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‘Emanon’ by Wayne Shorter Review: Grand Ambitions on Full Display – WSJ

‘Emanon’ by Wayne Shorter Review: Grand Ambitions on Full Display – WSJ

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/emanon-by-wayne-shorter-review-grand-ambitions-on-full-display-1536607575
 
‘Emanon’ by Wayne Shorter Review: Grand Ambitions on Full Display
A new three-disc set includes work the jazz great recorded with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, performances at London’s Barbican and a graphic novel.
Larry Blumenfeld
Sept. 10, 2018 3:26 p.m. ET

 
Wayne Shorter in 2013
Wayne Shorter in 2013 Photo: Didier Baverel/WireImage
By now, it would seem hard to enlarge Wayne Shorter’s stature. Mr. Shorter, who turned 85 last month, stands among jazz’s great composers. His works form touchstones for the development of jazz musicianship and vistas from which even casual listeners expand their horizons. His velvety tone on tenor saxophone is among jazz’s alluring pleasures, his piquant sound on soprano saxophone a signal of its searching spirit. In the 1960s, as a member of Miles Davis’s quintet and through his own Blue Note recordings, Mr. Shorter helped establish important new musical directions. His subsequent work, including as a member of Weather Report, upended some of that very legacy while anticipating a jazz landscape only now firmly in view. In December, he will be one of four Kennedy Center Honorees, the annual Washington distinction for artists who have made extraordinary contributions to culture.
With his current quartet, now nearly two decades running, and including musicians roughly half his age—pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Brian Blade—Mr. Shorter has scripted a daring late-career chapter. The group often employs his classic works as springboards toward collective improvisation, fostering what he calls “self-actualized communal leadership.” The music focuses on motion, dynamics and mood with little concern for style. Meanwhile, Mr. Shorter has suggested grander ambitions. “Without a Net” (Blue Note), released in 2013, featured Imani Winds, a chamber-music wind quintet, on a 23-minute piece, “Pegasus.”
That same year, Mr. Shorter upped his own ante. The day after a Carnegie Hall performance that paired his quartet with the 34-piece Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, he brought the combined ensembles into a recording studio for orchestrated versions of “Pegasus,” along with two new compositions, “Prometheus Unbound” and “Lotus,” and one older piece, “The Three Marias,” which first appeared on his 1985 album, “Atlantis.” These recordings form the first disc of “Emanon,” a fascinating new three-CD release out Friday, including two discs of quartet performances recorded at London’s Barbican in 2016, along with an 84-page graphic novel. (A deluxe edition also includes three 180-gram LPs.)
This new version of “Pegasus” begins with Mr. Perez sounding a crashing chord, and short bursts of theme from Mr. Shorter’s soprano saxophone. Once the orchestra joins in, the effect is something like an overture, with hints of Aaron Copland’s grandeur in the strings. Yet Mr. Shorter’s presence as a composer and orchestrator has little precedent. Tendrils of melody flower into larger movements. Foregrounds and backgrounds shift position with provocative beauty. The music sounds lush yet free of concert-music convention. When Mr. Shorter’s saxophone grabs the spotlight again near the end, he sounds gloriously unrestrained while highlighting the blues at the music’s core. In “Prometheus Unbound,” Mr. Shorter engages in some playful playful call-and-response with the orchestra’s strings. The harmonies of “Lotus” flicker with subtle yet forceful shifts of color. “The Three Marias,” arranged by Messrs. Perez and Patitucci, retains the original’s dancing quality, yet here, freed of its electric-bass anchor and fleshed out through orchestral textures, swirls with newfound possibilities.
Disc Two picks up where Mr. Shorter and the orchestra left off but enters through a side door. Mr. Shorter whistles the theme of “The Three Marias” as Mr. Patitucci bows his bass. Somewhere in the middle, Messrs. Shorter, Perez and Patitucci ruminate at length over four- and five-note snatches of the song. Later on, the group reaches a frenetic climax. Twenty-seven minutes later, it lands in a thoroughly unexpected place. The track is a thrilling example of their method for deconstructing Mr. Shorter’s music. It’s also a dramatic entry into the material from the Barbican concerts, which, taken on their own, would constitute a satisfying release.
Mr. Shorter’s music has long conveyed both an elder’s wisdom and a childlike sense of wonder. The graphic novel that accompanies this music draws upon both aspects. The powerful illustrations here, by artist Randy DuBurke, rekindle a spark of inspiration that perhaps began with “Another World,” a comic book about interstellar travel that Mr. Shorter wrote and drew when he was 15 years old. Writer Monica Sly collaborated with Mr. Shorter for this story of Emanon, a reluctant hero engaged in a righteous battle. The tale incorporates themes with which Mr. Shorter is fascinated and concerned: a sense of current political tensions; the scientific theory of a “multiverse”; and the Nichiren Buddhist teachings that have long guided Mr. Shorter’s life.
“Emanon”—a title lifted from a Dizzy Gillespie/Milton Shaw composition—is “Noname” spelled backward. This befits Mr. Shorter’s aesthetic, in which compositions blur their beginnings and ends, and stylistic monikers don’t apply. It’s no coincidence that Mr. Shorter aligned his quartet with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, which has no conductor (the musicians shape their sound cooperatively as a group).
Mr. Shorter’s music has always demanded alternate routes and suggested parallel worlds—it implies a multiverse of sorts. This package frames such ideas with splendor, elevating his stature in unexpected ways.
Mr. Blumenfeld writes about jazz and Afro-Latin music for the Journal.
 
 

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In The Year 5779

In The Year 5779

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http://www.phillytrib.com/obituaries/donald-gardner-executive-director-of-the-philadelphia-clef-club/article_b8781074-8601-5bb7-b9ce-fc5852271728.html
 
Donald Gardner, 87, executive director of the Philadelphia Clef Club
Sep 6, 2018
Donald Gardner, the executive director of the Philadelphia Clef Club of Jazz and Performing Arts, died on Tuesday, Sept. 4, 2018. He was 87.
He was born on May 9, 1931 to the late Raymond and Naomi Gardner. He was educated in the Philadelphia public schools. Receiving no formal training in music, he had an innate musical ability and became an accomplished drummer and singer.
From 1946 to 1974, Gardner grew into a renowned recording artist. After releasing his third album, he created his own group, The Three Bachelors, renamed The Sonotones. He later teamed up with Dee Dee Ford, creating an unforgettable duet.
Gardner not only enjoyed success in the U.S., but also abroad where he toured with several artists. His success continued as a solo artist and while partnering with Baby Washington in the 1970s. He remained in music as an artist and repertoire (A&R) manager and night club owner into the 1980s.
Gardner became board president of the Clef Club in the early 1990s. The Clef Club was his passion project since its mission was to preserve the legacy of jazz and help young jazz musicians hone their skills.
During his time with the Clef Club, he served in a number of positions including executive director, president, operations manager and the facilities manager.
“Don was a fixture at the Clef Club and was known for his kind, yet no nonsense approach,” his family said in a tribute.
“He shared his talent, wisdom and vision with his musical family at the Clef Club every day possible, right up to the last days of his life.”
He was preceded in death by his parents; wife, Camilla Gardner; wife, Sally Gardner; son, Stuart Gardner; brothers, Maxwell and Leonard and sisters, Bernice and Geraldine.
He is survived by: his son, Darryl Baynes (Linda); daughter, Trina Reaves (Edmund); seven grandchildren, four great-grandchildren and other relatives and friends.
A memorial service will be held Oct. 11 and Oct. 12 from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.at the Philadelphia Clef Club of Jazz and Performing Arts, 738 S. Broad St.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorial donations be given to The Philadelphia Clef Club of Jazz and Performing Arts, 736-738 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19146.
 
 

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In The Year 5779

In The Year 5779

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Nate Chinen’s Playing Changes, on contemporary jazz, reviewed: Slate

Nate Chinen’s Playing Changes, on contemporary jazz, reviewed: Slate

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https://slate.com/culture/2018/09/playing-changes-nate-chinen-review.html
 
