelonious Monk. (pp. 96)


Le Duc des Lombards, a premier club in the new center of Paris’s jazz scene, featuring famous contemporary French musicians such as Martial Solal, Henri Texier, and Aldo Romano. (pp. 107)

Showcasing 25 evocative vintage black-and-white photographs of jazz legends and locations, PARIS JAZZ recreates the glamour of the Jazz Age and brings it to the present. With 4 easy-to-use neighborhood maps and a comprehensive listing of contemporary jazz clubs, readers can experience for themselves where Sidney Bechet, Duke Ellington, Adelaide Hall, Cole Porter and scores of other musicians came together, transforming spontaneous rhythms and improvised harmonies into a signature art form of the twentieth century.

PARIS JAZZ: A Guide From the Jazz Age to the Present By Luke Miner Published by The Little Bookroom $19.95 . 174 pages . 25 photos . 4 maps ISBN: 1-89214-5294 . Publication Date: October 2005

Abstract Logix - Interview - Wayne Shorter Interview

Abstract Logix - Interview - Wayne Shorter InterviewWayne Shorter Interview (#75)
2005-06-12
Bill Milkowski
Senior Writer





He is a living legend swathed in mystique and an omnipresent cheshire cat grin. He speaks in odd, elliptical analogies and similies. And he has a decided penchant toward science fiction while peppering his conversation with references to classic movies from Hollywood’s Golden Era. It’s why his Newark, New Jersey schoolmates coined the phrase “as weird as Wayne” to describe the young Wayne Shorter.
As Michelle Mercer writes in her excellent new biography, “Footprints: The Life and Work of Wayne Shorter” (Tarcher/Penguin Books): “The Shorters (Wayne and his trumpet playing older brother Alan) reveled in their social estrangement: Wayne painted “Mr. Weird” on his horn case; Alan put “Doc Strange” on his. They embraced their band’s marginal status after hearing bebop demonized by radio DJs, who excluded it from their playlists. They resolved to make the same ‘chaotic’ and ‘disturbed’ music that Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, and Bud Powell were making across the river. “We’d play at the YMCA and we’d make like a dollar fifty,” Wayne said. “There’d be ten people there. And even they’d go home saying you can’t dance to this bebop. But we were dedicated and modern. And we’d take chances.”
Mercer further reports that the Shorter brothers would arrive on stage carrying their horns in shopping bags, having deliberately left their “bourgeois” horn cases at home. And they proudly played by ear. “To flaunt that talent,” writes Mercer, “the Shorters unfolded copies of the New York Daily News and placed them on their music stands in lieu of sheet music -- their sound was so fresh, it was taken from the day’s headlines.” And as Shorter tells Mercer, “Earlier that day we moistened our suits and crumpled them up so they’d be wrinkled, for that devil-may-care effect. We thought bop players had to look that way. We even wore galoshes -- and you know it wasn’t rainin’ outside.” Apparently, Alan enhanced the zany effect of his attire by donning a dandy’s white-and-gray kid gloves, putting them on one finger at a time with exaggerated slowness. Finally, the musicians perched themselves on backward-facing folding chairs and began to play.
From his beginnings as “Weird Wayne” in Newark, Shorter would graduate to the ranks of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, eventually becoming the musical director of that illustrious straight ahead outfit (which during Wayne’s tenure from 1959-1964 included such great players as trumpeters Lee Morgan and Freddie Hubbard, trombonist Curtis Fuller, pianists Bobby Timmons and Cedar Walton, bassists Jymie Merritt and Reggie Workman). He later became an important catalyst and key composer for the great Miles Davis quintet of the ‘60s, contributing such memorable compositions as “E.S.P.,” “Footprints,” “Masqualero,” “Nefertitti,” “Pinocchio,” “Sanctuary” and “Fall” to the Miles oeuvre.
In 1970, Shorter co-founded the group Weather Report with keyboardist and Miles Davis alum, Joe Zawinul. It remained the premier fusion group through the '70s and into the early '80s before disbanding in 1985 after 16 acclaimed recordings, including 1980's Grammy Award-winning double-live LP set, 8:30. Shorter formed his own group in 1986 and produced a succession of electric jazz albums for the Columbia label -- 1986's Atlantis, 1987's Phantom Navigator, 1988's Joy Ryder. He re-emerged on the Verve label with 1995's High Life, an orchestral project created on synthesizers in tandem with keyboardist Rachel Z. After the tragic loss of his wife in 1996 (she was aboard the ill-fated Paris-bound flight TWA 800), Shorter returned to the scene with 1997's 1+1, an intimate duet recording with pianist and former Miles Davis quintet bandmate Herbie Hancock. The two spent 1998 touring as a duet and by the summer of 2001 Wayne began touring as the leader of a talented young lineup featuring pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Brian Blade, each a celebrated recording artist and bandleader in his own right. The group's uncanny chemistry was well documented on 2002's acclaimed Footprints Live!
As a followup to 2003's ambitious, double Grammy Award-winning studio recording Alegria, Shorter returns with another exhilarating live document that captures the risk-taking chemistry of his celebrated quartet on tour. Recorded at concerts in Europe, Asia, and North America from November 2002 to April 2004, Beyond the Sound Barrier continues the remarkable group-think and deconstructivist aesthetic that Shorter established with pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Brian Blade on 2002's acclaimed Footprints Live!, Shorter's first all-acoustic foray since his early '60s Blue Note years and his first-ever live recording.


BILL MILKOWSKI: It seems like the message of this record -- in the titles alone -- is about going beyond, thinking beyond.

WAYNE SHORTER: Yeah, beyond a sound profession, having a sound profession, beyond sound advice, taking sound advice, going beyond faith in sound. It’s like, “You’re not gonna marry this musician, you need a doctor...someone with a sound profession. Now you go get your education and hook up with a doctor or lawyer... something sound.” Well, I’m going to go beyond this. I recently got one of Stephen Hawking’s tapes where he’s talking to the science fiction writer Gregory Bedford, and he’s saying, “I want to talk about boundaries in space,” and you get chills. People might think of the end of space almost like the end of life. But then, you come to the conclusion that there’s no such thing as beginning or end. So those words, they’re kind of artificial in a sense. And a lot of people give their lives for something that’s artificial or an illusion. And illusions can hit you in the face harder than what you think reality is. The reality of it is that it is an illusion, and it’s ass-kicking to know that. Sometimes to die and then continue later on with greater wisdom, to say, “Oh, man! Now I know about how I learned that lesson.”

BM: Even in your dedications on the inner sleeve of the cd, they’re all people who went beyond their own limitations.

WS: Yes, I have a dedication on this record to Stephen Hawking because he went beyond the barrier of his own body, denying himself the length of time that anyone in his condition should have. And he broke past that. It’s also dedicated to Dr. Linus Pauling, who discovered the double helix and DNA, and to the guy who invented the traffic light -- Gary Morgan. He invented the traffic system throughout the planet. And there’s a dedication to Henrietta Brodkrany, a black lady who did experiments in her kitchen sink years ago with the idea of submarines and torpedoes, though they denied her a patent. That was around the time that J.P. Morgan was coming along, buying up all of Nikolas Tesla’s patents because he didn’t have any money, and then shooting it over to Thomas Edison, credit-wise. And then there was Dr. Vivian Thomas at John Hopkins, who was a pioneer in treatment of blue baby syndrome. And there was a lady who flew during World War I, Bessy Coleman. She was denied her pilot’s license because she was a black woman, so she went and flew for France. And then I also dedicate the record to my man Chris Reeves...ol’ Caped One...for his stem cell advocacy.

BM: I’m very interested in the tune “Adventures on the Golden Mean”?

WS: Well, I know that a lot of people equate the Golden Mean with something called the middle way, in the middle...something like that. But I was investigating even further that the Golden Mean is neither captive to the right, left, east, west, north, south or the middle. It is attached to no extreme. That’s a place to try to get to in freedom of thought and choice and all that stuff.

BM: The Golden Mean refers to a pattern that is found in nature -- in nautilus shells, stars in the universe, in our bodies. It’s this very potent point of creation found in nature and in the human body itself which artists like DaVinci and Debussy have referred to.

WS: Yeah! That’s it! And that’s a place...and I think it has nothing to do with an almighty power or nothing like that...but it’s a place that we have inside us that’s just asleep a little sleep. I guess we can say that evolution is taking care of that. But there’s a whole lot of us. I used to wonder why there were so many people on the planet. And I figured, “Oh, that means that there’s that many more chances to evolve.”

BM: That’s a profound concept to address in a record.

WS: Yeah, and I’m thinking of it like a spaceship called The Golden Mean. It’s like a lot of kids on there flying around, having a good time -- “Adventures Aboard the Golden Mean.” And they’re going somewhere along the Golden Mean. And I thought, “Wow! Somebody got away!” We’re all gonna get away at some point. We’re all going there. Life is so mysterious, to me. I can’t stop at any one thing to say, “Oh, this is what it is.” And I think it’s always becoming, always becoming. And that’s the adventure. And people when they don’t have any money they say, “What can we do to have some fun without any money?” That imagination is part of that adventure, until you get to the place where you attract the money that you need and you’re grown up enough and adult enough to know how to take care of the money so that it takes care of you and takes care of other people, so...

BM: Well, that image you just described, about being in a spaceship, going on an adventure on the Golden Mean; I got a visual image from listening to “Joy Ryder” of the band riding in a roller coaster and laughing hysterically along the way.

WS: Yeah, you know, Michelle who wrote the book [the aforementioned “Footprints: The Life and Work of Wayne Shorter”], she looked it up and apparently there’s an asteroid called Joy Ryder...some kind of asteroid that moves mishievously, elusively through space. It’s a large one too. She found this astronomy book called “Joy Ryder,” which goes on and on about this asteroid.

BM: Talk about this band and how it’s evolved...what kind of feelings you have about the group starting out and how you’ve all gone through this great adventure together and where you’ve come out.

WS: Oh yeah...there’s one thing I’ve noticed from the beginning when we first got together, and that is that nobody dwells on things in the past or things that are happening in their personal lives, like other musicians sometimes do. These guys, they all have that kind of forward-looking thing about them. And we have a good chemistry off the stage too. We’re always writing down names of movies that we’re going to get. And I’ve seen a lot and hard about a lot of movies...I’m a little older and everything...so they’re writing down names of movies, black and white ones, like ”Random Harvest” with Ronald Coleman and Greer Garson. And we also talk about books and stuff like that. So they’re collecting things, and I’m getting stuff that they talk about, that they like. It’s an interaction and sharing which I think...it’s nice for countries to follow through on that. I know that countries do that sometime but they don’t follow through.

BM: Any comments about the two tunes that you had recorded in the ‘80s, “Over Shadow Hill Way” and “Joy Ryder.”

WS: Well, since I don’t believe in the words ‘beginning’ or ‘end,’ then nothing is finished. In reality there are things that are put aside but not finished. Take Gustav Mahler. I know he used to go back and look at stuff he was writing when he was a kid and then develop it in his adult years. Beethoven too, and Mozart. Some music has the degree for evolving. I’m thinking now about developing “Nefertiti” with an orchestra. And I’m thinking that some day there’s going to be orchestras where they will improvise. They’ll be able to improvise and of course read music, but they’ll have the facility to hear each other and react immediately to what they’re hearing. And they’ll have the ear training to decipher many, many things at once. In fact, I heard in Ann Arbor there was a chamber group doing just that. They played the first two or three bars of “Daphnes & Chole” and then they went somewhere else with it. They weren’t looking at the music, they were just improvising away. So I’d like to be able to explore that with an orchestra in developing some of my older pieces like “Nefertiti.” And I know some critics will say, “Improvisation is not really studied music, it’s like cheating.” And they say, “Improvisation is not composing.” But I say composing is writing something down, then you change your mind, you get the white out, you change this, change that, change that. Who’s really cheating? This guy, the composer, can cheat all day long. How about write down the first thing that you have in mind and never change it? So it’s all relative...uh, thank you Albert Einstein. Thanks Al (laughs). By the way, I saw him one time walking across the lawn at Princeton University when I was 18 years old.

BM: Who? Einstein?

WS: Yeah. He had this ski cap on and his white hair coming down. We were unloading our instruments for a dance that we were going to play there and this guy who was helping us unload suddenly said, “Oh, I’m gonna be late for my class! There’s my teacher. I gotta beat him to the classroom before he gets there.” And I said, “Who’s your teacher?” And he said, “Albert Einstein,” and then took off in a flash. And I kept watching him as he disappeared in an archway, and I said, “That’s Al. Big Al!” (laughs) And that memory stayed with me.

BM: Oh yeah, I guess that would.

WS: But you know, I want my music to connect with people. People say it’s getting a little too high falutin’ for marketing, a little too cerebral and all that. I’m thinking that I want this music to just hit people, so if they get a chance to hear more of it, they’ll get it. This music is saying that someone who’s not famous is just as important as kings and presidents. Yeah, this is music for the common folk and it keeps us human. Back when I was 15...hearing Charlie Parker and Dizzy and all them in the high school...we played a little bit of that music and people would say, “It’s far out, it’s too deep, too technical.” I recently played “Koko” and “Confirmation” to a person who never heard Charlie Parker before and she said, “Sounds like he’s talkin’ to us.” And I’m thinking, “Wow, here’s a real 21st century person.” We need more people like her. I know what the marketing of music has been, historically...basically trying to get the formula for what works. But I’ve been trying to avoid all that...the labels and categories...and just play music.

BM: I was interested to hear that you included a version of that Felix Mendelsohn, “On Wings of a Song,” on the new album.

WS: Yeah, I still lived in California then, around 1995. I was driving, coming home, and I started hearing this melody in my head...and I was thinking about movies I saw. There would be like a western movie with the fort, the union soldiers, and they have a ball, and there’s be a waltz and it’d be like John Wayne dancing with Maureen O’Hara or somebody like that...and this song would be playing. And they’d have dialogue going over it. And I’m listening to it, and I stopped the car and found a piece of paper and wrote down the first few notes so I wouldn’t forget that I thought about it. And the same thing happened with “Smilin’ Through.” I saw that movie with Jeanette MacDonald and in it there’s this an old Irish song called “Smilin’ Through.” That movie is something. It’s with Brian O’Hearn...he did some movies with Bette Davis way back and he’d play like school professors in Scotland and Ireland and all that...real distinguished looking guy, just like Roland Coleman but in another way. And what got me about the movie was it starts with a wedding...a wedding was in progress and the minister’s asking the bride, “Do you take this man?” And the camera goes up into the balcony and there’s the rejected suitor up there with a gun. And she instinctively turns around and jumps in front of her groom...husband to be. And the guy shoots and the bride dies immediately. And the movie opens like that. And the groom, who is Brian O’Hearn, goes through the whole movie getting older and older, never married. He teaches or something like that. And he sits in the garden and sees her ghost visiting him every weekend, and they talk. And she’s waiting for him, still in a bridal gown. You can see through her and all that. But their little girl....the bride had a sister who had a child and the sister was killed in the war so the groom became the guardian of the little girl. And as she grows up, she looks just like the bride he was gonna marry. And then she falls in love with the son of the guy who shot her aunt. But she’s at the piano and she plays this song, “Smilin’ Through.” Like, whenever a tragedy comes, can you smile through it? And that song stuck with me.

BM: Well, that also seems like that pretains to your own life too, considering what you’ve had to smile through in recent years.

WS: People ask me, how can I laugh since the tragedy of TWA and my wife. Uh, you know, I laugh and do things because I know it’s not over. She’s dead but we’re gonna see each other again.

WS: What about “As Far As The Eye Can See.” Is that a new piece?

WS: Yeah, it’s actually a development from “Go” from the Footprints Live album. It’s a development of that tune. It’s like a tag that becomes a piece of music.

BM: So there was a reference to it on Footprints Live?

