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Norma Miller, Lindy-Hopping ‘Queen of Swing,’ Is Dead at 99 – The New York Times

Norma Miller, Lindy-Hopping ‘Queen of Swing,’ Is Dead at 99 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/06/obituaries/norma-miller-dead.html?action=click
 
Norma Miller, Lindy-Hopping ‘Queen of Swing,’ Is Dead at 99
By Robert D. McFadden
May 6, 2019
Norma Miller and Billy Ricker, of Norma Miller’s Dancers, in a publicity photo taken in about 1940. With her troupe, she joined early fights to undermine segregation in the nightclubs and casinos of Miami Beach and Las Vegas.Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
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Norma Miller and Billy Ricker, of Norma Miller’s Dancers, in a publicity photo taken in about 1940. With her troupe, she joined early fights to undermine segregation in the nightclubs and casinos of Miami Beach and Las Vegas.Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
Norma Miller, who danced the Lindy Hop on Harlem sidewalks as a child, and as a teenager dazzled crowds on international tours in the 1930s and early ′40s doing the same kicks, spins and drops that had made it a Jazz Age jitterbug craze, died on Sunday at her home in Fort Myers, Fla. She was 99.
Her longtime manager and caretaker, John Biffar, announced her death.
Among the cultural prodigies who arose after the aviator Charles A. Lindbergh’s “hop” from New York to Paris in 1927 — hence the dance’s name — Ms. Miller, known as the “Queen of Swing,” was the youngest recruit and last survivor of the original Lindy Hoppers, the all-black Herbert White troupe that broke in at Harlem’s Savoy Ballroom and popularized the Lindy Hop in Broadway shows, on tours of Europe and Latin America, and in Hollywood films.
In the movies, she danced and sang in memorable black-cast numbers in the Marx Brothers’ “A Day at the Races” (1937) and in the madcap Olsen and Johnson comedy “Hellzapoppin’ ” (1941). She later thrived as a choreographer, comedian, television actor and author, and was honored by the National Endowment for the Arts in 2003 as a conservator of the Lindy Hop.
With her own black companies, the Norma Miller Dancers and Norma Miller and Her Jazzmen, she joined early fights to undermine segregation in the nightclubs and casinos of Miami Beach and Las Vegas, where black entertainers — even stars like Nat King Cole and Sammy Davis Jr. — drew big crowds but afterward had to leave through the kitchen and stay in segregated accommodations.
A child of poverty whose father died before she was born, Ms. Miller lived with her mother and sister in a cramped, noisy Harlem apartment, whose back windows looked out on the ballroom that would be her steppingstone to stardom. On the horizon were professional friendships with Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Artie Shaw and other musical legends.
She was discovered on Easter Sunday 1932 by the great swing dancer Twist Mouth George Ganaway as she flashed her moves on the sidewalk outside the Savoy, a blocklong rhythm factory on Lenox Avenue between West 140th and 141st Streets. She was only 12, too young even to get into the swanky, mirrored emporium of swing that Langston Hughes called “the heartbeat of Harlem.”
“I was a precocious youngster,” Ms. Miller said in “Queen of Swing,” a 2006 documentary about her life. Mr. Ganaway spotted her performance and gave her a Coca-Cola. From inside the Savoy, a swing band’s hard-driving sound beat its way to the sidewalk, and there she and Mr. Ganaway danced.
“He swung me out,” she recalled. “I don’t know if I ever hit the floor. He just flew me all around.”
Norma, wiry and nimble, already knew some Lindy Hop moves: the swing out, the hip-to-hip, the side-flip, the sugar push. Mr. Ganaway was impressed. He took her into the Savoy, ignoring the technicality of her age, and they were soon captivating the regulars with through-the-legs slides, over-the-head flips and acrobatic aerial lifts.
Ms. Miller in 2018. In her later years she traveled widely to appear at swing and jazz festivals and give talks on her dancing days.Erika Gerdemark for The New York Times
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Ms. Miller in 2018. In her later years she traveled widely to appear at swing and jazz festivals and give talks on her dancing days.Erika Gerdemark for The New York Times
Later, they won a Lindy Hop contest at the Savoy.
She continued to improve. After watching her win the Harvest Moon Ball dance contest at the Apollo Theater in 1934, Herbert White invited her to join his new troupe, the Lindy Hoppers. She agreed, and at 15 came under the tutelage of Mr. White’s choreographer, Frankie Manning, the master of swing-era dances, who was the inspirational coach of the Lindy Hoppers.
What followed over the next few years was the professional education of a dancer: the wider world of hard work and the excitement and grind of travel to faraway places, of dancing on Broadway and on a seven-month tour of Paris, London and other European cities, then performances across America with Ethel Waters and a girl’s first adventure in Hollywood.
She was not quite 18 when she met the Marx Brothers, Allan Jones and Maureen O’Sullivan on the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer lot and made her film debut in “A Day at the Races.” She danced and sang with the Lindy Hoppers in the well-known black-cast number “All God’s Chillun Got Rhythm,” which featured the singer Ivie Anderson and Duke Ellington’s orchestra. The Lindy Hop sequenceearned an Academy Award nomination for the choreographer, Dave Gould.
Ms. Miller and the Lindy Hoppers were showcased in the hit Broadway musical revue “Hellzapoppin’ ” in 1938 and in 1941 appeared in the Hollywood version, both of which starred Ole Olsen, Chic Johnson and Martha Raye. It was a slashing satire of show business, with slapstick mayhem, horned demons, collapsing staircases and fun-house slides that led straight to hell.
In a sequence widely regarded as the best example of the Lindy Hop on film, four couples in backstage-workers’ get-ups swing out, one after the other, into acrobatic shines at a frenetic tempo. Ms. Miller and Billy Ricker, dancing in chef’s caps like animated rag dolls, execute breathtaking flips, slides, kicks, splits, lifts and lightning moves that seem to defy gravity and human speed limits.
After completing the filming of that sequence, the Lindy Hoppers flew to Brazil and were performing in Rio de Janeiro when the bombing of Pearl Harbor plunged the United States into World War II. Unable to find transportation home, the troupe toured for six months in South America before returning home exhausted and nearly broke.
With the war on, the Lindy Hop began to fade as musical tastes changed. In 1942, Ms. Miller made her last tour with the Lindy Hoppers, appearing in New York, Washington and Baltimore. When her dance partner was drafted into the military, she left the troupe, which disbanded soon after. While her career went on for decades, it never returned to the high notes of her early years.
The Savoy Ballroom, which opened in 1926 and brought blacks and whites together in an era of racial segregation, was torn down in 1958 to make way for a housing project. On any given night, thousands had packed its hardwood floors as swing music by Ellington, Basie or Chick Webb inspired the Norma Millers.
“Black girls didn’t have many outlets,” she told a Florida radio station in 2015, eight decades after her heyday. “You had laundry. You had hairdresser. Or teacher. Now, I didn’t qualify for any of those. I could dance. I could just do it naturally.”
Norma Miller was born in Harlem on Dec. 2, 1919, the second daughter of Norman and Alma Miller, immigrants from Barbados. Her father, a shipyard worker, died of pneumonia a month before her birth, and her mother worked as a charwoman to raise her and her sister, Dot.
Ms. Miller performing with her dance troupe in the New York City Tap Extravaganza in 2004 at the Haft Auditorium at the Fashion Institute of Technology in Manhattan.Nan Melville for The New York Times
Ms. Miller performing with her dance troupe in the New York City Tap Extravaganza in 2004 at the Haft Auditorium at the Fashion Institute of Technology in Manhattan.Nan Melville for The New York Times
Norma was fascinated with dance, and her mother, though struggling to pay rent, enrolled her in Saturday dance classes. Norma danced at her mother’s “rent parties,” as friends chipped in.
In the Roaring Twenties, music was everywhere in Harlem. But after 1929, when the Millers moved into a tenement apartment on West 140th Street, music from the Savoy boomed nightly through their back windows. Looking out on the ballroom’s rear windows, Norma saw dancing patrons as shadows moving behind the curtains, doing the Charleston and the Lindy Hop.
She and her friends practiced the dances in the gym at her school, P.S. 136, and after church on the sidewalk outside the Savoy, where Mr. Ganaway discovered her. As her talents grew, she was enrolled at the Manhattan School of the Arts on the Upper West Side.
After her meteoric Lindy Hop career, Ms. Miller reinvented herself in 1952. She founded and choreographed the Norma Miller Dancers, a jazz-dance troupe that toured America and Australia for two years, then joined Count Basie on a national tour. In the pervasive racial segregation of the day, Ms. Miller and her group faced daily reminders of their secondary status in renting rooms, riding in the back of buses, dining in black eateries and sometimes confronting white protests.
In 1957, the Norma Miller Dancers played long-running engagements in Miami Beach and Las Vegas as part of an extravagant production called “The Cotton Club Revue.” The show, starring Cab Calloway and a 48-member all-black cast, drew huge nightly audiences for months. But it also stirred racial unrest, as had been anticipated: Every cast member was given an identity card issued by the police, and after each show had to retreat to a “colored” hotel.
“We were to be the first all-black show to play the Beachcomber in Miami Beach,” Ms. Miller recalled in “Stompin’ at the Savoy: The Memoir of a Jazz Dancer” (2003, with Evette Jensen). “During rehearsal, racial tensions surfaced. The day of our big dress rehearsal, there were headlines in The Miami Sun telling Murray Weinger” — a Miami Beach nightclub owner — “that they didn’t want his colored show on the beach.”
Ms. Miller lived in Las Vegas for much of the 1960s and ′70s. She did comedy routines in clubs with Redd Foxx and taught children’s dance classes. In 1972, she entertained American troops in Vietnam. She had roles in three of Mr. Foxx’s NBC sitcoms: “Sanford and Son” in 1973 and 1974, “Grady” in 1976, and “Sanford Arms” in 1977.
Besides “Queen of Swing,” John Biffar’s documentary, Ms. Miller appeared in at least nine other documentaries on dance, black comedy and other subjects, including Ken Burns’s PBS series “Jazz” (2000). She was the subject of a children’s book by Alan Govenar, “Stompin’ at the Savoy: The Story of Norma Miller” (2006). Her own books include “Swing Baby Swing” (2010, with Darlene Gist), a chronicle of swing dancing over her century.
Ms. Miller, who never married and left no immediate survivors, had a long-term relationship with her fellow “Hellzapoppin’ ” performer Roy Glenn, who died in 1971. She traveled widely to appear at swing and jazz festivals and give talks on her dancing days.
“The Savoy was our community,” she told an interviewer in 2016, “and the dance floor was the place we found freedom.”
In 2018, Ms. Miller appeared at the Herrang Dance Camp in Sweden, an annual gathering since the 1980s of Lindy Hop lovers from around the world. “A place like this is unbelievable,” she said. “It’s like Brigadoon” — the musical about a Scottish village that magically reappears once every 100 years.
 
 

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Dave Grusin Doc Recaps a Life Spent Juggling Film Scores, Jazz Cats – Variety

Dave Grusin Doc Recaps a Life Spent Juggling Film Scores, Jazz Cats – Variety

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https://variety.com/2019/music/news/dave-grusin-documentary-not-enough-time-1203205292/
 
Dave Grusin Documentary Recounts a Life Spent Juggling Film Scores and Jazz Cats
“Your music will never be more or less than you are as a human being,” said longtime friend Quincy Jones at the “Not Enough Time” screening.
By CHRIS WILLMAN
Chris Willman
Music Writer@chriswillmanFOLLOW
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·        Dave Grusin Documentary Recounts a Life Spent Juggling Film Scores and Jazz Cats

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The title of the just-completed documentary “Dave Grusin: Not Enough Time” reflects the subject’s lament that there aren’t enough hours in the day or days in the year for all the music that needs to be made. That desire to stretch the clock might seem hyperbolic coming from other musicians, but not for someone whose hats have included film and TV scorer, concert performer, producer and jazz label mogul, often all at once.
At a post-screening Q&A in Santa Monica this week, the great jazz bassist Marcus Millerspoke about being a youthful protege and watching Grusin casually change hats mid-day… and assuming that was normal.
“I started playing with Dave Grusin when I was 17, 18 — I don’t know how old, but I know I had braces,” Marcus laughed. “To see him run a session, and then know that he’s going to score a movie that night after the session… He was always working. Him and Quincy Jones, these guys are doing 14 things at the same time, and I just assumed if you’re a musician, that’s what you do. So I followed in their footsteps, man. You know, sleep – what’s that?… I thought he was from New York, because he was a hustler.”
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Said director Barbara Bentree, “For a long time we had this running joke among the crew that we were going to call this film ‘He Did That?’ It was a constant discovery.” One of the things she was most pleased about getting access to for clips was Andy Williams’ 1960s variety show, which had Grusin as musical director, pianist and occasional on-screen comic foil, before the film runs — sometimes hurriedly, sometimes at leisure — through a resume that includes another youthful stint with Sergio Mendes; the themes for “Maude,” “Good Times” and “St. Elsewhere”; Oscar-nominated scores for “On Golden Pond” and “The Fabulous Baker Boys” (among others); the also Oscar-nominated “Tootsie” hit “It Might Be You”; and the longtime presidency of the GRP label.
After previously showing in incomplete form at jazz festivals, “Not Enough Time” was being screened at Smart Post West for members of the Society of Composers & Lyricists, along with interested distributors. The post-screening panel, moderated by Variety‘s Jon Burlingame, included Bentree and executive music supervisor Joel Sill, along with Miller. Among those in the audience were Bentree’s husband and co-producer, John Rangel, movie-theme king Alan Bergman and Quincy Jones himself, who offered remarks from the audience.
Grusin was decidedly not from New York, as the documentary shows, but Colorado; he now resides on a ranch in Montana, where most of the interviews were filmed, not just of him but of “fishing buddies” like Michael Keaton, Tom Brokaw and author Thomas McGuane.
“I hear nature in his music,” said Bentree, who caught footage of Grusin doing something he proudly hints that he might be even better at than composing: fly-fishing. “I’m someone from rural Minnesota, and I think that’s one of the reasons his music moves me.”
Miller remembered him and some of his fellow players forming an expectation of Grusin based on his folksy appearance. “We were these urban kids from New York, and this cowboy cat comes and sits down at the piano with us, and we’re like ‘Ooh, this isn’t going to go well at all.’” It did.
But the Grammy-winning bassist came to learn that the “cowboy” aspect of Grusin’s demeanor didn’t exactly translate to laid-back. Grusin had “no ego at all,” Miller said, “but he was so concerned about the music that that was like the ego. In other words, he wouldn’t yell at you to make himself bigger. What he would do is yell at you because you played a wrong part. Not that he ever yelled at me! Let’s get that part right.”
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CREDIT: EDDIE JAG
Miller came to appreciate the sense of wide open spaces that Grusin brought to his scores, when he wasn’t improvising with Manhattan’s finest. “You know who he reminds me of?” asked the bassist. “The classic early American composers — Charles Ives and these guys who, when you heard their music, you really got a sense of America… not the edges, but the center of America. He somehow has figured out how to continue that tradition and update it to include all the other influences that he obviously has, like jazz and urban sounds.”
Humility was frequently mentioned as a quality of Grusin’s, although it wasn’t that that caused him to skip the Oscars when he won best score for “The Milagro Beanfield War” in 1988. As he explains in the film, he simply skipped that night because he figured he had zero chance after showing up and losing for much more popular films, like “Heaven Can Wait” and “The Champ.” Although he never won again, he would be nominated several times more, including for “The Firm,” one of his many collaborations with Sydney Pollack, an all-piano score so innovative that no one but the most attentive musicians noticed it was solely piano.
The apparent humility made the documentary a tough sell for Bentree. “He said, ‘Oh, no one will be interested in that.’ …  It was really his lovely wife Nan (Newton) who said, ‘Dave, if you don’t let these two musicians (Bentree and Rangel) do this movie about you… once you pass on, someone else is going to do that story and you’re not going to have any input.’ We gave him final approval on everything. It was really Nan who ended up being a coproducer on the film and got all these wonderful people to come participate.”
Bentree spoke about what had to be left on the cutting room floor. “When Dave talks about that era of everybody on the street (in Manhattan)… We made a map of all the recording studios in NYC. It was every block.” The audience of veteran musicians groaned at the omission, but she assured them she’d try to get it on the DVD or the movie’s website.
Sill launched his long association with Grusin when he was a studio executive. “I met him on the film ‘Reds.’ Stephen Sondheim was the composer on the film and he couldn’t actually take being tortured that much from (Warren) Beatty, so he left, and Beatty said, ‘Get me Dave Grusin. He did a great job on “Heaven Can Wait”.’ And that was the beginning of a relationship that lasted through seven or eight films,” and into this new one.
“One of the things I’ve noticed is he’s so empathetic, he actually feels the characters in the film, like he feels people in real life,” Sill said. “Like Quincy says in the film, God left his hands on his shoulders, and I think he also slipped one hand down and touched his heart. He’s just got so much soul, and watching him work, he’s so gentle, but he’s so clear about what he wants to get, and he works so hard to get it.” Sill likened Grusin’s output to being “like Christmas morning for a kid. He just gives all these gifts.”
Jones, asked by Burlingame what Grusin’s legacy will be, responded: “Some serious music — in every category. … Your music will never be more or less than you are as a human being. That’s what it’s about. Dave is an incredible human being. Now, I know him backwards. That’s where it starts. A human being.”
 

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Ahmad Jamal 1959- Darn that dream – YouTube

Ahmad Jamal 1959- Darn that dream – YouTube

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Check out who’s in the audience!
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6BD8-aYrKew

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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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CASH MCCALL (JANUARY 28, 1941 – APRIL 20, 2019)

CASH MCCALL (JANUARY 28, 1941 – APRIL 20, 2019)

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CASH MCCALL (JANUARY 28, 1941 – APRIL 20, 2019)

30/4/2019

​Cash McCall
July 1978
Montreux Jazz festival, Switzerland
Photo By Lionel Decoster
​Cash McCall
July 2018
Ecko Studio, Memphis
Photo by Nola Blue Records

​It is with great sadness that we share the news that Cash McCall passed away on April 20, 2019 after a long and courageous battle with lung cancer. His gentle spirit, humble nature and genuine kindness were a joy to behold, and he will be deeply missed.
 
Funeral details for Cash
Saturday, May 4, 2019
Wake: 10:30 am 
Funeral: 12:00 pm
The Healing Center Full Gospel Baptist Church, 3885 Tchulahoma Rd, Memphis, TN 38118
Born Morris Dollison, Jr. in New Madrid, Missouri on January 28, 1941, Cash McCall spent his early years on Chicago’s North Side.  From there, the family moved to Mississippi, where Cash first learned to play guitar—on a piece of baling wire nailed to the side of their home.  As a young man, he served his country in the US Army, where he was seriously injured while training to be a paratrooper. 
 
After completing his military service, Dollison returned to Chicago where he began his gospel career, singing and playing guitar or electric bass with well-regarded quartets including the Jubilee Hummingbirds, the Pilgrim Jubilees, the Gospel Songbirds, and the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi.  By 1964, he’d appeared on singles by the Jubilee Hummingbirds and the Gospel Songbirds.  
 
After dabbling in the secular world as a sideman, Dollison recorded his single, “The Earth Worm,” for One-derful’s M-Pac! imprint.  He continued working for One-derful! as a songwriter & session guitarist, writing several songs for Otis Clay including his hit “That’s How It Is (When You’re In Love)”.  By 1966, Dollison had written a new single, “When You Wake Up,” and took it to Thomas Records where he cut it with the house rhythm section.  Later, Monk Higgins added horns and background vocals and Thomas Records issued the single under the fictitious name of Cash McCall. Unbeknownst to Dollison, he learned of his new alias when first hearing his song on WVON radio.  “When You Wake Up” became a national R&B hit.  When Thomas folded in 1967, Higgins convinced McCall to join him at Chess Records. In addition to writing two singles of his own—“S.O.S.” and “It’s Not How Good You Make It”— Cash wrote for many of the label’s major names, including Little Milton (his hits “More And More” and “Let Me Down Easy”), Etta James (“I Prefer You”), and Rotary Connection, as well as Muddy Waters, Koko Taylor and many gospel stars. McCall was also a session guitarist on countless Chess/Checker records.
 
It wasn’t until 1974 that McCall released his first full-length album, “Omega Man,” on Paula Records (where he also did some producing). When Minnie Riperton offered him a gig as guitarist with Los Angeles-based Rotary Connection, McCall and his wife relocated to L.A.  Cash later released albums “No More Doggin’” for L+R in 1983, “Cash Up Front” on Stone in 1988 and “The Vintage Room” in 2007 on Dixon Landing. His strong connection with Willie Dixon brought McCall one of his proudest moments when he played on Dixon’s Grammy-winning 1988 album “Hidden Charms.” He also played on Dixon’s Grammy-nominated soundtrack album “Ginger Ale Afternoon” the next year.
 
In the early 90’s, McCall and his family moved to Memphis, Tennessee.  In 2018, upon reuniting with longtime friend Benny Turner, the two returned to the studio to pay homage to their Windy City Roots on the acclaimed album, “Going Back Home,” released on Nola Blue Records in 2019.  
 
(excerpts from bio by Bill Dahl, Music Journalist, on www.cashmccallmusic.com)

 

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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
http://www.jazzpromoservices.com

HAVE A JAZZ EVENT, NEW CD OR IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE JAZZ COMMUNITY YOU WANT TO PROMOTE? CONTACT JAZZ PROMO SERVICES FOR PRICE QUOTE.

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Jazz Drummer Joe Chambers On Blue Note: “The Black Musicians’ Label”

Jazz Drummer Joe Chambers On Blue Note: “The Black Musicians’ Label”

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Jazz Drummer Joe Chambers On Blue Note: “The Black Musicians’ Label”

An in-demand sideman for everyone from Wayne Shorter to Donald Byrd, drummer Joe Chambers recorded some of his greatest work for Blue Note in the 60s.

Charles Waring  April 11, 2019
Mention Joe Chambers’ name to devoted followers of Blue Note Records and it’s likely that their eyes will light up in recognition. That’s because Chambers had the distinction of playing drums on over 20 sessions for Alfred Lion’s iconic New York-based jazz label in the 60s.
During a fertile six-year period between 1964 and 1969, Chambers was very much in demand as a sideman and got to play with some of the biggest names in jazz, appearing on key Blue Note albums by Freddie Hubbard, Donald Byrd, Wayne Shorter, Joe Henderson, Sam Rivers, Bobby Hutcherson and Andrew Hill. Away from Blue Note, Chambers – who also plays the vibraphone and is a noteworthy composer in his own right – recorded with Archie Shepp, Miles Davis (albeit briefly, during the trumpeter’s In A Silent Way phase in the late 60s), Chick Corea, Charles Mingus, Chet Baker and Joe Zawinul, and was also a member of fellow drummer Max Roach’s percussion ensemble, M’Boom, with whom he recorded six albums. Chambers began recording albums under his own name from 1974 onwards and even led his own session for Blue Note in 1998.

“I wasn’t nervous… We were very tight”

Now 76, Chambers reminiscences about his Blue Note days in the 60s with a special fondness. In an interview with uDiscover Music, he vividly remembers his first recording session for the label.
It was on Thursday, 7 May 1964. He was a 21-year-old drummer originally from Chester, Pennsylvania, and had been asked by rising trumpet star Freddie Hubbard to play on what would become Breaking Point, the Indianapolis horn blower’s seventh recording date for Blue Note. “I met Freddie in Washington, DC,” recalls Chambers. “I lived there from about 1960 to ’63 and played with a group called The “JFK” Quintet, named by our manager after President John F Kennedy. We had a three-year residency at a club called The Bohemian Caverns. Lots of musicians – like Miles Davis, [John] Coltrane, Cannonball [Adderley], Art Blakey & The [Jazz] Messengers – would go there.”
Hubbard, then 25, had just left The Jazz Messengers and was looking to put a new group of musicians together for live dates and a recording session. He caught Chambers playing drums with The “JFK” Quintet in DC, and afterwards approached him about collaborating together. “He heard me and was impressed,” says Chambers, “so I went to New York in ’63 and we formed a band together consisting of himself, [saxophonist and flautist] James Spalding, [pianist] Ronnie Matthews, [bassist] Eddie Khan, and myself. That’s when we recorded that Breaking Point album.”
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Chambers says that he wasn’t apprehensive about his debut recording session. “It was very exciting,” he laughs, “but I wasn’t nervous because we had played the music live and were familiar with all of the tunes.” He remembers they spent six weeks on the road, which was an opportunity to hone the material and perfect it. “We were very tight, so when it came to recording, it just felt like we were on the stage.”