Just Behind the Beat
A perfectly timed, well-tuned chronicle of the past, present, and future of jazz.
Carl Wilson Sept 07, 20182:31 PM
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Wynton Marsalis and Kamasi Washington.
Photo illustration by Derreck Johnson. Photos by Theo Wargo/Getty Images; Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Coachella.
This past weekend, when the great jazz pianist Randy Weston died at 92, the online and media reaction was barely noticeable. That stood in sharp contrast to the vast mourning for Aretha Franklin, whose memorial service on Friday was a national event, attended by a cross-generational swath of religious and political figures (including the Clintons) and musical stars. Obviously, even at its height, Weston’s impact was nowhere near the Queen of Soul’s, but his story was compelling in its own right: He was a former State Department cultural ambassador alongside Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong and one of the leaders of a successful crusade to reconnect black American music to its African roots. He was still performing as recently as a few months ago. But would even 1 American in 100 recognize his name?
Things were different in Franklin’s own youth, when jazz was the hottest (and coolest) part of pop culture, and offered such a big tent that she was counted as a jazz singer herself. “More people in the United States listen to and enjoy jazz or near-jazz than any other music. Jazz is of tremendous importance for its quantity alone.” That was Marshall Stearns, one of the founders of academic jazz studies, writing in 1956 to argue why his subject was worthy of serious scholarship. As Nate Chinen says in his fascinating and vital new book, Playing Changes: Jazz for the New Century, that passage now sounds bizarre, like a report from “a vanished culture.” In fact, the music’s status today is the complete opposite: Most people vaguely recognize jazz’s cultural importance, but no one’s expected to get too excited about it, unless they want to look as out of touch as Ryan Gosling’s ridiculous hipster-jazz-bro character from the movie La La Land
One benefit of Playing Changes is that it explains how that reversal came about. But primarily, Chinen wants to document what happened after jazz lost its cultural dominance—its evolution in the past few decades into a much woolier, more various, and more relevant arena than most of the public might imagine. The author had a perfect perch to track that development as a New York Times jazz critic for more than a dozen years. (He now directs editorial content for an NPR-affiliated jazz station.) His book, like a great trumpet solo, arrives perfectly timed, just behind the beat, because the past couple of years have suggested that 21st-century jazz could start commanding broader attention.
The story of jazz now looks not like “a linear narrative, but a network of possibilities.”
The first name that appears in Chinen’s first chapter is Kamasi Washington, the young Los Angeles tenor sax player whose work with rap star Kendrick Lamar and his own fittingly titled triple album, The Epic, have catapulted him into the surprising position of playing John Coltrane–influenced cosmic-jazz shows before crowds of tens of thousands. As Chinen writes, Washington “emerged as jazz’s most persuasive embodiment of new black pride at a moment when few forces in American culture felt more pressing.” He’s a perfect example of how the multiculturally minded, socially conscious, and emotionally acute concerns of much 21st-century jazz could appeal perfectly to the moods of many young listeners today, if it could just find channels to reach them.
For context, Chinen rewinds from Washington back to the 1980s and 1990s, when jazz went through a process of institutionalization, rebranded as “America’s classical music.” At the academic level, there was a boom in both jazz-education programs and in scholarly analysis; the music industry’s focus turned to reissues and archival recordings; PBS aired the popular Ken Burns’ Jazz. And the jewel in the crown became New York’s Jazz at Lincoln Center, headed by Wynton Marsalis, the first of several new well-funded jazz-performance and repertory programs around the country.
This shift didn’t come without resistance; Marsalis and his allies had to lobby hard among gatekeepers who, even at that late date, retained a high-culture (and intrinsically racist) bias against jazz. Meanwhile, other musicians and critics, who believed the core of the music’s heritage lay in innovation rather than conservation, resented all the lavish resources being poured into jazz nostalgia, which they associated with Reagan-era conservatism. By the mid-1990s, it seemed like the losers of the “jazz wars” had been those adherents of the avant-garde and free-improvisation camps, referred to in the shorthand of jazz capital New York as the “downtown scene” (clustered around venues on the Lower East Side), as opposed to Marsalis’ seemingly swing-and-bop-purist “uptown” crowd (whose territory also took in the vintage nightclubs of Greenwich Village).
Yet it didn’t quite work out that way. Far from sealing the music behind glass and rendering it safely sterile, the institutionalization process allowed for an unexpected liberation: Rather than pick sides, young musicians could free themselves to use jazz’s history, deviate from it, combine it with other influences, and otherwise rethink it however they pleased. They could shrug off more of the burden of being the tradition’s vessels, now that the job of preserving it was safely in official hands. A couple of the book’s most illuminating chapters examine how collaborations and mentorships now work between newcomers and jazz “elders” and how it might affect the music now that most players come up through school and conservatory programs rather than apprenticing on professional bandstands.
Meanwhile, once their status was well established, the new jazz institutions gradually relaxed their policing of definitions—by 2007, no less fierce a “downtown” iconoclast than the punk-intellectual sax player and composer John Zorn was invited to headline an evening at Lincoln Center, alongside the titanic free-jazz poet-pianist-dancer Cecil Taylor (who pirouetted out of this mortal coil this April). Many of jazz’s experimentalists crossed over into the new-music world, attaining senior academic posts, winning foundation grants and prestigious commissions, and helping to train cohorts of fresh talents to whom the polarized divisions of the past were dusty, irrelevant distinctions.
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“Instead of stark binaries and opposing factions,” Chinen writes, jazz now operates in “a blur of contingent alignments.” Some of this pattern mirrors other art forms, such as visual art or literature, where the modernist quest for evermore-radical formal invention became exhausted by that century’s end and gave way to a new aesthetic eclecticism. However, with jazz it’s also always indispensable to chart its course alongside the changing currents of black culture. The “jazz wars” were in part an extension of the “fusion wars” in the 1970s, between musicians like Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, and Wayne Shorter, who engaged with rock and funk, and those who rejected that as sellout blasphemy. (As Chinen shows, the consensus now has shifted firmly to the pro-fusion side.) And for players of the past few decades, it’s been impossible not to react to the biggest movement in black music since the rise of jazz itself: hip-hop.
On that level, perhaps the most crucial chapter of Chinen’s book is the ninth, titled “Changing Sames” in homage to Amiri Baraka’s classic 1966 essay “The Changing Same,” about the continuum between genres in black music. There, Chinen documents the jazz connections of the Soulquarians, the cluster of creators involved in making D’Angelo’s landmark 2000 R&B album, Voodoo, among them drummer Questlove of the Roots, trumpeter Roy Hargrove (who went on to make jazz-branded albums that featured rap and R&B guests), and especially the prodigiously creative producer J Dilla, whose smeary, wobbly beats drew heavily on jazz and whose own influence continues to extend far beyond his premature death in 2006. (One revelation of this section is that in his early teens in Virginia, D’Angelo himself auditioned and was accepted as a student of Wynton Marsalis’ pianist father, Ellis, though the jazz patriarch moved back to New Orleans before they could begin.)
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From there, Chinen traces waves of neo-soul and hip-hop and electronic new-fusion jazz through the Soulquarian posse and beyond: to Texas-born keyboardist Robert Glasper; to groups such as Snarky Puppy, Beat Factor, and Kneebody; and to the Donny McCaslin Quartet, which David Bowie recruited to back him on his acclaimed final album, Blackstar—itself partly inspired by Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly. Chinen also returns to Lamar and Washington’s L.A. associates such as the bassist Thundercat and the digital producer-composer Flying Lotus, “The new rhythm science in jazz,” Chinen notes, “was also a production model”—allowing computer-programmed-and-edited beats alongside or instead of drumsticks and skins, and similar processing on players’ own performances. In the music being promoted in clubs like New York’s 55 Bar or by the London collective Jazz Refreshed, jazz is once again a dance music, and there are no firm lines between it and R&B, hip-hop, or post-DJ electronic music.
As Chinen writes in his foreword, the story of jazz now looks not like “a linear narrative, but a network of possibilities.” Throughout Playing Changes—a title that neatly puns on the jazz term for moving through chord patterns to suggest both “how playing has changed” and the flow of social and historical change—Chinen switches between chapters like “Changing Sames” that trace those networks and longer profiles of the figures he thinks best express those possibilities. Those include Vijay Iyer, a neuroscience Ph.D. whose work draws on South Indian rhythmic and harmonic forms as well as sound collage and hip-hop; the brainy but sensual pianist Brad Mehldau, whose influences range from Brahms to Radiohead; the restlessly curious saxophonist Steve Coleman and his informal collective known as M-Base, where singer Cassandra Wilson got her start; the Houston-raised, Jean Michel Basquiat–influenced pianist and conceptual artist Jason Moran; the Grammy-winning bassist and singer Esperanza Spalding (whose 2016 album, Emily’s D+Evolution, which I discovered through Chinen’s book, is the finest tribute ever to the style of late-1970s, fusion-era Joni Mitchell); Jon Batiste, the New Orleans–born pianist and bandleader who now banters with Stephen Colbert on late-night TV; and Mary Halvorson, whose thick, spiky electric guitar sound and unpredictable compositions voice the most singular sensibility I’ve heard in 21st-century jazz.
It’s understandable, given Chinen’s former Times gig, that the book betrays a touch of New York–centrism. The beginnings of many of the crossovers Chinen documents were visible in the Chicago scene in the 1990s and early 2000s, but that receives scant mention. (Though Chinen does acknowledge the overarching significance of Chicago’s AACM collective.) Chinen includes some material about globalization, including a look at how migrant musicians remake jazz to express multihyphenate identities, and a zoom in on the evolving condition of jazz in China. But it doesn’t come until the second-to-last chapter, which feels late for such a crucial theme—I wished it had been integrated earlier and more often, though it’s implicit to much of the content. And I wanted more than a paragraph about the current thriving, youthful scene in London.
My other slight misgiving about Playing Changes is the cool distance of Chinen’s narrative voice. Perhaps due to his newspaper training, he’s not one to make jokes, express strong opinions, try out grand theories, or bring himself into the picture. He’s too elegant a writer for the book to become dry, but (in part, admittedly, because we’ve met in person on a few occasions) I often found myself wondering how the developments Chinen was reporting as a young critic felt in real time and how they affected his perspectives. In the sections that bring up intercultural encounters, it seemed like his own past as a listener growing up in Hawaii (not usually thought of as a jazz center) might have provided an interesting backdrop.
Given the range of material he’s working with, though, the book clips along as smoothly and steadily as a drummer on a ride cymbal. It may seem like I named a lot of musicians above, but I’ve barely grazed the surface of Chinen’s references. To help sort through the thicket, each chapter ends with a short list of crucial related recordings, and the whole book concludes with a roundup of “The 129 Essential Albums of the Twenty-First Century (So Far).” Even for a fellow critic, it is a lot to catch up on. This is a world that desperately called for chronicling right now, and Playing Changes more than meets the occasion, making it one of the essential music books of the young century, so far.
Playing Changes: Jazz for the New Century by Nate Chinen. Pantheon.
See all the pieces in the Slate Book Review.
Slate is an Amazon affiliate and may receive a commission from purchases you make through our links.


 
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Plotting His Way Into Jazz History John Edward Hasse – WSJ

Plotting His Way Into Jazz History John Edward Hasse – WSJ

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/plotting-his-way-into-jazz-history-1536352843
 