WS: No, there’s no reference to it. You only hear it one time...there’s only like two measures and it stops, but this one takes on a whole other harmonic thing and it’s more of an experience of the eye...how much or how far are you willing to see? People who say they don’t feel this or that kind of music -- they don’t feel classical or they don’t feel country, or all they feel is country...all they want is the safety zone or comfort zone, what they can relate to and everything. Well, I say, if your feelings are only red, blue and yellow, how far can you extend yourself in a world that needs extending today? I mean, I’m not even worrying about Arabic. You better start studying Chinese on top of it. (laughs).

BM: “Tinkerbell” sounds like it’s something generated spontaneously on the bandstand.

WS: Yeah, that’s something that came out in one piece with the bow and the piano and the fact that Brian (Blade) contributed by not putting all percussion in there every moment. As Miles would say...he would consider somebody valuable when they knew when not to play. If you could do that, Miles would say, “You’re good, man,” and then walk right by you and keep walkin’. And you’d say to him, “What? What’d you say?” Miles liked that when you’d say, “What’d you say?” Because he’d kept walkin’ and he’d say to the bartender, “Get him a champagne. What you drinkin’ Wayne?” My drinking days are over but I had more fun with Miles than anybody...those years with Miles. The short time that I was with Coltrane, when he invited me to his house, we had another kind of fun because he would get into talking about philosophy. I had one little talk with Lester Young one time up at the Town Tavern on Young Street in Toronto. I had a little time left in the Army so they let me go on a vacation and I went up there and Lester was playing. During the intermission, the place was packed...this was in my drinking days. I had my gangster suit on -- paisley tie, pinstripe suit -- and I’m trying to get to the bar. You know, waiting your turn, six people deep. And suddenly this finger tapped me on the shoulder and I turned around and looked and it was Lester Young. And he said to me, “You look like you’re from New York.” His voice was real slow. And he said, “Whatchu drinkin’?” and I told him, “Cognac.” And he said, “Let’s go down in the wine cellar and get some REAL cognac.” So we went downstairs where the barrels were and he got these big water glasses and filled the up with cognac. And as he was talking, I was getting ripped. But you know, just standing there talkin’ with Lester Young...I don’t remember what he was saying or what I was saying...we didn’t talk about music or what I played. But I was just checking him out the whole time he was talking. Then we went up the stairs and he went to do his next set, and all I could think was, “That was Lester Young!” I started listening to him closely after that. I had heard him earlier, when I was 15. He was late coming to the theatre for a Norman Granz Jazz at the Philharmonic concert in Newark. He had the pork pie hat and everything and we were trying to figure out how to get into the theater from the fire escape around the back. So we finally got into the mezzanine and saw that whole show -- with the Stan Kenton and Dizzy Gillespie bands...both bands together doing “Peanut Vendor,” and Charlie Parker with strings doing “Laura” and stuff like that. And Russell Jacquet...Ilinois Jacquet, he was blowing up a storm at that concert too. The whole thing was so amazing to me. I was just 15 and in that moment I decided, “Hey, man, let me get a clarinet.” So seeing that concert is what got me started on clarinet. I ended up getting one when I was 16, and that’s when I started music.

BM: Tell us about Sonny Rollins. You must’ve met him early on when you were coming up in Newark as a young player.

WS: I met him when I was on a weekend furlough from the Army. It was right after Clifford Brown died and Kenny Dorham was playing with Sonny. And it was at a place called Sugar Hill, up the street from where I lived in Newark on Broad Street. And Max Roach was playing the drums. Max saw me come in with my Army suit on and he was still playing something like “Love Is A Many Splendored Thing” or something like that. We...the guys in Newark...used to call it “Love is A Many A Splendoed Thing.” We had a band called The Jazz Informers in Newark. So Max was playing and he looked at me, and he waved his drumstick at me, saying, “Come on up, come on up.” So I pointed to my uniform and then pointed to the door, indicating that I was going home to change into civilian clothes. I just lived around the corner. So I went back home, changed into civilian clothes and brought my horn. And then they called me up on the bandstand. See, I had met Max at Cafe Bohemia just before I went into the Army. I had gone down to hear music, I said, for the last time in my life. I had my draft notice in my back pocket when I walked into the club. That’s when I met Max. He said, “You’re the kid from Newark, huh? You’re the Flash, the Newark Flash.” (laughs) And he asked me to play with him then. And oh man, it was just before a lot of those guys moved to Europe. Art Taylor was on the drums, Oscar Pettiford on cello. They were changing drummers throughout the night -- Art Blakey, Max Roach, Art Taylor. Jimmy Smith came in the door with his organ. He drove to the club with his organ in a hearse. And outside we heard that Miles was looking for somebody named Cannonball. And I’m saying to myself, “All this stuff is going on and I gotta go to the Army in about five days!” So Max remembered me when I was in the Army and took that furlough and he calls me up to the bandstand. They started off with “Cherokee”...REAL FAST. I had this Martin sax, which had a high pitched sound; almost sounded like an alto. And there was a guy there named Pete Lonesome who had a Nagra tape recorder. He recorded that whole set. I played only that one number with them...and man ...he recorded it and to this day some people are still looking for Pete Lonesome with this Nagra tape, you know? So when I finished playing Sonny said to me, “Did you ever think about getting a mouthpiece made? A custom-made mouthpiece?” And he said, “Call Otto Link down in Florida. He’ll fix you up.” That was cool. Sonny was really cool.

BM: Do you remember the first thing that you heard by Sonny on record?

WS: I can’t remember. But I was about 15 going on 16 when I first heard him. I heard Sonny and then Ike Quebec and then Charlie Rouse...but I wasn’t analyzing anything then. All I can remember was hearing them and then knowing that Sonny had something that was really happening. He had a lot of rhythm and all this stuff, and he would leap out at things and take it and express something. So you would see the actual force, you’d feel that statement that Sonny made; in a certain way like Charlie Parker did too.

BM: So you didn’t really analyze his playing?

WS: No, I never really analyzed it. I never hardly even talked about it but it was just a feeling. Like right now I have a cd of Coltrane talking and playing. And I also have a cd of Charlie Parker giving music lessons to a young student. And what Charlie Parker says to the young student -- Charlie plays and then the young student plays, and he’s playing scales and everything. And the student says, “You mean, Mr. Parker, I have to memorize all these scales, all these things?” And Bird -- he had that deep voice -- says, “Yes, but if you can play within your mind!” With Sonny, I never really met him until that time at Sugar Hill shortly after Clifford Brown died, but I was listening to him all through the years. He was always there; he had that excitement and that full sound. In other words, what I liked about Sonny was he had that full sound all the way up and down the horn. The high range and the low range of his horn was full -- as full as you can be, you know? And only a few people had that -- Trane and a lot of the old guys had that. Nowadays guys are whistling on the tenor, playing the high register notes and overtones on the tenor. And that’s getting up in the soprano range. But Sonny’s content was alway like a full meal -- the meat and potatoes and salad and everything there.

BM: Any techniques or musical devices that he uses to create this distinctive sound?

WS: No, I think he just worked at it from a young age. Someone asked Trane what was it like when he played with Monk at the Five Spot and he would go out of the form of what Monk’s music was...”Misterioso” or “Straight No Chaser” or whatever it was. And Trane said Monk would leave the bandstand and go sit in the audience and enjoy himself listening to Trane going out with Wilbur Ware playing bass. And then the question was asked, “Is it legitimate to go off on your own tangent or something like that?” They asked Trane, “What is it like when you do that, when you go away? How do you feel about that?” And he said, “You know when it’s the truth.” And that’s why Monk was sitting out there having himself a good time. He said, “Now I get a chance to hear some music.” I used to say this all the time: “Nobody entertains the entertainer.” As Red Buttons used to say at the Friars Club Roast...he’d say, “Moses. He parted the Red Sea. Never had a dinner!” And he goes on with all these great people...”Never had a dinner!” Now Red Buttons got some rhythm.

BM: Timing is everything...laying back just a bit before he delivers the punch line.

WS: Yeah!

BM: Do you have any favorite Sonny Rollins records?

WS: No, I don’t...just the whole total of Sonny Rollins. I don’t have many records in my house. I have Sonny’s music in my pores, in my body, in my entity. It’s like when people fight about the word ‘jazz’ and what jazz is supposed to sound like and everything. I know what jazz is supposed to sound like. To me, the word ‘jazz’ means going ahead....the whole development of democracy. Jazz is democracy in progress. It’s a work in progress. And what jazz is supposed to sound like...people are getting tied up with and involved with formality rather than substance...formality and familiarity.

BM: Well, you mentioned earlier that you liked the tunes when Sonny conveyed a sense of humor. So I’m thinking that maybe you liked that album Way out West.

WS: Oh yeah, that one! People say there’s not enough humor in jazz today. There’s a whole history of guys who had some comedy in their music, like Sonny Rollins with ”Three Little Words” and stuff like that.

BM: “I’m An Old Cow Hand.”

WS: Yeah. And I like that song “South of the Border Down Mexico Way” that Charlie Parker did. Something should be done with it to bring it back, I think. And also another one by that alto sax player who wrote “Snakes.” He’s still teaching now in New England...what’s his name? He wrote that song, “Oooh, there’s a hole up there.” He played with Sonny too.

BM: Jackie McLean.

WS: Yeah! Jackie Mac! He had some stuff that people had to deal with as far as him being so serious in the bebop days. And then he comes up with “Snakes” and “Oooh, there’s a hole up there.” Now that was unexpected. I knew Jackie when he was confronting his demons at that time, and he still kept up his sense of humor. He didn’t have that serious and almost reverent thing of, ”This is my art. My art is my life.” Or “I’ll tune out from the rest of the world in any manner, shape or form in order to be separate from those who are not with it.” You heard that expression? “Are you with it, man?” As in the movie D.O.A. where Edmund O’Brien is in a jazz club and this guy is a little high and comes up to him and says, “Are you with it, man?” Hilarious! The young guys in my band, we talk about this stuff and they see that that kind of humor is missing now in jazz. They don’t get a lot of that humor from where they’re coming from. When I was coming up, I could walk into a place and there’d be Jo Jones sitting at the corner with a newspaper and some drum brushes, beating out a rhythm at the end of the bar. And I’d walk in and he says, “Here’s a new Messenger. Bartender! Give this Messenger a drink on me,” and he’d say all this without breaking the beat, playing brushes on a newspaper. Everytime I saw Jo Jones he always had something to say like that. And you could tell that he really dug Art Blakey and what Art was doing with the parade of young people who came through his band. So there was a built-in appreciation right there. And he’d tell somebody off when they thought they were hot stuff, whatever they played. He’d say, “You still in diapers!” And these singers, he’d say, “Here comes another birdie, another tweetie.” Billy Eckstine had that kind of humor too. And he would duke it out with you, man. People thought he was a pretty boy and they’d challenge him, .but they were in for a surprise because Billy was handy with his fists. He’d get in a stance and all of a sudden...boom! But he was a gentleman too. I met a lot of great people in those days. I shook hands with Louis Armstrong at Birdland. I met Joe Louis at Birdland. And I knew Sugar Ray Robinson and Rocky Graziano...they’d come into Birdland together a lot. And Archie Moore, the light heavyweight champion, was a good friend. So it’s not just the music, it was the whole scene then. It was these boxers...these are the guys, man...the boxers who listened to bebop. And people like Kareem Abdul Jabbar. He had a whole bunch of records that he’d play for us once in a while when we’d visit his house, that one that burnt down in Belair.

BM: He said he knew you from when he was a teenager.

WS: Yeah! That’s right. He came to my birthday party at Birdland when he was 13 and he stayed with his father. His name was Lew Alcindor then. Later when he was with the Lakers we had about three birthday parties at our house in California for him. They brought a floor to dance on and everything...speakers and all that. And here come the whole Lakers team to party over at our house.

BM: Jaco (Pastorius) used to walk around with this basketball and told everyone that Kareem had given it to him years before. I never believed him, thinking it was just another one of Jaco’s stories. But at Elvin’s wake, Kareem confirmed that he did indeed give Jaco that ball years before when he met Jaco in Weather Report.

WS: Oh yeah!

BM: Any comments on Jaco?

WS: Yeah, Jaco played the banjo on the bass...and you take it from there.

BM: That’s an interesting way of putting it.

WS: There’s a guy playing in Joe Zawinul’s band now [Linley Marthe] who is coming right out of that tradition of playing banjo on the bass.

BM: You must have some humorous stories about Jaco?

WS: You know what? It wasn’t nothing really humorous. I think in hindsight, he in a sense wasn’t trying to be funny. He was kind of listening hard to some things but they just didn’t get through...he didn’t get a chance to follow through. Sometimes we’d be talking about something...a lot of people in the room and everybody’s talking at once and everybody getting into everything...and then Jaco would say, “Wait a minute! Wait a minute! This is important!” when somebody was saying something really profound. “Let’s hear that again.” And I liked that about him. And it wasn’t about being cute, hip or a hippie or making believe he’s Tarzan down in Florida swinging on a vine somewhere, you know. ‘Cause we were pallbearers at his funeral...Joe Zawinul and myself. Remember his father knocked on the coffin and said, “It’s not over yet.”

BM: His father just passed away last November. Jaco’s son Felix is playing bass now and he’s a real monster! He’s really tall, maybe six-foot-six-inches, and he looks a whole lot like Jaco too.

WS: That shows it’s not over. Yeah, I’m thinking of a whole phalanx of people from the string section who have passed -- classical, jazz and everything. Yehudi Mehuin and Paul Chambers and Doug Watkins, Jasha Heifitz, Slam Stewart, Ray Brown, Red Callendar, Teddy Kotrick, Scott LaFaro. But you know what? I don’t train in on remembering somebody with their instrument. That’s a part of disconnecting the dots. People made a history of disconnecting the dots by insisting things like, “You’re gonna specialize in this, you’re gonna study that, you’re gonna be this or that. But no, we gotta connect all the dots from the cradle from now on. And that’s learned by our parents. Some of us did a good job. I’m not putting this generation or the last generation down. There were some good people but a lot of them were shut up. That’s why I like that movie “Network,” that movie. “I’m mad as hell and I’m not gonna take it anymore. (laughs) So everytime I start talking about a person, I have to go right back to what it means in the whole scope of society. Look in the mirror. Start there.

BM: Yeah.

WS: I’d like to say one thing about Miles Davis. One time he said to me, “Hey Wayne, do you get tired of playing music that sounds like music?” And so I’m just trying to say, this is not really about music because it’s not mine. The notes are not mine. I can’t hold this stuff in my arms and give it some baby food and stuff. Music is reflecting how people talk and live. And as far as I’m concerned, I’m going to end the line with it. I’m 71 now, I ain’t got nuthin’ to lose. So I’m gonna laugh my way right straight to the door [death]...I call it the door. I’m gonna go right through that door laughin’ and see you on the other side! (laughs) Me and Clark Terry, you know? That’s all I’m doing with the music now. I’m saying to hell with the rules. A lot of musicians shouldn’t have to worry about protecting what I call their musical foundation. They want to be on their Ps and Qs on stage...their best foot forward, their best runs, their best whatever. But it’s OK to be vulnerable, to open oneself and take chances, and not be afraid of the unknown. And that goes for the audience-wise too. Because we’re gonna have to deal with the unexpected from now on. So that’s what I want to do with the music now -- take more chances and let it happen naturally. And to me, all music, all sound...the sounds of music whatever it is -- country western or jazz and all that -- if I displace myself, it’s all neutral. And people should start doing that, extending beyond the sound, or what they think the sound represents: “This is music to get married by.” Well, gimme some divorce music. (Laughs). Or they might say something like, “Oh, it’s too cerebral.” Well, they got you from the cradle on that one.


JAZZ AT THE CARNEGIE BEGINS KICKOFF ON AUGUST 6 :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily

JAZZ AT THE CARNEGIE BEGINS KICKOFF ON AUGUST 6 :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News DailyJAZZ AT THE CARNEGIE HOTEL (JOHNSON CITY,TENN) will have its first kickoff concert on Saturday, August 6th,2005. Jazz pianist Lenore Raphael will be featured guest artist joining the Jazz Doctors headed by Dr. David Champouillon, Director of jazz at East Tennessee State University. The concert will benefit ETSU programs.
The Carnegie is located at 1216 W. State Street, Johnson City, TN
For more information call the Carnegie Hotel 423-979-6401, e mail info@carnegie.com.