“There were no other drummers writing music”

But as well as playing drums on the session, which was recorded at the legendary Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, Joe Chambers also composed one of the album’s best songs: an elegant slow ballad called ‘Mirrors’. “It was a tune written for a lesson and to demonstrate what was known as ‘mirror writing’, where themes are juxtaposed and reversed,” explains Chambers. “I wrote it while I was studying theory and composition at the American University when I lived in Washington, DC.”
Chambers recalls that he showed Freddie Hubbard the music for ‘Mirrors’ when the trumpeter was involved in rehearsals for Eric Dolphy’s Out To Lunch! album. “I met Eric in DC and played with him for two weeks. Later, back in New York, he assembled a group consisting of himself, Freddie Hubbard, Richard Davis, Bobby Hutcherson and myself, and we did a big concert at the Brooklyn Academy Of Music. Eric called me to the rehearsal for Out To Lunch! even though I wasn’t actually playing on the date [drummer Tony Williams got the gig] and told me to bring music. So I brought ‘Mirrors’ and played it. So that’s how Freddie saw the song. He looked at it and said, ‘Yeah, OK, I’m going to do this.’”
As a drummer who wrote music, Chambers was unique, and he would go on to be a prolific composer, contributing 17 songs that were recorded by Bobby Hutcherson while the vibraphonist was at Blue Note in the 60s. “There were no other drummers writing music, maybe except Max Roach,” says Chambers, who reveals that he learned to play the piano as a youngster. “I was always interested in composing from when I was little. To me, it was no big deal – just a natural thing.”

“We never talked about anything. We just played”

After appearing on Breaking Point, Joe Chambers’ phone didn’t stop ringing. “People started calling me from Blue Note. That’s when I got hooked up with Bobby Hutcherson, because I met him in DC too. He was with [alto saxophonist] Jackie McLean, who came to The Caverns. Then Bobby and I joined a band that Andrew Hill had started.”
With Hill, Chambers recorded his second Blue Note session, on the day of his 22nd birthday, on 25 June 1964, which resulted in the album Andrew!!!. He did two more albums with Hill: One For One (which stayed in the can until 1975) and Compulsion!!!!!, recorded in 1965 but not released until two years later. “Andrew Hill’s music was quite different and unique,” says Chambers, reflecting on one of Blue Note’s most prominent avant-garde figures. “His music was quite modern – very jagged and asymmetrical. He reminded me of [Thelonious] Monk, sometimes, so it required a different way of playing.”
It was while playing together on an Andrew Hill session that Chambers became good friends with vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson. They were of a similar age (the vibraphonist was just 18 months older) and, according to Chambers, “We just gravitated to each other. We kind of just fell in and clicked. We never talked about anything, we just played.” But there was a definite sense of musical simpatico between them, evidenced by the fact that, between 1965 and 1969, Joe Chambers played on nine of Hutcherson’s Blue Note albums, including the classic 1965 LP Components, on which four of his tunes – including ‘Juba Dance’ – occupied the whole of the original vinyl’s second side.
Hutcherson’s 1968 album Patterns, recently reissued on audiophile vinyl as part of a subscription-only box set called The Blue Note Review: Spirit & Time,also boasted four Joe Chambers compositions. “I don’t know how that happened,” laughs the drummer/composer, “because I wasn’t that pushy. With Components, where one side of the album was his songs and the other side was mine, I just brought in some tunes and was amazed that Blue Note accepted that and went along with it.”

“I was content as a sideman”

Given Chambers’ growing renown in the mid-to-late 60s, it’s surprising that Blue Note’s bosses, producers Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff, didn’t give him a recording date as a leader. But according to Chambers, there was a time when they offered him an opportunity to lead a session, but he was too immersed in his life as a sideman to consider it.
“During the time I was recording a lot – all those sessions with Sam Rivers, Andrew Hill and Joe Henderson – they asked me if I wanted to lead a session but I didn’t even follow up on it. I was not very business-like. I remember they said, ‘Let’s get together, sit down, and you show us some tunes.’ But I never followed up on it. I was content to be a sideman and doing what I was doing. I had no responsibilities other than show up and learn the tunes.”
Unlike other jazz labels of the time, Blue Note paid musicians to rehearse beforehand, usually several days prior to the session date. According to Joe Chambers that was the reason why Blue Note recordings had a sense of focus and cohesion. “We sounded like a working band in the studio because we went and rehearsed for about a week. All of the rehearsals were held at [jazz bandleader] Lynn Oliver’s studios. The music for Blue Note was more complex than just blowing sessions, so you required a little more time. We would put in four to five days for each album and by the time you went in the studio, you sounded real tight, like a working band.”

Joe Chambers WCHAMJ01 web optimised 740 watermarked
I’ve got some things I’m working on.” Joe Chambers in 2019.

When it came to the day of recording, Chambers remembers the drill: “We’d meet at the Empire Hotel and drive up to Jersey around midday. On average, a session would take four hours, maybe five, tops, but you wouldn’t go past that.”
Masterminding the recording sessions was the studio’s owner, sound boffin Rudy Van Gelder, who, Chambers reveals, could be both secretive and protective about his recording methods. “Rudy didn’t allow anybody to go into the control booth,” says the drummer. “He didn’t like people to see what he was doing and how he got the sound he got. And he wore gloves to handle his equipment.” Despite this, Chambers is deeply appreciative of the audio engineer’s role in capturing jazz on record. “He absolutely mastered the art of recording the quintet sound with a couple of horns, bass, piano and drums,” he says. “I wasn’t stuck in a booth like the way they record drums now. We were all there together on the floor facing each other.”

“Wayne Shorter is one of the greatest writers in jazz”

Other high points of Joe Chambers’ time at Blue Note were his sessions with saxophonist/composer Wayne Shorter, who returned to the label in 2012 and whose 2018 album, Emanon, won a Grammy award for Best Jazz Instrumental Album.
Chambers played on four Shorter albums between 1965 and 1967: EtceteraThe All Seeing EyeAdam’s Apple and Schizophrenia. “At that time, I knew Wayne was a talented writer,” says Chambers, “but now I know that he is one of the greatest writers in jazz. His tunes are like standards. They teach them in schools and all the students are interested in playing them. I remember that when I came on the scene with Freddie Hubbard, Wayne dug me because I was doing something different from what he had been used to doing with Art Blakey.”
Chambers says that Etcetera, just reissued on vinyl as part of Blue Note’s Tone Poet Audiophile Vinyl Series, is his favourite session with Shorter. “When I listen to it, there are some things that were happening that were very advanced at the time,” he declares. “The arrangements were open for a lot of multilayered polyrhythms.”

“It represents my best playing on record”

Tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson’s Mode For Joe is another classic Blue Note album that Joe Chambers contributed to. The veteran drummer says Henderson was a musician that he regarded highly. “Post-Coltrane and [Sonny] Rollins, I would say Joe and Wayne were the major saxophone players,” he asserts. “People don’t know this, but at one point, Miles [Davis] in ’67 had them both in his band together. Joe and Wayne are equal talents as far as I’m concerned, but Joe played with more soul. When I was coming up as a teenager playing R&B in black bars, saxophone players would either walk around the bar or get up on it, and Joe sounded like he walked the bar. He had that thing in his playing. It’s a soulful sound that the old house-rock tenors like Red Prysock and Illinois Jacquet had.”
Another favourite Blue Note session of Joe Chambers’ was for Contours, a 1965 album by saxophonist/flautist Sam Rivers, which has also been reissued as part of Blue Note’s Tone Poet Audiophile Vinyl Series.
“I did it very early in my Blue Note days,” Chambers recalls of the session. “I think that it represents some of my best playing on record. I was playing with Herbie Hancock and Ron Carter, and it’s just real crisp and some of the things I was doing were very innovative for quintet playing. I’ve been on a lot of other things but that’s the album I really like because of the whole concept and the way we went about it.”

“I’m back out working in the streets and hustling”

Twenty-nine years after his last session as a sideman for Blue Note, in 1998 the Philly drummer signed to the label as a leader for the first and only time and recorded an album called Mirrors, whose title track was a new interpretation of the song Freddie Hubbard recorded back in 1964. Chambers also played vibes on it.
“I look at that album and think that’s what I should have been doing way back when Blue Note first asked me to record,” he laughs. “[Producer] Michael Cuscuna was instrumental in bringing me to the label. I thought it was a good record but when I think about it, I should have been making albums like that back in ’65 or ’66.”
As well as playing jazz, for many years Joe Chambers has had a parallel academic career. Until recently, he enjoyed a long spell as the Thomas S Kenan Distinguished Professor Of Jazz at the University Of North Carolina in Wilmington, but he reveals he’s now fully committed to playing music again. “I’m not teaching there anymore,” he discloses. “Now, I’m back out working in the streets hustling. I’ve got some things I’m working on, which includes trying to revive the M’Boom percussion group.”
Reflecting on Blue Note’s achievements and musical legacy, Joe Chambers believes that it was an important record label not just for jazz in general but also African-American musicians in particular. “Given the social and political strata of the United States back in those times, the black musicians were really glad that people were interested in recording them,” says the veteran drummer/composer. “And Blue Note recorded almost every major African-American musician from the late 40s to the 60s. It was, above all else, the black American jazz musicians’ label.”
Listen to the best of Blue Note on Apple Music and Spotify.
 
 

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Charlie Parker Jazz Festival 2019: SummerStage-2019-Season-Announce-Press-Release.pdf

Charlie Parker Jazz Festival 2019: SummerStage-2019-Season-Announce-Press-Release.pdf

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https://cityparksfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/SummerStage-2019-Season-Announce-Press-Release.pdf

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Dave Samuels R.I.P.

Dave Samuels R.I.P.

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https://www.facebook.com/Spyro-Gyra-191795950861446/
 
Today the world said goodbye to Dave Samuels, a man of great talent, intelligence and wit. He has not been well for quite a while, but the pain of his passing is as acute as it would be even if it had not been long expected. Farewell, brother.

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Strange Fruit: The most shocking song of all time?: bbc.com

Strange Fruit: The most shocking song of all time?: bbc.com

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http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/20190415-strange-fruit-the-most-shocking-song-of-all-time
 
bbc.com
Strange Fruit: The most shocking song of all time?
Aida Amoako
9-12 minutes


“Can you imagine never having heard this song before and realising what the strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees is? That’s something that unfolds in the time of listening, so that image of bulging eyes and twisted mouth jumps out at the listener.” Cultural critic Emily J Lordi is describing the particular power of a song that still shocks 80 years after it was first performed.
On 20 April 1939, the jazz singer Billie Holiday (born Eleanora Fagan in 1915) stepped into a studio with an eight-piece band to record Strange Fruit. This jarring song about the horrors of lynching was not only Holiday’s biggest hit, but it would become one of the most influential protest songs of the 20th Century – continuing to speak to us about racial violence today.
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It was named the song of the century by Time magazine in 1999, and the story of Strange Fruit’s conception has entered legend. Originally a poem called Bitter Fruit, it was written by the Jewish school teacher Abel Meeropol under the pseudonym Lewis Allen in response to lynching in US southern states. “I wrote Strange Fruit because I hate lynching, and I hate injustice, and I hate the people who perpetuate it,” Meeropol said in 1971. He never witnessed a lynching but it is suggested he wrote Strange Fruit after seeing Lawrence Beitler’s distressing photograph of the 1930 lynching of Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith in Indiana. Lynching had begun to subside by the time the poem was published – but photographs like Beitler’s seared these graphic images into public consciousness.
Soon after publication, Meeropol set the song to music. It was performed at union meetings and even at Madison Square Garden by the jazz singer Laura Duncan. It was there that Robert Gordon, the new floor manager at the jazz club Café Society, supposedly first heard Strange Fruit in 1938. He mentioned it to Barney Josephson, the club’s founder, and Meeropol was invited to play it for Holiday.
In the spotlight
William Dufty, who co-wrote Holiday’s autobiography Lady Sings the Blues, once said: “Holiday doesn’t sing songs; she transforms them.” Holiday, her accompanist Sonny White and arranger Danny Mendelsohn, worked solidly for three weeks before debuting the revamped Strange Fruit at Café Society. In his 2001 book Strange Fruit: The Biography of a Song, the writer David Margolick suggests the club, with its policy of complete integration, was “probably the only place in America where Strange Fruit could have been sung and savoured”. To ensure that it was indeed savoured, Holiday and Josephson created specific conditions for the performances. It would be the last song in the set, there would be absolute silence, no bar service and the lights would be dimmed save for a single spotlight on Holiday’s face. As Josephson said, “People had to remember Strange Fruit, get their insides burned with it.”
What happened on the first night Holiday performed Strange Fruit at Café Society foreshadowed the response it would get when released as a record. “The first time I sang it I thought it was a mistake … there wasn’t even a patter of applause when I finished. Then a lone person began to clap nervously. Then suddenly everyone was clapping,” said Holiday in her autobiography. To hear Holiday sing of “the sudden smell of burning flesh” minutes after her jazz ballads was disquieting. Meeropol wrote: “She gave a startling, most dramatic and effective interpretation, which could jolt an audience out of its complacency anywheres [sic].”
As the song became a feature of her sets, Holiday witnessed a range of reactions, from tears to walkouts and racist hecklers. Radio stations in the US and abroad blacklisted it and Holiday’s label, Columbia Records, refused to record it. When she toured the song, some proprietors tried discouraging her from singing it for fear of alienating or angering their patrons.
There is simmering rage in the way she clips the syllables… but there’s also a deep mournful quality to Holiday’s performance – Emily J Lordi
It wasn’t just the song’s political nature that startled and moved listeners but the way Holiday performed it, a manner often described as haunting. Lordi argues in her book Black Resonance: Iconic Women Singers and African American Literature that this was the result of deliberate choices Holiday made. She tells BBC Culture: “There’s a real minimalist aesthetic to her recording that calls attention to just how striking the lyric is… There is simmering rage in the way she clips the syllables and that ‘drop’. But there’s also a deep mournful quality to Holiday’s performance.”
What is so remarkable about Strange Fruit is how indelible a mark it made on American society so soon after its release. Samuel Grafton, a columnist for the New York Post, wrote of the song: “It will, even after the tenth hearing, make you blink and hold onto your chair. Even now, as I think of it, the short hair on the back of my neck tightens and I want to hit somebody. And I think I know who.”
It was such an in-your-face type of protest song… it did really leave both the singer and the audience no place to hide – Tad Hershorn
Strange Fruit was not the first popular song to deal with race. Fats Waller’s Black and Blue had come out 10 years earlier, and Lead Belly recorded The Bourgeois Blues in the same month Holiday recorded Strange Fruit. But Strange Fruit stands out among protest songs for its graphic content and subsequent commercial success. Tad Hershorn, an archivist at the Rutgers Institute of Jazz Studies, tells BBC Culture: “It was such an in-your-face type of protest song [that it] really gained her fame outside of Harlem … it did really leave both the singer and the audience no place to hide.”
A call to arms
This bold confrontation helped galvanise a movement that would eventually alter the course of US history. Anti-lynching campaigners sent Strange Fruit to congressmen to encourage them to propose a viable anti-lynching bill. A review in Time Magazine referred to the song as “a prime piece of musical propaganda for the NAACP”. Ahmet Ertegun, who later co-founded Atlantic Records, called it “a declaration of war … the beginning of the civil rights movement”. Strange Fruit also brought its creators unwanted attention. In 1940 Meeropol, a socialist, was called to testify before a committee investigating communism and asked whether the US Communist Party had paid him to write Strange Fruit. Journalist Johann Hari suggests that while stories of Holiday’s drug use had already been circling, her first performance of Strange Fruit put her firmly on the radar of Harry Anslinger, the notorious head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics.
For some, Strange Fruit and Holiday’s personal life are inextricable: the aspects of her biography that made her the embodiment of a tragic jazz heroine are the source of the haunting quality of her voice. Despite the fact that Holiday never witnessed a lynching (contrary to what the 1972 Diana Ross film Lady Sings the Blues shows), Strange Fruit still evoked the racial injustice that she felt killed her father, Clarence, who was refused medical treatment at a Texas hospital. 
But as Strange Fruit has become separated from Holiday’s personal life over the decades, it has also become distanced from the specific horror of lynching. “It’s come to sort of represent racism generally,” Margolick tells BBC Culture. “Every once in a while there’s some horrific moment but lynching has become kind of a metaphor and, in that sense, the song has become more metaphorical than literal over the decades.”
Perhaps this is why in later years, according to Margolick, Meeropol suggested Strange Fruit “belonged to the Thirties”. But its influence has spanned decades. The songs associated with the civil rights movement of the 1960s are less explicit than Strange Fruit – but Margolick argues that it “conditioned the kinds of people who later sang protest music in the 1960s and taught them the impact that a strong song can have”.
Many musicians have covered, sampled, adapted Strange Fruit, the most famous being Nina Simone in 1965, while Kanye West sampled Simone’s cover for his 2013 track Blood on the Leaves. In 2017, British singer Rebecca Ferguson announced she would only accept the invitation to sing at then President-elect Trump’s inauguration if she could sing Strange Fruit. For Lordi, its unending power lies in the way it “distills the fact of racial violence so unmistakably. It’s shorthand for ‘What is a song I can think of that most powerfully indicts the ongoing legacy of racial violence in this country and across the world?’”
In 2002, Strange Fruit was added to the National Registry of the Library of Congress, immortalising it as a song of great significance to the musical heritage of the US. Holiday died in 1959 and Meeropol in 1986 – but their collaboration has endured, its capacity to shock never waning. It has inspired musicians since to sing about injustice with candour and the awareness that a song can be a timeless impetus for social change.
“There’s something that’s still very radioactive about the song.” says Margolick. “It’s still relevant because race is still relevant. It’s on the front pages of our newspapers every day. The impulses that [Meeropol] was talking about are still very much with us.”
If you would like to comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Culture, head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.
And if you liked this story, sign up for the weekly bbc.com features newsletter, called “If You Only Read 6 Things This Week”. A handpicked selection of stories from BBC Future, Culture, Capital and Travel, delivered to your inbox every Friday.
 

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The Jewish Trumpeter Who Entertained Nazis to Survive the Holocaust | The New Yorker

The Jewish Trumpeter Who Entertained Nazis to Survive the Holocaust | The New Yorker

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https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/the-jewish-trumpeter-who-entertained-nazis-to-survive-the-holocaust