Plotting His Way Into Jazz History
The visionary problem solving by Ferdinand ‘Jelly Roll’ Morton, jazz’s first theorist, led to his bravura recording of ‘Black Bottom Stomp.’
John Edward Hasse
Sept. 7, 2018 4:40 p.m. ET
Sept. 7, 2018 4:40 p.m. ET
Jazz pioneer Jelly Roll Morton
Jazz pioneer Jelly Roll Morton Photo: Corbis via Getty Images
In an era of outsize personalities with colorful nicknames, the Creole musician Ferdinand “Jelly Roll” Morton was a singular artist. Early on, Morton (c. 1885-1941) worked as a roving snake-oil salesman, card shark, vaudevillian, poolroom hustler, gambler and pimp. He chose a sexual nickname—“Jelly Roll”—and wore a diamond in his gold tooth. Late in life he fought fiercely and publicly to cement his place in music. His ebullient “Black Bottom Stomp” makes his case beautifully. It’s well worth a listen today—or any day. 
What makes Morton an enduring historical figure is not the sensational aspects of his story, but his music. He was the first great ensemble leader, arranger and composer in jazz, his works synthesizing diverse elements of African-American music, and his recordings such as “The Pearls,” “Wolverine Blues” and “King Porter Stomp” became a cornerstone of the jazz tradition. His piano style ingeniously transferred early jazz band textures to the keyboard. 
In his native New Orleans, Morton got his musical start playing piano in the city’s storied brothels. He later bragged that he “invented” jazz—an assertion that was met with derision by many. Yet by the 1910s he was already helping lead the transition from ragtime to jazz as a piano wizard of the first rank who could transform all sorts of music into jazz—embellishing, paraphrasing and improvising; smoothing out the rhythms of ragtime; and making everything flow and swing. Despite the odds against him—a black man in a white world, making a peripatetic living as he could, often in the nexus between the underworld and show business—he became one of the music’s most important pioneers.
When Morton walked into the Chicago studios of the Victor Talking Machine Co. on Sept. 15, 1926, he had high ambitions. Assembling a crack band of players, mostly from New Orleans, this was Morton’s big chance to prove himself and make his enduring mark through records. His ambition was aided by Victor’s state-of-the-art technology and masterly recording engineers. With his newly named septet, “The Red Hot Peppers,” Morton waxed three pieces, including “Black Bottom Stomp,” named for an African-American dance step from the deep South.
Jazz music’s first theorist, Morton took on several problems. In just over three minutes, how do you create interest and drama? In a musical style taking shape, how do you prove the full potential of jazz to integrate the planned with the spontaneous, the notated with the improvised?
His visionary solutions in “Black Bottom Stomp”: think architecturally; carefully plot themes and sections, their lengths and sonorities; differentiate an introduction, 10 choruses, a transition to another key, and a coda.
Vary the rhythms to incorporate two-beat, four-beat, a backbeat, and a five-note Black Bottom dance rhythm. 
Juxtapose 11 different textural combinations and vary the volume of each: full ensemble, cornet and rhythm section, cornet and trombone, clarinet and cornet, clarinet and banjo, clarinet alone, piano alone, cornet alone, banjo and bass, percussion alone, and trombone alone. 
Hire the best musicians; rehearse them methodically; give each certain space to improvise; punctuate the flow with moments of surprise, such as the cymbal break in the penultimate chorus; direct their recording session effectively; balance the front-line instruments with the rhythm section. Build drama to an inexorable climax.
The result? A bravura recording that still packs an emotional punch. The mood is upbeat, optimistic, bursting with energy and exuberance. This is music that makes you want to get up and dance. It rewards close, repeated listening. Whether appreciated architecturally or dramatically, Morton’s accomplishment is remarkable. 
“Black Bottom Stomp” reveals a real composer at work. In this and other pieces, Morton achieved a remarkable integration of improvisation, spontaneity and variety. His 1920s recordings with the Red Hot Peppers reached the peak of the New Orleans style of group embellishment and collective improvisation, with its trademark heterophony and polyphony. Morton’s superior musicianship, painstaking preparation, and sense of form and drama set a high standard for all subsequent jazz composers, including Duke Ellington. 
“Black Bottom Stomp” is Morton’s masterpiece, above all because he brilliantly creates a study in formal, textural and rhythmic variety. The piece is covered in many music textbooks. In 1999, a transcription of his recording—for performance and study—was published in the series Essential Jazz Editions. In 2006, “Black Bottom Stomp” was added to the Library of Congress’s prestigious National Recording Registry. In 2010, the Smithsonian chose to include it in the authoritative “Jazz: The Smithsonian Anthology.” The song has been recorded more than 190 times, by musicians around the globe, but my personal favorite is Wynton Marsalis’s 1999 interpretation that fills out the sound with a larger ensemble, adds more time for solos, and offers a modern take on musical revivalism. “Black Bottom Stomp” is an American classic.
—Mr. Hasse is curator emeritus of American music at the Smithsonian. His books include “Beyond Category: The Life and Genius of Duke Ellington” (Da Capo) and “Discover Jazz” (Pearson).
 
 
 

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Randy Weston Soundchecks Highlights In Jazz June 11, 2015

Randy Weston Soundchecks Highlights In Jazz June 11, 2015

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Jack Kleinsinger presented the great Randy Weston as part of his 2015 series Highlights In Jazz.
 
I had the privilege and honor to be in attendance for the soundcheck.
 
R.I.P. Randy Weston

 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_cRAkTFid0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Upr4qZ1S2E

 

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Randy Weston, Pianist Who Traced Africa in Jazz, Dies at 92 – The New York Times

Randy Weston, Pianist Who Traced Africa in Jazz, Dies at 92 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/01/obituaries/randy-weston-dead.html

Randy Weston, Pianist Who Traced Africa in Jazz, Dies at 92
Sept. 1, 2018


Randy Weston performing at a Highlife Session in April 1963. Mr. Weston’s playing and composing emphasized the African roots of jazz, including in such albums as “Little Niles” and “Uhuru Afrika” (Swahili for “Freedom Africa”).Chuck Stewart/Mosiac Records
 
By Giovanni Russonello
 
Randy Weston, an esteemed pianist whose music and scholarship advanced the argument — now broadly accepted — that jazz is, at its core, an African music, died at his home in Brooklyn on Saturday. He was 92.
His death was confirmed by his lawyer, Gail Boyd, who said the exact cause was still being determined.
On his earliest recordings in the mid-1950s, Mr. Weston almost fit the profile of a standard bebop musician: He recorded jazz standards and galloping original tunes in a typical, small-group format. But his sharply cut harmonies and intense, gnarled rhythms conveyed a manifestly Afrocentric sensibility, one that was slightly more barbed and rugged than the popular hard-bop sound of the day.
Early on, he exhibited a distinctive voice as a composer. “Hi-Fly,” which he first released in 1958 on the LP “New Faces at Newport,” became a standard. And he eventually distinguished himself as a solo pianist, reflecting the influence of his main idol, Thelonious Monk. But more than Monk, Mr. Weston liked to constantly reshape his cadences, rarely lingering on a steady pulse.
Reviewing a concert in 1990, The New York Times’ Peter Watrous wrote of Mr. Weston: “Everything he played was edited to the essential notes of a phrase, and each phrase stood on its own, carefully separated from the next one; Mr. Weston sat rippling waves of notes down next to glossy and percussive octaves, which led logically to meditative chords.”
Even before making his first album, Mr. Weston was giving concerts and teaching seminars that emphasized the African roots of jazz. This flew in the face of the prevailing narrative at the time, which cast jazz as a broadly American music, and a kind of equal-opportunity soundtrack to racial integration.
“Wherever I go, I try to explain that if you love music, you have to know where it came from,” Mr. Weston told the website All About Jazz in 2003. “Whether you say jazz or blues or bossa nova or samba, salsa — all these names are all Africa’s contributions to the Western hemisphere. If you take out the African elements of our music, you would have nothing.”
As countries across Africa shook themselves free of colonial exploitation in the mid-20th century, Mr. Weston recorded albums such as “Little Niles,” in 1958, and “Uhuru Afrika” (Swahili for “Freedom Africa”), in 1960, explicitly saluting the struggle for self-determination. The latter of those recordings included lyrics written by Langston Hughes, and sales were banned in South Africa by the apartheid regime.
Both albums — and others throughout his career — featured the marbled horn arrangements of the trombonist Melba Liston, who left an indelible stamp on Mr. Weston’s oeuvre.
In 1959 he became a central member of the United Nations Jazz Society, a group seeking to spread jazz throughout the world, particularly in Africa. In 1961 he visited Nigeria as part of a delegation of the American Society for African Culture, beginning a lifelong trans-Atlantic exchange.
After two more trips to Africa, he moved to Morocco in 1968, having first arrived there on a junket sponsored by the State Department. He stayed for five years, living first in Rabat and then in Tangier, where he ran the African Rhythms Cultural Center, a performance venue that fostered artists from various traditions.
Mr. Weston drew particular inspiration from musicians of the Gnawa tradition, whose music centered on complex, commingled rhythms and low drones. While in Morocco he established a rigorous international touring regimen and played often in Europe.
In the late 1980s and early ‘90s, Mr. Weston released a series of high-profile recordings for the label Verve, all to critical acclaim. Those included tributes to his two greatest American influences — Duke Ellington and Monk — as well as a record dedicated to his own compositions, “Self Portraits,” from 1989.
Mr. Weston earned a Grammy nod in 1973 for his album “Tanjah” (nominated for best jazz performance by a big band), and in 1995 for “The Splendid Master Gnawa Musicians of Morocco” (in the best world music album category), a recording that he produced and released under his name, but on which he left most of the playing to 11 Moroccan musicians.
In 2001, the National Endowment for the Arts bestowed Mr. Weston with its Jazz Masters award, the highest accolade available to a jazz artist in the United States. He was voted into DownBeat magazine’s hall of fame in 2016.
He also received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and United States Artists, as well as awards from the Moroccan government and the Institute of the Black World.
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Randy Weston’s African Rhythms Trio performing at the Newport Jazz Festival in 2011.Erik Jacobs for The New York Times
He held honorary doctorates of music from Brooklyn College, Colby College and the New England Conservatory, and had served as artist in residence at universities around New York City. Mr. Weston’s papers are archived at Harvard University’s Hutchins Center for African and African American Research.
In addition to his wife, Fatoumata Mbengue, Mr. Weston is survived by three daughters, Cheryl, Pamela and Kim; seven grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild. Mr. Weston’s first marriage, to Mildred Mosley, ended in divorce. A son, Azzedin, is deceased.
Randolph Edward Weston was born in Brooklyn on April 6, 1926. His father, Frank Weston, was a barber and restaurateur who had emigrated from Panama, and who studied his African heritage with pride. Randy’s mother, nee Vivian Moore, was a domestic worker who had grown up in Virginia.
Though his parents split when he was 3, they stayed on good terms and lived near each other in Brooklyn. Randy spent time with both throughout his childhood, receiving his father’s teachings about the cultures of Africa and the Caribbean while absorbing the music of the African-American church from his mother, who made sure that Randy and his half sister, Gladys, were in the pews every Sunday.
In his memoir, “African Rhythms,” written with Willard Jenkins, Mr. Weston remembered that his father — a staunch supporter of Marcus Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement Association — hung “maps and portraits of African kings on the walls, and was forever talking to me about Africa.”
Mr. Weston wrote of his father, “He was planting the seeds for what I would become as far as developing my consciousness of the plight of Africans all over the world.”
As a child, Mr. Weston took classical piano lessons, but did not fall in love with the instrument until he started studying with a teacher who encouraged his love for the jazz protagonists of the day, particularly Ellington, Count Basie and Coleman Hawkins.
Mr. Weston was drafted into the Army in 1944, serving three years and rising to the rank of staff sergeant. While stationed in Okinawa, Japan, he was in charge of managing supplies, and frequently tried to share leftover materials and food with local residents, many of whom had lost their homes in World War II.
Upon returning to Brooklyn, he took over managing his father’s restaurant, Trios, which became a hub of intellectuals and artists. Mr. Weston began playing jazz and R&B gigs in the borough, seeking wisdom from older musicians. He became particularly close to Monk.
“When I heard Monk play, his sound, his direction, I just fell in love with it,” Mr. Weston told All About Jazz in 2003. “I would pick him up in the car and bring him to Brooklyn and he was a great master because, for me, he put the magic back into the music.”
Heroin use was rampant on the jazz scene then, and Mr. Weston developed a habit. In 1951 he left New York to get clean, moving to Lenox, Mass. He made frequent trips to the Music Inn, a venue in nearby Stockbridge, and while working there met Marshall Stearns, a leading jazz scholar with strong beliefs about jazz’s West African roots, who was giving lectures and leading workshops at the venue.
Mr. Weston started to perform regularly, and he and Mr. Stearns collaborated on a series of round tables about the history of jazz. Mr. Weston met a range of musicians from across the African diaspora, including the Nigerian drummer Babatunde Olatunji, the Cuban percussionist Cándido Camero, and the Sierra Leonean drummer Asadata Dafora.
When he returned to Brooklyn that fall, Mr. Weston was brimming with ideas about the synchrony of African tradition and jazz innovation.
Mr. Weston’s towering stature — he stood at 6’7” and favored flowing garments from North or West Africa — combined with his redoubtable intelligence and technical virtuosity, making him an imposing, though genial, figure. He remained in good health until the end, performing most often with a rotating group he called African Rhythms.
In 2016, he released his 50th and final album as a band leader, the two-disc “African Nubian Suite,” which featured an orchestra-sized iteration of African Rhythms. Through music and spoken word, the suite traces humanity’s origins back to the Nile River delta.
Mr. Weston’s last public concert was in July at the Nice Jazz Festival in France, with his African Rhythms Quintet. At the time of his death, his website listed upcoming performances scheduled through October.
For Mr. Weston, music was a way of connecting histories with the present, and a communal undertaking. Looking back on his career, he told All About Jazz: “I have been blessed because I have been around some of the most fantastic people on the planet. I have become a composer and become a pianist. I couldn’t ask for anything more.”
 