Michael Brecker in Hospital :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily

Michael Brecker in Hospital :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily Michael Brecker in Hospital
Posted by: editoron Monday, July 18, 2005 - 11:35 PM
Jazz News This info comes from Randy Brecker.
Michael is in hospital for a round of chemo and then a bone marrow transplant. Doctors remain optimistic and you can send cards or letters to Mike at the following address:

MICHAEL BRECKER
Room 1137
Sloan-Kettering Memorial Cancer Center
1275 York Avenue
New York, NY 10021
USA

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Dizzy Gillespie - A Night In Havana - Dizzy Gillespie In Cuba Movie Info - Yahoo! Movies

Dizzy Gillespie - A Night In Havana - Dizzy Gillespie In Cuba Movie Info - Yahoo! MoviesDizzy Gillespie - A Night In Havana - Dizzy Gillespie In Cuba (1988)

Jazz history was irrevocably altered when Dizzy Gillespie helped form the burgeoning "bebop" movement in the 1940s. This film offers a glimpse of a trip to Cuba from the legendary trumpet player, where he provided entertainment for the audience at Havana's Fifth International Jazz Festival. Cuban music provided a great inspiration for Gillespie, so it was a fitting location in which to film the star. With a full band behind him, Gillespie performs a series of songs that draw on the traditions of Cuban music, while some intimate footage captures some priceless offstage moments with the talented musician.
MPAA Rating: Not Rated

Montreux Atlanta Jazz Festival :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily

Montreux Atlanta Jazz Festival :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily Montreux Atlanta Jazz Festival
Posted by: editoron Sunday, July 17, 2005 - 04:14 PM
Jazz News Blues legends and jazz masters in one-time-only productions; films, lectures and workshops to showcase a variety of musical genres; free outdoor performances on Callaway Plaza; new uses for a variety of spaces at the Woodruff

The Woodruff Arts Center and the City of Atlanta presents the Montreux Jazz Festival, an ambitious three-day musical celebration featuring a broad array of concerts, lectures, films and workshops in partnership with Switzerland’s internationally acclaimed Montreux Jazz Festival.

The Montreux Jazz Festival in Atlanta will take place Sept. 2-4 in a variety of indoor and outdoor spaces at the Woodruff Arts Center, offering music aficionados and fun-seekers the opportunity to experience musicians from distinct communities as they share their artistic and cultural heritage.

The three-day Montreux Jazz Festival in Atlanta will offer a unique showcase for more than 100 local, regional and internationally renowned musicians representing an abundance of musical styles and genres. Ticketed events will be held in Symphony Hall, the Rich Theatre, Center Space as well as the Alliance Theatre, which will be transformed into a “Latin dance party” and a “blues juke joint” during the festival. Woodruff’s Callaway Plaza will serve as an outdoor venue throughout the entire festival, featuring a variety of performances - all FREE to the public.

Tickets go on sale in July and are available through the Woodruff’s box office, (404) 733-5000 or www.woodruffcentertickets.org. Prices will vary depending on venue with single tickets and packages available. Outdoor concerts are free.


Montreux Atlanta Jazz Festival - Schedule of Events:

Friday, September 2

Callaway Plaza 5:30 p.m. Live on the Plaza:
Soweto Kinch Quintet; Julie Dexter; Mark de Clive Lowe

Rich Theatre 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. Blues in the Night:

Hubert Sumlin; Nappy Brown and special guests

Alliance Theatre 8:30 p.m. Musica Caliente:

Eddie Palmieri and La Perfecta II

Woodruff Jazz club 10 p.m.–1 a.m. FreeSoul Sessions Club Night:

Mark de Clive Lowe and special guests


Saturday, September 3

Callaway Plaza 2 p.m.–7 p.m. Live on the Plaza

Kevin Bales Trio, Tamboricua, and more

Symphony Hall 8:00 p.m. Legends of the Blues:

Buddy Guy; Pinetop Perkins and Friends



Rich Theatre 1:00 p.m. Montreux Jazz on Film:

“Brasil Night” featuring Joao Bosco, Baden Powell,

Gal Costa and more

2:15 p.m. Montreux Jazz on Film:

“All That Jazz” featuring Brad Mehldau,

Monty Alexander and Chick Corea

6:30 and 8:30 p.m. The Great American Songbook:

Bill Charlap Trio; Dick Hyman Trio

Woodruff Jazz Club 10 p.m.-1 a.m. FreeSoul Sessions Club Night:

Mark de Clive Lowe and special guests


Sunday, September 4

Callaway Plaza 2 p.m.–7 p.m. Live on the Plaza

International Groove Conspiracy; Sol Factor; Kingsized

Symphony Hall 8:00 p.m Keith Jarrett, Gary Peacock & Jack De Johnette

Rich Theatre 1:00 p.m. Montreux Jazz on Film:

“Jazz Meet Symphony” featuring Lalo Schifrin,

Ray Brown, Jon Faddis

2:15 p.m. Montreux Jazz on Film:

“Ladies of Jazz” featuring Shirley Horn, Betty Carter, Natalie Cole

8 p.m. Grant Lee Phillips and the Virginia Creepers

Alliance Theatre 8:00 and10 p.m. Juke Joint Revival:

Reverend Billy, Bob Margolin & special guests


Woodruff Jazz Club 10 p.m.-1 a.m. Free Soul Sessions Club Night:

Mark de Clive Lowe & special guests


http://woodruffcenter.org/wac/montreux-web/index.html


http://woodruffcenter.org/wac/montreux-web/LineUpRelease.doc



The Coastal Jazz Association Presents the
2005 Savannah Jazz Festival
September 18-25



FESTIVAL SCHEDULE (Highlighted are must sees):

Sunday, September 18 at 5:00 pm
Festival kickoff, featuring the area’s best musicians
Suzabelle’s Restaurant on the veranda, 102 East Broad Street

Monday-Wednesday at Suzabelle’s 8:00 pm
Monday: Howard Paul Trio
Tuesday: Barry Greene Trio
Wednesday: David Thomas Roberts, Ragtime Pianist

Thursday, September 22, Blues Night at Forsyth Park
Eric Culberson and EROK, 7:00 pm
Corey Harris, 8:00 pm
James “Blood” Ulmer, 9:00 pm

Friday, September 23, at Forsyth Park
Savannah Arts Academy Skyelite Jazz Band
featuring J.B. Scott, 7:00 pm
U.S. Air Force Reserve Band, 8:00 pm
Roy Ayers, 9:00 pm

Saturday, September 24, at Forsyth Park
University of North Florida Jazz Ensemble, 2:00 pm
U.S. Army Ground Forces Band, 3:00 pm
J.B. Scott/Lisa Kelly Quintet, 4:00 pm
Eric Person Quartet, 5:00 pm
Susan Pereira and Sabor Brasil, 6:00 pm
Doug Carn Quartet, 7:00 pm
(Drummer) Ben Riley Trio ft. Cedar Walton, 8:00 pm
Savannah/Coastal Jazz Association Hall of Fame Induction and Performance, 9:00 pm
John Hendricks w/ Savannah Jazz Orchestra, 10:00 pm


Sunday, September 25, at Forsyth Park
Children’s Jazz Festival featuring CJA All-Stars, Savannah Arts Academy Skyelite Jazz Band and Ronald McDonald.

*Rain Site for Forsyth Park events is Savannah State University’s Tiger Arena.
Sponsored by the City of Savannah’s Department of Cultural Affairs. Schedule is subject to change. For more information please call 912-356-2399, 912-232-2222, or visit www.coastaljazz.com

Saturday, July 16, 2005

liveDaily: liveDaily Interview: Herbie Hancock

liveDaily: liveDaily Interview: Herbie HancockiveDaily Interview: Herbie Hancock
June 29, 2005 12:01 PM
by Jim Harrington
liveDaily Contributor
Herbie Hancock (bio) has played with some of the greatest jazz musicians of the 20th century during a storied career that has spanned five decades. The A-list features such names as Miles Davis, Freddie Hubbard, Wynton Marsalis, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter and Michael Brecker.

Later this year, the acclaimed pianist/keyboardist/composer will attempt to balance the scales in the pop world with the release of "Herbie Hancock: Possibilities." The CD, which is scheduled to drop on Aug. 30, is a star-studded event along the lines of Carlos Santana's "Supernatural" and Ray Charles' "Genius Loves Company." Based on the stellar lineup that Hancock has culled for the project, "Possibilities" could be just as big as either of those Grammy-winning blockbusters.

Hancock hardly played it safe with this project, which will be a joint release on Starbucks' Hear Music label, Hancock Music and Vector Records. Hancock assembled a wildly diverse, and potentially dangerous, assortment of talent from both the pop and rock realms for the album. The Chicago-born bandleader called upon such crafty veterans as Santana, Paul Simon and Sting, but also chose some relative newcomers like Damien Rice, Joss Stone and Raul Midon.

It's not hard to envision Hancock collaborating with Phish's Trey Anastasio, given that both of their backgrounds are drenched in freewheeling improvisation. The selection of John Mayer and Jonny Lang, two young guns that draw from blues traditions, also makes sense. But, truly, only a Nostradamus-like visionary could ever have predicted that Herbie Hancock would someday join forces with Christina Aguilera.

Besides the new album, Hancock is also exploring new possibilities with his landmark '70s band the Headhunters. The pianist recently revived the funky ensemble, which he has dubbed Headhunters '05, to play at the annual hippie-fest known as Bonnaroo. The reaction was so overwhelmingly positive that Hancock now plans to take the band on the road. The tour will hit Japan and Australia before likely touching down in the U.S. in early 2006.

Hancock recently spoke to liveDaily from his office in Southern California.

liveDaily: You've always come across as a very open-minded artist, one who clearly isn't afraid to explore new musical avenues. In that regard, the title of the new album, "Possibilities," seems very appropriate. But I'm wondering what the title signifies to you?

Herbie Hancock: I am always interested in going beyond the comfort zone, going beyond the expected, going outside the box. I think that's where new concepts are created.

How are you going beyond your comfort zone with this record?

Well, I've never worked with most of the artists on this record. My foundation basically is in jazz, although I've ventured into a lot of different areas over the years with the same type of spirit found on "Possibilities." When I first did that Headhunters record, back in 1973, I had never played a synthesizer before. All the records I had done before, I'd played acoustic piano. So it was a whole new venture.

The same thing came with the record "Future Shock," which contained the single "Rockit," in the '80s. Here I was venturing into an area that I knew nothing about, which was the hip-hop scene. I had just heard scratching for the first time about a week before we recorded "Rockit." For me, it's fascinating working in these new areas. It always stimulates my blood.

It's the same thing with this project. I am working with various names, names associated with pop music, with kind of alternative rock and with rock/Latin. The spirit of "Possibilities," instead of being directed in one area alone, is directed in a lot of different areas. The other way the term applies to this record is that when I first thought about putting together a list of artists that I would be interested in working with, my curiosity was, if we got together and they bring what they bring to the table, a sort of newness and freshness, and I bring to the table what I bring to the table, which is experience, what would [happen]?

Obviously, you've worked with enough jazz artists to fill a hall of fame. Do you have to take a different approach when working with pop artists than you do with, say, Wayne Shorter?

I don't expect [pop artists] to know a whole series of chord changes, for example. I don't expect a great deal of technical knowledge from pop artists. Jazz musicians, by and large, know the technical aspects of music. You get to the higher-level players and that just becomes part of it. It's part of their talent. They don't even have to think about it. In fact, when I work with Wayne Shorter, we try not to think. We try to go beyond thinking.

The language that pop musicians work off is not as rich as [that of jazz musicians]. But it doesn't diminish the value of it in any way. So, I know how to get from one chord to another in a million of ways, and someone who is proficient in the blues only knows a certain number of ways. But that's not really the issue. I've made my decision about what I want to do with my life musically and so have they.

How did you go about making your wish list for who you wanted to have on the album?

I thought about people who I had never worked with who I might be curious about working with. I also thought about artists who might have been pigeonholed. In a way, we've all been pigeonholed by whatever we first became popular for. Every external influence tries to keep you in that pigeonhole. But my feeling is that most artists are larger than what their public perceives them to be. I was hoping that if I got to work with these people that the end result would be to kind of open up those pigeonholes. I was hoping that we could explore other avenues of life experience through music.

One of the artists on the album is Carlos Santana, who obviously has some experience in these types of all-star recordings. Did he have any advice for you?

As a matter of act, he told me in the beginning, "I understand the type of record you are doing because I've done it. It's kind of your 'Supernatural.'" He said, "You have to really, 100 percent, want to do this." That was the primary thing that he said. He also said, "If you do [this project], call on me to help you in any way that you want and I'll help you in any way that I can." That was really great of him.

Let's talk about the material on the album. You cover a number a different tunes from a range of artists. Some selections, like the Billie Holiday number, were hardly shocking. Other choices, such as the Paula Cole cover, were more surprising. Can you talk a little bit about song selection?

Sting, for example, chose "Sister Moon." It was convenient. It was a song he had already written and so he knew the lyrics. But what I wanted was a new, special arrangement of it. So, I asked a friend of mine, a guitarist from Africa named Lionel Loueke, if he would be interested in making an arrangement that would kind of add that African spice, rhythmically, to it.

With the Paula Cole song, I had mentioned to her that I had certain artists that I needed songs for on this project. Later on, she submitted some things that she had written as possible selections for Annie Lennox. I narrowed the list down to a few possibilities and sent it to Annie. Annie liked "Hush, Hush, Hush" and so did I. There was just something special about that piece.

With Trey Anastasio, we actually just got to the studio and started improvising some things.

What was your previous connection with Trey?

I really didn't have a connection with him. That was a suggestion from the executive producers. I had two executive producers that helped in the selection process, you know, putting the master list of names together.

Trey is considered by many to be a guitar god. You've played with some monster musicians. I wonder how you feel he stacks up.

I don't usually do that. That's for sports. I don't pit people against each other. But he's an excellent guitar player. He's great at improvising. He's very open to trying things, which is great. I have a great admiration for artists who are not afraid to try things. He's a great human being, warm heart, very open, very giving and very humble. That's a great combination.

One of the more unexpected collaborations on the album is the track with Christina Aguilera. She gets a lot of press for what she is wearing, or not wearing, but, boy, she's really got pipes.

Wow. I knew she could sing. I knew she could really sing. But I didn't know she could sing like that. She knocked me out. She did her first take and I said, "Well, you nailed it." And she said, "Oh, no, no, no, that was just a scratch vocal." I said, "What? That sounds like a keeper to me." Her intonation was so perfect, I mean, not a flaw in it at all.

Let's change course, because I definitely want to touch upon the Headhunters. I understand you absolutely knocked fans out at this year's Bonnaroo. Tell me about Headhunters '05.

We originally put that together at the suggestion of the promoters of Bonnaroo. Headhunters has a certain cache, in a way, with the young market that they expected to attend that show. They thought it would be a cool idea to kind of revisit the spirit of the Headhunters, only make it Headhunters '05. Actually, it was primarily my idea to make it '05. I didn't want to be a band that was just remaking old Headhunters material. Although, since there wasn't really time to develop a whole new band with new repertoire, we did do several pieces that we had recorded with the Headhunters before. But we did several new things as well.

For Bonnaroo, I wanted to get a kick-ass band, and I was fortunate to be able to get one. I had Marcus Miller on bass. I had Terri Lyne Carrington on drums. John Mayer played guitar. We also had another guitarist, Lionel Loueke. Lionel Loueke is a new name and he's extremely talented. I also had Kenny Garrett on saxophone and Roy Hargrove on trumpet. And I had Munyungo Jackson on percussion.

Wow. That sounds like a great lineup.

It was hot at Bonnaroo. It was smoking. The audience went nuts.