The Jewish Trumpeter Who Entertained Nazis to Survive the Holocaust

Amanda Petrusich
In 1961, sixteen years after Eric Vogel leaped from a transport train headed toward the Nazi concentration camp at Dachau, he recounted his escape for Downbeat, an American jazz magazine: “This is a story of horror, terror, and death but also of joy and pleasure, the history of a jazz band whose members were doomed to die.” English wasn’t Vogel’s first language—he was born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, in 1896—but it’s hard to imagine a more gripping opening line. Downbeat ran his story in three parts, each with the title “Jazz in a Nazi Concentration Camp.”
While Vogel was imprisoned by the Nazis—first in the so-called model camp, Theresienstadt, and then later at the Auschwitz death camp—he and a dozen or so others played in a jazz band called the Ghetto Swingers. There were similar groups at many camps throughout Nazi-controlled Europe: musicians who were forced to perform, on command and under inconceivable duress, for the S.S. The particular cruelty of this—desecrating and corrupting the creative impulse that fuels and sustains art—remains wildly perverse, though Vogel was nonetheless grateful for any chance, however grim, to make the music that he loved.
The Nazis officially condemned jazz as “jungle music,” identifying it with blacks and Jews, but a hunger for it remained, both in the camps and elsewhere in Europe. A widely distributed Nazi poster denouncing entartete (or “decadent”) music featured a man with exaggerated features playing a saxophone and wearing a top hat, tails, and a six-pointed gold star. The journalist Mike Zwerin, a trombonist from Queens who covered jazz for the International Herald Tribune, later wrote about the Luftwaffe officer Dietrich Schulz-Köhn, who published a secret newsletter about jazz in occupied Europe, using the pen name Dr. Jazz. “If anybody who loved jazz could not be a Nazi, there seem to have been quite a few close calls,” Zwerin noted. For a while, jazz kept Vogel useful to the Nazis—and therefore alive. According to Vogel, the Ghetto Swingers did very good arrangements of George Gershwin’s “I Got Rhythm” (“I got rhythm / I got music / I got my man / who could ask for anything more?”) and, incredibly, Georges Boulanger’s “Avant de Mourir,” or “Before Dying.”
Still, by the time an emaciated Vogel jumped from the train, in 1945—evading machine-gun fire, lunging toward a dark forest, his bones surely rattling against one another—many of his bandmates had been murdered. Vogel, who played trumpet, the pianist Martin Roman, and the guitarist Coco Schumann were the only survivors. “Being a member of The Ghetto Swingers was an iffy business,” Schumann wrote later. “It did not guarantee survival.”
When I first heard about the Ghetto Swingers, I had a difficult time processing the story. I’d received a letter from a man named Todd Allen, of Chatham, New Jersey; he had read a story I’d written about the lost Yiddish folk songs of the Second World War, and knew I had an ongoing interest in obscure musical artifacts. Allen had recently discovered a few boxes of Vogel’s things, languishing in a closet in Las Vegas. Felicita Danola, his wife’s grandmother, had been hired in Vogel’s old age as his live-in caretaker. When Vogel died, in 1980, Danola acquired some of his belongings. Vogel had thought to organize them, and Danola had thought to keep them, but the material had gone untouched for several decades. Allen had it now. Did I want to come see it? There were photos, letters, magazine articles. The improbability of the entire enterprise—musicians creating art under the most odious and debilitating conditions imaginable—made the fact of the Ghetto Swingers seem miraculous to me, if not incomprehensible. I went to New Jersey.
Allen and his wife, Ruth, received me warmly, and, over the next several months, they helped me piece together Vogel’s story. Vogel was an amateur musician, perhaps more of an aficionado than a savant. He was stout—before the war, he was about two hundred and ten pounds—and round-faced, with big, kind eyes. His eyebrows were pleasingly thick and arched into two little peaks. Vogel was the type of guy who could I.D. a horn solo mere seconds after the stylus hit the record, a serious and devoted student of the form, an instinctive critic. He was not above some light boasting about his record collection, which he described as “one of the largest collections of American jazz records in my country.”
On March 15, 1939—the same day that the Czech President, Emil Hácha, granted free passage to German soldiers, after Hitler had threatened to bomb Prague—the Gestapo pounded on the door of the apartment that Vogel shared with his parents, in Brno. The officer recognized Vogel from a jam session that they’d both attended a few weeks back. How odd that confrontation must have felt—meeting again under once unthinkable circumstances. The officer assured Vogel that he would be safe. “This was the first time that jazz was deeply involved in shaping my life. It was not to be the last,” Vogel wrote.
After the German occupation, Vogel lost his job. He was required to wear a yellow Star of David and forbidden to be outside after 8 P.M. His family now shared their two-bedroom apartment with two other Jewish families. Vogel clung to jazz as a sort of life preserver. “I still managed to play somewhat muted jazz in my apartment,” he writes, “and was in demand by bandleaders to write more arrangements.” Eventually, his short-wave radio was confiscated by the Gestapo. The Gestapo also took his trumpet, though he soaked the valves in sulfuric acid before surrendering it, “to prevent anyone from playing military marches on the horn used to playing jazz.” Vogel took a job with the local Jewish council, and was ordered to help organize umschulungskurse, or “retraining” courses. In theory, these were supposed to teach people practical skills that would allow them to emigrate, but Vogel was asked to lead a course on jazz. He had about forty applicants, and turned them into a band: the Kille Dillers. “I had found in one Down Beat an expression, ‘killer diller,’ that I liked very much, though I didn’t know the exact meaning of the words,” Vogel wrote. (A bit of lost mid-century American slang, “killer diller” refers, in a general way, to something sensational, though jazz musicians of the big-band era used it specifically to refer to a musician who could really play; Vogel also noted that “Kille” sounded a bit like the Hebrew word “kehilah,” or congregation.)
The Kille Dillers, in 1940. Vogel stands in the center, holding his trumpet in his left hand.
The Kille Dillers fell apart as the transport orders started coming in. Vogel’s notice arrived on March 25, 1942. He was sent west to Theresienstadt, a transit camp and sorting station in Terezín, a fortress town in the Nazi-occupied Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. Theresienstadt had been picked, he wrote, “to be shown to a commission of the International Red Cross as proof that everything written in the enemy press about concentration camps, with gas chambers, forced labor, and killing, was a lie.” In January of 1943, Vogel wrote to the camp’s department of leisure activities to see about establishing a jazz orchestra; he was given permission to assemble it. A band shell was erected in the main square, and a coffee house opened. The Ghetto Swingers were forced to play there “every day for many hours,” Vogel recalled. “It was set up as a so-called paradise camp—a showcase for propaganda purposes,” Bret Werb, an ethnomusicologist at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, in Washington, D.C., told me. “A lot of extraordinary things happened there. Many talented people who were sent there were allowed to exercise their artistic bents.”
The Ghetto Swingers were being compelled to participate in what was, by all accounts, a hideous charade, but the music that they played was real—which means that, for the players, it still offered a brief, guilty kind of solace, a bit of “joy and pleasure,” as Vogel wrote. “People did it because they felt better doing it, because it helped them escape,” Werb said. “Songs were spontaneously created there, or remembered. People’s access to the outside world was largely frozen in 1939, so a lot of the camp songs created are based on pop songs that people heard at the end of 1939.”
Vogel was able to recruit some of the best European players of the interwar era, including the clarinetist Fritz Weiss, and he soon found himself a little out of his league, musically. “The band was augmented by three trumpets and one trombone, and I was politely asked by the other members of the band to take the third chair and not play too loudly,” he wrote. The German-Jewish pianist Martin Roman was recognized at one of the band’s early shows. “They had heard that I had played in Holland with Coleman Hawkins, who was the greatest saxophonist in the world,” he said in 1989, in an interview with the musicologist David Bloch. “I improvised, and they did not let me stop.”
Vogel, who had never been a professional musician, was happy to cede control of the group. A few days later, Roman was approached by the bassist Pavel Libensky. “Libensky requested me to take over the leadership of the Ghetto Swingers,” Roman said. “At first I was reluctant to be in charge of a basically Czech group, but Libensky insisted and said all the musicians wanted me as their leader, and told me how impressed they all were by my playing and knowledge.”
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At Theresienstadt, the Ghetto Swingers were enlisted by the S.S. to perform in a propaganda film known as “The Führer Gives the Jews a City.” Schumann, the guitarist, also described the band as a haven offering deep, if temporary, relief from the panic of the camps. “When I played I forgot where I was. The world seemed in order, the suffering of people around me disappeared—life was beautiful,” he wrote in his autobiography. “We knew everything and forgot everything the moment we played a few bars.” Vogel described a similar experience: “We were so concerned and so happy to play our beloved jazz that we had tranquilized ourselves into the dream world produced by the Germans for reasons of propaganda.”
Though there’s little musical overlap, Vogel’s story reminded me, in a way, of the work songs that were recorded in Southern prisons in the mid-twentieth century. At that time, black prisoners were often leased from state penitentiaries to companies that collected resin from long-leaf pine forests. (The resin was distilled into turpentine, a volatile, toxic substance commonly used as a paint solvent.) “The men worked killing shifts in deep mud and thick underbrush,” David Oshinsky writes in his book “Worse Than Slavery.” “We go from can’t to can’t,” one prisoner explained. “Can’t see in the morning to can’t see at night.” As early as the nineteen-thirties, ethnomusicologists and folklorists such as Alan Lomax travelled to places such as Parchman Farm, Mississippi’s notorious state penitentiary, to make field recordings of prisoners working in the sweltering cotton fields there. They sang to pass the time, to give rhythm to their labor, and to keep their humanity from dissipating entirely.
On June 23, 1944, delegates from the International Committee of the Red Cross arrived to inspect Theresienstadt in person. The Ghetto Swingers set up and played in the band shell. Vogel recalls the camp commandant handing out sardine sandwiches to starving children, and ordering them to exclaim, “My, sardines again!” The Red Cross accepted the display, and, three months after its representatives left, on September 28th, the Nazis began emptying the camp. The Ghetto Swingers were sent to Auschwitz, every member aside from Vogel on the first transport train. Some of them, including Fritz Weiss, were marched from the train directly into a gas chamber. Vogel writes about his later arrival with extraordinary frankness: “The dense smoke coming from the chimney was the last of my friends.”
Vogel was eventually reunited with a few surviving members of the band. At Auschwitz, thirty or so musicians were selected to entertain the Nazis; they were assigned to a special barracks, and dressed in “sharp-looking” band uniforms. “We had to play from early in the morning until late in the evening for the German SS, who came in flocks to our barracks,” Vogel wrote. But, after four weeks, the Nazis disassembled the band and loaded its members onto a train. “People were lying one on the other. Some were crying, and a few were dying,” Vogel wrote. The Ghetto Swingers managed to joke with one another, and to sing some of their favorite band arrangements. For the next several months, Vogel was shuffled between camps.
When Vogel escaped, he weighed about seventy pounds. The first night, he hid in the woods. It rained. When he finally heard a car engine, he crawled from his hiding spot, and encountered two German Air Force officers. Miraculously, they gave him bread. Vogel walked to Petzenhausen, a nearby village. “I was given hot black coffee and potatoes and hidden by the villagers in a barn,” he wrote.
On April 30, 1945, an American jeep drove into the village with the words “BOOGIEWOOGIE” painted on its side. Hitler died the same day; a week later, the Germans would sign an instrument of unconditional surrender. Vogel ran to a soldier, kissed his feet, and started asking him about jazz. Vogel was offered chocolate and cigarettes. The Americans brought Vogel to an officers’ club, where they blindfolded him and played him records, to see if he could identify the performer. “Despite the fact that I had been cut off from American jazz for more than four years, I recognized most recordings of bands and soloists that were played for me. I was the sensation of the club,” Vogel wrote.
Vogel, at left, wearing his uniform from the camps, in a photo taken in 1945, shortly after he’d escaped.
In New Jersey, Allen showed me a glass negative for a photo of Vogel taken in 1945, shortly after he’d escaped. In it, he is standing alongside an older couple. It appears that he managed to put on about twenty pounds in his first two weeks free. He’s wearing his uniform from the camps—a dirty striped shirt and work pants. Werb told me that it was not especially unusual for Holocaust survivors to get back into their uniforms and pose for photographs with locals, just as returning soldiers might do. There’s another picture that shows Vogel in a group of eleven men and boys, all of them wearing their camp uniforms. Two women huddle in the front, one holding onto the other. Vogel is standing in the back, wearing a hat. His cheeks are sunken, and his eyes are blank. The photo was shot in black-and-white, but one gets the sense that, even if it had been taken with color film, it would still look impossibly gray.
Schumann was also put on a transport train to a subcamp of Dachau. A few months later, he was being marched toward Innsbruck, in Austria, when American tanks arrived; he was twenty years old, and terribly sick with angina and typhoid fever. Schumann briefly moved to Australia after the war, but eventually he returned to Berlin, where he performed with Marlene Dietrich, Ella Fitzgerald, and the violinist Helmut Zacharias, and later started his own band, the Coco Schumann Quartet. He died in Berlin, in 2018, at ninety-three. Martin Roman ultimately immigrated to the U.S., and settled in New Jersey. He kept playing, too—first at clubs in New York City and then at resorts upstate. He died in 1996, at eighty-six. Allen found a poster advertising a show in 1947, at the Hotel Astoria, in Prague, featuring what was most likely Vogel’s first band after the war: the E. T. Birds Blue White Rhythm Stars. Vogel’s first two initials were E.T., for Eric Theodore, and Vogel means “bird” in German.
In 1946, Vogel moved to New York with Gertrude Kleinová. Trudy, as she was known, was born on August 13, 1918, in Brno. She and Vogel had met before the war, at the local branch of the Maccabi sports club. As a teen-ager, Trudy exhibited an uncanny aptitude for table tennis, and Vogel became her coach; Trudy would be a table-tennis world champion three times before the age of twenty, helping win the women’s team world championship twice, in 1935 and 1936, and the world mixed doubles once, in 1936, with her playing partner, Miloslav Hamr.
In 1939, she married Jacob Schalinger, the chairman of her local table-tennis division. There’s a beguiling black-and-white photo of Trudy leaning on a table-tennis table, holding a paddle; she’s wearing high-waisted shorts, a tucked-in shirt, and little white sneakers, with neatly folded-down socks. Her dark hair is parted on the side and brushed back. Bohumil Váňa, one of her teammates, stands to her left, beaming. Trudy’s smile is wide and satisfied. There’s a ring on her left hand, which makes me think the photo must have been taken sometime between her wedding to Schalinger, in 1939, and December of 1941, when she and Schalinger were sent to Theresienstadt. Eventually, they, too, were brought to Auschwitz, where Schalinger was killed.
Nobody knows for sure how Trudy and Vogel found each other again, after the war ended. It’s possible that they saw each other at Theresienstadt, or at Auschwitz. Surely it was a relief to reunite in Brno—to find a person they knew and cared for before the camps, but who had seen the same things they’d seen, and understood how life was different now. They arranged for what looks like a small civil ceremony. Trudy wore an elegant, long-sleeved black suit and carried tulips. They exchanged rings that were handed to them on a silver platter, and posed for a photograph with friends and family on the street. In it, a man standing behind them holds a trumpet up like a talisman. Another waves drumsticks in the air.
Trudy and Eric Vogel, in the foreground, after their wedding.
It’s hard for me not to wonder now if Vogel had loved Trudy before, back when he was her coach, lecturing her on ball placement and spin, watching her play—and what it must have been like to see her marry a different man, a friend. They settled in Elmhurst, Queens, a predominantly Jewish and Italian neighborhood. Vogel took a job as a draftsman (he was later promoted to designer, then to design engineer) with Loewy-Hydropress, an engineering firm founded by a Czech refugee who had fled the Nazis. He also worked steadily as a jazz critic (his press pass declares that he’s “a bona fide representative of Down Beat Magazine”) and a radio host. In New York, Vogel palled around with guys like John Hammond—the record producer who introduced Benny Goodman to Fletcher Henderson, seeding the idea that jazz could “swing,” and who later signed Bob Dylan to Columbia Records. He was also a friend and booster of the extraordinary jazz pianist Jutta Hipp, who moved to the U.S. in 1955 and later lived near the Vogels, in Queens. Hipp, who stopped performing not long after, often drew caricatures of jazz performers. Vogel’s papers contain several.
Hammond’s archive, at Yale, contains dozens of letters between Vogel and Hammond. In them, Vogel mostly inquired after copies of Columbia records that he wanted to broadcast on the radio, but he also appointed himself as a kind of amateur A. & R. man, vigorously championing any promising young artists whom he came across. He recommended a twenty-year-old gospel singer, Rose Presley, who had come to New York from South Carolina and now worked at Loewy: “I feel a certain potential in her voice and I would ask you, dear John if you agree with me,” he wrote. “Her salary is small and she has to support her family.” In the sixties, after he travelled to Jamaica, Vogel suggested that Hammond look into a Jamaican singer, Keith Stewart, whom he had seen perform at a hotel. Vogel believed that Stewart could be “Columbias answer to Harry Belafonte,” and described him as having “perfect intonation.” Sometimes, Hammond politely demurred in his responses; at other times, he followed up on Vogel’s suggestions. (I eventually found a copy of Stewart’s début LP, “Yellow Bird,” in the dollar bin at my local record shop: it’s a sweet, breezy folk record, the kind of thing that sounds vast and flawless when the sun is shining.) This is the part of Vogel that I find the most consistently endearing. He loved music so thoroughly.
Allen also found a handful of vacation photos tucked among Vogel’s papers. Many are of the Vogels lounging lakeside in the Catskill Mountains, in upstate New York; in one, Trudy is holding a life preserver that reads “Breezy Hill.” When I reached out to the owner of the modern-day Breezy Hill Inn, in Fleischmanns, New York, to see if it might be the same place, I was told that there used to be a larger resort nearby called the Breezy Hill Hotel. Martin Roman played in the band there. I like to think that Vogel and Roman reunited happily in the mountains—that they had suffered together, and now might share pleasure. Maybe Vogel even brought his trumpet, and sat in with Roman’s band.
In 1952, Vogel wrote a three-page poem about Breezy Hill, in German. I asked the jazz guitarist Russ Spiegel—who was born in California but came of age in Germany—if he could translate the piece. He pointed out that it was written in rhyming verse, like a song. I wondered what it meant. The owner of the Breezy Hill Inn eventually referred me to a friend of hers, Peter Neumann, who had spent time at Breezy Hill in the nineteen-fifties, and whose mother, Suzanne Neumann, occasionally sang with the band. Neumann told me that the musicians often invented parodies about the guests—or whatever was going on at the resort that week—and sang them to the melody of a popular song. Vogel’s piece, which he titled “The Secret of Breezy Hill,” describes the management of the hotel training flies to spy on the resort’s guests—to curtail their mischief and, especially, to make sure that they didn’t miss breakfast.
Trudy is smiling in the photos—never widely, but she looks content enough. Still, one gets the sinking sense that she hadn’t quite metabolized the trauma of the war. How could we expect her to? She worked in New York—she was a member of the United Optical Workers Union—but her health steadily worsened. Allen showed me a letter from her physician, Eric J. Nash, written in 1963. “Mrs. Vogel entered the camp in full physical and mental health, she was a known champion in many fields of sport,” Nash wrote. “When she left the camp she suffered from the usual starvation syndrome, avitaminosis and underweight. She had developed osteoarthritis of her dorsal spine, both knee joints and both feet. She showed marked restlessness with prolonged periods of depression, coupled with severe headaches and sleeplessness.” It ends with a grim summation: “In view of the long-standing sickness the prognosis as to complete recovery is poor.”
Allen now has what’s surely a pair of Trudy’s table-tennis paddles, though it’s hard to say whether she ever played with them again. In 1948, shortly after they arrived in America, Vogel had written to the United States Table Tennis Association, perhaps to let it know that Trudy had arrived. “I certainly do remember your wife and her brilliant play in the 1937 World Championships,” Elmer F. Cinnater, then the association’s president, responded. He encouraged the Vogels to visit the Broadway Table Tennis Courts, near Carnegie Hall. “Just for the fun of it, don’t tell anyone about your wife,” he suggested. “Enter in the tournament and surprise the fellows up there.” I wonder if Trudy went—if she and Vogel pulled off the gag, and laughed about it on the train back to Queens. Trudy died in 1976, at the age of fifty-seven. Vogel’s correspondence suggests that she was sick for years before that.
In April of 1952, Vogel published an article in Metronome, another American jazz magazine. Because the piece is critical of the Soviet Union, and because his parents were still alive and living in Czechoslovakia, he thought it best to use a pseudonym—“K. Siva.” (Vogel’s parents, Ernst and Emma, were also sent to Terezín, and remained there until the spring of 1945, when they were liberated. “They were among those who eluded deportation and outlasted the Germans,” Werb, the musicologist, told me. “You might say they were lucky.” Emma died in 1954, and Ernst in 1961.) In the piece, Vogel argues that jazz represents the truest kind of liberation—a sort of spiritual and political emancipation. “The spirit of freedom in American Jazz has always been a hindrance and sore spot in the programs  of totalitarian governments,” he writes. Jazz gave musicians a freedom “comparable only to the freedoms of the democratic way of life.” Vogel describes the desire for the music among young people in Prague as similar “to the cry for water of a thirsty man lost in the desert.” He implores radio programmers to play more jazz on the stations “being beamed toward the Iron Curtain”—it will be a balm and a thrill, he suggests, for listeners shrinking under uncompromising regimes. Vogel felt that he owed his life to jazz (“I truly and literally had made my living with jazz,” he writes at the end of his Downbeat story), and, for the rest of his years in New York, he wanted to celebrate it. It had kept him alive once; maybe it could do the same for others now.
Curiously, the response to his Downbeat story appears to have been underwhelming. In a February, 1962, issue, a month after the publication of the third installment, there’s a single letter to the editor from an irate twenty-nine-year-old German, who sarcastically thanks Vogel for how he “really helped to rip open old wounds.” Yet Vogel went on. He tried to sell a memoir, but couldn’t find an appropriate co-author. (At one point the jazz critic Leonard Feather was a candidate.) He programmed radio shows, helped to book jazz festivals, and played music with his friends whenever he could. Before he died, in 1980—his death certificate cites congestive heart failure and colon cancer, though he was also suffering from Parkinson’s disease—he had collected photos of almost every major American jazz musician performing live: Miles Davis, Sonny Rollins, Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk. There’s something so pure and glorious about that part of Vogel. Nobody could extinguish or soften his love of jazz, not even the Nazis.
A lot of us who write about music talk about how a song or album saved our lives at one point or another. I’ve done it. It’s a flashy way of saying, “I need this. It means something to me.” Vogel understood the idea literally, as a debt he’d spend the rest of his life repaying. One night, Allen sent me a couple of stanzas by the writer Gregory Orr, from “Concerning the Book That Is the Body of the Beloved.” It made him think of Vogel, he said, and why it was so important to remember his life.
Reading it, I wondered if this was what it felt like for Vogel and the rest of the Ghetto Swingers to raise their instruments. To find grace in a place of dying, to be reborn and reanimated, briefly, by song:
Who can measure the gratitude
Of the beloved?
To have lain so long in the dark,
Listening to the worms whisper.
The eyes closed, the nerves numb.
And then to be brought alive.
And all because of you.
Because you sang the song
That someone wrote—or
Hummed it, even, not remembering
The words, but feeling the feeling of it.
 

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Happy Easter One More Time

Happy Easter One More Time

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J S Bach – Adagio from The Easter Oratorio BWV 249 – Art of Moog – The Lab Sessions 2019 – YouTube

J S Bach – Adagio from The Easter Oratorio BWV 249 – Art of Moog – The Lab Sessions 2019 – YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CklCJk6kNFg

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How Richmond jazz legend Lonnie Liston Smith is bridging generations | WTVR.com

How Richmond jazz legend Lonnie Liston Smith is bridging generations | WTVR.com

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https://wtvr.com/2019/04/19/lonnie-liston-smith-blue-note-records-beyond-the-notes-movie/
 
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How Richmond jazz legend Lonnie Liston Smith is bridging generations
Connatix
4-5 minutes


Richmond jazz legend Lonnie Liston Smith`s music sampled by Jay-Z
RICHMOND, Va. — Church Hill native Lonnie Liston Smith has made a name for himself playing with the likes of jazz giants Miles Davis and Art Blakey.
The pianist was one of the only jazz artists to appear on Soul Train and one of Smith’s songs was even sampled by Jay-Z.
As far back as he can remember, Smith has been tickling the ivories.
“I tell people I came out of my mother’s womb playing music,” Smith said. “From day one it was all music, all music.”
His talents have carried this Church Hill native from New York to Melbourne and countless jazz clubs in between. Smith’s fusion, acid jazz and smooth jazz helped him gain a strong foothold on the music scene.
“Back then the record company was fantastic,” Smith said.
He’s played with jazz heavyweights like Miles Davis and Art Blakely. Then Smith’s stature soared. When he appeared on Soul Train in the 1970s. A rarity for jazz musicians.
“All of a sudden people just come to you. They say you really must be famous. You really must be good,” Smith said.
Over the years Smith rubbed shoulders with some of the greats from Barry White to Marvin Gaye.
“(Marvin) impressed me. He was so nice. We started talking like we knew each other.”
In the 1990s younger listeners were exposed to Smith’s earlier works when hip-hop artist Guru collaborated with Smith on the groundbreaking album Jazzmatazz, which blended two genres.
Blending genres is one of the themes of a new documentary: “Blue Note Records: Beyond the Notes.”
“They put out some great records and they influenced the whole world,” Smith said.
The film detailing the legendary jazz label’s history and influence on new artists will play at the upcoming Richmond International Film and Music Festival.
“I performed with a lot of those musicians,” Smith said. “It was live. I mean the feeling was.”
Smith remembers playing in the New Jersey studio where Blue Note artists recorded as “fantastic” and “like some special place.”
The pianist says Blue Note’s distinct sound is timeless much like this 80-year-old’s music.
Rapper Jay-Z discovered Smith’s sound when he sampled “A Garden of Peace” for his breakthrough song Dead Presidents.
“The young people are discovering jazz through the samples,” Smith said.
Smith doesn’t consider sampling as unoriginal or thieving.
“When the artist or publishing or record company send you a check it really is a blessing,” Smith said.
Smith’s advice for young musicians?
“You got to go inside and find yourself,” Smith said. “A lot think I’m crazy, but I tell them you have to learn how to breathe through your fingers.”
Smith is bridging generations using his first love: Jazz.
“I feel a great responsibility. It’s a blessing that young kids have really fallen in love with it,” Smith said. “Music is fantastic.”
“Blue Note Records: Beyond the Notes” documentary will show Sunday, April 28 at 1:30 p.m. at the Byrd Theatre where Smith will appear as a guest panelist immediately following the film.
Like inspiring stories? Watch CBS 6 News at 11 p.m. Fridays for Greg McQuade’s powerful “I Have A Story” reports. If you know of someone Greg should feature in my “I Have A Story” segment email him at gmcquade@wtvr.com.

Watch “I Have A Story” Fridays on CBS 6 News at 11 p.m. If you know of someone with an interesting story we should tell, email gmcquade@wtvr.com
Additionally, watch CBS 6 News at 6 p.m. Thursdays for Greg McQuade’s “Heroes Among Us” features. 
 