 

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Unreleased Jazz Treasures Are Arriving: Here’s a Guide – The New York Times

Unreleased Jazz Treasures Are Arriving: Here’s a Guide – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/29/arts/music/historical-jazz-albums-savory-davis-coltrane.html?em_pos=medium
 
Unreleased Jazz Treasures Are Arriving: Here’s a Guide
Aug. 29, 2018
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A previously “lost” 1963 recording featuring McCoy Tyner and John Coltrane was released this year.Joe Alper
There’s never a shortage of old jazz albums being repackaged, or previously unknown recordings finding the light of day. But this year, a particularly impressive trickle of unreleased music from jazz’s halcyon midcentury has emerged for the first time. We already took a look at notable reissues. Here’s a guide to the historic recordings that have arrived so far.
‘The Savory Collection 1935-1940’
(6 CDs) (Mosaic)
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Here is a kind of swing-era Holy Grail — perhaps the most exciting single collection jazz fans have ever seen. William Savory would eventually become a groundbreaking audio engineer, but first he was a teenage music fanatic, using new technology to bootleg radio broadcasts of his favorite jazz musicians straight to acetate and metal discs. It was not until after his death in 2004 that the extent of this collectionbecame known, when the National Jazz Museum in Harlem bought the nearly 1,000 discs he had amassed in the 1930s and into 1940, featuring Coleman Hawkins, Count Basie, Mildred Bailey and Benny Goodman. The museum has been releasing material from it periodically on Apple Music in digital-only albums. But now we have a complete boxed set, with more than 100 songs across six CDs.
Sitting with “The Savory Collection,” you start to feel the hum and seduction of listening to jazz radio in the days before you could choose to put on a record or queue up a streaming service. And what comes bursting from the speakers will grab you: a lengthy, live version of Hawkins’s classic “Body and Soul,” performed at the Fiesta Danceteria in Manhattan; the prattling, overpowering drumming of Chick Webb, electrifying the CBS studios as if they were a dance hall; and two full discs of Count Basie’s orchestra in its prime, including a showstopping appearance at the Carnival of Swing in 1938.
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Miles Davis and John Coltrane, ‘The Final Tour: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 6’
(4 CDs) (Columbia/Legacy)
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This is the first time that Columbia has released any official recordings from Miles Davis’s 1960 European tour, though there have been recordings floating around for decades. This tour was an epochal moment in jazz, seeming to indicate two separate paths for the music’s future. Davis had established a tight-knit band, and was enjoying the warm reception to “Kind of Blue,” which would go on to become the best-selling album in jazz history. But Coltrane was shoving off in a different direction, ripping his technique apart and seeking a new kind of transcendence. On these tapes, as he splits tones and repeats gusty, arrhythmic phrases, you hear the audiences in Paris and Stockholm react with bemusement — and sometimes shouts, whistles and boos.
Grant Green, ‘Funk in France: From Paris to Antibes (1969-1970)’ and ‘Slick! — Live at Oil Can Harry’s’
(2 CDs and 3 LPs; 1 CD and 2 LPs) (Resonance)
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Grant Green was not the most innovative jazz guitarist of the 20th century, but he might be the most heavily sampled. His chunky, caustic sound was never far removed from the blues of his St. Louis upbringing, and when jazz-funk fusion became the order of the day in the early 1970s, he was ready for it. Two new releases from Resonance Records throw light on his transition into the style. The best moments come on Disc 2 of “Funk in France,” with Green leading an organ quartet at the Antibes Jazz Festival. The combo hadn’t sunk into the kind of swaggering rapport that would define his best live recordings from this period (“Alive!” from 1970, and “Live at the Lighthouse,” from 1972, both released on Blue Note), but these new albums are charged with fresh energy and a sense of rooted exploration.
John Coltrane, ‘Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album’
(1 CD and 1 LP; or a deluxe edition, 2 CDs and 2 LPs) (Impulse!)
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Coltrane’s career was soaring by March 1963 — so much so that studio sessions with his quartet were often dominated by new concepts and collaborations. But on this session, recorded in the midst of a run at Birdland in New York, the band was working in its own lingua franca, basically playing a version of its live set. Even more than on the album “Coltrane” from a year before, we can feel how closely connected these musicians (McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones) had become, and how combustive those live moments must have been. This album features seven different tunes, including three Coltrane never again recorded in the studio, and the deluxe edition includes seven alternate takes.
Dexter Gordon, ‘Tokyo 1975’
Woody Shaw, ‘Tokyo 1981’

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(1 CD each) (Elemental Music)
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These live recordings, released simultaneously this summer, provide glimpses of two modern masters leading longstanding groups. By 1975 the bebop tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon had spent a dozen years in Europe and was leading the house quartet at Copenhagen’s Jazzhus Montmartre. His band there included the American pianist Kenny Drew and the Danish bassist Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen; on “Tokyo 1975” he pulls them into a surging, swinging flow that sometimes calls to mind the funneled energy of his classic 1963 recording, “Our Man in Paris.”
Woody Shaw, a close friend of Gordon’s, was an uncommonly crisp and shapely trumpet player, as well as an underrated composer. He’s caught in this 1981 concert playing standards and originals — including a 10-plus-minute take on “Rosewood,” his magnum opus — with a fabulous quintet that features the trombonist Steve Turre and the pianist Mulgrew Miller, both of whom were soon to become jazz A-listers.
Correction: August 31, 2018
An earlier version of this article misstated the type of material onto which William Savory pressed bootleg recordings of radio broadcasts. He used acetate and metal discs, not shellac.
A version of this article appears in print on Aug. 30, 2018, on Page C5 of the New York edition with the headline: Masterly Survivals From the Halcyon Years of Jazz. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 
 
 

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Ella in Newburgh Ritz Theater Dressing Room Photo February 27, 1945

Ella in Newburgh Ritz Theater Dressing Room Photo February 27, 1945

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ritz_Theater_(Newburgh,_New_York 
 
In 1933 Eugene Levy purchased the theater from George Cohen and “converted that playhouse of a gaudier era into an institution where cinematic and variety productions of the highest standard [were] presented with amazing skill, and affording the fascinated beholder the ultimate in comfort and convenience.”[2] This would begin a new era for the Ritz Theater, which became a frequent stomping ground of many big name stars such as: Ella FitzgeraldLouis PrimaMary MartinPeggy Lee, Wood Herman, Dick Powell, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, Eddy Duchin, Red SkeltonXavier CugatThe InkspotsVaughn Monroe, Montana Slim, Les Brown, Ricardo Crotez, and many more.
On November 3, 1940, Frank Sinatra, an unknown singer at the time, stepped onto the Ritz Theater’s stage. The band of Tommy Dorsey backed Sinatra who captivated the Newburgh audience.[3]
The Ritz Theater is most notably famous for being the stage where Lucille Ball made her stage debut. “On December 17th, 1941 she performed for the first time on stage and for the first time with her new husband, Desi Arnaz. It was on the Ritz stage that they planted the seeds for their sitcom, I Love Lucy.”[3]
 

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The radical 1960s music of the Hindustani Jazz sextet — Quartz India

The radical 1960s music of the Hindustani Jazz sextet — Quartz India

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https://qz.com/india/1375501/the-radical-1960s-music-of-the-hindustani-jazz-sextet/
 