Will that be the group that you take on the road for the Headhunters '05 tour?

That's the band I'm taking to Japan. John may not be able to go, I'm not sure. Kenny Garrett may not be able to go. And I may not replace him. It might just be one horn, Roy Hargrove.

With both a Headhunters tour and this all-star album on your plate, this could be a big next year or so for Herbie Hancock.

I'm looking forward to the way things will unfold. It should be great.

A Fireside Chat with Herbie Hancock

A Fireside Chat with Herbie HancockArticle Courtesy AllAboutJazz.com


A Fireside Chat with Herbie Hancock

By Fred Jung

Violinist Eyvind Kang, in John Zorn's Arcana, explains, “Music isn't dead, but held captive, kept prisoner within a parade of falsely glamourized forms. Like a corpse which has been overly made up, the forms are glamourized to the point where music is no longer recognizable.” It was not always thus. And even today, in remote corners, music breaks free. This is a concept not foreign to Herbie Hancock. Blue Note standard, Miles affiliate, Sextant staple, Head Hunter producer, Thelonious Monk Institute ambassador, and an icon in modern music, Hancock has emancipated, not only jazz (in all its forms), but hip-hop as well. Hancock isn't merely your father's music, he is your son's as well. But that is the allure of freedom, it never gets old, and rarely requires improvement.

All About Jazz: “Exploration leads to discovery” is the intro to your website. During your explorations, what have you discovered?

Herbie Hancock: One of the most important things is that what I am is not a musician. That's what I do. That's not what I am. What I am is a human being and what I do is play music.

AAJ: Rage against the machine.

HH: Most professional people define themselves by their job. Doctors define themselves by that. Artists, in general, do that. There is a tendency for people to do that. The problem with that is that first of all, it is not true. It is an inaccurate evaluation of self. It can lead into all kinds of problems. It can put blinders on you and make it difficult to recognize something that can be of value to you because you are just wearing that one hat. The other thing is, if something were to happen to make it impossible for you to perform whatever that function is, then there is a tendency for people to think that then their life has no meaning after that. It is quite the opposite.

AAJ: You have long championed the virtues of technology. But as advancements in technology have afforded a segment of the populous with an improved quality of life, technology has also left those less fortunate behind.

HH: Yeah, there are people and groups that are addressing those issues and fighting for those issues. One of the important things about everyone having access to the technology is that there is a tendency for people to think that the have nots are a charity case and they need help. There are individuals in the have nots group that could have very important ideas for our survival. You never know who the next great person is going to be, but if they don't have access to the technology, we won't have access to what they can bring to the table, which maybe something that we desperately need.

AAJ: Was it an irreversible lapse in public relations for the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) to sue a 12- year-old?

HH: Yeah, and I thought they represented the industry in general, meaning the artists and the record labels. I found out, in fact, they only represent the record labels. Although, they have been a proponent against the idea of stealing music that is supposed to be bought and paid for so that everyone who contributed their time and efforts can get paid. I think they were coming from the wrong place, first of all. They didn't really represent the artists. Some of the artists wouldn't go to Washington and fight that battle. I didn't and I told them I wouldn't because I don't think they're coming from the right place. The idea of biting off the hand that feeds you is not a good idea. It is the record companies' fault that the whole thing started in the first place because they were too self-absorbed and blind to the technology. Napster came in existence and then others after that.

AAJ: Can the recording industry stop the bleeding? The motion picture industry has a profitable satellite with DVDs.

HH: The motion picture industry is the next victim. The only thing that stands in the way of them being victims right now is the speed factor and storage. It takes too long to download a movie.

We know that that's going to change and going to change quickly. First of all, one thing that has happened with this whole business is that the business practices of the record labels have been exposed. That's a good thing. They have not been doing justice ever since CDs came out. They were supposed to change the price of CDs once they caught on, but they never did. I asked them for years why they charged so much for CDs and they always came up with some excuses that were bullshit. They have been ripping the public off for a long time.

AAJ: Do you approve of the hip-hop community sampling your work?

HH: We get paid for that. For example, Janet Jackson's new record has a sample from one of my records.

“There is this music called electronica and a lot of the young artists rediscovered Sextant. I didn't even know that was happening.”

AAJ: Aside from Mongo Santamaria, who has justly interpreted your work?

HH: I don't look at it that way. If someone takes my tune and interprets it in a way that they see fit, I am happy about it.

AAJ: So you were pleased with Us3's “Cantaloop.”

HH: Oh, yeah. When I first heard it, I was in Japan. I went to this club in Japan and I remember it was downstairs in some basement. As I am walking down the stairs, I hear “Cantaloupe Island,” or so I thought. But I didn't hear the last two chords. I thought a DJ was mixing it with something else live and that somebody was rapping on top of it. Then it dawned on me that someone had told me that they did a rap version of “Cantaloupe Island.” I thought it was pretty cool. I will give you another example, Fred. Years ago, what was her name? Lady. The song was called “Groove Is in the Heart.”

AAJ: Deee-Lite.

HH: Deee-Lite, that's the group. I was told that somebody had sampled something from the Blow-Up soundtrack that I had done. I had never heard it. And then one day, my daughter and I were getting in my car and the radio was on and she said, “Dad, that's that song.” She pointed it out because I didn't even remember the song. I had to go and get the record to remember.

AAJ: Would you revisit the Sextant band?

HH: There is this music called electronica and a lot of the young artists rediscovered Sextant. I didn't even know that was happening. Somebody had to point it out to me. I put a band together called Future 2 Future and we were in the electronica area. Sextant was a very raw sound and it grew out of the times. It was postavant- garde and the whole avant-garde area was a big underground thing happening in the '60s and had a lot of influence on the mainstream of jazz. For example, in the Miles Davis group I played in, I remember one concert that we played when I was with Miles and after the concert, Miles leaned over to Tony Williams and said, “I sounded like Don Cherry didn't I?” And he was pleased. Miles was pleased because he was checking it out too. So I haven't had to bring that band back as a reunion band. When I think of reunion bands, a lot of times, I think these are has beens trying to recreate something they did at a certain time and that time is not now.

AAJ: Of late, you have been on tour with Michael Brecker and Roy Hargrove (Directions in Music), celebrating the music of Miles Davis and John Coltrane.

HH: They were born the same year and so we were celebrating what would be their 75th birthdays. That was an idea that was generated by my concert agent. Miles has been a major innovator through several generations. That is kind of a no-brainer for people to realize that. For John Coltrane, during the time that he was with Miles and then particularly when he left Miles, he contributed a whole different kind of openness to the music and added a spiritual essence to the music scene. Not that Miles' music wasn't spiritual, but John's was in almost an hypnotic way. During the short time that he was around, because he wasn't around that long, he was a major contributor, especially to saxophone players. Michael Brecker, for example, credits John Coltrane for the reason that he plays saxophone. He wouldn't be a musician had it not been for John Coltrane's music.

AAJ: In June, you headline the Playboy Jazz Festival.

HH: That is a quartet with Wayne Shorter and Brian Blade and Dave Holland. We are looking forward to it.

AAJ: You are continuing your association with the Thelonious Monk Institute, of which you are a board member.

HH: Right, I am the Chairman now. The overall vision is the promotion of jazz and jazz education, and to grow a new audience for jazz, and also to work towards the continued evolution of the music. We have a lot of different programs going. One of them including jazz as a part of American history in elementary schools and middle schools because it should be. Any German knows who Beethoven is and Bach. Most of the people in Europe know who their great composers are without having to study music. They are included in the cultural aspect of the history their nations and we don't do that for jazz in nation and it really should be. We also have a performance area too. We have a college band selected from around the world. Every year, we put a band together and they are together for two years. Each year, the groups that we put together blow our minds in their growth and in their development. It is really amazing. The bands are so good they're scary.

AAJ: There is hope.

HH: Exactly.

Visit Herbie Hancock on the web at www.herbiehancock.com .

Thursday, July 14, 2005

Jazz News: Blue Note to Release Newly-Discovered Monk & Coltrane Recording

Jazz News: Blue Note to Release Newly-Discovered Monk & Coltrane Recording Blue Note to Release Newly-Discovered Monk & Coltrane Recording
Posted: 2005-07-07
On September 27th, Blue Note Records will release Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane: Live at Carnegie Hall, a never-before-heard jazz classic that documents one of the most historically important working bands in all of jazz history, a band that was both short-lived and, until now, thought to be frustratingly under-recorded. The concert, which took place at the famed New York hall on November 29, 1957, was preserved on newly-discovered tapes made by Voice of America for a later radio broadcast that were located at the Library of Congress in Washington DC earlier this year.

1957 was a pivotal year in the lives and careers of both Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane. For Monk, 1957 began auspiciously. For several years the pianist had been unable to perform in New York City's clubs and concert halls due to the loss of his cabaret card, but with the help of his manager Harry Colomby and the patroness Nica de Koenigswarter, he regained his card early that year, and immediately began working again around town.

Monk had been on the verge of a breakthrough since 1955. Having been instrumental in the birth of bebop as the house pianist at the Harlem club Minton's Playhouse, as well as playing in the bands of Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, Monk was given his first opportunity to make his own records as a leader by Alfred Lion of Blue Note Records in 1946. After making a series of early recordings for Blue Note and then Prestige, he began to reach a wider audience upon his move to Riverside in 1955.

However, due to his inability to perform in New York during that time period, and his unwillingness to travel, mainstream recognition was still out of reach. So, upon the return of his cabaret card in 1957, Monk wasted no time in getting back on track. His first gig was an open-ended engagement at the Five Spot Café in the East Village for which he hired a quartet that included the tenor saxophonist John Coltrane.

For Coltrane, 1957 began with the lowest point of his career. He had been lifted from obscurity two years previous when Miles Davis hired him into his quintet, but by late-1956 Coltrane's heroin addiction had started to interfere with his performance. After several warnings, Davis finally ran out of patience, and in April 1957 fired the saxophonist for his unreliability. Having squandered his best job to-date, he returned home to Philadelphia, and in May he kicked his addiction cold turkey. Years later, Coltrane would also describe this as a moment of spiritual reawakening, a path that would ultimately lead to perhaps his greatest achievement, A Love Supreme. And so it was with a renewed spirit and dedication that Coltrane returned to New York in the late-Spring / early-Summer of 1957, began attending Monk's informal workshops at his apartment, and eventually joined Monk's quartet at the Five Spot in late July.

The Five Spot engagement was a triumph. The club was packed with lines around the block every night of what would become a five-month engagement. Monk was finally given the recognition that he long deserved, and Coltrane, inspired by Monk's music and pedagogy, began developing at an astounding rate. “My time with Monk brought me into association with a supreme architect of music,” Coltrane said in a DownBeat article. Coltrane also made his first great record, Blue Train, for Blue Note Records in September 1957, just two months before the Carnegie Hall concert.

Which brings us to November 29, 1957. Monk and Coltrane had been working together for a solid four months by the time they set foot on stage at Carnegie Hall that night. By all accounts, Coltrane had been tentative early on in the Five Spot run, challenged at first by Monk's quirky melodies and chord changes, but the 51 minutes of music captured in pristine sound quality on Live at Carnegie Hall present the quartet, which was completed by bassist Ahmed Abdul-Malik and drummer Shadow Wilson, at the height of their powers.

The quartet performed two short sets, with the repertoire largely culled from Monk's book. The first set consists of “Monk's Mood,” “Evidence,” “Crepuscule with Nellie,” “Nutty” and “Epistrophy.” The second set they stretched out a bit more, opening with “Bye-Ya,” followed by the sole standard “Sweet & Lovely,” “Blue Monk” and closing with an incomplete second-take of “Epistrophy” that ends when the tape runs out.

The concert, which was a benefit for the Morningside Community Center in Harlem, boasted a jaw-dropping line-up of artists that also included Billie Holiday, Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Charles, Chet Baker with Zoot Sims, and Sonny Rollins, and was recorded for a later broadcast overseas by Voice of America.

The month after the Carnegie Hall concert the Five Spot run finally came to an end, Coltrane left Monk's quartet ignited from that spark of creativity, and proceeded to change the face of jazz over the remaining ten years of his life, at first reuniting with Miles Davis to create such landmark recordings as Round About Midnight and Kind of Blue, and then creating his own landmarks such as Giant Steps and A Love Supreme, the latter with his own classic quartet featuring McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones. Monk's star also continued to rise. The pianist eventually found another tenor saxophonist that could embody his music in the person of Charlie Rouse, went to sign with powerhouse label Columbia Records, and grace the cover of TIME magazine.

The tapes from that evening at Carnegie Hall were inadequately labeled, filed away amongst the Voice of America's vast collection of recordings, and apparently forgotten until January 2005 when Larry Appelbaum, a supervisor and jazz specialist at the Library of Congress, came upon them by chance during the routine process of digitally transferring the Library's collection for preservation purposes. Appelbaum noticed a set of tapes simply labeled “sp. Event 11/29/57 carnegie jazz concert (#1),” with one of the tapes barring the sole marking “T. Monk.” All of the evening's performances, with the sole exception of Billie Holiday's performances were present in the set.

Until now, remarkably little recorded documentation of Monk's quartet with Coltrane has been known to exist, a fact that makes this finding all the more significant. The quartet did record three tracks in the studio for Riverside over the summer of 1957, “Ruby My Dear,” “Trinkle, Tinkle” and “Nutty,” which were released on Thelonious Monk with John Coltrane, and in 1993, Blue Note released an amateur recording, titled Live at the Five Spot-Discovery!, which was taken from Naima Coltrane's (John's wife at the time) handheld recording device of Monk's quartet in September 1958 after Coltrane had left the band but returned temporarily to fill in for tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin.

Monday, July 11, 2005

Lynette Washington Winner 2005 Jazzmobile/Anheuser-Busch Jazz Vocal Competition :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jaz

Lynette Washington Winner 2005 Jazzmobile/Anheuser-Busch Jazz Vocal Competition :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily Lynette Washington Winner 2005 Jazzmobile/Anheuser-Busch Jazz Vocal Competition
Posted by: eJazzNews Readeron Sunday, July 10, 2005 - 10:49 PM
Jazz News Lynette Washington
2005 1st Place Winner in the Jazzmobile Anheuser-Busch Jazz Vocal Competition

On Friday, June 17, jazz vocalist Ms. Lynette Washington was the 1st place winner in the 2005 Michelob Red Ribbon Jazz Vocal Competition sponsored by Jazzmobile & Anheuser-Busch, Inc. at the Sculpture Garden in Yonkers, New York.

Appearing with 5 other finalists, Ms. Washington topped the evening with her renditions of Don’t Get Around Much Anymore (Duke Ellington) & Images/4 Women (Nina Simone).

This summer Ms. Washington will appear at Jazzmobile concerts and jazz festivals throughout New York City and the metropolitan area. For concert & events, log onto www.jazzmobile.org.



For your listening pleasure, Ms Washington’s CDs, Smoky Dawn, Live! At The Kennedy Center, and Long, Long Ago are available at GuavaJamm's Music Store for $9.99. To order, click on the link and experience a rare voice and a rare vocal talent!

Lynette will lift your spirits and make your heart soar. Share her musical gift as she continues to wow audiences in New York City and communities around the globe.

For bookings and other information:
Write to City Slicker Productions/Guavajamm Entertainment
P.O. Box L, Inwood Station, New York City 10034 (212) 567-0411; Email: juicy@guavaJamm.net

News Release: June 18, 2005

Saturday, July 09, 2005

Diet Coke Women In Jazz Festival - Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily

Diet Coke Women In Jazz Festival - Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily Festivals: Diet Coke Women In Jazz Festival - Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola
Posted by: eJazzNews Readeron Friday, July 08, 2005 - 02:11 PM
Jazz Festivals DIET COKE HITS THE RIGHT NOTES WITH THE INAUGURAL
WOMEN IN JAZZ FESTIVAL AT
JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER’S DIZZY’S CLUB COCA-COLA

NEW YORK, June 21, 2005 – Calling all jazz lovers! Diet Coke, the world's leading diet soft drink, and Jazz at Lincoln Center, the not-for-profit arts organization dedicated to enriching the artistic substance and perpetuating the democratic spirit of America’s music, today announced the first-ever Diet Coke Women in Jazz Festival at Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola, a celebration of the great contributions women performers have made to jazz music.