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Yankees and Flyers Will Stop Playing Kate Smith After Discovering Racist Songs – The New York Times

Yankees and Flyers Will Stop Playing Kate Smith After Discovering Racist Songs – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/19/sports/kate-smith-new-york-yankees-philadelphia-flyers.html?action=click&module=Latest&pgtype=Homepage

Yankees and Flyers Will Stop Playing Kate Smith After Discovering Racist Songs

By Victor Mather
 April 19, 2019
Kate Smith sings “God Bless America” before a 1975 playoff game between the Flyers and the Islanders.Associated Press
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Kate Smith sings “God Bless America” before a 1975 playoff game between the Flyers and the Islanders.Associated Press
For the Yankees, Kate Smith’s version of “God Bless America” was a staple of the seventh-inning stretch since 2001.
For the Philadelphia Flyers, the connection was even tighter, with Smith serving as a mascot of sorts for the team’s 1970s Stanley Cup winners, and performing live at games.
Now both teams have announced they will stop playing Smith’s version of “God Bless America” after discovering that she sang songs with racist lyrics in the 1930s. The Flyers will also cover a statue of Smith that has been in front of their arena since 1987.
Smith, who died in 1986, is most closely identified with “God Bless America,” but recorded numerous other songs over her long career. Among them were “Pickaninny Heaven” and “That’s Why Darkies Were Born,” which contain disturbing lyrics that demean black people.
“The Yankees have been made aware of a recording that had been previously unknown to us and decided to immediately and carefully review this new information,” a team spokesman told The Daily News, which first reported the story. “The Yankees take social, racial and cultural insensitivities very seriously. And while no final conclusions have been made, we are erring on the side of sensitivity.”
The Yankees used the song early in the season, but stopped after being alerted by a fan’s email to Smith’s racially insensitive work.
A statue of Kate Smith by the Philadelphia Flyers arena. At left is Lauren Hart, who has sung “God Bless America” at Flyers games alongside a recording by Smith.Matt Rourke/Associated Press
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A statue of Kate Smith by the Philadelphia Flyers arena. At left is Lauren Hart, who has sung “God Bless America” at Flyers games alongside a recording by Smith.Matt Rourke/Associated Press
The Flyers said in a statement: “We have recently become aware that several songs performed by Kate Smith contain offensive lyrics that do not reflect our values as an organization. As we continue to look into this serious matter, we are removing Kate Smith’s recording of ‘God Bless America’ from our library and covering up the statue that stands outside of our arena.”
The Flyers have a tradition of playing Smith’s version of “God Bless America” as a replacement for the national anthem at particularly big games. The song has been said to bring the team good luck. Smith performed it live before Game 6 of the 1974 Stanley Cup final, the game in which the Flyers won their first Cup.
Like many white singers of her era, Smith sang some songs that at best are dated and insensitive and at worst are downright racist.
In “Pickaninny Heaven,” Smith sings of a place where “great big watermelons roll around and get in your way.” “Pickaninny” is a demeaning term for a black child. In the 1933 film “Hello Everybody,” Smith sings the song to a group of black orphans listening on the radio.
“That’s Why Darkies Were Born” begins: “Someone had to pick the cotton,/ Someone had to pick the corn,/ Someone had to slave and be able to sing,/ That’s why darkies were born.”
The lyrics also include: “Sing, sing, sing when you’re weary and sing when you’re blue/ Sing, sing, that’s what you taught all the white folks to do.”
The song was also recorded by the black singer and civil rights activist Paul Robeson, although “one has to think that Robeson’s take on the lyrics was decidedly ironic,” wrote Steven Carl Tracy in “Hot Music, Ragmentation and the Bluing of American Literature.”
James Wagner contributed reporting.
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‘Pick Up My Pieces: Gabrielle Stravelli Sings Willie Nelson’ Review: Jazz That Heads Down Home – WSJ

‘Pick Up My Pieces: Gabrielle Stravelli Sings Willie Nelson’ Review: Jazz That Heads Down Home – WSJ

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/pick-up-my-pieces-gabrielle-stravelli-sings-willie-nelson-review-jazz-that-heads-down-home-11555613962
 
wsj.com
‘Pick Up My Pieces: Gabrielle Stravelli Sings Willie Nelson’ Review: Jazz That Heads Down Home
Will Friedwald
4-5 minutes


The late, great jazz writer Nat Hentoff was much enamored of a certain anecdote about Charlie Parker, the legendary saxophonist and modern jazz innovator. The story goes that Bird and his band were relaxing and he kept playing country-and-western records on a jukebox. The musicians, who regarded country music as hopelessly square, asked their boss just what he found so appealing in those tracks, and he answered: “Listen to the stories.” (Hentoff even used that as the title of one of his books.)
Hentoff would have loved “Pick Up My Pieces: Gabrielle Stravelli Sings Willie Nelson” (Big Modern Music), out now, in which the New York-based jazz singer addresses the music of one of country’s most iconoclastic singer-songwriters. Country music is, on the whole, an underutilized wellspring for jazz musicians and singers, who in recent decades have been looking as far afield as the Beatles and Björk for inspiration while largely ignoring a massive genre of great homegrown American songs.
Not that Ms. Stravelli takes Mr. Nelson’s music and merely “jazzes” it up in the most obvious way. She’s giving these songs the same kind of thoughtful interpretation that, for instance, Cyrille Aimée, Melissa Errico and Cheryl Bentyne all brought to the music of Stephen Sondheim in their recent albums. As famously sung by the duo of Mr. Nelson and Waylon Jennings, “Good Hearted Woman” is compassionate but undeniably macho; Ms. Stravelli and her musical director, Pat O’Leary, not only recast it as a gentle waltz but retell the tale from the viewpoint of the woman herself. Ms. Stravelli has, in effect, transformed “Good Hearted Woman” into a whole new song, one that I like as much as the original.
Yet here and elsewhere in the album she never messes with the message or gets in the way of Mr. Nelson’s humor—“Three Days,” which now opens with a scatted intro and is set in a swinging 4/4, remains as funny and poignant as Mr. Nelson’s own versions. It now climaxes in an exciting sequence of horn battles between trumpeter Jon-Erik Kellso and trombonist Jon Allred, then between Evan Arntzen on alto saxophone and Scott Robinson on tenor. (Spoiler alert, to the few who don’t know the song, originally a hit for Faron Young in 1962: The “three days” are yesterday, today and tomorrow.) Another Willie-Waylon classic, “Mammas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys,” is relentlessly bebopped in a way that replaces the irony of the original with a whole new set of ironic underpinnings and subtexts.
Ms. Stravelli’s treatment of “Nightlife” is significantly more celebratory than the original, leaving out the regret and recriminations of Mr. Nelson’s many versions. “Angel Flying Too Close to the Ground” has always been something of a dirge and a cautionary tale; Ms. Stravelli and Mr. O’Leary add a string quartet and move it over to the realm of the love song.
Along the way, Ms. Stravelli also incorporates several songs identified with Mr. Nelson that he didn’t write, notably the jazz standard “Stardust” and the country classic “Always on My Mind.”
Surprisingly, Ms. Stravelli never dives straightforwardly into Mr. Nelson’s “Crazy,” best known through its interpretations by other artists, though she alludes to that 1961 song instrumentally in “Good Hearted Woman” and she also interpolates about four lines of “Crazy” into the middle of “Somebody Pick Up My Pieces.” That last number, from which the album draws its title, may be her most remarkable transformation here; Mr. Nelson’s own treatment is highly confessional, but Ms. Stravelli’s is not only that. It’s like a sprawling blues testimonial, in the manner of Charlie Parker’s “Parker’s Mood,” not to mention part spiritual, part sermon and part eulogy. “What I thought was heaven / Was just falling debris.”
My guess is that not only would Nat and Bird have loved it, but so will Willie.
—Mr. Friedwald writes about music and popular culture for the Journal.
 

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EASTER & PASSOVER GREETINGS

EASTER & PASSOVER GREETINGS

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FROM ALL OF US TO ALL OF YOU


forsythia warwick ny spring 2019
 

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Dill Jones Trio-in Concert – YouTube

Dill Jones Trio-in Concert – YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5GAXHgRRibk
 
Recorded in BBC Llandaff, Studio C1. The studio is due to be demolished sometime in 2020.

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BBC Radio 3 – Sunday Feature – 7 Candid Photos of Jazz Legends

BBC Radio 3 – Sunday Feature – 7 Candid Photos of Jazz Legends

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https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/k329t7ywmrhngwrK3JZWFV/7-candid-photos-of-jazz-legends
 
bbc.co.uk
BBC Radio 3 – Sunday Feature – 7 Candid Photos of Jazz Legends
5-6 minutes


Over six decades, Val Wilmer has become “a world figure in the history of African-American musical culture”. Her remarkable career has seen her interview and photograph almost every significant and influential figure in post-war jazz, blues and R&B.
In 1956, aged 14, Val took a snap at London Airport of a grinning Louis Armstrong. Since then she has covered names including Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, John Coltrane, Charles Mingus, Sun Ra and Albert Ayler – as well as countless unrecognised men and women who have shaped African-American culture since the 1950s.
Radio 3’s Sunday Feature: A Portrait of Val Wilmer talks to Val and discusses her career. Here are some of the photographs she’s taken…

Louis Armstrong leaving London Airport for Ghana, with Clive Wilmer (Val’s younger brother, aged 11) in background. 1956.

Sunny Murray and son, at home. Carroll Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. 1966.

Donald & Albert Ayler. St Nicholas Park, New York. September 1966.

Archie Shepp. East 5th Street, Lower East Side, New York. 1971.

Charles Mingus, recording ‘Let My Children Hear Music’ (“the best album I have ever made”). New York City. 1972.

Pharoah Sanders, with Richard Davis (bass). Village Gate, New York. 1976.

Val Wilmer, with her portrait of Sun Ra in background. In conversation at The Wire Salon, Café Oto, Dalston, London. July 2017. Photo credit: David Corio.
Radio 3’s Sunday Feature: A Portrait of Val Wilmer is broadcast on 4 March 2018 at 18:45.
Images supplied by Val Wilmer / David Corio, and are subject to copyright.
 

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Boston Public Library 78rpm Collection : Free Audio : Free Download, Borrow and Streaming : Internet Archive

Boston Public Library 78rpm Collection : Free Audio : Free Download, Borrow and Streaming : Internet Archive

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https://archive.org/details/78rpm_bostonpubliclibrary
 
Boston Public Library 78rpm Collection
The Boston Public Library (BPL) sound collection includes hundreds of thousands of audio recordings in a variety of historical formats, including wax cylinders, 78 rpms, and LPs. The recordings span many genres, including classical, pop,

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Wesley Schmidt, owner of Snug Harbor Jazz Bistro, dies at 68 – nola.com

Wesley Schmidt, owner of Snug Harbor Jazz Bistro, dies at 68 – nola.com

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https://www.nola.com/entertainment/2019/04/wesley-schmidt-owner-of-snug-harbor-jazz-bistro-dies-at-68.html
 
Wesley Schmidt, owner of Snug Harbor Jazz Bistro, dies at 68
By Olivia Prentzel, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
Updated Apr 14, 9:21 AM; Posted Apr 13, 2019
Wesley Schmidt was the grand marshal of the Storyville Stompers. In this file photo from April 2003, Schmidt leads the marching band around Jackson Square as the opening act of the final day of the French Quarter Festival.
Wesley Schmidt, owner of Snug Harbor Jazz Bistro, grand marshal of Storyville Stompers and a founder of MOMS Ball, died Friday (April 12) from lung cancer at his Mid-City home, friends said. He was 68.
A New Orleans native, Mr. Schmidt spent three decades at Snug Harbor, a cornerstone to the city’s jazz scene and anchor to Frenchmen Street. He started at the club as an assistant manager and was promoted to manager. In 2007, he became the club’s owner after the death of former owner George Brumat.
“He loved that place,” said Mr. Schmidt’s friend Woody Penouilh. “He was Snug Harbor to me.”
Before Snug Harbor, Mr. Schmidt was a manager at The Dream Palace, which is now Blue Nile.
In the 1970s, Mr. Schmidt became a manager of Luigi’s Italian Restaurant on Elysian Fields Avenue, near the University of New Orleans. It was at Luigi’s that Mr. Schmidt booked the pre-Radiators group, The Rhapsodizers, including guitarist Clark Vreeland, to play every Wednesday night.
Mr. Schmidt’s public persona was shaped by his role as grand marshal of the Storyville Stompers, a marching band inspired by the Olympia Brass Band, and as one of the founders of MOMS ball, a semi-private, bohemian costume party held every Saturday before Mardi Gras. Behind his public persona, friends said Mr. Schmidt was a relatively private person.
Penouilh, a tuba player with the Storyville Stompers, described Mr. Schmidt as an audiophile who would seek out a certain type of turntable on which he’d play his eclectic selection of music. Mr. Schmidt was a generous person, Penouilh said, who was “unique and true and real.”
Jay Christman, general manger of Snug Harbor, said Mr. Schmidt played a large role in continuing the club’s legacy and its mission to jazz. The club, which provides music seven nights a week, is only closed three nights a year: Thanksgiving, Christmas and Mardi Gras. It closed Friday night in honor of Mr. Schmidt’s passing.
Every Thanksgiving, Mr. Schmidt would have an open house, inviting anyone he knew without family in town to share dinner at his home, Christman said.
“He celebrated all aspects of what we think of community in the city here,” Christman said. “Music was a primary source of everything we do and he did what ever he could to promote that.”
Mr. Schmidt is survived by his wife. Funeral arrangements are unknown.
Staff reporter Doug MacCash contributed to this story.
 
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Remembering Philadelphia jazz drummer, composer, and advocate Jim Miller | Broad Street Review

Remembering Philadelphia jazz drummer, composer, and advocate Jim Miller | Broad Street Review

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https://www.broadstreetreview.com/wnwnbooks/remembering-philadelphia-jazz-drummer-composer-and-advocate-jim-miller#
 
Remembering Philadelphia jazz drummer, composer, and advocate Jim Miller
Suzanne Cloud
March 10, 2019
Legendary listening
I first met Jim Miller in the early 1980s when I needed a drummer to fill in for my regular guy on short notice. From the first downbeat, I realized this musician had a way of transforming the drums behind a singer: from a ballad’s whispering pulse, delicate and lush, to launching an insistent pocket with the band, allowing me to glide above the groove, suspending or parsing my notes in midair.
NZyGAzlA-751-1125.jpgA champion of the Philadelphia jazz community: Jim Miller. (Photo by Anthony Dean.)
At first break that first night, Miller told me he was born in Indianapolis and had moved to Philly in 1977 after stopping here for a gig with a touring band. The hotel room’s radio, tuned to an All-Coltrane Weekend on WRTI, sold him on our city.  
Tuning in to everyone
Miller was already known as the cofounder of the jazz-fusion group Reverie, an experimental group that included keyboardist Mark Knox, bassist Gerald Veasley, and saxophonist EJ Yellin; and featured many guest artists, including guitarist Jef Lee Johnson. A fan favorite, Reverie played festivals, clubs, and colleges from New England to Florida. Of course, I didn’t know any of this when I met Miller, but I knew that he would be my first call from now on. Now, after forty years of collaborations, I’d never heard a drummer like him.
Veasley, president of Jazz Philadelphia, says Jim taught him that “listening is the most essential skill for a musician,” adding, “I never played with a drummer who was so tuned to the musicians around him. He was just as tuned into people off the stage. His heart was as big as his musical ears.”
Philly embraced him as a musician, and Miller was a highly sought drummer, recording and playing with many nationally known artists, including Philly greats like Johnny Coles, John Blake Jr., Al Grey, Reggie Workman, Larry McKenna, Richie Cole, Charles Fambrough, Randy Brecker, Buddy DeFranco, and Tyrone Brown. Miller regularly played and recorded with small groups led by singer Evelyn Simms, fusion-pioneer pianist Eddie Green, and baritone saxophonist Denis DiBlasio.
Drummer Tom Cohen, a fellow traveler with Miller in Philly drum circles (they frequently subbed for each other), tells me that “Jim created a modern style that was uniquely his own. Born of deep passion and a deft touch, he served up a gritty matrix of hipness that was singular … the mark of a true jazz musician.”
Beyond the drums
In 1986, angry and indignant at the indifference of the world toward jazz and the people who played it, Miller founded a cooperative record label, which eventually became Dreambox Media, to spotlight Philadelphia-area jazz artists deserving recognition that major labels consistently overlooked. I became the second artist on the label (Reverie was the first), and we both spread the word to the community at large: Yes, you can record, get airplay, and sell your work in addition to sticking it to the big labels! We built it and they came.
In 1999, Dreambox Media won Philadelphia Magazine’s Best of Philly award for Jazz Record Label, and in early 2007 the label celebrated its 20th anniversary, coinciding with its 100th release. In 2010, Jim’s MONKadelphia Crepuscule CD was named one of the Top Ten Best in Jazz by the Inquirer. So many artists’ original work from this region was documented from 1986 through 2015, and Philly is lucky to have this treasure trove of jazz history to appreciate and listen to well into the future. Jim Miller did that. But he wasn’t finished.
Jazz Bridge, a charity to help professional jazz and blues artists in crisis, was created by musicians who knew firsthand that choosing a life in jazz, essentially a vow of poverty, often ends in tragedy. Miller immediately got involved to help get the organization off the ground (I was its founder and first executive director). As a volunteer and board member, Miller made sure a guitarist with a cognitive disability made it to Horizon House for his appointments. He drafted fellow musicians to jam with an avant-garde drummer in hospice. Miller lugged PA equipment and drum sets for elderly musicians, learned QuickBooks, played every fundraiser for free, and basically did anything and everything to make Jazz Bridge a success. He knew how hard the life was, because he lived it every single day.
A jazz hero 
Miller loved the drums, and his book, A Brief History of Time-Keeping: From Baby Dodds to Jack DeJohnette, showed his wry sense of humor and keen intelligence from the start. He dedicated the book to his mother (who made him play for “every disinterested relative or family friend who happened to come by”) and wrote that “those early days subliminally prepared me for the indifference and implied hostility I would recognize in many an American jazz-club audience later in my career.”
Eventually, he formed his own band, Miller Time, which put out three CDs of original material (much of it political), and two of his compositions will be featured in the Real Philadelphia Book, a compendium of Philly jazz and blues artists’ original compositions, coming soon from Temple University Press. This was Miller’s last project—he was working intensely on it as an editor when he died.
Singer Wendy Simon, a cofounder of Jazz Bridge, says, “He was smart, funny, a creative and compassionate person who believed in social justice. I was blown away by his musical, out-of-the-box compositions.”
For the entirety of his work, Miller received the Jazz Hero Award for the Philadelphia region by the Jazz Journalists Association in April 2013.
I loved his presence in my own life, and the Philadelphia jazz community lost a champion on February 25, 2019, when Miller died of sepsis at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital. He was only 65 and leaves behind his wife Michelle, daughter Annie, many students, and a host of admirers inspired by his empathy and advocacy.
Wherever jazz lived in this city, Jim Miller was there, too. This town will never be the same.
Donations in his name can be made to Jazz Bridge.

 
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Ken Snakehips Johnson – YouTube

Ken Snakehips Johnson – YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5dub9uQuOlE

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Wobbly Sounds, A Collection of British Flexi Discs | Irregulars | Four Corners Books

Wobbly Sounds, A Collection of British Flexi Discs | Irregulars | Four Corners Books

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https://www.fourcornersbooks.co.uk/books/wobbly-sounds/

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Appreciating D.C.’s Jazz History – The Georgetowner

Appreciating D.C.’s Jazz History – The Georgetowner

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https://georgetowner.com/articles/2019/04/10/appreciating-d-c-s-jazz-history/
 
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Appreciating D.C.’s Jazz History – The Georgetowner
Gary Tischler
5-7 minutes


You might think for now that April is cherry blossom month, or it’s a month for April showers or the month that a poet or poets called the cruelest of the year.
April is all of that, but April is also Jazz Appreciation Month, aka JAM, by way of the Smithsonian National Museum of American History, which created the designation in 2001 to “recognize and celebrate the extraordinary heritage and history of jazz.”
The focus of this year’s JAM is “Jazz Beyond Borders,” which not only looks at the “dynamic ways jazz can unite people across the culture and geography” but also highlights the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra’s upcoming tour, hitting cities in North America, Europe and Asia.
Nat King Cole, the smooth-voiced, “Unforgettable” singer of jazz ballads and vocal classics (and father of the late Natalie Cole) is this year’s JAM featured artist.
Jazz is many things to almost everyone. Phrases abound: jazz is love, jazz is freedom, jazz flies, jazz is original. It’s been called America’s classical music. Jazz in its history carries irony, dichotomy, aspiration, the weight and sometimes burdens of its roots. It spirals out of a wellspring of blues, gospel, rock and rockabilly. It is a trifecta of cool — as a style, as a sound and as a way of being. It’s unfettered and, at the same time, as disciplined as math; precise, yet in flight.
It has a history of dramatic personas and personalities — performers, musicians, composers and singers who left indelible impressions by the way they sang, played, explored — to the point of achieving the status of legend or of royalty: the Duke, the Count, Lady Day and so on, as in Ellington, Basie and Billie Holiday.
Jazz is also our city’s music. Duke Ellington lived and played here, great singers sang here in churches, in clubs and at the Lincoln and Howard Theatres. If there was a Harlem Renaissance, there was one here, too. It remains in places like Blues Alley and Twins, in the resurrected Lincoln and Howard. And it had its homegrown legends like Shirley Horn and Buck Hill, who died only a couple of years ago at 90.
The spirit of jazz and jazz history will be found on Wednesday, April 17, at Mt. Zion United Methodist Church, at 1334 29th St. in Georgetown, when the Citizens Association of Georgetown hosts Georgetown University’s Maurice Jackson, co-editor of “DC Jazz: Stories of Jazz Music in Washington, DC,” conversing with local jazz greats Blair Ruble, Bridget Arnwine and Rusty Hassan. A reception at 6:30 p.m. precedes the program, from 7 to 8 p.m.
It’s an appropriate location for such an event. Mt. Zion was one of the keystones of a once thriving and culturally and musically rich African American community.
The book is a treasure trove of history, deeply researched and often tightly annotated. It’s something of a landmark history, where all sorts of personalities, peoples, places and things pop up, sometimes feeling like a print version of a riff by a jazz trio or a quartet, going from here to there, picked up by some other player in another way, always returning home.
The arrangement of the book is like an arrangement of a composition or, as Jason Moran, artistic director for jazz at the Kennedy Center, writes in a foreword: “Jazz has always been about community because of a revolutionary idea: the song is shared by every member of the band.”
Ellington figures strongly in the book, along with tales of origins, the building of communities and identity and all the legendary players that made D.C. a kind of jazz city, always evolving. It’s full of contributions from people steeped in jazz, including Willard Jenkins, current artistic director of the DC Jazz Festival, poet E. Ethelbert Miller and producer Bill Brower, along with Ruble and Jackson, who serve as co-editors of the book. Jackson teaches history and African American studies at Georgetown and Ruble is the author of “Washington’s U Street: A Biography.”
Jazz is at heart a personal experience, touched by life experience, which seems a birthright for some, a gratifying accident for others. As a kid and a German immigrant, growing up in small-town America, I had no experience of jazz until, stationed in New York in 1961 as part of my army service, on leave in Manhattan, I stumbled into a place called the Metropole and encountered Lionel Hampton. I had never seen anybody play the vibes, or heard the music being made, but it created vistas in a small, smoke-filled bar and enlarged the world for me.
I was fortunate: a phone interview with Basie, who at a concert in Oakland announced “Ladies and gentlemen, the Duke is dead”; seeing Dizzy walk along M Street in Georgetown on his way for morning coffee before heading to Blues Alley; listening to Nina Simone sing “Ain’t Got No” in a stadium on a hot summer day (wearing a white mink); watching two bass players, a youngster and an oldster, dueling; chancing to hear Ella sing scat at Wolf Trap; arguing with my neighbor in Lanier Heights, who remembered the glory days of U Street, about the best singer to sing “My Funny Valentine” (Chaka Khan was his choice).
You can add this: Miller, the poet, writing about Ellington:
what did Ellington mean
when he said
”I love you madly”
his hands touching a
piano not made of flesh
Probably everything. One woman says: jazz is love, after all.
 