The radical 1960s music of the Hindustani Jazz sextet
Anu KumarAugust 31, 2018
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Sleepy Night Records
The Don Ellis band at the 1978 Jazz Yatra at Mumbai’s Rang Bhavan
The American jazz musician Don Ellis was known–and at times criticised–for his love of experimentation. It marked and superseded his performances, as a soloist and a conductor, even before it led to another turn in his musical life in 1964.
That year, Ellis met Harihar Rao, sitarist and disciple of Ravi Shankar, while studying ethnomusicology at the University of California in Los Angeles. Their friendship resulted in the formation of a band–the Hindustani Jazz Sextet. Little known in their time, the band fused eastern rhythms to jazz improvisations and remained radical in every way.
In his collaboration with Rao, Ellis’s experimentation in the use of odd time meters in jazz improvisations, away from the conventional swing (4/4) rhythm, would enter a new phase. It was a way of playing that would have a profound effect on everything else Ellis did–the orchestra and his music–in the following years.
Starting off
The Hindustani Jazz Sextet first began performing in Manne-Hole, the Hollywood music venue owned by drummer Shelly Manne, and remained primarily active between 1964 and 1970. When he wasn’t performing with the Sextet, Ellis conducted and played with his newly-formed big band, The Don Ellis Orchestra, where he continued experimenting with instrumentation and arrangement, using a range of percussion instruments, and deliberately altering the numbers of bassists and woodwind musicians. He also had them play more than one instrument on occasion.
The Sextet never formally recorded, but their music is archived in the UCLA’s ethnomusicology department. Some of their early performances in Los Angeles’ Lighthouse Café, one of the oldest jazz cafes in the city, have been digitised by the California audiovisual preservation project. Over the last decade, most of their work–some still being discovered–has been archived thanks to Ellis’ fans such as the musician and teacher, Ken Orton, and Sean Fenlon, whose dissertation The Exotic Rhythms of Don Ellis explored Ellis’ experimentations with eastern music. Fenlon also maintains the website, donellismusic.com. A lot of Ellis’ music is also now available on YouTube.
The irascible Leonard Feather, music critic for the Los Angeles Times during the 1960s and ’70s, found the Sextet’s rhythmic experimentation too mathematical, and wrote that the audience needed a computer to figure out things when Ellis explained eastern rhythms and metres to them. Some critics were humorously patronising of the Sextet’s performances. One headline read Hot Hindustanis Here. Others stressed on the music’s unconventionality, with headlines like Hindustani Jazz Unorthodox and Jazz Workshop Eccentric.
Ellis and innovation
Born in 1934 in California’s San Bernardino, Ellis had long favoured the trumpet over the piano (his mother was an organist). After a degree in music composition from Boston University, he had performed for Glenn Miller’s band and didn’t give up on music during his army stint. By the late 1950s, he was already breaking away from the conventional symmetrical formula (4/4) of writing, a trait he would master in the company of Rao.
Music of the third stream, a term coined by Gunther Schuller in 1957 to describe the fusion of jazz and classical, fascinated Ellis. He termed the music “the new thing” in an article that he wrote for the International Musician in 1965, which was later cited by Ellis in his dissertation.
Ellis was somewhat familiar with odd-numbered meters, even before he met Rao. As Fenlon writes, it was Arif Mardin, the Turkish-American composer, who had once shown Ellis a Turkish folk rhythm in nine beats, broken up in 2, 2, 2, 3. But it was “Rao [who] taught him to superimpose complicated rhythm patterns on top of these different signatures…and a counting system so Ellis could know exactly where he was within it at any given point”.
Sextet and experimentation
The Hindustani Jazz Sextet was a leap in experimentation. Nothing like it had ever been attempted, and its influence was vital for Ellis. He co-authored an article with Rao in 1965 titled An Introduction to Indian Music for the Jazz Musician. In 1968, Ellis composed and played The Tihai, a repetitively rhythmic composition set to Hindustani classical beats of three for the album Shock Treatment, recorded by The Don Ellis Orchestra.
The year 1967 was somewhat of a breakthrough year–now unfortunately forgotten–when the Hindustani Jazz Sextet performed with Stan Kenton’s band, the Neophonic Orchestra. The piece, Synthesis, was based on two classical ragas, and featured Rao on sitar and tabla, Ellis and Gabe Baltazar on woodwinds, and the 25-odd musicians of the Neophonic Orchestra.
As Feather wrote in the Los Angeles Times, Ellis and the Sextet “ran away” with the show, with the music winding its way from “New Orleans to New Delhi, fusing Hindustani ragas and rhythms to European classical concepts, American sounds and African touches”.
The Hindustani Jazz Sextet was unconventional in other ways as well. In 1987, when Feather wrote in his book From Satchmo to Miles of the “racial separatism” that marked the world of jazz, he appeared oblivious to the fact that in the Sextet, Ellis played with a multi-racial cast of musicians. In one of its initial outings, the Sextet played music by Lalo Schifrin, the Argentine-born pianist-composer and Mardin, who worked with musicians across all genres.
Rao’s influence
Rao taught at the UCLA for several years and played the sitar as an accompanist to other musicians like Chet Atkins. His mastery of the sitar influenced others, chiefly bass players in the Ellis Orchestra.
After being introduced to Rao in Los Angeles in the mid-1960s, jazz bassist Bill Plummer picked up the sitar and the Hindustani classical way of notation. Plummer’s love for jazz and Hindustani classical came together in his 1967 LP in which he performed with his band, the Cosmic Brotherhood. The band featured several musicians who dabbled in eastern instruments such as Hersh Hamel (sitar, tanpura, vocals), Milt Holland (tabla), Ray Neapolitan (sitar, tanpura) and Jan Steward (sarod and tanpura). Neapolitan would also play bass for The Doors later, in Morrison Hotel and Other Voices.
Several other musicians, who were once part of the Sextet, went on to have thriving music careers, and continued their association with eastern music.
Among them was Emil Richards, who played the vibes and percussion, and featured on some of the Sextet’s early sessions. During his world travels with Frank Sinatra and George Harrison, Richards became fascinated with ethnic wind instruments and began his own collection, several of which are now in an Oakland museum. Richards played the percussion for the Salaam Bombay and Mississippi Masala soundtracks.
Pianist and composer Dave Mackay, a mainstay of the Sextet, was the first blind student to graduate from Connecticut’s Trinity College. The bassist Chuck Domanico went on to play in several film soundtracks, such as Who Framed Roger Rabbit, California Suite and Fugitive.
The saxophonist Sam Falzone, who died in 2013, was part of Ellis’ big-band orchestra and his somewhat more conventional and lesser-known band, informally called the Organic Band. This was all-acoustic with a vocal quartet. In Falzone’s composition for this band, Jupiter’s Favourite Child, influences of Brazilian music, a country that Ellis had visited a short while ago, are palpable.
Woodwind player Baltazar, born to a Filipino father and a Japanese mother (who lived in Hawaii), was one of two Asian-Americans active in the American jazz scene of the 1960s and 1970s (the other was the pianist Paul Togawa).
Ellis died of heart complications in 1978 at the age of 44. He continued writing about music till the very end. In 1973, he wrote Rhythm, detailing a system of beats drawn from ancient Hindu techniques. His lifelong fascination with the subject continued in Quarter Tones–which appeared two years later–a short history on the subject complete with ‘musical examples, exercises and etudes’.
Electric Heart: The Don Ellis Story, a short documentary made by writer-director John Vizzusi, reveals how integral the Hindustani Jazz Sextet was to everything Ellis did and played in that last momentous decade of his young life.
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Don Ellis at the 1978 Jazz Yatra in Mumbai.
This piece was first published on Scroll.in. We welcome your comments at ideas.india@qz.com
 
 

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jazz’s legendary earl “fatha” hines — 8/31/18-Delanceyplace.com

jazz’s legendary earl “fatha” hines — 8/31/18-Delanceyplace.com

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Today’s selection — from Nat King Cole by Daniel Mark Epstein.

 

Earl Hines, one of the early jazz pioneers, had a career dream that became a nightmare under Al Capone:

“To know Nat [King] Cole you must first know Earl Hines, his artistic father. Earl’s teeth were like the white keys of a piano. They called him Gate­mouth because his mouth was like the pearly gates and he was always smiling. He smiled because he loved to play piano and he was almost always playing. Sometimes he smiled so hard the muscles in his face would freeze and the smile would stick on his face for an hour or so after the show was over. One of his sidemen would have to massage the smile off his face.

“Musicians were already beginning to call Earl Hines ‘Fatha’ at age thirty-two because he had given birth to a style — more than a style, a virtual language — of jazz piano. There were wicked rumors that Hines had an invisible third hand, that he had made a pact with the Devil. Men who had never seen him up close, envious musicians, said that Gatemouth had cut the ‘webs’ between his fingers with a razor blade, so as to give him the extra stretch needed to manage those tenth-interval trills.

“Every kid pianist in the Midwest copied Earl Hines. Hines … had been a prodigy, mastering the Czerny exercises and playing Chopin preludes by the age of eleven in Duquesne, Pennsyl­vania. By the time he was fourteen Hines was winning prizes and getting his picture in the paper. He was drawn to popular music. Earl was living with his Aunt Sadie Phillips when he was in high school, and she dab­bled in light opera. Musicians like Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle, re­nowned pianist/composer Lucky Roberts, and singer Lois Deppe liked to visit Sadie and play on her piano. That is how Earl first heard ragtime and blues. …

 

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Hines in 1947
(photograph by William P. Gottlieb)

 

“Soon Hines orga­nized a band called the Symphonian Serenaders. He watched other pianists. Jim Fellman taught him to make ‘tenths’ with his left hand. Johnny Waters of Detroit could stretch tenths with his right hand while playing a little melody with the middle fingers. Young Earl watched, and listened, and stretched his growing hands. …

“By the time Earl Hines arrived in Chicago in 1924 at age twenty, he had recorded eight sides for [the label of] Gennet, including his own ‘Congaine,’ and Lucky’s ‘Isabel.’ He had formed his own band with Benny Carter on sax and ‘Cuban’ Bennet blowing trumpet. And at twenty-one, Gatemouth had forged a piano style that surpassed that of James P. Johnson and rivaled the work of the great Jelly Roll Morton, the self-styled ‘Originator of Jazz.’ … 

“Jelly Roll may have created jazz piano. But Gatemouth Earl Hines was the first grand master of the art, bringing to that complex, many-voiced instrument the volume and harmonic richness it deserves. He drew upon three hundred years of European chording and counterpoint to embellish the dance music of New Orleans. He would free his left hand from the chains of the stride bass, without missing a beat of dance rhythm, using his left to make melodies and harmonies from one end of the keyboard to the other. Upward glissandos, octave slides, he played with a nimble left hand so free of his right that it was hard to believe there was only one man at the piano.