In association with NYC & Company, New York City’s tourism marketing organization, the festival will feature nightly performances by some of the most influential women in jazz today as well as up-and-coming jazz artists beginning September 6 through October 2, 2005. Held at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola located in the new home of Jazz at Lincoln Center, Frederick P. Rose Hall, the festival will be part of the 2005-06 programming season, “Jazz from Coast to Coast.”

"Jazz music is constantly evolving and women have long been instrumental in shaping the landscape of the jazz scene," said Derek E. Gordon, President and CEO of Jazz at Lincoln Center. "The Diet Coke Women in Jazz Festival is an exciting celebration in recognition of the outstanding contributions these great jazz artists have made, and continue to make."

Coca-Cola is committed to the encouragement and development of female jazz artists of the future. Toward that aim, Coca-Cola will underwrite tickets for the IAJE's "Sisters in Jazz" Upstarts! night performance on September 26th for distribution to local area high school music students. "New York City is the jazz capital of the world, and Diet Coke is delighted to help bring this first-time festival to the Big Apple and support creative music and the arts," said Chuck Fruit, Senior Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer of The Coca-Cola Company.

“From Harlem to Queens, New York City has always been at the center of the jazz music evolution,” said Cristyne Nicholas, President & CEO of NYC & Company. “This festival will further establish New York City as the premier destination for experiencing live jazz music.”

The artists scheduled to perform include:
September 6 – 11 Angela Bofill
September 12 UPSTARTS! – Stephanie Nakasian with Hod O’Brien Trio featuring 11 year old Veronica Swift O’Brien / Tia Fuller Quintet
September 13 Marian McPartland – special solo piano concerts
September 14, 15 Rita Coolidge
September 16, 17 Toshiko Akiyoshi Trio with special guests
September 18 Tessa Souter / Cynthia Scott
September 19 UPSTARTS! – IAJE Sisters in Jazz / Lenora Zenzalai Helm
September 20, 21 Claudia Acuña Quartet
September 22 Basie, Blues & Beyond: Karrin Allyson, Nancy King & Friends
September 23, 24 Sherrie Maricle and DIVA Jazz Orchestra with Ann Hampton Callaway and other special guests
September 25 Lynne Arriale Trio / Akiko Grace Trio
September 26 UPSTARTS! – Terri Lyne Carrington with special student guests
September 27 Helen Merrill Quartet
September 28 Jane Ira Bloom Quartet / Cindy Blackman Quartet
September 29 Joanne Brackeen / Bertha Hope Quintet
Sept 30, Oct 1 Barbara Carroll Trio with special guests
October 2 Nnenna Freelon / Leeanne Ledgerwood Trio




Reservations and additional information about the Diet Coke Women in Jazz Festival at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola can be found at www.jalc.org or by calling (212) 258-9595. Artists and schedule subject to change.

Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola is accessible through the Jazz at Lincoln Center marquee entrance on the corner of Broadway at 60th Street. The club is located on the 5th floor. Doors open at 6:00pm for the 7:30pm set and guests may arrive at 8:45-9:00pm for the 9:30pm set. Sets begin at 7:30pm and 9:30pm, with an 11:30pm set on Friday and Saturday nights only. After Hours sets are at 11:00pm Tuesday through Thursday, and at 12:30am on Friday and Saturday. Tuesday through Sunday, there is a $30 cover charge for music. On Mondays for the student UPSTARTS! programming, there is a $15 music charge. After Hours set cover charge is $10. There is no additional music charge for patrons who stay after the last artist set. Student rates with valid ID: Sunday 9:30pm set $15, Monday 7:30pm and 9:30pm sets $10, Tuesday and Wednesday 9:30pm set $15, After Hours hang set $5. Standard food and beverage minimum of $10 applies at tables, $5 minimum is required at the bar. Food and beverage minimum applies to student rates.

Jazz at Lincoln Center opened Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola in October 2004 to critical acclaim and popularity with musicians and music fans. The intimate club features artists from around the world seven nights a week in a spectacular setting with views of the Manhattan skyline. Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola also features a full menu by Jazz at Lincoln Center’s exclusive facility caterer, Great Performances in collaboration with Harlem’s Spoonbread Catering, reflecting the diversity of jazz.

Jazz at Lincoln Center received a leadership grant from The Coca-Cola Company towards the creation of the world’s first performing arts center designed specifically for jazz, Frederick P. Rose Hall. In recognition of the company’s commitment to this authentic art form, Jazz at Lincoln Center named the 140-seat jazz club performance venue in the new facility Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola. The late Mrs. Lorraine Gillespie, Dizzy’s wife, said, “I know that my husband would be proud and honored that many musicians will further their careers and the awareness of jazz as an art form in a place that bears his name.”

- - -

About The Coca-Cola Company
The Coca-Cola Company is the world's largest beverage company. Along with Coca-Cola, recognized as the world's best-known brand, the Company markets four of the world's top five soft drink brands, including Diet Coke, Fanta and Sprite, and a wide range of other beverages, including diet and light soft drinks, waters, juices and juice drinks, teas, coffees and sports drinks. Through the world's largest distribution system, consumers in more than 200 countries enjoy the Company's beverages at a rate exceeding 1 billion servings each day. For more information about The Coca-Cola Company, please visit our website at www.coca-cola.com.


About Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola
Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola, one of the three main performance venues located in Jazz at Lincoln Center’s new home at Frederick P. Rose Hall, is an intimate 140-seat jazz club, set against a glittering backdrop with spectacular views of Central Park that provides a hip environment for performance, education and other special events. The club also includes fine dinner, dessert and late night menus by New York culinary creators Great Performances and Spoonbread Inc. Jazz at Lincoln Center is a not-for-profit arts organization dedicated to jazz and advances a unique vision for the continued development of the art of jazz by producing a year-round schedule of performance, education, and broadcast events for audiences of all ages. For more information, please visit www.jalc.org.

Founding Member of Parliament-Funkadelic, Ray Davis Died at 65 - Softpedia News

Founding Member of Parliament-Funkadelic, Ray Davis Died at 65 - Softpedia NewsFounding Member of Parliament-Funkadelic, Ray Davis Died at 65
Category: SOFTPEDIA NEWS :: Entertainment :: Music

The musician died of respiratory complication, his son said, according to the Associated Press


Ray Davis, one of the founding members of Parliament-Funkadelic, whose music has been an inspiration for modern rap and hip-hop bands, died at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, N.J., at the age of 65.

His death was caused by respiratory complications, according to his son, Derrick, reported Associated Press.

The musician born March 29, 1940, in Sumter, S.C, played with the original Parliaments, the band formed by George Clinton in the 1950’s, which included Clarence Haskins and Grady Thomas as well.

Their single "(I Wanna) Testify" has reached the 1967’s Top 20 pop hits and made them famous. Clinton changed the name of the group into “Parliament” and created another group called "Funkadelic", whose sound was much more influenced by the electric guitar.

The acts of the two groups became known as P-Funk, the musical attempt to bring o stage garish costumes completing the R&B, jazz, gospel and rock styles, which has made them one of the original bands of the 1970’s.

They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997, alongside famous artists like Bee Gees, Joni Mitchell, Crosby, Stills and Nash, the Young Rascals and Buffalo Springfield.

Fans remember bass vocals of ray Davis for two of the band’s hits, which reached No.1 on the R&B charts, "One Nation Under a Groove" and "Flashlight'.

He continued his career as musician aster the 1990s, together with his colleagues Haskins and Thomas.

Tom Talbert, 80, noted jazz musician, composer and arranger

Tom Talbert, 80, noted jazz musician, composer and arrangerTom Talbert, 80, noted jazz musician, composer and arranger

Los Angeles Times
Jul. 9, 2005 12:00 AM

LOS ANGELES - Tom Talbert, a jazz composer and arranger whose music mixed influences as diverse as Duke Ellington and Debussy, has died. He was 80.

Talbert died Saturday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after a severe stroke, his family said.

Self-taught as a pianist, Talbert became interested in arranging at age 15 after hearing big bands on the radio. During World War II, he joined the Army and became an arranger for a military band at Fort Ord that performed for war-bond drives throughout California.

After the war, the native of Crystal Bay, Minn., came to Los Angeles and led his own orchestra from 1946-49 and toured with singer Anita O'Day. In 1950, Talbert moved to New York and arranged music for many jazz greats, including big band leaders Buddy Rich, Stan Kenton and Claude Thornhill.

Two albums Talbert released in the mid-1950s, Bix Duke Fats, a modern jazz treatment of compositions by Bix Beiderbecke, Ellington and Fats Waller, and Wednesday's Child with singer Patty McGovern were critically well-received, if not easy to describe.

"Unique stylistic combination of French Impressionism, Abstraction and 'blowing,' " the Billboard review of Bix said.

When asked about his distinctive style, Talbert told the Los Angeles Times in 1994, "I probably learned the most from listening to records. So I ended up writing what I heard in my head, and what I liked. I never tried to make it sound like Ravel's Daphnis and Chloe. It's just what I hear."

In 1975, he returned to Los Angeles and wrote the soundtracks for such television shows as NBC's Serpico and Emergency. He led a septet and another big band, revived his recording career and performed through the 1990s.

He also established a scholarship for young musicians studying at California State University-Long Beach.

Friday, July 08, 2005

John Stubblefield Insights

John Stubblefield Insights

Tim - Let's talk about the legacy of the tenor via jazz...your ideas.

John - There's a lot of cats carrying on the legacy of this music, whether they know it or not. I just came back from San Francisco with McCoy Tyner's big band, and I got a chance to meet Prince Lasha! He was on my case every night; He came by the club every night. He gave me a tape he did in 1987 with Woody Shaw, and showed me photos of him when he knew and played with Coltrane. He played with Sonny Rollins; this cat is a walking history book. The next day he came by the hotel, and took me over to the house of woodwinds. Prince plays alto sax, flute and baritone sax. Prince is amazing.

Tim - Reflect on Jr. Cook's playing with McCoy when you both were in the sax section together.

John - Jr. Cook is someone who McCoy still talks about, and the fact that he still misses him. We all talk about Jr. Cook a lot. I used to listen to him a lot when I was in high school. When he was with Horace Silver. Jr. Cook was one of the first to play a style out of Sonny Rollins, and the first to assimilate it was Joe Henderson. Jr. came up on the grasp of Rollins style very honestly, and he developed his own voice of that Rollins style. Over the years, I found what a great musician Jr. Cook was. He never practiced the sax, he played the piano a lot (kinda like Lonnie Hillar did). He took his ideas on piano and took them to the tenor. He had a rhythmic concept that was fantastic! I really liked that feel.

I'd notice when we played together, he'd play 16 bars on one foot, and he'd switch legs and pat that foot on the bridge of the tune. So there was something about how he distributed his body like that. I watched that in Jr. Cook a lot. He did that all the time too.

Tim - That's the sub-consciousness of his thoughts, it's heavy.

John - I never heard Jr. Cook fluff that much cause he was such a good pianist.

Tim - You do a variety of styles, gigs and concepts. You do McCoy Tyner's band, also Kenny Barrons quintet, plus funk dates and pop music. What players have left their mark on you, and why?

John - I can tell you my favorite saxophone players, then I can tell you my favorite saxophone players who were arrangers. Some were soloists, some were arrangers. I first heard Lester Young in 1957, I heard him before I heard Coleman Hawkins, though I knew of Hawkins.
Lester Young always moved me cause he was more melodic in his playing. When I heard Coleman Hawkins, I found he played appoggiatura's better than anyone I knew or heard. Coleman Hawkins was a vertical player and Lester was a horizontal player, and when I studied the Lydian concept, I found I could respond more to what Lester was doing! I see them as both great. You got to give Coleman Hawkins all the credit in the world for making the tenor a solo instrument. Hawkin's sound was really something new too. I talked to people who had played with him, and they always told me, Hawk was always working at his reeds and mouthpiece to get a better sound, and get a big cutting sound. If you look into the whole picture of the saxophone, all of the saxes from the armies in the civil war went to New Orleans. The way that instrument became popular there, was because all clarinetists played sax. But, if you listen to Albert Nicholas, or Benny Bailey, the way they played the was was coming from a clarinet concept. The Brown Brothers and all of that was a novelty at first, but Coleman Hawkins grabbed that, and played the novelty thing too, cause he was a great slap-tongue artist. He could kill that style.

Tim - When you slap tongue - Hawk used that as a device but as a harmonic thing, via the rhythm.

John - It's funny that you mentioned that, cause I learned that when I started saxophone, and lost if over the years and was trying to learn it back from Howard Johnson, Howard does it very well. Howard talks about how Tom Scott was asking him about it too.
The guy Hawkins really dug was a player with Jelly Roll Morton and the Hot Peppers called Stomp Evans. Coleman said if Stomp would have come to N.Y. he would have been the cat. I got a chance to talk to Prince Robinson, he was in the same era, and coleman Hawkins loved him too. Prince played a lot with the McKinely Cotton Pickers, plus road work in band. I got to speak to him in 1973. He was really a force on the saxophone historically. Rudy Weidoff had a lot of influence on those cats cause he was the most recorded saxophone player in that time, before 1923 and all that. That slap-tongue thing was Stomp Evans with Jelly Roll Morton. They used it just like you said Tim, Stomp and Hawk used that slap-tongue as a harmonic and rhythmic device. Prince Robinson was bad too, cause he had the ability to run changes in a very modern way.

Tim - The saxophone has and always will be something that people enjoy, via the mass audience, it's just a matter of how it's presented along with some help from the press and media.

John - People will always enjoy it! Look, I just went to see Dewey Redman, and not only did he play his butt off, but he sand, "Mr. Sandman" I thought about it, see I used to watch the hit parade on T.V. in the early 50's. I didn't realize it then as I do now, people as they progressed became specialized in the music that they played. In those years everybody played the same thing. See, if you played "Body and Soul" it was played for the serious listener, it was played for dancing, it was played for everything. Today, it's a bit different. You got a funk player who only plays funk. You got a big band player who only does that. Years ago, a player did everything, and everything was what it was! Meaning that if you played a popular song, a sixteen year old DUG that as well as a 60 year old. So the hit parade show was one of the same. It was no this or that, JUST music all could enjoy. Recently, I was talking to Eddie Harris in California, and he and I were talking about this record he was asked to be on by Gerald Albright, and you know, Gerald had some hits out, he can play. He had Eddie Harris and Kirk Whalum as his guests on his record, and they were playing tunes, and that's great cause some people only knew Kirk and Gerald as pop cats. They can really blow! Here now people are playing all of the music. King Curtis could play all of the music!

Tim - If you listen to the record King Curtis did with Jimmy Forrest and Oliver Nelson, King Curtis will knock you out. Forget it!

John - That's right, forget it! He could play all of the music, and he was a student of Garvin Bushells. Have you heard Garvin Bushell with Jabbo Smith, it's a killer. Garvin Bushell was very together as you know Tim.

Tim - You don't have to tell me that John, Garvin used to help me on oboe and bassoon. HE made me some unreal oboe reeds, he was so together, and a beautiful teacher and player.

John - I got all my info. about Garvin Bushell from drummer Sam Wooding, when I was in Sams band. He told me everything I wanted to know. He and Charlie Gaines. Garvin was playing clarinet on this FAts Waller record with Garvin and Jabbo Smith, and Fats was playing the organ, and James P. Johnson is on piano (It's on R.C.A. Records). Garvin Bushell played clarinet better than anyone! If he wouldn't have left for Russia, and if he would have gotten pushed on clarinet it would have been all over. He would have been a big star.

Tim - Garvin was a total musician! He played with Coltrane, Fats Waller, Ella's big band, plus symphonic gigs. He did what a musician was to do in those days.