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Jazz Commentary: Pee Wee Russell – A Singular Voice – The Arts Fuse

Jazz Commentary: Pee Wee Russell – A Singular Voice – The Arts Fuse

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Jazz Commentary: Pee Wee Russell – A Singular Voice – The Arts Fuse
By: Steve Provizer
5-6 minutes


You are here: Home / Music / Jazz / Jazz Commentary: Pee Wee Russell — A Singular Voice

April 7, 2019 Leave a Comment
By Steve Provizer
Despite the fact that clarinet (and occasional sax) player Pee Wee Russell was one of the most distinctive voices in jazz history, his name remains unknown outside of infra jazz circles.
Pee Wee Russell. Photo: Jan Persson & CDJ
Today marks the 50th anniversary of the first Pee Wee Russell Memorial Stomp, a benefit concert organized right after the 1969 death of Russell. Somehow, I don’t think you knew that. Despite the fact that clarinet (and occasional sax) player Russell was one of the most distinctive voices in jazz history, his name remains unknown outside of infra jazz circles. From my bully pulpit here at The Arts Fuse, I thought it worthwhile to bring him to your attention.
Born in 1908 in St. Louis, Russell was exposed to New Orleans musicians when he was ten and caught the jazz bug. He wasn’t much for school, got his first gig at eleven, and was fully employed as a musician by the mid-1920’s. Almost from the beginning, Russell’s playing polarized listeners and other musicians. Some loved it, hearing it as the highest expression of jazz creativity. Others thought it the fumbling of an amateur. It should be noted that Russell struggled with alcohol addiction; it’s not hard to imagine that there were nights when his playing slipped over the line from idiosyncratic to spaced-out or chaotic. In any case, the only other jazz musician to create a similar level of contentiousness is Ornette Coleman. Both were accused of not having mastered the lingua franca of jazz. In Ornette’s case, he did an end-around, essentially creating a kind of parallel language that drew on some parts of the prevailing jazz discourse and discarded others. Russell’s case is different.
From the start, Russell demonstrated that he know the basic jazz language as it was developed in the 1920s. He gigged and recorded with the musical cohort that was recognized as the most evolved mainstream (mostly white) branch of jazz, including Bix Beiderbecke, Frank Trumbauer, Red Nichols, Miff Mole, and Jack Teagarden. He also played in early mixed race groups, which included Fats Waller, Henry Red Allen, and Coleman Hawkins. One of his first recordings, “Crying All Day” in 1927, was with Trumbauer and Bix. He is clearly in the Bix mold; his solo, coming right after Beiderbecke’s, shows that he is in complete control of his instrument. He proffers a distinctive tone and an incipient approach to melody and intervals that will become part of what separates him from other jazz musicians.
In this 1929 Louisiana Rhythm Kings recording of “Basin Street Blues,” you can hear more clearly Russell’s bent, stifled, even strangled notes and phrases of unexpected length; signs that Russell was leaving the Beiderbecke voice behind and moving toward  asserting his own.
In this 1938 recording of “Love Is Just Around the Corner,” the voice continues on its singular, idiosyncratic way.
I’m not going to flood you with musical examples from the ensuing decades, if only because Russell retained many of the same stylistic elements he had developed early on. He remained himself whether he was playing in a more traditional (“Dixieland” or “Chicago”) context, in a swing-oriented group, or in a more “modern” context.
Here Russell is paired with Jimmy Giuffre in 1958, playing a blues. It’s a remarkable duet.
Lastly, here’s Russell with Thelonius Monk in 1963. Hear how he brings his idiosyncratic style and adapts it to Monk’s harmonic language.
Pee Wee Russell was one of the few jazz musicians who began recording in the ’20s and went on to play with new generations of jazz players well into the ’60s. Another was saxophonist Coleman Hawkins. Hawkins was vastly and overtly influential; I think Russell’s influence was more subliminal. Russell’s approach did not generate legions of followers — as Hawkins’ playing did — but he was an important exemplar that the sine qua non of jazz is finding your individual voice. In Russell’s case, one part of this meant presenting a paradigm that gave other musicians a yardstick, a way to measure how far “in” or “out” they themselves wanted to go. Finally, I think that musicians could see that Russell, by pursuing his own vision, had avoided the vicissitudes of changing fashion and touched on the quality of timelessness that is the implicit goal of any jazz musician — indeed, of any artist.


Steve Provizer is a jazz brass player and vocalist, leads a band called Skylight and plays with the Leap of Faith Orchestra. He has a radio show Thursdays at 5 p.m. on WZBC, 90.3 FM and has been blogging about jazz since 2010.

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Fifty Years In, Lee Fields Is Still Wearing Great Suits | Vanity Fair

Fifty Years In, Lee Fields Is Still Wearing Great Suits | Vanity Fair

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https://www.vanityfair.com/style/2019/04/fifty-years-in-lee-fields-is-still-wearing-great-suits

Fifty Years In, Lee Fields Is Still Wearing Great Suits

Dan AdlerApril 5, 2019 2:55 PM
That’s Sharp
Image removed by sender.
Photograph by Justin Bishop.
Catching up with the soul singer, whose new album, It Rains Love, is out today, and his wife on a clear day in New Jersey.
Soon, soul singer Lee Fields is going to celebrate his 50th anniversary in music by touring behind his new album, It Rains Love, with his band, the Expressions. But on a recent day at his home in Plainfield, New Jersey, he was mostly talking about his suits.
“Oh man, watch yourself!” he said as he handed over one of them, before breaking into a deep belly laugh. “You almost cut your hand off!” This particular suit was dangerous—it had shards of mirror sewn onto its exterior.
The 68-year-old keeps the hundred-plus bespoke outfits he has worn over his career in basement storage. From the cache, he brought up a few racks of his imaginative and ornate favorites to share with Vanity Fair.
“When I wore this outfit in Las Vegas,” Fields said of the mirrored suit, “my bass player said, ‘Oh man, Lee, this sharp.’ I did a spin, and I moved on with the show. He looked at me and said, ‘Lee, you almost got me.’”

Photographs by Justin Bishop.

Photographs by Justin Bishop.
With Fields, though, even a conversation about clothes turns into a disquisition about religion and politics, or else a dive into his trove of stories. “I like the Stones, I like the Beatles, I like Liberace, I like Elvis, I like James Brown, I like the Temptations,” he continued. “How they were dressing back in the day. I like David Bowie. We went to David Bowie’s concert—we were invited by his keyboardist, and then I thought David Bowie was just absolutely fantastic. The way he had on this outfit, he came on with one outfit, but he was constantly taking pieces off of the outfit and he was changing right before your eyes. I felt he was one of the most creative artists of all time.”
Fields’s wife, Christine, was home that afternoon, too. The couple, who will also be celebrating their 50th anniversary soon, met in New York in 1968, a year after he arrived from North Carolina to pursue a singing career. “As I’ve watched the changes through the years,” Fields said in his living room, “it seemed like every betterment of society came because of love.”
For all Fields’s effortlessly maximalist, Clyde Frazier-level style, he didn’t want to take the credit. “I don’t really pick ‘em out,” he said of his wife. “She does.”
Fields’s mother made some of his earliest suits. “And I enjoyed that, going to the fabric stores, picking out fabrics,” Christine said. “She knew exactly what to buy, because she was actually a stage person, too. I took it from her, to be honest, and I loved picking different styles, different colors, and just having this vision.”
“We used to ride around for hours,” Fields said of his early trips with his wife and mother. “Some days, maybe ride around for six, seven hours. Until we find that right material and everybody agreed on it, it didn’t work.”
After Fields took a break from music to pursue real-estate interests in the 80s, it was Christine who put him back on track. “I had drifted so far from music, I felt like I’d missed my shot,” he said. “I was planning on opening an eatery over in Newark. I thought, we get this place, rent out the three floors, and turn the bottom storefront into a fish place, where you carry out, where you come get your fish and you go. So then we won’t have to worry about dealing with people that might sit around for a while, and might cause a lot of trouble. I thought it was a great idea, so I told my wife about it.”

Photograph by Justin Bishop.
“She wasn’t that excited about it but I said, ‘I’ll take you over to the place and let you see the place.’ So we drove over to Newark and she saw the place. She thought it could be a good idea. But she looked at me, she said, ‘What do you know about fish?’”
He paused, and his laughter beat him to the punch line. “I said, ‘Well baby, they taste good.’”
Christine told Fields that he should just stick to what he did best. At one point, he gestured to her. “That’s really Lee Fields, over there.”
On It Rains Love, Fields sounds as vital and enlivened as ever, his voice warm and restrained. His still-growing stockpile of suits is a capsule of his career, but also an expression of his intention to keep pushing it forward. Before he left his house, he put on a lime green jacquard jacket.
“I always dressed a little futuristic,” Fields said. “A lot of people that look at my music, they don’t see the future. But I’m very much about the future. You know, I wear the regular suits, too. But sometimes, man, for me to really be expressing myself, I got to just take it to the full metal. I got to go out there.”

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At the Friars Club, When the Laughter Stopped – The New York Times

At the Friars Club, When the Laughter Stopped – The New York Times

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At the Friars Club, When the Laughter Stopped
21-27 minutes


For many decades, the Friars Club has operated as a fraternity for entertainers and is known for its roasts of celebrities. Jack Benny, center, was the guest of honor in 1970. From left are Johnny Carson, Alan King, Ed Sullivan, Dennis Day, Phil Harris, Mr. Benny, George Burns and Milton Berle.CreditEverett Collection

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For many decades, the Friars Club has operated as a fraternity for entertainers and is known for its roasts of celebrities. Jack Benny, center, was the guest of honor in 1970. From left are Johnny Carson, Alan King, Ed Sullivan, Dennis Day, Phil Harris, Mr. Benny, George Burns and Milton Berle.CreditCreditEverett Collection
For decades, the Friars Club has been America’s temple of comedy, a fraternity of jokesters and others who relish the rimshot and proudly regard bad taste as a core virtue.
How bad?
Jack Black showed up to be roasted and dropped his pants on the red carpet. Gilbert Gottfried thought it would be funny to try a 9/11 joke just weeks after the attacks. Mourners at Milton Berle’s memorial service could not stop talking about his legendary (euphemism here).
I saw him sink a four-foot putt with it.
Ba-dum-bum.
Despite the Friars’ puckish vulgarity — or maybe because of it — their Manhattan headquarters, a six-story landmark townhouse known as “the Monastery,” has long been a cradle of celebrity, and the club’s roasts are the stuff of legend. Frank Sinatra, Ed Sullivan and Jerry Lewis all directed its affairs, and it was an entertainment force during an era when television had a handful of channels and America a smaller constellation of stars.
But fewer and fewer tastemakers visit the Monastery these days. Membership has dwindled. Bills have piled up. The club lost its tax-exempt status as a fraternal organization in 2010. Some members question how their money is being spent. Dissension reigns.
Federal agents raided the offices in 2017, carting off boxes of files. Earlier this year, they charged the club’s executive director, Michael Gyure, with filing false personal tax returns.
The club’s governing board told members last month that the federal investigation was over and that the club faced no further accusations.
“It is our hope,” the board wrote in a letter, “that now that this cloud has lifted, many good Friars will return so that the Club can go forward to recreate the fraternal environment which made the Friars famous.”
But a review of emails, tax records, Friars’ correspondence and financial records — and four dozen interviews with former and current Friars and staff members — reveals that the club’s problems ran deeper than one director’s faulty tax returns.
The club’s foundation held charity events that raised $3 million but cleared only $13,000 for charity, an outcome that led the volunteer board to cease operations in 2015. The club hired a man convicted of defrauding charities, who called himself the “King of Cons,” as a consultant. Former staff members described questionable spending and sloppy bookkeeping, including a $160,000 loan to the executive director without interest that was never written down.
Though the club looks as it always has — bars on the first and second floors, gym on five, Luigi’s barbershop on four next to the card room — many Friars and former Friars remain upset, and have been meeting to discuss what to do next.
A landmark building, the headquarters of the Friars Club since 1957 is a six-story townhouse on East 55th Street that is affectionately called “the Monastery.”CreditVincent Tullo for The New York Times
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A landmark building, the headquarters of the Friars Club since 1957 is a six-story townhouse on East 55th Street that is affectionately called “the Monastery.”CreditVincent Tullo for The New York Times
Even some governing board members have thrown up their hands in frustration, complaining they have been used as a rubber stamp by Mr. Gyure and a few members on the executive committee of the board.
“This is not a board that was running the club, or fully informed of what was going on in the club,” said Lou DiBella, a sports and entertainment executive who quit the board in January. “I believed that it was a group of guys who ran the club in the shadows.”
Mr. Gyure (pronounced “Jury”) pleaded guilty in January to the tax matter and is facing a possible prison term when he is sentenced in May. But the club paid a portion of his legal fees and says it will keep a job open for him. His crime, members of the executive committee said, was not directly related to his work.
Several committee members acknowledged, though, that the club had lacked proper financial controls, and that too much power had rested with the executive director.
“Members say they want to be more involved,” said Jeffrey Citron, a new member of the committee. “They want more transparency. We’re going to try to give it to them.”
Mr. Citron said there were no financial shenanigans, and that the club’s reputation had been hurt by bitter dissidents who spread false rumors about the management of the place.
Stu Cantor, a former leader of the club, disagreed. He said the club had suspended members, including himself, just for raising questions.
“They’re blaming all the great longtime members for destroying the club because they left,” he said in an interview. “It’s totally backward. The reason all the wonderful long-term members left was because they were running the place into the ground.”
Once an entertainment epicenter
The object of all this Friar affection, and disaffection, is a 115-year-old club that began as a hangout for theater press agents and grew into an institution whose membership rolls read like a timeline of showbiz history. George M. Cohan — the Broadway macher and “Yankee Doodle Boy” songwriter — was once the abbot. (Think president.) He brought in Irving Berlin. Through the years Chevy Chase, George Burns and Johnny Carson have been members, and the subjects of the insult-filled celebrity “roasts” for which the club is known.
NBC, ESPN and Comedy Central all televised the roasts at various points, and the broadcast revenues supplemented the club’s annual dues, which are now $5,165.
From left, Johnny Carson, the roastee Jerry Lewis and Alan King in 1971. Right, Paul Shaffer and the roastee Chevy Chase in 2002.CreditLeft, NBC, via Getty Images; Right, Frank Micelotta/Getty Images
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From left, Johnny Carson, the roastee Jerry Lewis and Alan King in 1971. Right, Paul Shaffer and the roastee Chevy Chase in 2002.CreditLeft, NBC, via Getty Images; Right, Frank Micelotta/Getty Images
Today the average Friar is 56 years old. Most of the 1,000 members are men. Many are retired.
Since 1957, the club has been housed in a baronial English Renaissance townhouse on East 55th Street, where the dining room serves chicken chow mein named for Jimmy Fallon (Friar, inducted 2009).
The bar on the second floor is named for Barbra Streisand (Friar, 1988) though she was not the first woman in the club. That honor went to Liza Minnelli who was selected earlier that year.
About 20 percent of members are women now, though the club retains an atmosphere of male privilege. Mr. Berle’s infamous appendage, long referenced in Friar lore, remains its spirit animal.
Carol Scibelli (Friar, 1998) remembers the first time she saw Buddy Hackett holding court in the bar. Mr. Hackett, a dough-faced borscht belt comic known for roles in the films “The Music Man” and “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World,” was chatting with a group of male comedians. Ms. Scibelli couldn’t resist joining the conversation.
“Who the hell is this broad?” she remembers him bellowing.
But Ms. Scibelli, a comedian who promotes herself as the “funniest widow on earth,” wasn’t offended. The club once drew burlesque dancers and vaudeville stars, and their bawdy, off-color humor is part of the club’s DNA.
“I was a little embarrassed, but I was also happy that Buddy Hackett knew I was alive,” Ms. Scibelli said.
A financial pratfall and an odd hire
In recent years, the club’s financial problems were no secret to the staff members who paid the bills.
Con Edison would threaten to turn off the electricity. Vendors went half paid. The club fell several hundred thousand dollars behind on its state sales tax.
Herb Slavin of M. Slavin & Sons, a fishmonger who supplied the club, said he stopped delivering in 2017 because it couldn’t pay its tab. “Whenever you called,” he joked, “the person that was in charge had died.”
Many current and former members said that for years they never realized how deep the deficits ran, though they did notice the added assessments that kept popping up on their dues bills. The Operating Assessment. The Capital Improvement Fund.
Many of America’s most popular entertainers have been Friars. Clockwise from top left, Irving Berlin, Frank Sinatra, Milton Berle, Johnny Carson, Jimmy Fallon, Jack Black, Jerry Lewis and Liza Minnelli.CreditClockwise from top left: Associated Press; Ronald Dumont/Hulton Archive, via Getty Images; Betty Galella/WireImage, via Getty Images; Jessica Burstein/NBC, via Getty Images; Loreen Sarkis/Getty Images; Charles Eshelman/FilmMagic, via Getty Images; Jim Spellman/WireImage, via Getty Images; Bettmann/Getty Images
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Many of America’s most popular entertainers have been Friars. Clockwise from top left, Irving Berlin, Frank Sinatra, Milton Berle, Johnny Carson, Jimmy Fallon, Jack Black, Jerry Lewis and Liza Minnelli.CreditClockwise from top left: Associated Press; Ronald Dumont/Hulton Archive, via Getty Images; Betty Galella/WireImage, via Getty Images; Jessica Burstein/NBC, via Getty Images; Loreen Sarkis/Getty Images; Charles Eshelman/FilmMagic, via Getty Images; Jim Spellman/WireImage, via Getty Images; Bettmann/Getty Images
The leadership attributed the shortfalls to rising prices and falling membership. But former staff members said in interviews that they questioned how the club spent money even as it struggled to pay its bills. Pricey dinners by board members would be reimbursed. The club seemed to commit to expensive hotel banquet fees without shopping around.
“I found it very strange that when I started to bring up these things, everybody got very quiet, very upset, nobody wanted to talk about it,” said Tom Lowery, who briefly served as the club’s controller in 2017. “So I share the frustration of members who started to get agitated.”
Mr. Lowery only lasted two months, until, he said, he was fired for opening a piece of mail addressed to a club officer. He said it was not uncommon for employees to open and sort mail for the officers. The club said he had resigned.
Nancy DeSomma, who worked in accounts payable for three years until she was laid off in a 2017 downsizing, said she found the bookkeeping to be sloppy.
She said, for example, that she was instructed to cut checks for Flatbush and Church, an entity owned by a club officer, Bruce Charet. “I never saw paperwork,” she said, “I was just told to make a check out to it.”
In an interview, Mr. Charet said he had submitted invoices and that he had been reimbursed for expenses incurred in helping to produce events, which often meant securing performers and celebrity attendees.
“There are 20 dinners and lunches that you have to go to to deliver one person,” he said.
Mr. Charet later stepped down from his officer post after a club receptionist accused him of sexual harassment. Mr. Charet denied her charges. She filed a lawsuit in 2016, and the case was ultimately settled.
Mr. Gyure, the club’s executive director, was also paid fees in addition to his salary for helping to produce events.
The strangest payments, former staff members said, went to Aaron Tonken, a fund-raising consultant hired in 2014, six years after his release from federal prison where he served four years for defrauding charities.
In his book, “King of Cons,” written in 2004, Mr. Tonken described how he raised the profile of charity events he ran by luring celebrities with cash and lavish gifts. “I call it taking from the needy to feed the greedy,” he wrote.
Michael Gyure, right, executive director, is to be sentenced soon for failing to report income and expenses from the club on his tax returns. He is pictured here at the roast of Terry Bradshaw, left, with Jerry Lewis, the Friars’ abbot at the time.CreditAndrew H. Walker/Getty Images
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Michael Gyure, right, executive director, is to be sentenced soon for failing to report income and expenses from the club on his tax returns. He is pictured here at the roast of Terry Bradshaw, left, with Jerry Lewis, the Friars’ abbot at the time.CreditAndrew H. Walker/Getty Images
Arthur Aidala, a Friar who answered questions on Mr. Gyure’s behalf, said Mr. Tonken had presented Mr. Gyure a letter of recommendation from law enforcement officials attesting to his changed character.
Mr. Tonken said the club paid for travel costs, hotel stays, meals and even some of his rent. Three former club employees confirmed paying multiple expenses for him. Kristen Cure, a former administrative assistant, remembered searching for a birdcage the club could buy for one of his pet parrots and refilling a cash card for his use.
“I just came to work, ate, hung around in his office,” Mr. Tonken said of Mr. Gyure, who he said asked him to keep their business relationship quiet.
“Please don’t let other staff know about our arrangement,” Mr. Gyure wrote him in a 2014 email. “It is our business only.”
In a letter from November 2014, Mr. Gyure thanked Mr. Tonken for his work on a benefit dinner the month before, honoring the billionaire Carlos Slim and the actor Robert De Niro.
“Thanks to your efforts we were able to raise a significant amount of funds that will go toward donations to the charities affiliated with the event,” Mr. Gyure wrote.
Of course, that depends on how you define the term “significant.”
Spending money for charity
The first annual Lincoln Awards concert, sponsored in 2015 by the Friars Foundation, the club’s charitable arm, also turned out to be the last annual Lincoln Awards.
The event, at the Kennedy Center in Washington, had been promoted with much fanfare as a new opportunity to recognize the contributions of American veterans. Hosted by Brian Williams, it included tributes to 10 deserving recipients and performances by Nick Jonas, Harvey Keitel and Whitney Cummings, among others.
“Actors have Oscars,” USA Today wrote in a preview of show. “Live theater, the Tony Awards. Journalists receive Pulitzers and scientists Nobel Prizes. Now there is the Lincoln — for veterans.”
But the foundation, which had been operating as a charity since 1977, all but shut down later that year.
Aaron Tonken at prison in California where he spent four years after having been convicted of defrauding charities. He was later hired as a fund-raising consultant for the Friars Club.CreditReed Saxon/Associated Press
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Aaron Tonken at prison in California where he spent four years after having been convicted of defrauding charities. He was later hired as a fund-raising consultant for the Friars Club.CreditReed Saxon/Associated Press
The club and the foundation had a complicated relationship. Though they had separate boards and books, they were closely linked, with the club staff, led by Mr. Gyure, organizing foundation events under a longstanding agreement that the club, with its show business acumen, was best suited to run what were in effect entertainment events.
Members of the foundation’s volunteer board became concerned, they said, that the club was spending too much on events like the Lincoln Awards that seemed to cost a fortune to produce but spun off little for the foundation’s board to give away as charity.
In the last fiscal year that it fully operated, the foundation held three events that took in $3 million, but spent all but $13,000 in the process. The foundation, tapping funds from additional sources, paid out $198,000 that year.
“The general discomfort got so high, we decided we’d pay the bills and we’d give away the rest of the money to charity and close,” said John Catsimatidis, the Gristedes supermarket chain owner and one of the foundation’s directors.
The Lincoln awards had taken in $1.5 million in revenue, but ended up operating at a $79,000 loss, according to the charity’s audited financial statement.
The expenses included $596,000 for entertainment, even though some performers had donated their services. The club flew Mr. Williams, who was not paid, and other performers to Washington on a private jet, according to two people with knowledge of the club’s arrangements. (Mr. Williams was later edited out of the broadcast after his inaccurate account of a helicopter ride in Iraq drew public criticism.)
Mr. Aidala said the show had been envisioned as a “fun-raiser,” not a fund-raiser per se, and the charitable benefit had been the night out it provided for hundreds of servicemen and women who attended free.
But even before the Lincoln Awards, Mr. Catsimatidis said, the directors had become concerned about the spending surrounding the events. For the Carlos Slim charity dinner in 2014, the club spent 93 percent of the $1.47 million it took in, according to the foundation’s tax filing. More than $444,000 was spent to stage and cater the event in the Waldorf Astoria ballroom in New York.
“When the vast majority of the money is spent on events that don’t generate significant revenue, that’s concerning,” said Ashley Post, a spokeswoman for Charity Navigator, an organization that assesses charities.
Michael Matuza, the president of MBM Entertainment, a company that produced the entertainment portion of the dinner, said he did not know how the club could have spent so much on top of what it cost to rent the Waldorf. “It feels high,” he said.
The Lincoln Awards, a charity event run by the club and designed to honor veterans and their families, took in $1.5 million in revenue but operated at a loss.CreditPaul Morigi/Getty Images
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The Lincoln Awards, a charity event run by the club and designed to honor veterans and their families, took in $1.5 million in revenue but operated at a loss.CreditPaul Morigi/Getty Images
Mr. Aidala accused the foundation leaders of legally “cooking the books” to make it appear as if the charity had made less than it actually had. It was, he said, another outgrowth of the tensions between club leaders and foundation leaders that led the charity to cease actively operating. Club leaders said it will eventually resurface.
Mr. Catsimatidis scoffed at any suggestion that numbers had been manipulated. He had paid for his daughter’s wedding at the Waldorf and said he found the cost of the charity event outrageous.
But the foundation paid for the dinner, he said, “even though some of us on the board didn’t believe it passed the smell test.”
Can the laughing resume?
Nancy DeSomma remembers the day in 2017 when federal agents clambered up the stairs of the Monastery toward the sixth floor offices where the club kept its books.
She knew, she said, the place was under investigation. A federal agent had appeared at her Brooklyn apartment weeks earlier, looking to chat about what she had learned while doing the accounts payable.
Sondra Beninati, a member then, also was not surprised by the raid. She had long been frustrated by what she saw as a lack of transparency regarding the club’s finances, so when a federal agent contacted her and asked her to wear a taping device, she agreed. She went, wired up, she said, to a membership meeting in the club’s Frank Sinatra dining room.
Ms. Beninati loves the club, she said, and wants to see it restored to good health. At one point, she refused to pay her dues until she received an audited financial statement. She was suspended, and ultimately booted from the club. “It felt like getting kicked out of your house,” she said.
For the many members who viewed the federal investigation as an unmerited nuisance, its apparent end has fed the hope that the club may be able to go back to being a place for laughs, a few drinks and maybe a bit of singing.
“We ourselves did not know what this was going to uncover,” said Mr. Citron. “We were the most relieved when we found out it uncovered nothing.”
But some members are disappointed that the investigation did not answer their longstanding questions about the club’s financial health and management.
Stewie Stone, a comedian who was once on the executive committee of the club, has said he was disappointed in the way the place has been run in recent years.CreditAndrew Toth/Getty Images
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Stewie Stone, a comedian who was once on the executive committee of the club, has said he was disappointed in the way the place has been run in recent years.CreditAndrew Toth/Getty Images
Mr. DiBella, the former board member, said the board often was not consulted about financial decisions and played no role in selecting the club’s lawyers or accountants.
Executive committee members said they are working to improve the club’s oversight, to catch up on any unpaid bills and to ensure that major financial decisions are properly reviewed by the governing board.
They defended keeping a job open for Mr. Gyure, even if he goes to prison. His new title will be “executive producer,” they said, and he will have no control over the club’s financials.
“He made some mistakes in his personal life having nothing really to do with the club,” said Mr. Citron. “People make mistakes. But as a friend, a manager, as a force at the club, a lot of people love him.”
Mr. Gyure pleaded guilty to not having reported income he received from the club in the form of $273,000 in expenses and a $160,000 loan that was forgiven, according to the government’s court papers.
Two former members of the executive committee, Stewie Stone and Mr. Cantor, said in interviews that Mr. Gyure had actually been suspected of taking the $160,000 without authorization, but the club leaders at the time forgave him and agreed to treat it as a loan.
“They’re comedians — what the hell do they know?” said Mr. Cantor, who sat on the executive committee at the time.
Mr. Gyure’s lawyer, Paul Shechtman, disputed that account, saying Mr. Gyure had asked and received permission to take an advance on his salary and later repaid it, partly through salary reductions.
Still, for the members who have seen friends ejected, the idea that Mr. Gyure would be welcomed back to the club was galling. One of them was Harold Siegel, a member since 1968. He died in late March at 89.
Once, his life had been mapped by the small triangle linking the club, his office on Madison Avenue, and his apartment a few blocks away. But he became disappointed in what the club had turned into.
“When you know something was so good,” he said, “you don’t like it when it ends.”
Colin Moynihan and William K. Rashbaum contributed reporting. Susan Beachy, Alain Delaqueriere, Kitty Bennett, Jack Begg and Doris Burke contributed research.
A version of this article appears in print on April 14, 2019, on Page AR1 of the New York edition with the headline: Serious Business at the Friars Club. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 