“Jelly heard Earl Hines playing solo at the Elite No. 2 Club in Chicago in 1924, before Gatemouth went on the road with Carroll Dickerson’s band. A few years later he might have heard Earl at the Sunset Cafe, a mob-controlled nightclub on 35th and Calumet, playing duets with Louis Armstrong, numbers such as ‘Muggles’ and ‘Weather Bird Rag.’ There in the Sunset Cafe in 1927 and 1928 the twenty-one-year-old keyboard genius and the twenty-seven-year-old archangel of the trum­pet created the seminal rhythmic language of ensemble jazz. …

“On his birthday, December 28, 1928, Earl Hines and his ten-piece band opened Ed Fox’s brand-new Grand Terrace, a Chicago nightclub and dance hall at Oakwood and South Parkway Boulevard. Customers sat on different terracelike levels on either side of the bandstand. … In 1932, when business was booming at the Grand Terrace, Al Capone sent five men to pay Ed Fox a visit. They entered without knock­ing. …

“‘We’re going to take twenty-five percent,’ Capone’s man told Fox. 

“From that point forward … Earl Hines had two bosses, one of whom was scarface Al Capone. … Capone began to think of Gatemouth as property. When Hines went on the road with his band, two bodyguards accompanied him every­where because Scarface was worried a rival gang might injure Hines to hurt Capone. When the pianist protested he didn’t need two body­guards, Capone shrugged and said it was no big deal, he had thirty of them himself. … During the rule of the gangsters in the 1930s Earl Hines’s dream became a nightmare. He was a black songbird in a gilded cage.”

 

 

 

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Nat King Cole
Author: Daniel Mark Epstein
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Copyright 1999 by Daniel Mark Epstein
Pages: 6-10


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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Esperanza Spalding Is The 21st Century’s Jazz Genius : NPR

Esperanza Spalding Is The 21st Century’s Jazz Genius : NPR

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Esperanza Spalding Is The 21st Century’s Jazz Genius
Lara Pellegrinelli 
August 28, 20187:00 AM ET

Esperanza Spalding performs at the 2011 Montreux Jazz festival in Switzerland.
Photo Illustration: A163/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images and Angela Hsieh/NPR
It’s not enough to make list after list. The Turning the Tables project seeks to suggest alternatives to the traditional popular music canon, and to do more than that, too: to stimulate conversation about how hierarchies emerge and endure. This year, Turning the Tables considers how women and non-binary artists are shaping music in our moment, from the pop mainstream to the sinecures of jazz and contemporary classical music. Our list of the 200 Greatest Songs By Women+ offers a soundtrack to a new century. This series of essays takes on another task.
The 25 arguments writers make in these pieces challenge the usual definitions of influence. Some rethink the building legacies of popular artists; others celebrate those who create within subcultures, their innovations rippling outward over time. As always, women forge new pathways in sound; today, they also make waves under the surface of culture by confronting, in their music, the increased fluidity of “woman” itself. What is a woman? It’s a timeless question on the surface, but one deeply engaged with whatever historical moment in which it is asked. Our 25 Most Influential Women Musicians of the 21st Century illuminate its complexities. —Ann Powers


Pop fans of a certain age may only remember Esperanza Spalding as a spoiler, the interloper who once robbed an obsessively worshiped teen idol of his Grammy.
The year was 2011. Spalding, then 26 years old and little-known outside jazz circles, had been nominated in the coveted best new artist category alongside Drake, Mumford & Sons, Florence + the Machine and Justin Bieber, the obvious favorite that night. No one expected her to win, least of all herself. But the upset was less shocking for the vitriol of spurned Beliebers— of which there was plenty — than as the first and only time the award has been given to someone who self-identifies as jazz artist.
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Spalding has undeniably made her mark within that male-dominated, musically conservative field. At the same time, she’s also shown her capacity to operate irrespective of its borders, an unusual achievement irrespective of her gender.
She didn’t exactly come out of nowhere. A native of Portland, Ore., Spalding played classical violin as a child and gigged in an indie band on bass as a teenager. She graduated from the Berklee College of Music in only three years, becoming, at the time, the youngest instructor in the school’s history at the age of 20. By the time of her Grammy nomination, she’d already recorded three albums: Junjo (2006), an offering of breezy originals and standards; Esperanza (2008), a garland of Afro-Latin and Brazilian influences; and Chamber Music Society (2010), a well-tailored concert program featuring strings. Three more have followed since then: Radio Music Society (2012), a collection of hummable, danceable, radio-friendly tunes that won a Grammy for Best Jazz Vocal Album; Emily’s D+Evolution (2016), an Afrofuturistic landscape of complex, groove-oriented compositions; and the unprecedented Exposure (2017), created in just 77 hours while streamed on Facebook Live.
It’s tempting to think of Spalding as a prodigy. Drummer, composer and producer Terri Lyne Carrington, who first met Spalding during those early Berklee years, prefers a different term: “I call her a genius every chance I get.”
“If we go back in the music’s history,” explains Carrington, who is well-versed in women’s struggles in jazz, “there are very few people who are accomplished in all of the areas that Esperanza is. She’s a virtuosic bass player. Her voice is capable of acrobatics. Her compositions are not easy. Her lyrics are poetry. And she puts it all together in a way that’s commercially appealing. She’s setting an extreme example for young women in music.”
Similarly, few have traversed such diverse stylistic terrain at such a young age, a feat Spalding has accomplished in spite of being policed by jazz purists. At times, they’ve grumbled that her music is too immature or too accessible (read: too playful and too joyful), a stance so predictable that it says more about the intractability of critics than the music. In jazz’s time-honored apprentice system, “sidemen” ready themselves by playing in the bands of more seasoned leaders, ranks that women can still find challenging to enter. Although Spalding has performed, and continues to, in groups such as beloved saxophonist Joe Lovano’s Us Five, she has leapfrogged through the expected dues-paying to make her own music. Her self-described “f*** it, whatever” attitude, the result of having already faced down a lifetime of low expectations, has served her well.
At the beginning of her career, Spalding recently told me by phone, she was considered “a hot — hey, I’m still hot — brown lady of indeterminate ethnicity. There was a novelty that drew people to me as an entity before the merit of my work could make a place for itself. Many times people didn’t expect anything from me because I was a pretty girl. And those in the industry didn’t care how I played because they saw I was marketable.”
If Spalding assembled her musician’s toolkit by mastering classical music, jazz and its Afro-Latin counterparts, she came into her own by threading those influences through the R&B she heard on the radio when she was a kid: Sam Cooke; Smokey Robinson; Earth, Wind & Fire. That fusion was already audible in Esperanza‘s funky bass lines, but has taken off in her later projects as she has come into the orbit of black popular musicians. 
A favorite of the Obamas, Spalding performed “Overjoyed” at the White House in tribute to Stevie Wonder in 2009, sparking a relationship between the two artists. Prince invited her to jam, and she played on his BET Lifetime Achievement Award tribute and opened for him on tour in 2011. (When I saw the show, I couldn’t help checking out Questlove seated at the end of my aisle, his head bobbing to Spalding’s “I Know You Know.”) Radio Music Society featured a guest appearance by Lalah Hathaway; Q-Tip produced a pair of its tracks. Spalding appeared as a guest on Janelle Monáe’s 2013 album The Electric Lady and Bruno Mars’ 2012 Unorthodox Jukebox.
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These artists clearly acknowledge Spalding as a talented peer. The benefits of their creative exchanges may seem obvious to those outside of jazz, but they run contrary to jazz’s often elitist musical culture. They come at a time when the form has its sights set in the rearview mirror, when most young artists are “trying to sound like they peaked in 1942 or 1957,” says Carrington.
Spalding, instead, has more in common with two of jazz’s greatest living composers: pianist Herbie Hancock and saxophonist Wayne Shorter, co-founder of the superband Weather Report. (Incidentally, Spalding is writing the libretto for Shorter’s opera Iphigenia, premiering in 2020.) Alumni of Miles Davis’ second great quintet, the two men pioneered fusion starting in the 1970s, walking paths that brought them to audiences for commercial music. 
For example, Spalding’s “Good Lava” from Emily’s D+Evolution demands that we “See this pretty girl, watch this pretty girl flow”; grungy guitars mirror bass in shape-shifting, Tetris-like configurations punctuated by ear-popping, overdubbed vocals (think “Bohemian Rhapsody”). “Judas” wows with epic, rangey harmonies linked together by a recurrent, loping bass line. And, with its echoes of Joni Mitchell, “Earth to Heaven” splays a broken chorus across voices, guitars, bass and keyboards, interrupting serpentine melodies. A culmination of Spalding’s work and influences to date, this is funk at its most serious-minded and compositional.
But the ways in which Spalding’s music are truly the most radical are perhaps the most easily overlooked: how her approach to singing and the substance of her playing challenge gender norms across styles.
A slender reed of a woman who might still be mistaken for a teenager, Spalding possesses a voice that is agile and lithe, closer to Diana Ross, Roberta Flack (a closeted jazz musician) or Brazilian singer Elis Regina than to her jazz precursors. Spalding doesn’t sing torch songs and rarely writes of romance. She doesn’t attempt to reel in her audiences with flirtation. She chooses not to perform desire or longing, themes that fuel the most deeply held stereotypes of jazz women as singers who simply emote rather than perform with technical skill. That Spalding can sing with power and spirit while refusing to operate from a place of emotional want represents an enormous psychic shift within jazz, bringing the music in line with contemporary women’s values.
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Likewise, her bass playing redefines that instrument through her penchant for lyrical invention. During the press party for Chamber Music Society, I remember overhearing one critic complain to another, “Well, she’s no Paul Chambers,” referring to the muscular Detroit bassist on some of Miles Davis’ most famous albums. 
“That really ticks me off,” Carrington responds, knowing there’s no way to compete with dead legends. “Bringing a more feminine aesthetic into the music is mandatory at this point. Because Paul Chambers didn’t get around the instrument the way she does. So she’s not digging in as hard; it gives her a kind of fleeting emotion that is beautiful. He did not sound like a butterfly. And if you’re saying that the bass cannot sound like a butterfly, that’s bulls***.”
It’s both absurd and completely predictable that Spalding’s unconventional excellence would be threatening to those who would uphold the status quo through the bass. And it’s tempting to write that she does everything Paul Chambers did except backwards and in high heels, because it’s still gratifying to see women shredding ferociously on this instrument. There have long been female players with the chops to do just that: among them, late jazz bassist Carline Ray, session musician Carol Kaye, Tina Weymouth (Talking Heads), Gail Ann Dorsey (David Bowie), Sara Lee (Gang of Four, B-52s, Indigo Girls) and Meshell Ndegeocello, who herself deserves far greater recognition as an innovator. There’s something particularly powerful about seeing a woman succeed — and succeed wildly, popularly — on the instrument. 
Like keyboards, the bass provides accompaniment. Like guitar, it can take pyrotechnic solos. But unlike these instruments, the bass is not optional. It can’t be abandoned for the microphone or dismissed as an accessory. It is the foundation of any band: its rhythmic and harmonic center of gravity, its anchor. To claim the bass is to take on a role and occupy a register, one where we may have been blind to women’s absence (such that it’s easier to accept Meghan Trainor or Nicki Minajadopting “bass” as a sexual innuendo than to envision a woman commanding the instrument).
When we see Esperanza Spalding playing her instrument as she sings, in front of her own band, in the context of the new musical worlds she has created, we bear witness to a woman who is so completely in control of her own context that she dwells at the foundation on which it stands. Made visible, hers is leadership that cannot be denied.
 