John - When I first came to New York from Chicago and the A.A.C.M. I was trying to play the music and instruments well, you know and be responsible.

Tim - You've known Pharoah Sanders for a long time.

John - No doubt about it, I've known Pharoah for about 37 years now. I meat Pharoah Sanders when he was a first clarinet player! And when he left little rock and moved to Oakland, I'd be in touch with Pharoah. All he'd talk about would be the way John Coltraine would go and listen to John gilmore night after night with Sun Ra. Coltrane was very much into the Sun Ra band then, around the mid 60's.

Tim - That's when they had Gilmore, but also giants like Pat Patrick and Charles Davis. John Gilmore also played beautiful bass clarinet on some Sun Ra C.D.'s that just came out on evidence.

John - He was a virtuoso clarinet player - when Gilmore came out of the air force he played first clarinet in the Earl "Fatha" Hines band. Sun RA met him when he was in the Hines band. He's a great clarinetist! Everybody in chicago knew that.

Tim - You know Gilmore had that one-ness from the plam keys on the tenor up thru the high harmonics like A Ribbon, it was seamless. IF you listen to him you'll hear that, a very complete player with his own style...

John - It's nice you're giving that man the credit, cause John Gilmore is by far one of the finest saxophone players on this planet. When people could summon his talent, they did. As Art Blakey did. I never forget hearing Gilmore play in memphis with Blakey, and I still can hear this cadenza John Gilmore played then; I can hear it yet today. It was on "Autumn In New York". I'll never forget it as long as I live. Gilmore played a great solo and master-piece cadenza. It was UNBELIEVABLE!

Tim - You know, out of that Chicago school as is Eddie Harris. That dude is so bad - he plays piano, and all of his books are vital for the saxophone. He's like a Marcel Mule of jazz. If I ever won the lottery, I'd rent a club and hire Eddie Harris and Andrew White and just sit back and watch their genius at work. Eddie got a lot of Chicago in him.

John - The chicago school is something. Yes, Eddie Harris is someone who not a lot of cats would want to mess with cause he's a genius. We've all known that for years. Charles Davis and I are compiling a list of Chicago saxists ....heard of, and unheard of. See, Chicago was a Lester Young town, that's what it was. When I hear Kirk Whalum play, I feel whether he knows it or not, he's carrying on a tradition of Evelyn Young in memphis. She's a memphis lady, and that's a school unto itself. I come out of her, Hank Crawford comes out of her. She's the one who was around the Texas musicians who came to Memphis with Jelly Roll Morton. America don't know how much they owe Evelyn Young. The schools that the saxophone comes thru are vital yet today. Chicago, Detroit, Philly, and Texas. See, today Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young are still very vital today, and always will be.

Tim - What are some things you practice?

John - Well, one of the things I practice that John Gilmore turned me onto, is I practice out of drum books. The Louis Bellson ones. I practice rhythms, and study rhythm. I also practice long tones a lot. It helps you express yourself. If you can control your sound you have a more powerful weapon. I practice a bunch of different keys, standard tunes, plus I practice my own music, that's a dimension too. I like to work on styles of the horn.

Tim - Where are some records where people can get into your playing a lot. Any favorites?

John - The Kenny Barron record "What If". (on ENJA records) - It shows the whole thing I'm coming from with the Lydian concept of playing bi-tonal sounds that are not moving in II V areas. That recorded tells a lot of my studies. The Sonny Phillips record on Muse I like a lot. Also the Delmark recrods with Joseph Jarman and Maurice McIntyre in the 60', I was playing that music with a passion in those times. I just did one with Craig Harris, also I did a Billy Hart record on Arabesque records. There are a lot of style on there, plus I was really into my altissimo register on Billy's record. That's a special area. You know Eddie Harrris has that down, but have you heard this guy Marc Russo? Marc can really go up there! He used to play with the "yellowjackets". plus I heard him at my friends house, David Eye, David is Smokey Robinson's sax player, and is also from Little Rock. David played me some stuff of Marc's that really was impressive. I've done close to 70 records with different people, but as of now those are some of my favorites.

Jazz News: John Stubblefield Feb. 4, 1945-July 4, 2005

Jazz News: John Stubblefield Feb. 4, 1945-July 4, 2005

Jazz News News Center


John Stubblefield Feb. 4, 1945-July 4, 2005
Posted: 2005-07-05
5 July 2005 At five minutes before seven on the evening of the forth July 2005, after enduring great suffering with remarkable strength and courage, our beloved John Stubblefield left us on a soft note held gently at the end of a bitter sweet ballad. Surrounded with love by sweetheart Katherine Gogel, sister Joyce Pattillo, cousins Harry Stubblefield and Stephanie Barber, and by friends Rolando Briceño and Yvonne, John quietly passed away into paradise, where he will compose brilliant works and perform music to fill the universe with love, hope and joy. We will continue to be inspired by John’s generosity of spirit, his for ever glowing soul, and the vision of John’s smiling face, which always lights up the lives of everyone he encountered. Thank you for sharing with us your thoughts about how John touched your lives. May peace be with us all. Sincerely, Katherine, Joyce, Harry and Stephanie p.s. : Please pass this message on.

Katherine Gogel 5 Granison Road Weston, MA 02493 email: jazzgreens11@yahoo.com 27th June 2005 Since the 3rd April 2004, John Stubblefield has been hospitalized with prostate cancer. I have been with him most of the time. Now I am with John day and night. John is now here at Calvary Hospital in the Bronx. John is very quiet these days. He also eats very little food and drinks a little water. On the 19th May 2005, John’s blood pressure dropped drastically to 60 over 40. He was listed as critical. We expected that we had very little time left with John. Recently, John has been taken off the critical list. Just the same, I stay with John day and night. We still take each moment as it comes. Some great things have happened since John was first hospitalized. In September 2004, we went to Symphony Space in Manhattan, where the Mingus Big Band was performing at a John Kerry fund raiser. John was on stage with the band, sitting in his wheel chair, microphone in front of him. He recited “Don’t Let It Happen” (the title?). John felt really good about being back on stage with the band again and feeling the music so close. In October 2004, we went to the recording studio where Sue Mingus has assembled the Mingus Big Band to record “Song With Orange”, “Orange Was The Color Of Her Dress, Then Blue Silk”, and “Pedal Point Blues”, all arranged by John. During this six-hour session, John conducted the band. The recording was released on 7th June 2005. We have been hearing good reviews about John’s arrangements. On 4th February 2005, John’s sister Joyce had organized a surprise birthday party for John at the apartment of Sue Mingus. Many of John’s friends and family members were there. The apartment was bursting. He was indeed surprised. While John was at the nursing home, he completed writing a 4th arrangement to a Mingus composition: “Prayer For A Passive Resistance”. The band has performed it and John made sure they did it right after hearing the tapes. One day Boris Kozlov came the orchestral score and they made final corrections. On the 23rd May 2005, Pastor Lind from Saint Peter’s church in Manhattan came to bless John. After the blessing, John wanted to phone my mother. When we put her on, he asked her: “May I have permission to take your daughter’s hand in marriage?” We were all surprised and touched. Joyce and Rolando Briceño were there. Pastor Lind ministered the marriage ceremony. It was really sweet and brought much joy. Here at Calvary Hospital, John has received two very prominent visitors, bringing joy and excitement to all those around. In March, Bill Cosby arrived one morning, taking John completely by surprise. He was most delightful and even took time to look in on other patients. On Thursday, the 16th June 2005, President Clinton arrived to visit John. It was a gorgeous visit, making so many people happy. Clinton spoke of his saxophones. He has not been able to play since three years, having written his book and then undergoing the heart surgery. Clinton also visited patients on his way out Many have come from near and far to visit John since April 2004. We are grateful for all your support and healing thoughts. John is very quiet now. We like to hold hands and smile at each other. All we want is peace. Thank you and be well. Katherine


Tuesday, July 05, 2005

Tonight - Abdullah Ibrahim seeks talent for his city big band

Tonight - Abdullah Ibrahim seeks talent for his city big bandWESTERN CAPE
Abdullah Ibrahim seeks talent for his city big band
July 5, 2005

Cape Town will soon have its own jazz orchestra, the brainchild of internationally acclaimed jazz musician Abdullah Ibrahim.

Auditions for the Big Band component of the Cape Town Jazz Orchestra will be held in Cape Town, Durban and Johannesburg in the second half of this month. The CTJO Big Band will be officially launched in October or November this year.

Big bands normally have at least 18 members, but Ibrahim hopes to form a pool of musicians who could be used for various events.

He plans to launch a full chamber orchestra and the third phase of this project will involve a choral and traditional element. Auditions for the big band will be held from July 15 to 18 at the M7 Academy, 106 Darling Street, Cape Town, from 10am to 4pm.

Those applying should have excellent music-reading skills, with experience in jazz preferable but not essential
. No submissions will be necessary, but CVs should be brought along on audition day. There will be no callbacks.

Ibrahim will be returning briefly to South Africa on July 14.
Details: Marysa Leukes at the M7 Academy, 021 465 6261 or 082 769 4480, fax 021 461 9938 or e-mail mseven@mweb.co.za/

A movie on Ibrahim's life, Abdullah Ibrahim: A Struggle for Love, will be shown at the Encounters documentary festival at 8.15pm on Sunday, July 17, and at 6pm on Thursday, July 21, at Cinema Nouveau in the Waterfront.

In March, the film won a German TV award, the Adolf Grimme-Preis, beating 40 other films. It was premiéred at Ibrahim's 70th birthday celebrations in Germany in October last year.

WVIZ/PBS: Featured Program

WVIZ/PBS: Featured ProgramWVIZ






American Masters: Satchmo - The Life of Louis Armstrong
Wednesday, July 6 at 9:00 PM

A self-taught trumpet player and singer burst onto the scene at age 17 in 1918, replacing the legendary King Oliver in Kid Ory’s band. Over the next six decades he would turn the world of music on its ear and become one of the world’s most recognized and best-loved entertainers. He recorded albums in every conceivable genre, from country to show tunes, toured the globe and influenced virtually “every musician of worth in popular music or jazz,” as Tony Bennett says in this film by Gary Giddins. He was also an outspoken symbol of the civil rights movement, making a goodwill tour of western Africa and refusing to patronize New York clubs from which he had once been excluded. Named Best Music Video by Jazz Times Magazine in 1989, this film tracks Armstrong’s life and career through recordings, performance footage, rare home movies, and interviews with friends and colleagues — among them Wynton Marsalis, Tony Bennett, Dave Brubeck, Lester Bowie, Dexter Gordon, Milt Hinton and many others.

Then…stay tuned to WVIZ/PBS for “Alma’s Jazzy Marriage” at 10:30pm. In ALMA'S JAZZY MARRIAGE, Alma Foster recalls her life with her husband, seminal jazz bassist George "Pops" Foster. Foster popularized the slap bass style, an innovation which changed jazz's rhythm section forever. ALMA'S JAZZY MARRIAGE is a behind the scenes look at some of the giants of jazz, told from a woman's perspective — from Harlem in the 1920s and '30s, through hilarious road trips and life in San Francisco. Family photos and archival film, as well as a rare interview with Alma, whose memory and wit "as sharp as a 10-penny nail," bring this duo's colorful marriage to life.


FALL PREVIEWS 2005 Jazz at Lincoln Center :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily

FALL PREVIEWS 2005 Jazz at Lincoln Center :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily FALL PREVIEWS 2005 Jazz at Lincoln Center
Posted by: editoron Tuesday, July 05, 2005 - 05:26 PM
Jazz News
Jazz at Lincoln Center has an exciting new season approaching for consideration in your Fall Preview. Entitled “Jazz from Coast to Coast,” the 2005-06 season features cities nationwide that have enriched jazz music. Cities being spotlighted include: Kansas City, New Orleans, Los Angeles, Detroit and Philadelphia.

Here are some specific events for your consideration:

v Diet Coke Women In Jazz Festival in Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola September 6, 2005-October 2, 2005 featuring some of the most influential women in jazz today from Nnennah Freelon to Marian McPartland.
v Kansas City Festival with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra encompasses all performance venues of our home, Frederick P. Rose Hall including: Rose Theater, The Allen Room and Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola and celebrates the contributions of Kansas City September 22-24.
v Jazz Con Salsa series with Arturo O’Farrill and the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra appearing September 30 and October 1. These Latin luminaries light up the evening in The Allen Room’s breathtaking setting overlooking Central Park and the Manhattan skyline.
v Singers Over Manhattan in The Allen Room features the Eric Reed Trio and three exciting vocalists Carla Cook, Sachal Vasandani and Jennifer Sanon appearing October 20-22.
v This season the Jazz at Lincoln Center education courses continue. Jazz 101 will be held in the Edward John Noble Studio, and for the toddler set (ages 2-5), the fun begins with WeBop! classes in the Louis Armstrong Classroom.

Thank you for considering these productions in your Fall Previews (full listings with photo links below).
Please contact me for more information. Thank you.



Best regards,

Scott H. Thompson
Assistant Director – Public Relations
Jazz at Lincoln Center
33 W. 60th St., Floor 11, New York, NY 10023-7999
212-258-9807
sthompson@jalc.org
www.jalc.org





LISTING HIGHLIGHTS

q Diet Coke Women In Jazz Festival – September 6-October 2, 2005
High resolution, downloadable photos of the performers in the Diet Coke Women in Jazz Festival available at: http://www.jalc.org/04_05/2005_Galleries/womeninjazz

Diet Coke Women In Jazz Festival
September 6-October 2, 2005
Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola / Set Times 7:30 & 9:30pm every night, 11:30pm set Friday & Saturday
Diet Coke, the world's leading diet soft drink, and Jazz at Lincoln Center, the not-for-profit arts organization dedicated to enriching the artistic substance and perpetuating the democratic spirit of America’s music, presents the first-ever Diet Coke Women in Jazz Festival at Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola, a celebration of the great contributions women performers have made to jazz music.
Reservations: $30 cover charge w/ $10 minimum, call 212-258-9595
The artists scheduled to perform include:

September 6 – 11 Angela Bofill
September 12 UPSTARTS! – Tia Fuller Quintet / Stephanie Nakasian with Hod O’Brien Trio
September 13 Marian McPartland – special solo piano concerts
September 14, 15 Rita Coolidge
September 16, 17 Toshiko Akiyoshi Trio with special guests
September 18 Tessa Souter / Cynthia Scott
September 19 UPSTARTS! – IAJE Sisters in Jazz
September 20, 21 Claudia Acuña Quartet
September 22 Basie, Blues & Beyond: Karrin Allyson, Nancy King & Friends
September 23, 24 Sherrie Maricle and DIVA Jazz Orchestra with Ann Hampton Callaway & special guests
September 25 Lynne Arriale Trio with special guests
September 26 UPSTARTS! – Terri Lyne Carrington with special student guests
September 27 Helen Merrill Quartet
September 28 Jane Ira Bloom
September 29 Joanne Brackeen / Bertha Hope Quintet
Sept 30, Oct 1 Barbara Carroll Trio with special guests
October 2 Nnennah Freelon / Leeanne Ledgerwood Trio

q Kansas City Festival – September 22-24, 2005
High resolution, downloadable photos of Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra at: http://www.jalc.org/presenters/images/index.html

Kansas City: K.C. and The Count
Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
Featuring guest artist Frank Wess
September 22, 23 & 24, 2005, Rose Theater, 8pm
The 2005-2006 season, “Jazz from Coast to Coast,” opens with a celebration of Kansas City jazz. The LINCOLN CENTER JAZZ ORCHESTRA with WYNTON MARSALIS performs the music of influential Kansas City jazz musicians, particularly the legendary Count Basie and his spare signature piano style. The city’s significant history includes saxophonist FRANK WESS, who played in Count Basie’s big band and will to play some of the best of Kansas City’s boogie woogie jazz. This special Kansas City show integrates new talent inspired by rich tradition.
Tickets: $30, $50, $75, $100, $130 / Call 212-721-6500

Kansas City: K.C. Boogie-Woogie
Featuring Bobby Watson’s Boogie-Woogie Jump Band and the Juilliard Jazz Orchestra
September 22, 23 & 24, 2005, The Allen Room, 7:30pm
As part of the Kansas City festival, saxophonist and bandleader BOBBY WATSON and the JUILLIARD JAZZ ORCHESTRA (celebrating its centennial) come together to perform some of the best of Kansas City’s boogie-woogie jazz. Bobby Watson’s Boogie-Woogie Jump Band brings these swingin’ sounds and this distinctive Kansas City style - famed for its percussive piano sound - to The Allen Room.
Tickets: $40, $75, $130 / Call 212-721-6500


Jazz 101: Kansas City-Swing Territory (see Jazz Education section for listing details.)