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Bob Slade, Distinguished Voice on Black Radio, Dies at 70 – The New York Times

Bob Slade, Distinguished Voice on Black Radio, Dies at 70 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/08/obituaries/bob-slade-dies.html?action=click&module=Well&pgtype=Homepage&section=Obituaries
 
nytimes.com
Bob Slade, Distinguished Voice on Black Radio, Dies at 70
6-7 minutes


Bob Slade at the studios of WRKS-FM in Lower Manhattan in 2000. His program “Open Line,” first heard on WRKS 1989, provided an important forum for the black community.CreditMichelle V. Agins/The New York Times

Bob Slade at the studios of WRKS-FM in Lower Manhattan in 2000. His program “Open Line,” first heard on WRKS 1989, provided an important forum for the black community.CreditCreditMichelle V. Agins/The New York Times
Bob Slade, a prominent voice on African-American radio in New York City as a creator and longtime host of the call-in commentary program “Open Line,” died on March 23 at a hospital in Manhattan. He was 70.
His wife, Tina McCants, said the cause was complications of kidney disease, which Mr. Slade had had since the 1990s.
Mr. Slade’s mellow voice was recognizable to radio audiences in the tristate area, where he spent more than three decades as a disc jockey, radio reporter, host and commentator.
“My philosophy has always been I’m not really a newscaster, I’m not what you call a broadcaster, I’m a communicator,” he said in a video interview included in a tribute to him by his most recent station, WBLS-FM.
His longest tenure was at 98.7-FM, then an R&B station known by the call letters WRKS and more colloquially as Kiss-FM, where he worked from the mid-1970s until WBLS and WRKS merged in 2012.
It was at Kiss, in 1989, that Mr. Slade helped create “Open Line,” which now airs on Sundays from 8 to 9 a.m. on WBLS.
“Open Line” provided an important forum for the black community, which many say has long lacked sufficient representation in the mainstream media. For many years Mr. Slade hosted the program with Bob Pickett, who still hosts it, and the musician and activist James Mtume, who left the show in 2013.
They discussed the news with callers and guests like Mayor David N. Dinkins and the Rev. Al Sharpton, who also has a program on WBLS.
“For a quarter of a century we struggled together,” Mr. Sharpton wrote on Twitter after Mr. Slade’s death. “You are irreplaceable.”
“Open Line” developed a following: Skip Dillard, WBLS’s operations manager, said that about 60,000 people tune in each week. Mr. Pickett described Mr. Slade as the program’s “chief operator” and a “historian.”
“Bob was a great storyteller and activist in getting our audience involved in certain big issues,” Mr. Pickett said in a telephone interview.
Among many other topics, “Open Line” addressed politics, the O. J. Simpson trial and police shootings of black people. It was one of the first programs to question the conventional news media narrative about five black and Latino teenagers accused of beating and raping a white woman who was jogging in Central Park in 1989.
The so-called Central Park jogger case became one of the biggest crime stories of the late 1980s, and many news outlets were quick to trust police accounts and a prosecution based largely on confessions that the youths claimed were coerced. On “Open Line,” Mr. Slade pointed to DNA evidence that appeared to exonerate the suspects and criticized other outlets for playing it down.
“We’re telling the story the way it should have been told — the way everybody else should be telling it,” Mr. Slade told The New York Times in 1990.
All five of the youths were convicted of various crimes, and served years in prison. In 2002 a convicted murderer and serial rapist confessed to the rape, and the convictions of the five men were vacated.
Mr. Slade told The Daily News in 2012 that he considered the exoneration of the Central Park Five, as the men came to be known, a vindication of his journalistic approach.
“Everyone thought we were just defending these kids because they were black and Hispanic,” he said. “I kept saying it’s not black and white. It’s right and wrong.”
Bob Slade was born Robert Reed McCants III in Harlem on Nov. 10, 1948, to Robert McCants Jr., a city bus driver, and Doris (Stokes) McCants, a homemaker. He grew up in the Abraham Lincoln Houses, a housing project there, and acted in shows staged at the YMCA before graduating from Haaren High School in Midtown, which has since closed.
“I had no idea that I would ever get into radio,” Mr. Slade once said, adding that he hoped to be an actor, “the black Paul Newman.”
He studied journalism and communications at Queens College and honed his radio voice as an announcer at a department store in Brooklyn. His first radio job was for a small station on Long Island, and in the late 1960s he moved to Troy, N.Y., to work at WTRY-FM. A program director there persuaded him to use the radio-friendly name Bob Slade.
Mr. Slade returned to New York in 1975. He was WRKS’s news director for a time and also hosted a weekly news roundup called “The Week in Review” and a series called “Soul Beginnings,” which charted the growth of soul music from the 1950s to the ′70s.
In 1994 Mr. Slade earned a Peabody Award for WRKS for another music-themed project, “The Rise and Fall of Vee-Jay Records,” a documentary about an influential Chicago R&B label for which he and Johnny Meadow were executive producers.
He spent several years balancing his hectic work schedule with regular dialysis treatments before receiving a kidney transplant in 2005.
In 1973 he married Tina Mendez. In addition to his wife, with whom he lived in Jersey City, he is survived by a brother, Reed Robert, and two sisters, Dorry and Jody McCants. Another sister, Rande McCants, died in 2010.
Mr. Slade’s last appearance on “Open Line” was on March 3. Fatiyn Muhammad, the executive producer, said the show would continue, with Mr. Pickett and himself as hosts.
Follow Daniel E. Slotnik on Twitter: @dslotnik
 

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Sam Pilafian death: Legendary Tuba performer and music educator has died at age 69

Sam Pilafian death: Legendary Tuba performer and music educator has died at age 69

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https://www.monstersandcritics.com/people/sam-pilafian-death-legendary-tuba-performer-and-music-educator-has-died-at-age-69/
 
monstersandcritics.com
Sam Pilafian death: Legendary Tuba performer and music educator has died at age 69
By Frank Yemi
3 minutes


6th April 2019 6:15 PM ET

Exceptional tuba performer Sam Pilafian has died. Pic credit: Sam Pilafian/Facebook.
Acclaimed Tuba performer and music educator Sam Pilafian has died. The musical icon, who was also the professor of Tuba at Arizona State University, was reportedly 69 years old when his death was announced.
Sam Pilafian is remembered by many of his students and fans. The tuba virtuoso taught at numerous musical programs including Arizona State University, Boston University, and Tanglewood Institute.
Pilafian’s cause of death has not been revealed.
Sam started his career in the 60s and grew up in Miami, Florida. Pilafian is a founding member of the Empire Brass Quintet and played at the premiere of Leonard Bernstein’s MASS at the opening of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in 1971.
During his musical career, he performed with Pink Floyd, the Boston Symphony, Bernadette Peters and Frank Vignola,
According to his Arizona State University biography, he recorded 15 albums as a solo jazz artist and performed Solo recital and concerto performances across Europe, Japan, and Canada.
The late tuba performer won numerous competitions during his career including the National Music Camp in Interlochen Michigan. Sam Pilafian earned fellowships Dartmouth College and the Tanglewood Music Center and was awarded the 2009 Emmy Award for best instructional/educational video.
Sam Pilafian was the Professor of Music at Arizona State University, after working for over two decades at the music faculties of Boston University.
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Emmet Cohen wins 2019 American Pianists Awards on his third try: Indianapolis Star

Emmet Cohen wins 2019 American Pianists Awards on his third try: Indianapolis Star

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https://www.indystar.com/story/entertainment/music/2019/04/06/emmet-cohen-wins-american-pianists-awards-final-performance-jazz-kitchen-hilbert-circle-theatre/3238398002/
 
indystar.com
‘I was choking back tears’: Jazz pianist Emmet Cohen wins 2019 American Pianists Awards
Domenica Bongiovanni, Indianapolis Star
9-12 minutes


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Emmet Cohen is a jazz finalist for the American Pianists Awards. He performed at Eskanazi Hospital on Feb. 21, 2019. American Pianists Awards, Indianapolis Star
Emmet Cohen has won the 2019 American Pianists Awards, one of the world’s major jazz piano competitions. And that means a serious, up-and-coming musician who has already seen success is about to have his career move up a level internationally.  
The winner was announced after the five finalists performed Saturday at Hilbert Circle Theatre in a concert emceed by Dee Dee Bridgewater. The Indianapolis-based competition, run by the American Pianists Association, is known for its massive prize. It includes $50,000 in cash, two years of career management, a recording contract with esteemed label Mack Avenue Records and the title of artist-in-residence at the University of Indianapolis for two years.
On Saturday night, Cohen delivered deeply soulful renditions of “I Keep Goin’ Back to Joe’s” (Marvin Fisher and Jack Segal) with singer Kurt Elling and a Fats Waller Medley with the Buselli-Wallarab Jazz Orchestra. Cohen expertly locked into Elling’s scat singing and the orchestra’s rhythm section, and he pulled an uncommon depth and sensitivity from the piano’s middle range during his solos. 
“I’ve been really trying to connect with my breath, really just trying to be as natural and as flowing as possible,” Cohen told IndyStar after he was announced as the winner Saturday.
“I think a way to connect with the other musicians around you, which is what the ultimate goal of jazz is, one of the ways to do that is to invite everyone into what it is you’re playing, really listen to what they’re doing and to try to fit in with it.”
The pianist had previously been a finalist in Indianapolis in 2011 and 2015. Cohen said he considered not coming back for a third time but friends and family encouraged him to give it one more shot. 
“I’ve been in that situation back there when they name the winner and the build-up and the wait, and it’s one of the most nerve-wracking things, one of the things that will keep you up at night. It’s one of the things that I was thinking about when I wasn’t able to sleep last night,” he said.
“When they called my name, I was choking back tears.”
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Cohen, 28, has already performed with many of the jazz musicians who have fashioned the genre as we know it. He created his “Masters Legacy Series” recordings through such collaborations. The series pairs young jazz musicians with greats, including Jimmy Cobb, the drummer on Miles Davis’ “Kind of Blue,” and Ron Carter, who holds the Guinness World Record as the “most recorded jazz bassist in history.”
“It was like, ‘OK, that’s how he hears music. That’s how he shapes the music. This is how his swing feel pulsates within the room,” Cohen told IndyStar in February about working with Cobb.
Cohen — who grew up in Miami and Montclair, New Jersey, and now lives in Harlem — earned a master’s degree from the Manhattan School of Music. He has played at the Newport and Monterey jazz festivals, met President Barack Obama in the White House and plays the Hammond B-3 organ in New York’s Smoke Jazz & Supper Club whenever he’s at home.
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Who are the other finalists?
Kenny Banks Jr.
Banks, 30, came to the American Pianists Awards with star credits and a stint performing with the Theo Croker Quintet in China. In 2018, Banks released his album “My Sentiments.” He has played with Dionne Farris, India Arie and Jennifer Holliday, who is known for her performance as Effie “Melody” White in “Dreamgirls” in 1981.
“It took my playing level to the next level because she doesn’t play around,” Banks told IndyStar in October. “I mean, she’s very specific about what she wants, very direct about how she’s going to get it.” 
The pianist, who studied with his father and played with the respected Columbus Youth Jazz Orchestra, said he doesn’t peg his style but focuses on ideas like heart and soul. The son of a church organist and jazz pianist, Banks grew up in Columbus, Ohio, with gospel music, choral music and the blues. He later moved to Atlanta to continue pursuing his jazz piano career.
Billy Test
Test, 30, has been living in Germany after he was invited to perform with the WDR Big Band, the Grammy-winning ensemble that belongs to the radio station in Cologne, Germany.
Previously, the pianist flew out to play events with Jaimoe, the founding drummer for the Allman Brothers Band. Other performances have included trumpeter Joe Magnarelli and the New York-based Vanguard Jazz Orchestra.
His composition “Empty Spaces” particularly affected the jury for the American Pianists Awards. The piece, which he said he wrote in 30 minutes, is dedicated to his father, who died unexpectedly when Test was 15 years old.
The pianist, who grew up in Philipsburg, Pennsylvania, earned his master’s degree from the Manhattan School of Music.
Dave Meder
Meder, 28, has already won an ASCAP Young Jazz Composer Award and put together a piano-trio album called “Passage.” His composition prowess and penchant for combining several music styles helped him to a position as an assistant professor of jazz piano at the University of North Texas.
The pianist, who’s from Tampa, Florida, is also influenced by his upbringing in a Baptist church and often incorporates hymns into his sets, along with what he’s gleaned from Thelonious Monk, John Adams and Philip Glass. Meder earned his master’s degree at New York University and an Artist Diploma at The Juilliard School.
Meder’s time as music director at Fordham Lutheran Church molded the way he performs now.
“The congregation was primarily African-American, and I had never, up to that point, been in a congregation like that. So the music was radically different … and really forced me to get into a different mode of thinking musically,” Meder told IndyStar in January.
“Oftentimes musicians, especially the ones who go to school, get hung up on all the abstract concepts. But in church, it’s a whole different thing. So it forced me to balance those two sides of my musical identity.”
Keelan Dimick
Dimick, 27, has toured the U.S. and overseas, performing with drummer Kobie Watkins, saxophonist David Liebman and trumpeter Randy Brecker, who has played on the albums of James Taylor, Bruce Springsteen, Parliament/Funkadelic, Frank Sinatra and Frank Zappa.
Brecker especially had an impact on Dimick.
“He gave me some really great advice career-wise, and we just hit it off really well,” Dimick told IndyStar in November.
“I think that more important than the music that happens just in that one performance, it’s the connection that you make because that’s what … is going to matter for the rest of your life. The music will just come from that connection.”
Dimick also has taught at the Fresco Arts Academy in Eagle, Idaho, and as a teacher’s assistant at the Frost School of Music at the University of Miami.
The pianist, who grew up in Fairfield, Iowa, and Boise, Idaho, now lives in Miami. He completed his master’s degree at the Frost School.
Who decided the winner?
The American Pianists Awards alternates every two years between jazz and classical finalists. Drew Peterson won the classical iteration in 2017. Sullivan Fortner won the 2015 jazz competition.
Saturday’s concert, where each finalist played with Elling and the Buselli-Wallarab Jazz Orchestra, was only part of the months-long competition. From September through February, the pianists visited Indianapolis to perform and participate in community outreach at high schools.
During those visits, the finalists’ sets at The Jazz Kitchen counted toward their overall score. Additional concerts at The Jazz Kitchen and Hilbert Circle Theatre on Friday and Saturday formed the rest of the scores.
Here are the jurors involved in the 2019 competition:

  • Adam Birnbaum: Winner of the 2004 American Pianists Awards,
  • Stanley Cowell: Professor Emeritus of Jazz Piano at Rutgers University,
  • Phil DeGreg: Professor of jazz studies at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music,
  • Matthew Fries: Great American Jazz Piano Competition winner and professor of jazz piano at Western Michigan University,
  • Jeff Hellmer: Professor of jazz studies at the University of Texas at Austin,
  • Tamir Hendelman: Award-winning touring pianist,
  • Chris Mees: President of B Natural, Inc. booking and management agency,
  • Renee Rosnes: Jazz pianist, composer and music director for ARTEMIS, an ensemble with all-star talent, 
  • Scott Routenberg: Award-winning composer, arranger, pianist and assistant professor of music performance at Ball State University,
  • John Salmon: Winner of the 1983 American Pianists Awards and professor of piano at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro,
  • Helen Sung: Award-winning pianist and composer,
  • Will Wakefield: Executive at Mack Avenue Records, and
  • Brent Wallarab: Co-founder and conductor of the Buselli Wallarab Jazz Orchestra and associate professor of jazz studies at Indiana University.

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Contact IndyStar reporter Domenica Bongiovanni at 317-444-7339 or d.bongiovanni@indystar.com. Follow her on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter: @domenicareports.
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Rudy Gobert reacts to being on ‘album cover’ after listening to jazz for the first time

Rudy Gobert reacts to being on ‘album cover’ after listening to jazz for the first time

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https://www.deseretnews.com/article/900064136/rudy-gobert-reacts-to-being-on-album-cover-after-listening-to-jazz-for-the-first-time-utah-basketball-nba-dpoy.html
 
deseretnews.com
Rudy Gobert reacts to being on ‘album cover’ after listening to jazz for the first time
Ryan McDonald
4-5 minutes



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Utah Jazz PR
The Utah Jazz are kicking off Rudy Gobert’s 2019 Defensive Player of the Year campaign with the release of Gobert/Encore 2019. The decorative album is a fitting tribute to a modern star with throwback sensibilities, as Gobert tries to defend his title as the NBA’s defensive king. The Jazz creative team paid tribute to the Utah Jazz name through the recreation of a classic jazz album: John Coltrane’s “Prestige 7105.” The albums were pressed at United Record Pressing in Nashville, Tenn., the same company that pressed Bob Dylan’s “Highway 61 Revisited,” Jay-Z’s “The Black Album” and Miles Davis’ “Kind of Blue.” The jackets were printed at Dorado Music Packaging in Los Angeles.
SALT LAKE CITY — Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert had never listened to jazz music before Thursday night, but he had good reason to.
The Jazz organization on Friday morning began a campaign for the Frenchman to be voted the NBA’s Defensive Player of the Year by releasing a vinyl record-themed package reminiscent of an album by famed jazz musician John Coltrane.
While there’s no actual music on the record, the package highlighting Gobert’s defensive prowess has just about everything else a real record and jacket would. The front cover features a portrait shot of the big fella, while the inside booklet that would usually have song lyrics contains some of his impressive stats and “reviews,” things people around the NBA have said about him.
”  … it makes me want to work even harder for this organization. “
Rudy Gobert
The whole thing is incredibly detailed, down to the fact that it even smells like an old record.
“I never thought I’d be on the cover of a jazz album in my life,” Gobert said Friday morning after Utah’s shootaround. “I really like it. I think it’s cool. It’s kind of vintage. I think my mom’s going to like it.”
Gobert said he’ll likely keep it in his trophy room, while he suspects his mother Corinne will hang it up in a more prominent place, even if he doesn’t fancy that idea much.
“I’ll tell her not to, but it is what it is,” he said.
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Although Gobert said he might not boastfully display the package, he is thankful the Jazz organization would go to such great lengths to make award voters aware of what he’s done this season.
“It means a lot,” he said. “I’m always thankful … it makes me want to work even harder for this organization.”

As far as the actual award is concerned, Gobert said winning it for the second year in a row would be a big deal to him.
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“It would mean a lot,” he said. “It’s history, and it’s something I take a lot of pride of. It’s all about the team. Like I always say, you don’t play great defense by yourself. You need everyone to be on board defensively. You need the coaching staff to be on board and my teammates. I anchor it, obviously, but if you don’t do what they’re doing, there’s no Defensive Player of the Year.”
After busting out some jazz music on Thursday, does Gobert think he’ll listen to it regularly moving forward?
“It’s actually relaxing, so it’s pretty good,” he said. “I’ve never really gotten into it, so I’ve got to dig in.”
 
 

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Keystone Korner founder saw ‘opportunity and need’ for new jazz club in Mussel Bar space – Baltimore Business Journal

Keystone Korner founder saw ‘opportunity and need’ for new jazz club in Mussel Bar space – Baltimore Business Journal

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https://www.bizjournals.com/baltimore/news/2019/04/03/keystone-korner-founder-saw-opportunity-and-need.html
 
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Keystone Korner founder saw ‘opportunity and need’ for new jazz club in Mussel Bar space – Baltimore Business Journal
By Amanda Yeager  – Reporter, Baltimore Business Journal a day ago
2-3 minutes


Barkan will move to Baltimore to manage programming and production for the club. He’s joining forces with renowned chef Robert Wiedmaier, Mussel Bar’s owner, for the project.
Barkan and Wiedmaier met last year at a celebration supper for the winners of the National Endowment for the Arts’ Jazz Masters award, the highest honor in the jazz community. Barkan had been named a Jazz Master, and Wiedmaier was hosting the dinner at Marcel’s, one of the Washington, D.C.-area restaurants owned by his RW Restaurant Group.
After striking up a “wonderful friendship and camaraderie,” the two began talking about opening a jazz club in the area, Barkan said. Wiedmaier suggested using his Mussel Bar & Grille property, which shut down last spring amid heavy construction in Harbor East.
“A lightbulb went off: this could be a wonderful place to have a jazz club where the community would embrace it and we would embrace the community,” Barkan said. “This is kind of a Cinderella-type story, a friendship and a vision together. Because you have to have a lot of heart to start a jazz club.”
The roughly 200-seat club will host live music every night, Barkan said. He’s assembling a lineup of national recording artists, as well as local and regional acts, to play at the new Keystone.
Prominent jazz bassist Ron Carter will kick things off with a run of performances April 30-May 2, accompanied by Donald Vega, a pianist, and guitarist Russell Malone. Other performers scheduled to play at the club in the coming months include saxophonist Kenny Garrett, Brazilian drummer Duduka da Fonseca, trumpet player and organist Joey DeFrancesco and the Cookers, a veteran bebop septet.
Barkan said tickets will be moderately priced, with seats for the Ron Carter shows ranging from $25 for general admission to $45 for premium spots.
 