 

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Jazz Commentary: Response to “The Jazz Bubble” By Steve Provizer

Jazz Commentary: Response to “The Jazz Bubble” By Steve Provizer

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Jazz Commentary: Response to “The Jazz Bubble”
August 28, 2018 Leave a Comment
Arts Fuse Jazz critic Steve Provizer responds to Dale Chapman’s book The Jazz Bubble: Neoclassical Jazz in a Neoliberal Culture.
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By Steve Provizer
There are aspects of the argument in The Jazz Bubble that ring true to me. [See interview with author Dale Chapman in The Arts Fuse.] There’s been a massive redistribution of wealth and a commensurate shredding of labor unions and the middle class. The acceptance of “increasing shareholder value” has definitely come to dominate business language, including in arts and culture. But there’s a lack of valuable historical perspective in The Jazz Bubble and an exclusion of the thoughts of a range of jazz musicians that undercuts Chapman’s neat calculus about the relationship between business and jazz.
Chapman’s thesis is that the investment of neoliberal economic/business interests in jazz became qualitatively different in the ’80s, and that this is reflected in the ascension of the “neoclassical” jazz of Wynton Marsalis and the “Young Lions.” Chapman’s thesis might have become more convincing to me if he had chosen to bring in more perspective on the history of the relationship between business and the art of jazz. As far as I’m concerned, business involvement has always been self-interested and to some degree, necessary. It also carries with it occasional positive side effects for artists and local communities.
One way or another, you need metrics to pay artists. In jazz, metrics were once ticket sales, drink receipts in clubs and record sales. I imagine that what fiscal health that jazz enjoyed in the first part of the 20th century was because those metrics were solid. No more. Round about the ’60s, those metrics began to slip, and corporations began subsidizing jazz festivals. Playboy sponsored a jazz festival as early as 1959. Actually, “From Spirituals to Swing,” the famous 1938 and 1939 concerts in Carnegie Hall, were sponsored by The New Masses, the magazine of the Communist Party. Cigarettes makers, beer brewers, banks — any number of organizations or corporations with their own ‘branding’ agendas have been sponsoring jazz for many decades. I have a picture on my wall of Harry James flogging Chesterfield cigarettes in the ’40s. Yes, white musicians picked up more and better endorsements than black ones, but there have always been ample examples in the black media of jazz stars being used to sell product.
So, pinpointing when the “disruptive innovation” posed by jazz became co-optable by the world of business is not all that simple. Chapman believes the jazz of the ’80s marks a watershed. Why then, rather than an earlier period? Yes, there was a conservative aspect to the clothing style and in the language that emerged with Wynton Marsalis and the Young Lions of the ’80s. What Marsalis has said remains divisive. But the weight Chapman gives to this conservatism is mitigated when you realize that Miles Davis, to whom Chapman unfavorably compares Marsalis and company, was an important element in several retail clothing campaigns. He was a notably conservative, Ivy League-style dresser until the late ’60s.
And yes,  nostalgia was at work with the apotheosis of saxophonist Dexter Gordon when he returned to the U.S. in the late ’70s and early ’80s. That nostalgia no doubt made for a convenient foothold for institutions looking for ways to expand their footprints in certain communities. But, the targeting of markets has always been based on leveraging demographics — us versus them —  and this categorization usually amounts to the cool versus the not-cool. And speaking of cool, Kool cigarettes had billboards in pretty much every black community in America from the ’60s-’80s. (see ad above). How much difference is there between using the music to sell the fantasies in these ads or using it to sell nostalgia?
I am not sure Chapman hasn’t played fast and loose with Gordon. On the one hand, he extols the musician’s playing and talks about how authentic it is in light of African-American experience. On the other, he says that Gordon also somehow allowed himself to become a useful tool, an example of “heteronormative” masculinity; this somehow made the world safer for neoliberal capitalism. Geez, the guy can’t do anything right. Ditto Joe Henderson who, despite his great playing, was marketed as a tool in Verve Records’ neoconservative strategy. Gordon and Henderson are treated like points in an argument, rather than as individual, self-aware musicians.
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Chapman makes much of the degree to which the concept of self-responsibility was elevated by both the Young Lions and the business world. And he compares Wynton Marsalis rigidly defining the “acceptable parameters” of jazz to “the market’s invisible hand.” That comparison is tricky, because jazz has traditionally been a meritocracy. Either you cut it on the bandstand or you didn’t. At least, this code has traditionally been at play in the mainstream, commercially viable stream of jazz. Other kinds of jazz, while possibly less cutthroat, generated very little income for the musicians.
Similarly, were institutions and “market processes” really held more responsible for the financial failings of individuals in earlier days, as Chapman observes? I don’t recall those days. Groups and individuals — not institutions and market processes  — have always taken the brunt of blame for a given musician’s inability to deal with risk and take control of their own finances.
Here are a few other points:
The “Jazz Bubble” has a narrow meaning. It sounds catchy, but it has little relevance thematically. It simply refers to the fact that when one kind of jazz seems to catch a buzz and sell well, record companies want to jump on the bandwagon and produce what in the film industry would be termed endless sequels. This may have been a more pervasive phenomenon in the ’80s to ’00s, but it’s hardly unique to that time period.
Ella Fitzgerald a “quintessential bebop artist”? She picked up some bop, but was a quintessential swing artist.
As for the veiled or less-then- veiled sexual innuendos about disco launched by the jazz establishment in the ’70s — jazz has always had issues with gender and sexuality.
In this book, Chapman gives us a boatload of interesting data. The fact that so many business consultants and publications have taken concepts from jazz and translated them into the business domain is starting, to say the least. It’s a little unsettling for a jazz person to read about “performative flexibility, being alive to the potential of the moment as useful business tools.” Then there’s the analogy of jazz to the “entrepreneurial self, set loose within the conditions of the free market” and “…that jazz musicians provide a space in which risk taking can generate new and innovative ideas.” Let me note that, although laden with acronyms and various kinds of jargon, the book is written clearly and quite readable. Also, any tome about jazz by an academic with no mention of Adorno is ok in my book.
Chapman is obviously thoughtful and widely-read and I can’t help but feel that he has omitted some historical perspective in order to nail his thesis about late 20th century neoclassical jazz and neoliberal culture to the jazz club wall. Some of this perspective could have come from hearing the voices of a wider cross-section of jazz musicians, including those who may or may not have been trapped in ‘The Jazz Bubble.’ 


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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Commentary/Interview: “The Jazz Bubble” — The Arts, Commodified

Commentary/Interview: “The Jazz Bubble” — The Arts, Commodified

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http://artsfuse.org/173079/commentary-interview-the-jazz-bubble-the-arts-commodified/
 
Commentary/Interview: “The Jazz Bubble” — The Arts, Commodified
August 23, 2018 Leave a Comment
In what ways are the arts themselves (and our understanding of them) being shaped to serve the ethos of corporate profit-making?
By Bill Marx
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We are always “following the money” in politics. But what about the arts? When it comes to culture, the popular assumption is that philanthropists, corporations, and governmental organizations are neutral or idealistic players, funding imaginative projects dreamed up by artists and institutions. But can we make this assumption so easily, particularly at a time when power and wealth is being accumulated by a smaller and smaller number of financial giants whose strategies are obsessively transactional? Whose very action is monetized, branded, and make use of metrics that measure performance as well as financial return?
wrote about this question regarding the criminal super-bank Wells Fargo (the second-largest arts-loving bank in the country) and its 2016 advertising campaign for Teen Financial Education Day. The ‘botched’ message in the ads reflected current corporate mentality: that an education in science and math is more valuable than a career in the arts. There was an outcry and the ads were changed. But notion that the arts are valuable primarily because they are useful — they can be of service in the job market (or ameliorating social problems) — is symptomatic of a far larger problem. In what ways are the arts themselves (and our understanding of them) being shaped to serve the ethos of profit-making?
Critics and academics are examining this provocative question. A recent volume I found particularly illuminating was Dale Chapman’s The Jazz Bubble: Neoclassical Jazz in Neoliberal Culture (University of California Press, 296 pages, $34.95, paperback): it looks at the interactions among philanthropy, politics, and jazz since the 1980s. Chapman is interested in the aesthetic of neoclassical jazz and how its success (as well as its vision of jazz history) reflects the rise of an increasingly powerful corporate culture around the world.
Ian Patterson, in his thoughtful review of The Jazz Bubble in All About Jazz, sums up the thrust of the book: “Via a series of case studies that range from the music itself to record label ideology and the myriad financial maneuverings behind the setting up of jazz venues, the author joins the dots between between culture and socio-economics in an era of global financialization. For Chapman, neoclassical jazz can serve as a prism through which to understand late twentieth and early twenty first century capitalism, and the story he weaves is a compelling one.”
One intriguing section of Chapman’s argument explores why, at a time that some larger, corporate funded jazz venues are thriving, smaller, independent clubs are on the wane. Moneyed knights in shining armor, claiming they want to rescue of the arts, turn out to be homogenizers or for-profit players in disguise. Chapman writes:
We come to see cities with formerly vibrant jazz ecologies, dense networks of local venues, give themselves over to jazz monocultures based upon a small handful of upmarket jazz institutions, each of these bankrolled through “speculative urbanism” of redevelopment agencies and public-private partnerships.
Chapman, an Associate Professor of Music at Bates College, is writing about jazz, but a number of his ideas about cultural commodification apply to what is happening in the performing arts. I sent him questions via e-mail, asking why corporate funded culture is so dangerous for subversive art making, how big money, a champion of the conservative, is transforming our understanding of the history of the arts, and if Chapman sees any solutions to the problems he points out.