Kansas City represented in Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola – Diet Coke Women In Jazz Festival
Basie, Blues & Beyond: Karrin Allyson, Nancy King & Friends
September 22, 2005, Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola, Set Times 7:30 & 9:30pm every night, 11:30pm set Friday & Saturday
Karrin Allyson from Kansas City represents the Midwest jazz city at the club.
For reservations call: 212.258.9595, $30 cover charge w/ $10 minimum

q Jazz Education – September 17-November 8, 2005
High resolution, downloadable photos of Jazz for Young People, are available at: http://www.jalc.org/04_05/2004_galleries/j4yp/index.html

WeBop! Saturdays, September 17-November 8, 2005, Louis Armstrong Classroom
Saturdays, September 17-November 8, 2005, Louis Armstrong Classroom
· Stompers, 2-3 year olds, 10:30 - 11:15am
· Gumbo Group, 2-5 year olds, 11:30 – 12:15pm
Tuesdays, September 20-November 10, 2005, Louis Armstrong Classroom
· Stompers, 2-3 year olds, 9:30-10:15am
· Syncopators, 4-5 year olds, 10:30-11:15am
Back for a second season, WeBop! is a music education program in which young children and their parents/caregivers sing, move and play the soulful rhythms and melodies of great jazz. WeBop! teachers lead children ages 2 –5 to a greater understanding of jazz and of their national musical heritage.
Registration fee: $240 / Call 212-721-6500

Jazz 101: The Intro with Dr. Lewis Porter, Author and Rutgers University Professor
September 21-November 8, 2005, Edward John Noble Foundation Studio, 6:30 – 8:30pm
Why was Edward Ellington called “Duke?” How did Louis Armstrong revolutionize jazz? Learn the basics and increase your enjoyment of jazz in this popular series.
Registration fee: $240 / Call 212-721-6500

Jazz 101: Kansas City: Swing Territory with Loren Schoenberg, Executive Director of the Harlem Jazz Museum and Grammy Winning Writer
September 21-November 8, 2005, Edward John Noble Foundation Studio, 6:30 – 8:30pm
Take a trip to Kansas City without ever leaving Frederick P. Rose Hall. This class will provide insight to the first city celebrated in Jazz at Lincoln Center’s season “Jazz from Coast to Coast” and the musicians that were responsible for the unique Kansas City sound.
Registration fee: $240 / Call 212-721-6500

q Jazz con Salsa – September 30-October 1, 2005
High resolution, downloadable photos of the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra available at: http://www.jalc.org/presenters/images/aljo.html

Jazz con Salsa
Featuring the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra and Arturo O’Farrill & Special Guests Joe Lovano, Lew Soloff & Greg Osby
September 30 & October 1, 2005, Rose Theater, 8pm
The AFRO-LATIN JAZZ ORCHESTRA with ARTURO O’FARRILL brings together the styles of salsa and jazz in an eclectic mixture of rhythm and groove. Guest artists JOE LOVANO, LEW SOLOFF and GREG OSBY join the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra to showcase the finest in Latin and straight ahead jazz rhythm new and old.
Tickets: $30, $50, $75, $100, $130 / Call 212-721-6500

q Singers Over Manhattan – October 20-22, 2005
High resolution, downloadable photos of 2005-06 season artists available at:
http://www.jalc.org/press/photos_06.asp

Singers Over Manhattan
Featuring the Eric Reed Trio, Carla Cook, Sachal Vasandani and Jennifer Sanon
October 20, 21, & 22, 2005, The Allen Room, 7:30pm
The Singers Over Manhattan show returns to The Allen Room for a series of evenings with some of the great jazz vocalists of today. Led by the ERIC REED TRIO, the incredibly talented CARLA COOK, SACHAL VASANDANI and JENNIFER SANON showcase their vocal flair.
Tickets: $40, $75, $130 / Call 721-721-6500

Oscar Peterson - First night reviews - Times Online

Oscar Peterson - First night reviews - Times OnlineJuly 05, 2005

Jazz

Oscar Peterson
Alyn Shipton at Albert Hall

USUALLY, jazz evenings finish with the band’s best playing, then there’s a tumultuous drum solo, and everyone goes home. By contrast, Oscar Peterson’s return to the Albert Hall began with a drum solo from his newest recruit, Alvin Queen — a brilliant American musician based in Switzerland — before the bassist David Young strolled out to join him, then the guitarist Ulf Wakenius, and finally Peterson himself. The group’s tightest playing was tucked into the first 30 minutes, while everyone was still fresh and energetic, and the rest of the concert was mostly about keeping that initial momentum going.

The warm standing ovation that greeted the pianist was momentarily checked as it became obvious that the big man, now bent with age, was having a painful time of it walking to the piano, and a mixture of affection and concern washed through the crowd. As he settled on his stool and began to play, the years and his physical problems fell away.

Peterson’s most delicate and assured playing came on his own pieces, such as the haunting Love Ballade, with its delicate Chopinesque beginning, its broad dynamic range, and singing piano sound.

Hearing this, there was no doubt that we were listening to one of the world’s greatest jazz pianists, although immediately before it, the rapid runs in Cakewalk, with guitar and piano slightly out of synch, had sounded like platefuls of scrambled egg.

On the equally brisk Backyard Blues the playing was much crisper, and the piano’s goading, bluesy runs and gospelly turnarounds prompted some flying playing from all concerned. Young had the hardest job of the evening, replacing Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen, who died shortly after the tour was announced. In tribute, Young’s solo version of the Danish folksong In the Still of the Woods was beautifully played, with a singing upper register and immaculate projection. What he lacked, however, was Pedersen’s ability to inject swing. Too much of the burden fell on Wakenius, who overcompensated, thereby killing the spirit of relaxation at speed which used to be such a feature of this band.

That said, the quartet played two full sets, there was an admirable balance of familiar hits and new material, and a heartfelt Requiem for Peterson’s contemporaries who are no longer with us. To see and hear this great survivor igniting more than the occasional spark of his youthful genius, six weeks short of his 80th birthday, was a highly emotional experience, and we were all back on our feet when it came time to bid him farewell.

EUR Web > PEOPLE OF NOTE: Kenny Barron … Saluting the Music Masters At The Rose Theatre


PEOPLE OF NOTE: Kenny Barron … Saluting the Music Masters At The Rose Theatre

By Deardra Shuler
July 5, 2005

Kenny Baron
A resounding roll of thunder clashed like cymbals against the dark gray sky as I spoke with pianist, Kenny Barron, about his upcoming Piano Masters Salute to Piano Legends, sponsored by the JVC Jazz Festival and Jazz Forum Arts. The Salute held at the Rose Theater within Frederick P. Rose Hall, housed within Jazz at Lincoln Center, is located at 60th Street and Broadway. The event is a tribute to the music of Duke Ellington, Herbie Hancock, Bill Evans and Thelonious Monk.

A resounding roll of thunder clashed like cymbals against the dark gray sky as I spoke with pianist, Kenny Barron, about his upcoming Piano Masters Salute to Piano Legends, sponsored by the JVC Jazz Festival and Jazz Forum Arts. The event is a tribute to the music of Duke Ellington, Herbie Hancock, Bill Evans and Thelonious Monk. “This will be my first time playing at the Rose Theater, although, I have played at Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola,” stated Kenny. “However, for the Piano Masters Salute, I will be performing with pianists Geri Allen, Uri Caine and Randy Weston who are wonderful pianist. We will be performing and celebrating the music of Duke Ellington, Herbie Hancock, Bill Evans and Thelonious Monk. Some of the music will be solo, some duet and some with a rhythm section,” declared the world-renowned musician and composer.

Born in Philadelphia, Kenny Barron, who is recognized as one of the giants of modern mainstream piano, is the younger brother of the late saxophonist Bill Barron. “I listened to a lot of jazz in my youth and had my first gig when I was 14. I continued playing throughout high school and when I graduated, I moved to New York. That was in 1961. I started working with James Moody and then I worked with Roy Haynes. I also worked with Lee Morgan and Lou Donaldson. My older brother, Bill, who has now passed, played sax. He already knew these musicians and introduced me to many of them,” stated Barron. “However, it was it was James Moody who introduced me to Dizzy Gillespie. It was a fantastic experience working with Gillespie, who was a very generous man. Working with Dizzy was like going to school. He knew a lot and was very generous with his knowledge. I learned a lot from him,” claimed the seven-time Grammy nominee. Barron spent four years (1962-1966) playing and recording with Gillespie. “I started working with Freddie Hubbard after Dizzy. I worked with Freddie on and off for about 3 years. I worked with quite a few people, among them Stanley Turrentine and Yusef Lateef,” reminisced the talented pianist.

Barron also formed a relationship with Ron Carter's two-bass quartet. He performed with them from 1976-1980. Barron was a co-leader of the group Sphere in the 1980s, and went on to lead his own trios. Barron also worked with Stan Getz. “I worked with Stan Getz toward the end of his life, the last 4 or 5 years of his life in fact. Getz was a very lyrical player. We had that in common. I am lyrical myself so it was a big thrill for me to play with him. The very last time we played together we did a live duet performance in Copenhagen. The recording is called “People Time.” This was Stan Getz’s last recording before his death.

Married and the father of 2, Kenny likes to cook and read. He also teaches at Juilliard. Mr. Barron’s latest recording is entitled: “Images” which he recorded on Sunnyside and released in 2004.

Barron recently returned from a tour in Japan. “The Japanese are a great audience. Everything is usually first class with them and they are well versed in jazz. I always enjoy playing before the Japanese audience” stated Kenny. “I am in Europe a lot, too. I have been in Germany, Italy, and Spain and plan to go back to Rome in another two weeks. I have even been to Africa. That was great, too. The Africans love jazz and even recognize that it developed from their country. When I decided to visit Africa, I was playing a gig in Rome with Yusef Lateef at the time. We had a few days off so we decided to visit Tunis, Tunisia, in North Africa” explained the pianist. “It turned out we experienced a surprise while there. While walking down the street in Tunis, I heard someone call my name and when I turned around, I saw it was Percy Heath. Percy recently passed. But at that time, it turned out, there was a big jazz festival going on there in the ruins of Carthage. The Mighty Jazz Quartet was there, trumpeter Roy Eldridge was there and Dizzy Gillespie was there. So, I ended up attending the jazz festival. That was a truly wonderful experience and I had a great time” reflected Barron.

“In terms of my craft, I try to be better today than I was yesterday. So, I hope people will turn out to see me at the Rose Theatre for the Piano Masters Salute to Piano Legends, it’s sure to be a great show.”

Monday, July 04, 2005

940 NEWS > Jazz bassist Pierre Michelot dies at age 77; recorded with Miles Davis

940 NEWSJazz bassist Pierre Michelot dies at age 77; recorded with Miles Davis at 13:53 on July 4, 2005, EST.

PARIS (AP) - Jazz bassist Pierre Michelot, who recorded with Miles Davis and arranged music for Chet Baker, has died, a fellow musician said Monday. He was 77.

The bass player, who suffered from Alzheimer's disease, died in Paris on Sunday, said pianist Rene Urtreger, a member of Michelot's longtime jazz trio, HUM.

Michelot played with Davis on one of the great soundtracks of the 1950s, for Louis Malle's classic thriller Ascenseur pour L'Echafaud (Elevator to the Gallows). He recorded with artists including Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Powell, Kenny Clarke and Django Reinhardt, and he arranged music for Baker's 1955-56 Barclay sessions in Paris.

Michelot was considered Europe's best jazz bassist in the second half of the 1950s, Urtreger said.

"He had a magnificent natural sound, clear, deep and true," Urtreger said. "It was a dream to play with him."

Originally trained in classical piano, Michelot learned bass as a teenager, then performed for American troops stationed in France after the end of the Second World War. He was highly sought-after for concerts by American musicians in Paris in the postwar years.

Michelot had a role in French director Bertrand Tavernier's 1986 film Round Midnight, about a musician on the skids in 1950s Paris.

Sunday, July 03, 2005

Blogcritics.org: The Dave Holland Quintet, Jazz Winnipeg Festival, Sat., June 25, 2005

Blogcritics.org: The Dave Holland Quintet, Jazz Winnipeg Festival, Sat., June 25, 2005 The Dave Holland Quintet, Jazz Winnipeg Festival, Sat., June 25, 2005
Posted by Triniman on July 03, 2005 01:43 AM (See all posts by Triniman)
Filed under: Music, Music: Jazz - Scroll down to read comments on this story and/or add one of your own.




That Dave Holland is among the most famous bass players in jazz is a well-known fact. Plucked from England at the age of 21 to join Miles Davis touring and recording bands, Holland has had an illustrious career, playing with just about everyone anyone up and coming bass player could hope to play with. Now, at the age of 59, Holland is getting press as having quite simply, the world's best touring jazz band. Hype, sure, but it's impossible to argue that his band is not among the cream of the crop.

Opening for Dave Holland was the sax player James Carter. The Detroit native, 36, was very smartly dressed and completely played the role of the charismatic, hot-shot musician. From from being a one-trick pony, Carter backed up his bravado by putting on an energetic, hyperactive performance, which is not something you normally associate with jazz. Backing him up were among the top players from Winnipeg - pianist Ron Paley, professors Steve Kirby on bass and Alvin Atkinson, Jr. on drums, with associate professor and well-known Winnipegger, Larry Roy on guitar. Carter switched occaisionally to soprano sax and flute, and was always effective.

Carter soaked up the spotlight and performed like the star that he is. He has seven albums out and his first album was heralded as the finest saxophone debut in decades. The bottom line with James Carter is that he is an exciting, first-rate talent who is worth seeing live. I haven't heard any of his recordings, but they do vary in style so one would have to be certain before making a purchase. Everyone in the band performed well, as would be expected of the talent invovled. Carter has won jazz poll awards as the top baritone sax player for three years running.

Dave Holland is at the top of his game. He can tour and record with anyone. His current band is composed of Robin Eubanks on trombone, Steve Nelson on vibes, Chris Potter on Alto/ Soprano saxophones and Nate Smith on drums. Eubanks is the brother of guitarist Kevin Eubanks, from TV's The Tonight Show, and is also an Assistant Professor. For six years, he was voted the top trombonist in Down Beat's International Critic's Poll. Nelson holds a Masters degree in music. Chris Potter, 34, has 6 CDs as leader and was briefly with Steely Dan.

What was most surprising about this show was trombonist Robin Eubanks. I was surpised to not see a trumpet player to compliment Chris Potter, but I was amazed at what a player Eubanks turned out to be. If you have any doubts about how mesmering and intense a jazz trombonist can be, just check out this guy in concert. Time and time again, he did for the trombone what other musicians do with their equipment - grab and hold your attention. He wasn't overshadowed by anyone.

Chris Potter has also made a name for himself among jazz aficionados and delivered the goods in spades. Once again, Winnipeg audiences were exposed to another of the most celebrated youngish sax players in the world. He could easily tour full time with his own band if he ever gets tired of being a sideplayer with Dave Holland.

Steve Nelson was a treat to watch. It's simply amazing to watch him pick out notes with seemingly no effort. It's not too often that you see a vibes player and while he wasn't the centre of attention as much as the other players, he added all the right colors, at the right moments, to make the show just that much richer.