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Google Doodle honors jazz legend and anti-apartheid hero Hugh Masekela

Google Doodle honors jazz legend and anti-apartheid hero Hugh Masekela

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/04/africa/hugh-masekela-80-google-doodle/index.html

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‘Tom McDermott Meets Scott Joplin’ Review: Reviving Rags – WSJ

‘Tom McDermott Meets Scott Joplin’ Review: Reviving Rags – WSJ

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/tom-mcdermott-meets-scott-joplin-review-reviving-rags-11554312372
 
wsj.com
‘Tom McDermott Meets Scott Joplin’ Review: Reviving Rags
Larry Blumenfeld
5-6 minutes


Like so many musicians, pianist Tom McDermott came to New Orleans to play a gig, fell in love with the place and never left. Since relocating in 1984, he has become a fixture on that city’s musical landscape and within its long lineage of pianists, some homegrown and some from afar, each lending distinctive flair to a rich legacy that blends scholarship, humor, funkiness and a range of jazz, blues and R&B influences.
The relaxed feel of Mr. McDermott’s playing sometimes conceals the boldness of his harmonic decisions and the rigor of his approach, which leans on diligent musicology. His playing and his original compositions draw from deep repertoire (he can play Louis Moreau Gottschalk’s mid-19th-century works with aplomb) and flash the same offbeat wit as the limericks and pencil drawings he publishes in small volumes.
“Tom McDermott Meets Scott Joplin” (Arbors), out Friday, reveals a love of ragtime, and of Joplin’s rags in particular, that began long before Mr. McDermott moved to New Orleans. Now 61 years old, he grew up in St. Louis at a time when a young musician could still attend annual ragtime festivals and hear the form (steady beat in the left hand, syncopation in the right, clearly defined thematic sections) played correctly by devotees such as Butch Thompson and James Dapogny. Even before this country got hooked anew on Joplin’s “The Entertainer,” as played by Marvin Hamlisch for the 1973 film “The Sting,” Mr. McDermott had dug into pianist Joshua Rifkin’s Nonesuch recordings of that and other Joplin works.
Joplin’s rags were an anachronism in “The Sting”—the film was set in the 1930s, well after ragtime’s heyday—but ragtime did beget early jazz. It’s the proper precursor for all of the music that Mr. McDermott has embraced. In a liner note, he recalls how, at age 14, “Joplin hit like thunder, opening my door into classic rag, and eventually early jazz, Brazilian music, Cuban grooves and New Orleans R&B.” All these influences figure into his approach to these 17 tracks.
Mr. McDermott is both reverent and not. He plays it mostly straight on “The Easy Winners” and “Magnetic Rag,” both of which benefit from his graceful light touch. He accentuates the tenderness and somber tone of “Gladiolus Rag.” On “Fig Leaf Rag,” he appropriates some of the variations Mr. Rifkin used on his Nonesuch versions. With “The Strenuous Life,” he places Joplin in a New Orleans jazz context, via what Jelly Roll Morton called “the Spanish tinge” (and redolent of the sound of a New Orleans piano pioneer, Professor Longhair). Mr. McDermott erases the march from “Rosebud March,” loosening its joints gradually to achieve a sped-up midsection that sounds like an overt homage to another New Orleans piano legend, James Booker.
“Maple Leaf Rag,” one of Joplin’s best-known and most demanding rags, was also, upon its publication in 1899, the earliest of sheet-music best sellers. It forms a centerpiece here, full of unorthodox key changes in the opening section and sly shifts of tempo and style before ending, in unusual fashion, back on the opening “A” section. In lesser hands, such an approach would seem mere pastiche. Mr. McDermott is hardly the first to toy with this rag (New Orleans pianist Henry Butler, among others, had his own radical interpretation), but his version is notable for both its daring and its cohesion. “The Entertainer,” another highlight, is the furthest flung and hardest swung of Mr. McDermott’s takes on Joplin.
New Orleans isn’t the only place that seduced Mr. McDermott. Brazil has long been a muse as well, particularly for its choro style, which predated ragtime in origin and outlasted it in popularity. Mr. McDermott ends this Joplin album with three tracks originally issued on his 2005 release, “Choro do Norte,” which featured Brazilian and New Orleans-based musicians. The combination of choro and ragtime makes musicological sense, in terms of both form and shared roots; as expressed here by Mr. McDermott, it’s a sublime blend, lending fresh propulsion to ragtime’s inherent bounce on “Swipesy Cakewalk.” On “Heliotrope Bouquet,” arranged by Mr. McDermott for a piano-less quintet, the melody is introduced by Henry Lentino’s bandolim (a Brazilian mandolin) and passed along to clarinetist Evan Christopher and trombonist Rick Trolsen. They capture both the lilt and sway of Brazilian music, and the bluesy directness of early New Orleans jazz.
Scott Joplin’s rags have long fascinated musicians for their structural elegance, their magnificent melodies and their invitation to invent. With his own immersion, Mr. McDermott has broadened the possibilities and rekindled a spark.
Mr. Blumenfeld writes about jazz and Afro-Latin music for the Journal.
 

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He Says He Found a Souvenir From the ’60s: The Stage at Woodstock – The New York Times

He Says He Found a Souvenir From the ’60s: The Stage at Woodstock – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/31/nyregion/woodstock-festival-1969-stage-souvenir.html?action=click&module=Editors%20Picks&pgtype=Homepage
 
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He Says He Found a Souvenir From the ’60s: The Stage at Woodstock
8-10 minutes


Grace Notes
Steve Gold with a wooden panel from the stage of the 1969 Woodstock music festival.CreditDesiree Rios for The New York Times

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Steve Gold with a wooden panel from the stage of the 1969 Woodstock music festival.CreditCreditDesiree Rios for The New York Times
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In this year of 50th anniversaries — astronauts walking on the moon, “Sesame Street” premiering on television and the Mets winning their first World Series, to name only three — Steve Gold has what he says is the biggest souvenir from one of the biggest happenings of all: the stage from Woodstock.
“It was the focal point,” said Mr. Gold, who was 15 when more than 350,000 people descended on a field in Bethel, N.Y., about 15 miles from where he grew up.
It was, after all, where the Who, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Sly and the Family Stone, Janis Joplin and Richie Havens performed.
Mr. Gold was in the crowd. As a local, he was not stuck in traffic on the New York State Thruway, as so many were. “I went back and forth every day because I knew the back roads,” he said. “Not that many people knew the back roads, but I was able to go in and out as I pleased.”
After Jimi Hendrix delivered his electrifying performance of “The Star-Spangled Banner” and the crowd left, Woodstock became history. Now there is a museum at the site with psychedelic-looking exhibits. There is a stone marker. “I call it the tomb of the unknown hippie,” Duke Devlin, a longtime “site interpreter” for the museum, declared in a museum video. “Looks like a grave.”
Last year, when archaeologists combed the field for five days — one day longer than the festival itself — Spin magazine mused: “Perhaps they would find an old peace symbol? Or a strand of hippie beads? Or Jimi Hendrix’s guitar pick?”
Mr. Gold had no such thoughts when he went home from Woodstock in 1969. He figured what he had witnessed was just another rock concert. “For Sullivan County, it was a big to-do,” Mr. Gold said, “but it didn’t seem like this worldwide big to-do.”
The big to-do for him was a girl named Robin, whose parents owned a bungalow colony with cottages they rented out during the summer and repaired before the weather turned cold.
“What happens after Labor Day is you start renovating or adding additions for the following season,” he said. “My girlfriend’s father was building a little sports area, like basketball hoops and a paddleball court.”
One day, Mr. Gold went by to watch. “I want to be nice to the father because I’m dating his daughter,” he said, retelling the story. “He asks if I would help him unload wood from his pickup truck. I say O.K. They’re these plywood panels. He says, ‘I bought these panels at Yasgur’s farm because they were selling everything from the concert, and this was the stage. I bought part of the stage.’ I said, ‘O.K.’ I was like, so what, I’m here because of your daughter, whatever.”
He did not imagine that the moment would replay itself someday, but a couple of years ago, it did, in one of those middle-of-the night moments when things come to mind out of nowhere. He was lying in bed. “I didn’t tell my wife I was thinking about my first love,” he said. “But I thought, ‘I remember Robin’s dad telling me he was building the paddleball court with wood from the stage.’”
Soon Mr. Gold, who lives in New City, made the drive to Woodbourne, where Robin’s father’s bungalow colony had been, and he and a friend went looking for the paddleball court. The compound had fallen into disrepair and was overgrown. After wandering around, disoriented, he was ready to give up the search.
“My friend says, ‘What’s that all the way deep, deep in the woods?’” he said. “I go, ‘I don’t know, but I don’t remember it being that far away.’”
They pushed through the brush, crossing a stream that seemed as wide as the Mississippi River. There it was. “The same exact paddleball court that I remember,” he said.
Jimi Hendrix was among the stars who performed onstage at Woodstock in August 1969.CreditLarry C. Morris/The New York Times

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Jimi Hendrix was among the stars who performed onstage at Woodstock in August 1969.CreditLarry C. Morris/The New York Times
He could not be sure it was the court he had watched Robin’s father put together with the boards from Woodstock. Without explaining why, he asked the owners — Robin’s parents had long since sold the place — if he could pull off a couple of the wooden panels. He said they thought it was a strange request, but they agreed.
“I saw a lot of the markings that you see in the Woodstock movie and photos,” he said. There were logos for Weyerhauser, the lumber manufacturer that had made the boards. “They’re very prominent,” he said, “and some panels had different color paint.” He remembered seeing photographs of the stage with paint like that. “So I was 99 percent sure this was the stage,” he said.
He hired an independent consulting firm, which concurred after testing the wood and checking the Weyerhauser markings and the paint. “It appears that the plywood in your possession is authentic and from the Woodstock Festival,” the consultant concluded.
Mr. Gold did one other thing. He called Robin.
“I hadn’t spoken to her since I graduated from high school in 1971,” he said. He reached her after sending her sister a message on Facebook, asking for a telephone number.
As he tells it, he got right to the point. “I said, ‘Robin, the reason I’m calling is the paddleball court,’” he said. “Her first words were, ‘Did you know the paddleball court was built from the Woodstock stage?’ I said, ‘Would you write a letter and notarize it?’”
She did.
Next Mr. Gold hired people to take the paddleball court apart — carefully, piece by piece. He lent some to the Museum at Bethel Woods, adjacent to the original festival site.
The museum director and senior curator, Wade Lawrence, had doubts when he heard Mr. Gold’s story about tracking down the plywood panels. “As a museum professional, as a museum curator, I’m always skeptical of any claims of authenticity of any object,” he said.
But he met Mr. Gold at a storage unit where Mr. Gold had stashed the wood, and left convinced that it was what Mr. Gold said it was.
What was his confidence level? “If I were to put a number on this,” he said, “I’d say it’s in the 90s.”
A journalist, Joel Makower, who interviewed Mr. Gold in the 1980s for his book, “Woodstock: The Oral History,” said after hearing the story of the stage that it “sounds plausible.” Michael Lang, one of the 1969 event’s original promoters, said through a spokesman that, “It’s true.”
Still, Mr. Lawrence initially resisted Mr. Gold’s offer to provide several panels for the museum’s 50th anniversary exhibit, which opened on Saturday, mainly because the plywood he saw at the storage unit was in poor condition. But Mr. Gold insisted that there was wood that was better looking, and he sent photos of several pieces. “They have water stains all over them,” Mr. Lawrence said, “but hey, it rained at Woodstock.” So he decided to use them in the exhibit.
Now Mr. Gold is cutting the wood into small pieces and selling them online. He even plans to save the sawdust, and sell that.
(Mr. Lawrence, the curator, distanced himself from Mr. Gold’s commercialization, noting that Mr. Gold’s items are not being sold at the museum. Cutting the wood and selling it is “not something a museum would condone or do,” Mr. Lawrence said.)
Is there an appetite for that kind of memorabilia? Should what was left of the stage be cut into circles (for pendants with peace symbols, which Mr. Gold is selling for $99 apiece), into small pieces mounted in a frame ($299) or slightly larger squares ($499, complete with a glass cover)? He said he had sold 500 pendants, 200 frames and about 50 of the $99 items since they went on sale on March 19.
One more question: What happened to him and Robin?
“I think she started seeing somebody from her parents’ bungalow colony,” Mr. Gold said. “I think she showed him the paddleball court and said, ‘This is the Woodstock stage,’ and he fell in love with her.”
A version of this article appears in print on April 1, 2019, on Page A16 of the New York edition with the headline: A Summer of ’69 Romance and the Stage From Woodstock. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 

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Chucho Valdés named 2019 Harvard Jazz Master-in-Residence – Latin Jazz Network

Chucho Valdés named 2019 Harvard Jazz Master-in-Residence – Latin Jazz Network

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Chucho Valdés named 2019 Harvard Jazz Master-in-Residence – Latin Jazz Network
Web Editor
5-6 minutes


Pianist Chucho Valdés – six-time Grammy Award winner and three-time Latin Grammy Award Winner ­– has been named 2019 Jazz Master in Residence at Harvard University. The residency April 8-12, is sponsored by the Office for the Arts at Harvard and Harvard Jazz Bands (Yosvany Terry and Mark Olson, conductors), in partnership with the Cuba Studies Program at the David Rockefeller Center at Harvard University.
In addition to working and rehearsing with Harvard Jazz Bands, Valdés will participate in a concert open to the public:
Friday, April 12, 8 pm: Puente Musical: Celebrating Chucho Valdés, a concert featuring the Harvard Jazz Bands and guest bassist Yunior Terry with 2019 Harvard Jazz Master Chucho Valdés, at Sanders Theatre, 45 Quincy St., Cambridge. Tickets will be available March 14 through the Harvard Box Office at the Smith Campus Center, online at Harvard Box Office and by calling 617.496.2222. (Phone and online orders subject to service fees.) Free parking is available at the Broadway Garage, 7 Felton St. For more information, call 617.495.8676
About Chucho Valdés
The Cuban pianist, composer and arranger Chucho Valdés is one of the most influential figures in modern Afro-Cuban jazz. Born into a family of musicians in Quivicán, Havana province, Cuba, Dionisio Jesús “Chucho” Valdés Rodríguez, has distilled elements of the Afro-Cuban music tradition, jazz, classical music, rock and more, into an organic, personal style that has both, a distinct style and substance.
His first teacher was his father, the great pianist, composer and bandleader Ramón “Bebo” Valdés. By the age of 3, Valdés was playing the melodies he heard on the radio at the piano, using both hands and in any key. He began taking lessons on piano, theory and solfege at 5, and continued his formal musical education at the Conservatorio Municipal de Música de la Habana, from which he graduated at 14. A year later, Valdés formed his first jazz trio and, in 1959, debuted with the orchestra Sabor de Cuba, directed by his father. Sabor de Cuba is considered one of the great orchestras in modern Cuban music history.
Valdés is perhaps best known as the founder, pianist and main composer and arranger of yet another landmark ensemble in Cuban music: Irakere (1973-2005). Not well known outside Cuba, Irakere was discovered by Dizzy Gillespie, who was visiting Havana on a jazz cruise, in 1977.
The same year Irakere debuted, unannounced, as “surprise guests,” at Carnegie Hall as part of the Newport Jazz Festival. Selections from that performance were later included in Irakere (CBS), the band’s debut recording in the U.S. The album won a Grammy as Best Latin Recording in 1979. That original band featured future global jazz stars such as Paquito D’Rivera and Arturo Sandoval, but over its rich, long life, Irakere became a rolling university of Afro-Cuban music while also featuring influential musicians such as the late Miguel “Angá” Díaz; Jose Luis Cortés (who would later found NG La Banda) and Germán Velazco. Valdés stayed with Irakere until 2005.
In 1998 — having won his second Grammy the previous year for Habana (Verve), this time as a member of trumpeter Roy Hargrove’s group Crisol — Valdés launched a parallel career as a solo player and small-group leader.
An enormously fruitful period followed, highlighted by albums such as Solo Piano (Blue Note, 1991), Solo: Live in New York (Blue Note, 2001) and New Conceptions (Blue Note, 2003), as well as quartet recordings such as Bele Bele en La Habana (Blue Note, 1998), Briyumba Palo Congo (Blue Note, 1999) and Live at the Village Vanguard (Blue Note, 2000), which won a Grammy for Best Latin Jazz Album.
Since, Valdés also won Grammys for Juntos Para Siempre (Calle 54, 2007), the duet recording with his father, Bebo; and for Chucho’s Steps (Comanche, 2010), which introduced his new group, the Afro-Cuban Messengers.
About the OFA Jazz Program
The OFA Jazz Program, together with the Harvard Jazz Bands, brings artists of distinction in this uniquely American art form to Harvard. Whether world-renowned masters or emerging artists, they are honored and connected to students through clinics, rehearsals, and performance over a period of weeks. A remarkable array of significant artists, such as Benny Carter, Roy Haynes, Joe Lovano and Cassandra Wilson, has played with Harvard Jazz Bands over nearly five decades. The Monday Band is directed by Yosvany Terry; the Sunday Band by Mark Olson. The OFA maintains a recording archive (search for “Jazz Office for the Arts”) of visiting artists in jazz, which is available to students and scholars through the Morse Music and Media Collection, Lamont Library. “The Tom Everett Collection of Jazz Manuscripts,” at the Eda Kuhn Loeb Music Library, houses works commissioned by the Harvard Jazz Bands. It is named for the long-time Harvard Bands Director and founder of Jazz at Harvard.
Source: Office for the Arts at Harvard (Harvard University)
 

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Art Tatum : Art’s Blues ( 1947 ) ( Fabulous Dorseys ) – YouTube

Art Tatum : Art’s Blues ( 1947 ) ( Fabulous Dorseys ) – YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mVuE0ywwBO0
 
Jam Session From The 1947Film “Fabulous Dorseys” Art Tatum : Piano Tommy Dorsey : Trombone Jimmie Dorsey : Clarinet Charlie Barnet : Sax George Van Eps : Guitar Ray Bauduc : Drums Ziggy Elman : Trumpet Stuart Foster : Bass


 

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Live Stream Right Now Dave Stryker & Bob Mintzer – WDR Big Band – Orchester und Chor – WDR

Live Stream Right Now Dave Stryker & Bob Mintzer – WDR Big Band – Orchester und Chor – WDR

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The Philly POPS Appoints Philly Jazz Legend Terell Stafford As Artistic Director For Jazz

The Philly POPS Appoints Philly Jazz Legend Terell Stafford As Artistic Director For Jazz

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https://www.broadwayworld.com/philadelphia/article/The-Philly-POPS-Appoints-Philly-Jazz-Legend-Terell-Stafford-As-Artistic-Director-For-Jazz-20190325
 
broadwayworld.com
The Philly POPS Appoints Philly Jazz Legend Terell Stafford As Artistic Director For Jazz
BWW News Desk
7-9 minutes


Following the immense artistic success of JAZZED! The Philly POPS BIG Band with Terell Stafford in January, The Philly POPS has designated Terell Stafford as the Artistic Director for Jazz for The Philly POPS.
As the Artistic Director for Jazz, Terell will continue to direct the All City Jazz Orchestra, continuing this five-year-old partnership between the School District of Philadelphia and the POPS. Terell will expand The Philly POPS’ POPS in Schools programming to include new opportunities bringing credentialed jazz musicians to schools throughout the School District of Philadelphia, while creating programs to bring student performers into the concert hall. The Jazz Orchestra of Philadelphia, which Terell also directs, will be presented by The Philly POPS creating The Philly POPS Jazz Orchestra of Philadelphia, and adding the jazz orchestra’s performances to The Philly POPS’ roster of activities.
On behalf of the School District of Philadelphia and the All City Jazz program, we are excited to learn of Terell Stafford’s new appointment as Artistic Director for Jazz at The Philly POPS! said Frank Machos, Executive Director of the Office of The Arts & Academic Enrichment for the School District of Philadelphia. Through the collaboration between Terell, The POPS, and our District Music Educators in recent years, we have seen incredible growth of All City Jazz and the opportunities for our students to experience some of the best in jazz education. We are thrilled to know that this will continue to expand and impact even more students in the years ahead.
This season, The Philly POPS has presented three highly-reviewed jazz shows, all of which have celebrated the past, present, and future of jazz music. January’s JAZZED! show was particularly important it traced the history of jazz in Philadelphia, and symbolically passed the torch with a performance of Blue Monk, where Christian McBride played bass alongside Dan McCain, a University of the Arts student and four-year member of All City Jazz. Next season, the POPS will continue to celebrate jazz music with SINATRA: A Man and His Music.
Jazz has always been a personal favorite of mine, so I’m thrilled to announce this collaboration with Philly’s own Terell Stafford, said Frank Giordano, President and CEO of The Philly POPS. I am looking forward to presenting The Philly POPS Jazz Orchestra of Philadelphia’s performances over these next years. We admire his work in education, both at Temple University and with the All-City Jazz program, and we look to his leadership as we ramp up our POPS in Schools programming with the School District of Philadelphia. Terell is the perfect educator to shape the jazz musicians of tomorrow.
A renowned and multifaceted jazz musician, Terell’s album BrotherLee Love, Celebrating Lee Morgan received a 47th annual NAACP Image Award Nomination. His most recent album, Family Feeling, was released in 2018 under BCM&D Records. Terell has won a GRAMMY award as a member of the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra for the album Monday Night Live at the Village Vanguard in 2009 and has been nominated for seven GRAMMY awards for his performances with the Clayton Brothers, Diana Krall, Bobby Watson, and more.
Terell is the Director of Jazz Studies and Chair of Instrumental Studies at Temple University. For his work as an educator, Terell received Temple’s Creative Achievement Award. Terell has conducted the All City Jazz Orchestra, an all-audition honor band created through a partnership with the School District of Philadelphia and the POPS, since its creation in 2015. With this new appointment, he will help expand the All City Jazz program’s footprint helping raise the city’s next generation of jazz musicians and music lovers.
About Terell Stafford
Terell Stafford has been hailed as one of the great players of our time, a fabulous trumpet player by piano legend McCoy Tyner. Stafford is recognized as an incredibly gifted and versatile player, combining a deep love of melody with his own brand of spirited and adventurous lyricism. Stafford’s exceptionally expressive and well-defined musical talent allows him to dance in and around the rich trumpet tradition of his predecessors while making his own inroads.
Since the mid-1990s, Stafford has performed with groups such as Benny Golson’s Sextet, McCoy Tyner’s Sextet, Kenny Barron Quintet, Frank Wess Quintet, Jimmy Heath Quintet and Big Band, Jon Faddis Jazz Orchestra, Carnegie Hall Jazz Band and Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Alumni Band. Stafford, with the Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra, performed on Diana Krall‘s Grammy-nominated From this Moment On (2006). John Clayton invited Stafford to perform with the Clayton Brothers Quintet and Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra. Stafford is a member of the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, which was awarded a Grammy in 2009 for Best Large Ensemble, Live at the Village Vanguard.
Stafford can be heard on over 130 albums. His latest recording This Side of Strayhorn has been hailed as the first must-have album of 2011 and genius. Stafford is the Director of Jazz Studies and Chair of Instrumental Studies at Temple University, founder and band leader of the Terell Stafford Quintet, and Managing and Artistic Director of the Jazz Orchestra of Philadelphia (JOP). Stafford is renowned in the jazz world as an educator, performer and leader and has received countless award nominations and accolades.
Stafford was born in Miami and raised in Chicago, Illinois and Silver Spring, Maryland. He received a Bachelor of Science in Music Education from the University of Maryland in 1988 and a Masters of Music from Rutgers University in 1993.
About The Philly POPS
The Philly POPS, the largest standalone pops orchestra in the United States, delights audiences with the inspired performance of American popular music. The POPS celebrates this distinctive musical heritage through an expanding repertoire of innovative concert performances and a robust set of educational and engagement initiatives.
Now celebrating its 40th Anniversary Season, the POPS, the official POPS orchestra of Pennsylvania and the City of Philadelphia’s partner in civic celebration, serves a consistently growing audience of over 200,000 annually. Music Director Michael Krajewski and the 65-piece Philly POPS orchestra keep listeners tapping their toes to an impressive repertoire of songs from American traditional music up through to today’s chart-toppers. The Philly POPS BIG Band, an 18-20 piece ensemble performing a rock and rhythm and blues repertoire, premiered in 2017 to enthusiastic response at the July 4 Welcome America Concert on the Parkway.
Outside the concert hall, free Salute Series performances including Memorial Salute, July 3 POPS on Independence, July 4 POPS on the Parkway and the I’ll Be Home for Christmas: A Salute to the Military and First Responders concert celebrate the American tradition of service around important national holidays. POPS in Schools enhances music education for Philadelphia School District students; POPS Outside brings POPS music to local communities. The Philly POPS performs as a founding resident company of The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, and at venues throughout the mid-Atlantic region.
Related Articles View More Philadelphia Stories   Shows
 