Steve Nelson, Robin Eubanks, Dave Holland, Chris Potter and Billy Kilson

Dave Holland was obviously very pleased with the performance, due to all the smiles he was giving. He performed like Nelson, making his job look effortless but at the same time, he showed that he was a solid part of the band's foundation. The stand up bass is not just for show or to remain a humble part of the background when Holland in on board. He played and soloes with complete authority and confidence and, like all the other players in his band, won generous applause.

Nate Smith held the fort down and won more applause than anyone at the final curtain call. I thought it was tough for anyone else to really outshine the performances of Holland, Eubanks and Potter. Here's hoping these players return to Winnipeg, either with Dave Holland or with their own bands.

All Rise by Wynton Marsalis :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily

All Rise by Wynton Marsalis :: eJazzNews.com : The Number One Jazz News Resource On The Net :: Jazz News Daily All Rise by Wynton Marsalis
Posted by: editoron Sunday, July 03, 2005 - 08:32 AM
Jazz News Royal Albert Hall Sunday | 2 October 2005 | 7.30pm
London Philharmonic Orchestra Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra London Adventist Chorale

with Wynton Marsalis Kurt Masur conductor

Commissioned by Kurt Masur and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra in 1999, All Rise is an extraordinary, epic work on the scale of Marsalis's 1997 Pulizer Prize-winning oratorio Blood on the Fields. Unanimously hailed as a masterpiece by the critics, the work is a slice from the rock-face of musical culture; mirroring the career of Wynton Marsalis, an eclectic musician in every sense - scored for a symphony orchestra, a jazz orchestra, a chorus and a gospel choir. Hugely influenced by jazz and the blues, All Rise encomplasses a plethora of musical styles from the fugue to the fiddler's reel; from the didgeridoo to ancient Greece; and from Eastern scales to 'plain old down-home ditties'. In the words of Marsalis himself, 'I don't try to combine many different styles in a 'world music' type of melange, I only try to hear that they are the same.'

In the first performances of All Rise in the UK, Kurt Masur will lead Wynton Marsalis, the London Philharmonic Orchestra, the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra and the London Adventist Chorale in performances in Birmingham, Cardiff, London, Manchester and Glasgow in what will be one of the highlights of the UK's musical year.

TICKETS: £10 - £50

To book tickets for All Rise at the Royal Albert Hall contact:

London Philharmonic Orchestra Box Office 020 7840 4242 (Mon-Fri 10am-5pm) www.lpo.org.uk (no booking fee)

Royal Albert Hall Box Office 020 7589 8212 (Daily 9am-9pm) www.royalalberthall.com (telephone/website booking fee applies per transaction)

Japan Today - News - Soul star Luther Vandross dead at 54 - Japan's Leading International News Network

Japan Today - News - Soul star Luther Vandross dead at 54 - Japan's Leading International News Network Monday, July 4, 2005

Soul star Luther Vandross dead at 54

Sunday, July 3, 2005 at 07:11 JST
NEW YORK — Legendary American soul singer Luther Vandross died at the age of 54, two years after suffering a devastating stroke that left him debilitated for the rest of his life, a hospital spokesman said Friday.

The Grammy Award-winning musical star died at the John F Kennedy Medical Center in Edison, in New Jersey.

"At 1:47 p.m. at the JFK Medical Center, Luther Vandross had a peaceful passing under the watchful eyes of friends, family and his medical support team," said hospital spokesman Robert Cavanaugh.

"Luther Vandross suffered a stroke two years ago which he never fully recovered from. "Luther was deeply touched by all the thoughts and wishes from his fans," Cavanaugh said.

Vandross stopped making public appearances following his stroke in his New York apartment, but managed to keep recording, winning four Grammys in 2004 including best song for his wrenching "Dance With My Father."

The artist dominated the rhythm and blues world for more than 20 years, his 14 albums selling more than 25 million records and winning a total of eight Grammy awards in the latter part of his three-decade career.

Born Luther Ronzoni Vandross on April 20, 1951 in New York to a family with a strong tradition of gospel and soul singing, the young Vandross grew up listening to the music of Aretha Franklin, Diana Ross and Dionne Warwick.

While at school, the young musician formed a group and performed at the legendary Apollo Theater in New York.

He got his first major career break in 1972 when his song "Everybody Rejoice (A Brand New Day)" was chosen to feature in Broadway musical "The Wiz."

In 1974, a pal invited him to join a recording session for British musical star David Bowie's "Young Americans" album during which he caught the eye of Bowie, who asked him to arrange the vocals and sing many of the backing tracks.

He later toured with Bowie and then with U.S. diva Bette Midler, becoming one of the music industry's top session musicians and oval arrangers, but remaining largely unknown to the public.

In 1975, he formed his own group — Luther — and made two albums which did not fare well.

Until the 1980s Vandross, supported himself primarily by making television advertising jingles, but his recording work for music mogul Quincy Jones as well as Sister Sledge maintained his profile in the industry.

His debut solo album "Never Too Much" was released in 1981 by Epic Records, setting Vandross on course for a decade of chart-topping albums and singles that made him a global star. (Wire reports)

Saturday, July 02, 2005

Musicians Forced Into Fakery - New York Times

Musicians Forced Into Fakery - New York TimesJuly 2, 2005
Musicians Forced Into Fakery
By ANTHONY TOMMASINI

It was supposed to be a breakout moment in the history of the New York Pops and its music director, Skitch Henderson. On Monday night, on seven barges along the East River, Macy's will present what it is calling the largest Fourth of July fireworks display in America. It will be precisely coordinated to a soundtrack performed by the New York Pops, a 30-minute medley of American music. And the whole show will be televised nationwide on NBC.

This is just the kind of exposure the New York Pops, which Mr. Henderson founded in 1983, has longed for. Over the years, with outdoor concerts from the Charles River Esplanade, the hugely successful Boston Pops has been America's orchestra of note for Fourth of July festivities. (CBS will carry its concert live at 10 p.m. on Monday.)

But officials at the New York Pops may now be thinking, "Be careful what you wish for." Viewers who look closely at the NBC broadcast on Monday night at 9 may notice something strange. If the musicians of the New York Pops look a little sheepish and seem less than fully engaged, it's because they will be shown doing the instrumental equivalent of lip-synching. Officials from the orchestra call it "synchronizing."

The musicians recorded the soundtrack in a studio last week. The video images of the orchestra pretending to perform were taped during a free concert - or what was supposed to be a free concert - that the Pops presented on Wednesday night at Bryant Park. For some 45 minutes, the audience in the park watched an NBC camera crew film the fake performance as the recorded soundtrack was played over loudspeakers, a process that necessitated stopping and starting many times.

The audience had been expecting to hear a live concert. Given the distractions of the videotaping as well as the rainy weather, the intrepid music lovers who showed up were remarkably tolerant.

Although weather reports had predicted thunderstorms, by concert time the precipitation had slackened to showers. The orchestra was under multiple pressures to go ahead with the performance.

Besides being a free concert for the public, the event was a benefit for the Pops. About 175 people had purchased boxed dinners at $250 each, and almost half of them showed up, determined to enjoy themselves despite having to slice their chicken with one hand while holding an umbrella with the other. In good weather the free concerts by the New York Pops in Bryant Park can attract up to 10,000 people. Here there were a few hundred, at best. No one was allowed to sit on the lawn, which was soggy with rain. Still, determined patrons, wearing all manner of rain gear, sat in folding chairs that encircled the Bryant Park green.

The other pressure came from the need to videotape the fake performance for NBC. When the Pops agreed to provide the soundtrack for the fireworks display, its managers did not realize that the musicians would not be shown giving an actual performance, James M. Johnson, the orchestra's executive director, said during a break in the concert. But having signed on to the project, the orchestra complied with the producers' insistence that the fireworks display be matched to a recorded soundtrack.

In the original plans, the synchronized performance was to be videotaped on Wednesday afternoon, so that in the evening the orchestra could simply perform the medley for the audience. But because of heavy afternoon showers, the television crew had to use concert time for the taping.

The program, part of the Summermusic series, began well enough, given the rain and humidity. Mr. Henderson, still a lively presence on the podium at 87, led accounts of Glière's "Russian Sailor's Dance" and works by Jerónimo Giméniz and Debussy, followed by selections from Handel's "Water Music," which seemed all too appropriate. The audience was palpably appreciative.

The orchestra used an Electro-Voice amplification system, which certainly gave the music resonance: the decaying sound of fortissimo final chords lingered for four seconds by my watch. The acoustics may not be natural, but you could not complain that the Pops was hard to hear.

Then came time for the taping. Midge Woolsey of WQXR, the host for the evening, explained what was about to happen and admitted that the orchestra would be going through the motions of playing as we listened to the recorded soundtrack. She warned that the players would have to stop and restart often. But she urged everyone to get involved, to shout and cheer at the end of each piece and show its enthusiasm for the benefit of the cameras.

Such is the allure of television in the age of reality shows that most people stuck around and willingly played their parts. Sometimes it was hard to fathom exactly what was going on. Fathers bounced their children on their knees to the rhythms of a George M. Cohan tune or John Williams's "Olympic Fanfare," and you wondered whether they were really enjoying themselves or mugging for the cameras, or whether they could not really tell the difference between the live selections and the faked ones, since both were amplified.

During the beloved standard "Over the Rainbow," the orchestra's concertmaster, Erica Kiesewetter, played a prominent violin solo. Not live, of course; she was just pretending. This is not the kind of turn you can imagine your career path taking when you are a young, idealistic violin student.

The medley ended with "God Bless America," with the orchestra joined by the New York Pops Festival Chorus - which had also recorded its parts.

Once the videotaping was completed, the Pops gave the patient audience a well-deserved reward, performing a medley from "West Side Story." By this point the rain had stopped. Even hearing the selections through loudspeakers, the audience, not to mention the players, seemed relieved to be experiencing music performed live.

Asked afterward whether the New York Pops would again agree to record a soundtrack for a Fourth of July fireworks display if it involved faking a performance for television, Mr. Johnson said, "Ask me again in two weeks."

Friday, July 01, 2005

Struggling to Keep the Band and Legend of Sun Ra Alive - New York Times

Struggling to Keep the Band and Legend of Sun Ra Alive - New York Times

June 30, 2005
Struggling to Keep the Band and Legend of Sun Ra Alive
By COREY KILGANNON
PHILADELPHIA - In the Germantown neighborhood, an 81-year-old bandleader and alto saxophonist is struggling to maintain a crumbling town house and a legendary big band.

The bandleader, Marshall Allen, lives in a three-story row house on Morton Avenue that since 1968 has been the headquarters of the Sun Ra Arkestra, the avant-garde big band that the keyboardist and free-jazz pioneer Sun Ra formed a half-century ago. Sun Ra died in 1993 at 79, and now Mr. Allen leads the group.

One recent evening at the Sun Ra house, an elderly man with a guitar case was dozing on the porch. Mr. Allen opened the door and shooed him away.

"We still get cats coming by here like it's the old days," said Mr. Allen, who had been spackling the bathroom ceiling. "I can't run the place like that no more. It was different when Sun Ra was alive. He could take in all these nutty musicians and bring out the good in them, but I ain't that talented."

In those old days, the band lived communally in the house, where Sun Ra wrote songs and arrangements and rehearsed and recorded the band, often around the clock.

Now it is quieter and emptier, home only to Mr. Allen and three other band members. The Arkestra is still together; some members have been with it since the 1950's and 60's. After some lean times when it was in danger of folding, the band has rebounded in recent years. It played some 30 dates last year, including gigs in Europe, Brazil, a Buddhist temple in Tuva and the Manhattan nightclub Iridium.

Mr. Allen toured for two weeks with the bassist Henry Grimes this year, and is about to return to Tuva with a small group and to perform with the Arkestra in Austria and France in early July. But he complains that the concerts do not pay enough to keep the entire band together like an extended family, the way Sun Ra did. Mr. Allen often has trouble scraping together a full ensemble (anywhere from 13 to 19 pieces) even for weekly rehearsals and must call upon Arkestra alumni to fill spots.

"We have a nucleus that still rehearses and lives together here," he said, standing in the ground-floor rehearsal room where Sun Ra held marathon rehearsals. "We play several days a week. Not every day like when Sun Ra was alive, but whoever's here, we rehearse."

Sun Ra required the band members in the house to follow a disciplined regimen based on his musical and philosophical concepts, which Mr. Allen and the others still follow. Mr. Allen writes daily for the Arkestra, composing new music and rearranging Sun Ra's.

"I'm juggling too many things just keeping the place together," said Mr. Allen, who took over as band director after the 1995 death of the tenor saxophonist John Gilmore, another longtime member of the Arkestra.

The old house is a museum dedicated to Sun Ra, filled with his music, possessions and other memorabilia, and Mr. Allen often books engagements just to maintain it and pay the taxes and bills. In all, the Arkestra has released more than 100 self-produced records, Mr. Allen said, as well as several albums on established labels. But the meager royalties go to Sun Ra's family and former business partners, not the current band.

"We get no royalties," he said. "I got no money. I'm sitting on zero. If we had more bookings, the band would be stronger. Then we could rehearse steady and play numbers we ain't never played. You got to have money to run a band. Bills have to be paid. I can't even pay a musician's carfare to get down here."

The band still plays music that alternates between straight-ahead swing arrangements and squealing solos. The concerts still feature free-form dancers, light shows and musicians in outlandish costumes marching through the audience while chanting and singing. Band members often use megaphones to sing songs with the cosmic themes that were the trademark of Sun Ra, who claimed to be from Saturn and described his concepts with outer-space imagery.

He spoke of making music sublime enough to elevate humanity beyond Earth, to transcend reality. He spoke of a world in which people traveled in cars and rocket ships powered by music alone.

The Arkestra never was as popular as jazz's best-known big bands, but it did have a steady following and was highly regarded in jazz circles. It appeared on "Saturday Night Live" in 1978, played a Central Park concert with Sonic Youth in 1992, and was named best big band in Down Beat magazine's critics poll five times between 1985 and 1992.

In 1968, Sun Ra moved the band from the Lower East Side of Manhattan to a house in Philadelphia that Mr. Allen's family owned but gave to him for the band's headquarters. It still belongs to the Sun Ra estate.

Mr. Allen was interviewed in a third-floor room where several of Sun Ra's old electronic keyboards leaned sideways in a jumble in the corner. In another corner was a tall wardrobe cabinet containing hundreds of Sun Ra's original music scores, much of them never recorded.

"I got 40 years worth of his music here, him writing songs every day," said Mr. Allen, who was watching a sports show on television and was intermittently using an electronic keyboard to work on his own compositions, which are decidedly Sun Ra-influenced. "I was there when he wrote most of his stuff. I seen him write everything since 1958."

That was the year Mr. Allen joined the Arkestra. He grew up admiring the styles of swing-era saxophonists like Johnny Hodges, Don Byas, Willie Smith and Earle Warren but eventually developed an avant-garde style, mastering overblowing techniques, false fingerings, note manipulations and extreme registers. He frequently solos on alternate instruments, including a gadget called an E.V.I., or electronic valve instrument.

The room was adorned with Egyptian and African art, psychedelic paintings and tributes to Sun Ra. His walking stick was mounted on the wall. The room was cluttered with kitchen items, instruments and tools for fixing them. The books on the shelves were mostly on mystical subjects, outer space and ancient Egypt. Outside in the hallway hung a sign containing an Arkestra credo, "Play what you don't know" - the reverse of a popular musical axiom.

There were dried roses from the funerals of both Sun Ra and John Gilmore.

"I'm just doing what I can to keep the music going," Mr. Allen said. "I'm not Sun Ra. It's still his band, but I'm carrying it on."

Then one of his housemates, the tenor saxophonist YahYa Abdul Majid, came into the room and said to Mr. Allen: "Let me borrow $5. I'll pay you tomorrow."

Mr. Allen laughed and reached into his pocket. "Oh man," he said, "you know it's the poorhouse up here."