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The Philly POPS Appoints Philly Jazz Legend Terell Stafford As Artistic Director For Jazz

The Philly POPS Appoints Philly Jazz Legend Terell Stafford As Artistic Director For Jazz

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https://www.broadwayworld.com/philadelphia/article/The-Philly-POPS-Appoints-Philly-Jazz-Legend-Terell-Stafford-As-Artistic-Director-For-Jazz-20190325
 
broadwayworld.com
The Philly POPS Appoints Philly Jazz Legend Terell Stafford As Artistic Director For Jazz
BWW News Desk
7-9 minutes


Following the immense artistic success of JAZZED! The Philly POPS BIG Band with Terell Stafford in January, The Philly POPS has designated Terell Stafford as the Artistic Director for Jazz for The Philly POPS.
As the Artistic Director for Jazz, Terell will continue to direct the All City Jazz Orchestra, continuing this five-year-old partnership between the School District of Philadelphia and the POPS. Terell will expand The Philly POPS’ POPS in Schools programming to include new opportunities bringing credentialed jazz musicians to schools throughout the School District of Philadelphia, while creating programs to bring student performers into the concert hall. The Jazz Orchestra of Philadelphia, which Terell also directs, will be presented by The Philly POPS creating The Philly POPS Jazz Orchestra of Philadelphia, and adding the jazz orchestra’s performances to The Philly POPS’ roster of activities.
On behalf of the School District of Philadelphia and the All City Jazz program, we are excited to learn of Terell Stafford’s new appointment as Artistic Director for Jazz at The Philly POPS! said Frank Machos, Executive Director of the Office of The Arts & Academic Enrichment for the School District of Philadelphia. Through the collaboration between Terell, The POPS, and our District Music Educators in recent years, we have seen incredible growth of All City Jazz and the opportunities for our students to experience some of the best in jazz education. We are thrilled to know that this will continue to expand and impact even more students in the years ahead.
This season, The Philly POPS has presented three highly-reviewed jazz shows, all of which have celebrated the past, present, and future of jazz music. January’s JAZZED! show was particularly important it traced the history of jazz in Philadelphia, and symbolically passed the torch with a performance of Blue Monk, where Christian McBride played bass alongside Dan McCain, a University of the Arts student and four-year member of All City Jazz. Next season, the POPS will continue to celebrate jazz music with SINATRA: A Man and His Music.
Jazz has always been a personal favorite of mine, so I’m thrilled to announce this collaboration with Philly’s own Terell Stafford, said Frank Giordano, President and CEO of The Philly POPS. I am looking forward to presenting The Philly POPS Jazz Orchestra of Philadelphia’s performances over these next years. We admire his work in education, both at Temple University and with the All-City Jazz program, and we look to his leadership as we ramp up our POPS in Schools programming with the School District of Philadelphia. Terell is the perfect educator to shape the jazz musicians of tomorrow.
A renowned and multifaceted jazz musician, Terell’s album BrotherLee Love, Celebrating Lee Morgan received a 47th annual NAACP Image Award Nomination. His most recent album, Family Feeling, was released in 2018 under BCM&D Records. Terell has won a GRAMMY award as a member of the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra for the album Monday Night Live at the Village Vanguard in 2009 and has been nominated for seven GRAMMY awards for his performances with the Clayton Brothers, Diana Krall, Bobby Watson, and more.
Terell is the Director of Jazz Studies and Chair of Instrumental Studies at Temple University. For his work as an educator, Terell received Temple’s Creative Achievement Award. Terell has conducted the All City Jazz Orchestra, an all-audition honor band created through a partnership with the School District of Philadelphia and the POPS, since its creation in 2015. With this new appointment, he will help expand the All City Jazz program’s footprint helping raise the city’s next generation of jazz musicians and music lovers.
About Terell Stafford
Terell Stafford has been hailed as one of the great players of our time, a fabulous trumpet player by piano legend McCoy Tyner. Stafford is recognized as an incredibly gifted and versatile player, combining a deep love of melody with his own brand of spirited and adventurous lyricism. Stafford’s exceptionally expressive and well-defined musical talent allows him to dance in and around the rich trumpet tradition of his predecessors while making his own inroads.
Since the mid-1990s, Stafford has performed with groups such as Benny Golson’s Sextet, McCoy Tyner’s Sextet, Kenny Barron Quintet, Frank Wess Quintet, Jimmy Heath Quintet and Big Band, Jon Faddis Jazz Orchestra, Carnegie Hall Jazz Band and Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Alumni Band. Stafford, with the Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra, performed on Diana Krall‘s Grammy-nominated From this Moment On (2006). John Clayton invited Stafford to perform with the Clayton Brothers Quintet and Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra. Stafford is a member of the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, which was awarded a Grammy in 2009 for Best Large Ensemble, Live at the Village Vanguard.
Stafford can be heard on over 130 albums. His latest recording This Side of Strayhorn has been hailed as the first must-have album of 2011 and genius. Stafford is the Director of Jazz Studies and Chair of Instrumental Studies at Temple University, founder and band leader of the Terell Stafford Quintet, and Managing and Artistic Director of the Jazz Orchestra of Philadelphia (JOP). Stafford is renowned in the jazz world as an educator, performer and leader and has received countless award nominations and accolades.
Stafford was born in Miami and raised in Chicago, Illinois and Silver Spring, Maryland. He received a Bachelor of Science in Music Education from the University of Maryland in 1988 and a Masters of Music from Rutgers University in 1993.
About The Philly POPS
The Philly POPS, the largest standalone pops orchestra in the United States, delights audiences with the inspired performance of American popular music. The POPS celebrates this distinctive musical heritage through an expanding repertoire of innovative concert performances and a robust set of educational and engagement initiatives.
Now celebrating its 40th Anniversary Season, the POPS, the official POPS orchestra of Pennsylvania and the City of Philadelphia’s partner in civic celebration, serves a consistently growing audience of over 200,000 annually. Music Director Michael Krajewski and the 65-piece Philly POPS orchestra keep listeners tapping their toes to an impressive repertoire of songs from American traditional music up through to today’s chart-toppers. The Philly POPS BIG Band, an 18-20 piece ensemble performing a rock and rhythm and blues repertoire, premiered in 2017 to enthusiastic response at the July 4 Welcome America Concert on the Parkway.
Outside the concert hall, free Salute Series performances including Memorial Salute, July 3 POPS on Independence, July 4 POPS on the Parkway and the I’ll Be Home for Christmas: A Salute to the Military and First Responders concert celebrate the American tradition of service around important national holidays. POPS in Schools enhances music education for Philadelphia School District students; POPS Outside brings POPS music to local communities. The Philly POPS performs as a founding resident company of The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, and at venues throughout the mid-Atlantic region.
Related Articles View More Philadelphia Stories   Shows
 
More Hot Stories For You
 

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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
http://www.jazzpromoservices.com

HAVE A JAZZ EVENT, NEW CD OR IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE JAZZ COMMUNITY YOU WANT TO PROMOTE? CONTACT JAZZ PROMO SERVICES FOR PRICE QUOTE.

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An oral history of the Gibson Les Paul – Guitar.com | All Things Guitar

An oral history of the Gibson Les Paul – Guitar.com | All Things Guitar

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https://guitar.com/guides/essential-guide/the-oral-history-of-the-les-paul/
 
An oral history of the Gibson Les Paul
Gibson’s Les Paul signature model eventually came to define the sound of rock music – a role it still delights in to this day. Yet its design was a protracted process, with many twists and turns. Here, we present its story first-hand, both from its creators and its most famous players…
19th March 2019
Gibson’s Les Paul signature model eventually came to define the sound of rock music – a role it still delights in to this day. Yet its design was a protracted process, with many twists and turns. Here, we present its story first-hand, both from its creators and its most famous players…

This is the insider’s story of the early days of the Gibson Les Paul, the company’s first solidbody electric guitar. Following Fender’s introduction of the Broadcaster and Telecaster in 1950 and 1951, Gibson decided to compete, signing up America’s most famous guitarist of the time, Les Paul, to endorse its new instrument.
Through the years that followed, Gibson’s Les Paul Goldtop (introduced in 1952), Les Paul Custom (1954) and Les Paul Standard or ‘Burst’ (which replaced the Goldtop in 1958) formed a strong basis for the company’s solidbody line, which also featured a couple of budget models: the Les Paul Junior (1954) and the Les Paul Special (1955).
Catalogue showing Gibson’s Les Paul signature line emphasise just how big a draw the endorsee was in the 1950s
This oral history of the early Les Paul and its famous players comes from the archive of interviews I’ve done over the years for my books about Gibson. The people you’ll hear from are: Billy Gibbons, who was in his pre-ZZ Top band Moving Sidewalks in 1968 when he acquired a Burst; Ted McCarty, who joined Gibson in 1948 and became its president two years later; Jimmy Page, who got a Les Paul Custom around 1964 and, in Led Zeppelin, bought a Burst from Joe Walsh in 1969; and Les Paul himself – who, with Mary Ford, had scored a US No. 1 hit with How High The Moon in 1951.
Les wants a log
Les Paul
“I’d been trying to make a guitar that sustained and that reproduced the sound of the string with nothing added. No distortion, no change in the response from what the string was doing. I wanted the string to do its thing. No top vibrating, no added enhancement, advantageous or disadvantageous. I wanted to make sure it just gave you the string as the string was excited: you plucked the string, and that’s what you got. That was my whole idea way back in the early 30s. I worked on it, worked on it, stuffing rags in guitars, then finally plugging them up completely, making one-inch tops on them. Then finally saying: ‘Look, I’m just gonna go on a log.’
The Log – Les Paul’s original prototype
“I approached Gibson in 1941. They laughed at the idea, they called me the kid with the broomstick with the pickups on it. The factory was in Kalamazoo, Michigan, but the offices were in Chicago, and that’s where I went. The log was what I took to them. I actually built it at Epiphone. I knew the people there, and I could have the factory every Sunday, there was nobody there but the watchman.
“So every Sunday I went and I worked there, from 1939 to ’41. Epiphone says, what in the hell is this? I says it’s a log, it’s a solidbody guitar, and they says, well why? And I says, well… but I was aiming at Gibson, I wasn’t aiming at Epi. I knew Epi was about to go under. Gibson was the biggest in the business and that’s where I wanted to go. I took it to Chicago to Maurice Berlin, the president of CMI, the [Gibson owning] Chicago Musical Instrument company, and they laughed at it.

“I moved to California, went in the army, went with Bing Crosby, kept playing my log, and Leo Fender came in my backyard, and Merle Travis saw it, so did every other guitar player, every other manufacturer, they all saw it. The vibrola, I started on that in the 30s and then found out that a guy had already invented a vibrola, but it was dead, it was extinct, it died in its tracks. So I said: ‘I’ll make my own vibrola,’ so I made my own and Bigsby came in my backyard, with Fender.”
Gibson wants a solidbody
Ted McCarty
“Trade shows in the late 40s were in Chicago in June and in New York in January or so. We would take prototypes to the show, show them, they’d get a reaction from the dealers – because this was a dealer show, you had to be a dealer to get in – and according to the reaction, we’d go back to the factory and the salesmen would say this is a good seller, this is a good seller, but I couldn’t do much with this one. Okay, you’ve got it. That’s how we chose the line, you might say.

“We realised that Leo Fender was gaining popularity in the West with his Spanish solidbody. He didn’t get anywhere in New York or this part of the country, it was strictly in the West. I watched him and watched him and I said: ‘We’ve got to get into that business. We’re giving him a free run, he’s the only one making that kind of guitar.’ Had that real shrill sound, which the country and western boys liked. It was becoming popular. So we talked it over and decided, let’s make one.
“Now, Les Paul was known to me, Les Paul was a bit of an innovator, but he played Epiphone. And I had been trying to get him to play Gibson, oh, for a couple of years. He was not going to get shaken away from Epiphone, he was loyal to them. He had made some improvements, some changes, in his Epiphone that he used. They didn’t make an Epiphone with his name on it – everything they made was Epiphone.”
Designing the Les Paul
Les Paul
“Leo Fender saw what I was doing and he started to make one. And when Gibson heard about it, they said find that guy with the broomstick with the pickup on it! They came round right away, soon as they heard what Leo was doing. They came over to me, and I says: ‘Well, you guys are a little bit behind the times. But okay, let’s go.’”
Ted McCarty
“We started out to make a solidbody and we had a lot to learn. For instance, the stiffer the material, the harder the wood, the more shrill is the sound, and the longer is the sustain. Hit the string and it would ring for a long sustain period. It could be too long. One of the things we did was to take a piece of iron rail from the railroad track, put a bridge and a pickup and a tailpiece on it, and test it. You could hit that string, take a walk, come back, and it would still be ringing. Because the thing that causes it to slow down is the fact that wood gives a little bit.
“We made a guitar out of solid rock maple. Wasn’t good. Too shrill, too much sustain. And we made one out of mahogany. Too soft. Didn’t quite have that thing. So we finally came up with a maple top and a mahogany back, made a sandwich out of it, glued them together. Then we decided, now what about the shape? We wanted something that wouldn’t be too heavy. The Fender was a much larger guitar, heavier. So we made ours a little smaller bodied, in a traditional shape.
Les Paul and his wife Mary Ford at a press reception at the Savoy Hotel in London, for the 1952 unveiling of the Les Paul signature model. Note the DeArmond Dynasonics under the neck P-90 pickup covers
“We had always carved the tops of our fine guitars, and we had real fine carving machines. Leo Fender didn’t have any carving machines. They joined their neck with a plate in the back of the guitar. We always glued our neck in, made it an integral part. So I said: ‘Okay, let’s carve the top of this thing, like we’d do on an L-5 and an L-7.’
“We finally came up with a guitar that was attractive. And as far as we were concerned it had the tone, it had the resonance and it also had the sustain, but not too much. Now we needed an excuse to make it. None of the other major guitar companies had anything to do with a solidbody. Their attitude was forget it, because anyone with a bandsaw can make a solidbody guitar. Bandsaw and a router, that’s all you needed.
“So I got to thinking. At that time, Les Paul and Mary Ford were riding very high, they were probably the number-one vocal team in the United States. They were earning a million dollars a year. And knowing Les and Mary, I decided maybe I ought to show this guitar to them.”
Making the deal
Ted McCarty
“Les and his group were at a hunting lodge in Delaware Water Gap, which is up in the mountains in Pennsylvania. I had been talking to Les by phone, and I talked to Phil Braunstein, his financial manager, a New York accountant. So I made a date with Phil, flew into New York, had breakfast, got in his car, and I had this [prototype] guitar with me.

“It was an all-day drive from New York down there, we got there at night, pouring down with rain, a miserable night. “I said: ‘I’ve got something here, Les, that I’d like you to see.’ We had an amplifier and we hooked this guitar up to it. He took it, and he played it – and he played it and he played it. There was this balcony upstairs with bedrooms leading off it, and Mary Ford was upstairs, so he hollered up: ‘Mary, come down here, I want you
to see this.’
“Mary came down. He says: ‘Play this, Mary, I want to hear and see what you think of it.’ She took it and played it, and she said: ‘I love this.’ Les said, ‘Let me have it,’ and he played it some more, and he turned to Mary and said: ‘Look, they’re getting too close to us, Mary, I think we ought to join them. What do you think?’ She says: ‘I like it.’”
Les Paul
“It was a flat-topped guitar at that time, it was not an archtop. I designed everything on there except the belly, the arched top. I had a flat-top. I sat there with Maurice Berlin at CMI, and he said: ‘You know, I like violins.’ And he took me through his vault and showed me his collection, and he says: ‘Would you consider making it in an archtop?’, and I said I’d love it. He said: ‘Nobody else – Fender, nobody else – can do that, and we have the facilities to do it.’ So I said: ‘By all means, let’s do it.’ So we made them.”

Ted McCarty
“Les had taken his Epiphone and had made a lot of changes to it, put some pickups on it that he had made. I had been after him for a couple of years, trying to talk him into Gibson, hadn’t been successful. So I said: ‘That’s what we want to do, we want to call this the Les Paul model.’ I told him that we would pay him a royalty. I’m not an attorney, and nor was Phil Braunstein, nor was Les. So we started making a contract. And I have a theory about contracts. The more simple they are, the better they are. If you have five pages of gobbledegook, what I call ‘boilerplate’, you hire a smart lawyer and he’ll find loopholes in it. A simple one, anyone can understand. So we started out on it, first thing we did was write out how much we would pay him per guitar.
“We agreed it all that night. So I came back to the factory and now we had a Les Paul model. I’d been trying to get Les to let us make him a guitar for years, with no success, but we finally had something that he liked. So then we started to produce them.”
Goltop/Custom/Burst
Ted McCarty
“We did the gold finish because it covered the blemishes in the wood, the cosmetic appearance. If it was maple [like the later Burst], it had to be fiddleback maple, had to be perfect, couldn’t have any blemishes, couldn’t have any mineral streaks in it. But we used to cover it up with that [gold] paint.
The lack of fingerboard binding and the diagonal bridge pickup height-adjustment screws denote that this now-heavily modded 1952 Goldtop model is one of the first ever made
“We added the Les Paul Custom just to have another one. You have all kinds of players out there that like this and like that. Chevrolet has a whole bunch of models, Ford has a whole bunch of models. And there was a good reason for it. We were having more and more of a problem getting real good clear mahogany from Honduras. We’d get mahogany and it’d have streaks in it and whatnot.
“So that Les Paul Custom was a solidbody, it was not a sandwich, it was solid mahogany, but painted black. So you had some with streaks in it? You made Customs out of it. Dolled it up fancy with binding and other things on it, and sold it for a higher price.”
Billy’s divine music with Pearly Gates
Billy Gibbons
“This guy I knew in Houston, John Wilson – he had a Rickenbacker 12-string, they sounded like The Byrds, they were called The Magic Ring – he rang one day and said: ‘Hey, word is you’re looking for one of those Les Pauls.’ I said yeah. He said: ‘There’s a farmer, a rancher, up the road, just outside the city limits, big ranch out there, a big cattle man, cattle and horses. Well, he’s got one of those things.’
“We had secured a 1936 Packard automobile, and we had a friend of the band, Renee Thomas, she had an opportunity to audition in California to win a part in a movie, so we gave her the Packard. She called up, says she’s in California and she got the part. Well, finally she sold the beater Packard and sent me this cheque for, I think, $350. I swear, the cheque arrived in the mail, and my buddy pulls up and said: ‘Hey, let’s go out see about that guitar.’
This beautiful ’59 Burst was the inspiration for Gibson Custom’s 2016 Minnesota Burst, 39th in a series of painstaking recreations of storied instruments
We get there, the guy said: ‘You want it, you can have it.’ I said, ‘How much you want?’ He says: ‘How much you got?’ I pulled the cheque out and says I just got this today, $350. He says: ‘I’ll take it.’ So I took off with that guitar!
“We had named that car Pearly Gates and when Renee sold it, I called her back, I said: ‘I got this guitar with the money.’ She goes, ‘Well, we’re gonna call that guitar Pearly Gates and you’re gonna play divine music.’
“I’ll tell you, man, that is some kind of guitar! This was 1968, right after summer. I’ve wondered along the way why this particular example of the Les Paul [’59 Burst] is so robust. Really, the only explanation is that it just happened to be put together on the right day. The right combination of wood. “It was all guesswork back in those days. The particular day that all of the disparate elements came together was just that magical moment, I suppose.”
Jimmy’s moves: Custom/Tele/Burst
Jimmy Page
“I got my [three humbucker] Les Paul Custom in the 60s… there was Selmer’s [shop in Charing Cross Road] and then there was one further on, at the time it was affiliated somehow, called [Lew Davis], and I bought it in there. I remember going in and there was a sort of cash desk, and the guys behind it, and right up on the wall… I said: ‘Oh my god, let me try that!’ What it was doing in there and why, but it was there. It was just… I fell in love with the bloody thing.
“There weren’t many around. It was just such a gorgeous-looking thing and it sounded so wonderful. The middle setting wasn’t what you’d expect it to be, but it was a really spiky sound that was really superb. I customised it with some switches so you could get into any combination, and [in 1970] it was the one that got stolen.
Jimmy Page in 1975, the year he bought a backup Burst to deputise for the ‘Number One’ Les Paul Standard that was his mainstay
“In 1969, Joe Walsh turned up at The Fillmore or Winterland, one or the other, in San Francisco and he bloody insisted, he said: ‘You’ve got to buy this guitar!’ [It became Page’s ‘Number One’ Burst.] And it actually looked as though it’d been refinished. I said: ‘I don’t necessarily need it.’ ‘No, you’ve got to have it, just try it, you’ll want it,’ and all that. I said: ‘I’ve already got the Custom.’ ‘No, no, you’ve got to try it! You’ve got to buy this guitar!’
“He kept insisting. I said: ‘Ah, no, no, no, I can’t afford it. You know how it is.’ This wasn’t like dealing with Selmer’s. He was really sporting – he’s still sporting about it now. Because everyone goes oh, you sold him a Les Paul for whatever it is, hundreds of dollars. It was a pro-rata price, he wasn’t stealing me up and he wasn’t giving it to me as a present.
“I knew it was a good guitar. I knew there wouldn’t be the feedback, the squealing I got from my Telecaster, which every night there was a whole episode of controlling that. The first album is done on the Telecaster, because it is a transition from The Yardbirds to Led Zeppelin, it’s exactly the same guitar. Everybody had that if they started turning up a Telecaster loud. So Joe insisted that I bought it, and I did buy it, and I kicked off the second album with it.
This 1956 Les Paul Custom has a ‘staple’ single coil in the neck position. The Custom was introduced in 1954 to fulfil Les Paul’s wish for a more luxurious-looking guitar that looked “like a tuxedo”
“There’s no guarantee that I would have played the… I don’t know, it’s hypothetical, but I may not have come up with the riff of Whole Lotta Love on the Telecaster. That fat sound you’re working with, you are inspired – well, I am – and I know other people are, by instruments, the sound of the instruments. And then they’re playing something they haven’t played before – and it’s really user-friendly, and suddenly they’ve got some sort of riff, which is peculiar to that moment. I’m not saying that’s the first thing I played on it, but it was to come.
“I always knew the Les Paul was a really user-friendly guitar over, say, a Strat or something like that. It’s really sympatico. So many things start singing, you know? Really singing.”
For more Les Paul articles, click here.
 

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