The Arts FuseThe Jazz Bubble explores a puzzling cultural paradox, On the one hand, there is hefty support for a certain kind of jazz (neoclassical) by large corporations in large venues in big cities. Well financed jazz performing arts centers in New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New Orleans tout themselves as ways in which state and corporate entities can treat jazz as a “site of urban philanthropy.” Yet jazz struggles to survive on a grass roots level — from the increasing closure of small clubs to a dearth of commercial appeal. What is going on?
Dale Chapman: In my view, what is happening in the contemporary urban context is that jazz is presently understood less as a commercially viable expressive form in its own right than as a symbol of something else: as an artistic practice that is seen as both “legitimate” (in other words, as inoffensive to established institutions), and as contributing to multiculturalism, through its links to communities of color. Thus, jazz becomes the kind of genre that can give an imprimatur of both respectability and social inclusivity to a large redevelopment project, even while it may be of little interest to a prospective for-profit club owner, looking to cover the significant expenses of operating a venue in an expensive urban center without the benefit of grant money or transformative donations. As Marty Khan has observed, the kind of venue that might have been found even in mid-sized cities several decades ago — the kind of small, for-profit jazz club that is able to pay mid-range artists while still covering its overhead — is now in quite short supply, particularly outside of affluent metropoles such as New York, Chicago, and San Francisco.
Both ends of this spectrum — the disappearance of the small for-profit club, and the proliferation of performing arts centers that function as part of investment-driven, public-private redevelopment initiatives — derive from a finance-centered conception of the city, of urban centers that see skyrocketing real estate values as a result of financial speculation, and that see redevelopment initiatives as another site where investment opportunities become available to a global class of financial investors.
AF: Your book looks at how global financialization is not only shaping how jazz is marketed, but how it is made and understood. For example, corporations are attracted to jazz because improvisation is about ‘risk’ — and today’s capitalism thrives on risk.
http://artsfuse.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/11053280976_401f120c23_k-333x500.jpgAuthor Dale Chapman. Photo courtesy of the author.
Chapman: Yes — one of the more fascinating developments in corporate culture over the past two decades is the rise of what management theorists refer to as “arts-based” methods for cultivating workforce sensibilities, and an important subset of this development (as my colleagues Mark Laver and Ken Prouty have pointed out) is the creation of workshops and demonstrations centered around jazz as a metaphor for contemporary business strategy. I am particularly interested in the way that the risk inherent in jazz improvisation contributes to the appeal of the music for management theorists: the volatility of market forces demands from workers a nimble, flexible, and largely ad hoc approach to new situations. Consequently, jazz performance is trotted out as a point of reference in contexts ranging from workshops conducted for corporate clients to presentations at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
AF: Why are corporations and philanthropies so concerned with supporting jazz that is conservative? Why is experimental or unconventional jazz such a threat?
Chapman: In the case of large nonprofit venues, the Jazz at Lincoln Center model has been a powerful one, because of the compelling vision that Wynton Marsalis has advanced on its behalf: jazz, for JALC, is understood as a music that celebrates the importance of tradition and American democracy, that seems to embody a safe and palatable conception of musical dynamism (other scholars have pointed out its emphasis upon “swing”) — and it’s music that is seen as having a degree of proximity to Western classical music, which remains a known quantity for a certain kind of established arts patron.
There are definitely cases where large institutions are willing to program music beyond the very limited jazz canon presupposed by these parameters; the SF Jazz Center, for instance, has a more expansive vision that has seen programming curated by figures such as Jason Moran, Vijay Iyer, Bill Frisell, or Esperanza Spalding. I suspect they are able to do this because of the different “brand” that SF Jazz has cultivated in its bid to attract distinctively Bay Area audiences and donors. However, I think in many contexts, it is true that programming more experimental forms of jazz and improvised music remains a tougher “sell” for mainstream nonprofits, in part because the music’s aesthetics — its dense textures, its harmonic dissonances, its unpredictable forms — makes it more difficult to commodify. The ability to “package” music for listeners was crucial for an institution such as Jazz at Lincoln Center, which was able to find in the traditional jazz canon an analogue to the predictable, perennial “warhorses” of the classical repertory, rolled out each season for BSO or New York Philharmonic subscribers.
AF: What aspects of the history of jazz are in danger of being forgotten with the rise of neoclassicism?
Chapman: The problem with neoclassicism, as it consolidated itself in the 1990s, is that as a genre tasked with carefully reproducing and revisiting earlier moments in jazz history, its own conception of that history was sharply delimited, emphasizing certain areas and often simply excluding other ones. For awhile, I think we may have lost sight of the considerable diversity of musics on offer in the 1980s and 1990s in the U.S., where the “young lions” thing shared the stage with the music of David Murray and Arthur Blythe, with Steve Coleman’s M-BASE project, with the cluster of artists working around the Knitting Factory, with the smooth jazz / contemporary jazz radio formats, and in the 1990s with a variety of new forms that integrated elements of house, techno, and drum and bass music in jazz projects, or that treated songs by Radiohead and Nick Drake as new kinds of jazz “standard.”
But in recent years, I think a lot of critics and scholars are becoming increasingly sensitive to the range of voices previously excluded from our understanding of the jazz tradition, not merely in terms of musical style (a lot of recent jazz scholarship is attentive to experimental and fusion practices in the 1970s, for example) but also in terms of the ways in which, for instance, normative understandings of gender and sexuality have silenced particular voices within jazz history. In particular, the work of writers such as Sherrie Tucker, Lara Pellegrinelli, or Nicole Rustin-Paschal pushes back against a pervasive notion of jazz as a strictly male-centered endeavor, which is a narrative that the traditionalism of the neoclassicists has both tacitly and overtly reinforced.
AF: Should we be alarmed with what is going on in terms of jazz’s future? You offer an analysis of the problem in The Jazz Bubble — but few solutions.
Chapman: I actually have at least a tentatively optimistic view of jazz’s future, seen from a certain perspective. Given the book’s focus on the 1980s and 1990s, my discussion doesn’t get into some of the more interesting recent developments: I’m thinking here of Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah, Ambrose Akinmusire, Esperanza Spalding, Robert Glasper, or the cluster of jazz and jazz-related collaborations among such Los Angeles-based artists as Kamasi Washington, Thundercat, and Flying Lotus. Many of these artists are particularly interested in the relationship between jazz, hip hop, and R&B, and see these musics as occupying points on a continuum in black musical culture, rather than sequestering jazz away from other popular forms; as a result, they’ve produced music that is both aesthetically engaging and commercially sustainable, in a context that has often understood these two things to be mutually exclusive.
/var/folders/pd/2lg4zts10vld_7zmypp_wkbh0000gp/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/WebArchiveCopyPasteTempFiles/thunercatcolbdert-1509544330-compressed.pngBase guitarist Stephen Lee Bruner (stage name Thundercat) explores jazz, hip hop, and R & B.
Where I am perhaps a bit more ambivalent about the future is with respect to the funding models available to musicians who are not quite as visible as Glasper or Spalding. We now inhabit an environment in which the music industry has become a bit more precarious and unpredictable for everybody: the degree to which file-sharing, and later streaming, has upended the conventional business models of both major labels and independents means that artists of all kinds have to think, constantly, about how to land engagements, to cultivate fan bases, to fund projects, to locate alternate sites of revenue, and so forth — in other words, to think of themselves as entrepreneurs as much as artists. We have seen the emergence of new and interesting models, such as the ArtistShare crowdfunding platform, which has allowed an artist like Maria Schneider to fund her work by granting different levels of access to followers; even while there is much to be said for the model, there is a sense in which artists on these and other such platforms need to always be “on,” to be performing in their social relations as much as in their musical ones. Such entrepreneurial models will only become more pervasive as time goes on, and so will all the things that come with them.
AF: Many of the points you make about the unhealthy interactions among politics, economics, diversity, and culture extend far beyond jazz. Can you talk about other arts, and ways in which corporations are rewarding the safe by making it dominant and marginalizing the subversive?
Chapman: The market pressures I have talked about in The Jazz Bubble have had dramatic effects for all cultural institutions, and they manifest themselves in different ways in different industries. One thing that, in my view, tends to undermine the potential for subversive culture in a variety of contexts is the sense in which cultural production is increasingly the province of a racially and economically homogenous subset of the upper middle-class, as a result of the dramatic increase in income inequality over the past several decades (which is itself a product of neoliberalism).
In the early 2000s, Richard Florida celebrated the emergence of what he called the “creative class,” a coterie of youthful creative workers, attracted to urban centers that catered to their sense of selves. Two decades on, we can more clearly see the end result: I think here, for example, of the dramatic gentrification of New York bohemian culture, of the gap between 1970s artist squats and contemporary hipster enclaves, and of its impact on the nature of creative work. In these circumstances, economic inequality increasingly ensures a kind of homogenization of culture, as professional opportunities in writing, design, music, advertising, and so forth become available to an ever-smaller subset of creative workers. The skyrocketing expense of higher education is also very much to blame in this set of circumstances as well: for students facing the prospect of decades of onerous debt service payments, college itself ceases to be a space of contemplative exploration and becomes organized around the central fact of the post-graduation job search.
If solutions are hard to come by here — both in terms of the socioeconomic predicament of contemporary jazz, and for American culture more generally — this is because they derive from such fundamental structural inequalities. Solutions, in my view, will only derive from significant policy changes, measures that don’t simply treat the symptoms of a polarized economy but that address the very basis of inequality itself.
An Arts Fuse jazz critic’s response to The Jazz Bubble


Bill Marx is the editor-in-chief of The Arts Fuse. For over three decades, he has written about arts and culture for print, broadcast, and online. He has regularly reviewed theater for National Public Radio Station WBUR and The Boston Globe. He created and edited WBUR Online Arts, a cultural webzine that in 2004 won an Online Journalism Award for Specialty Journalism. In 2007 he created The Arts Fuse, an online magazine dedicated to covering arts and culture in Boston and throughout New England.
 
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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The End of Jazz: The Weekly Standard & Richie Beirach response

The End of Jazz: The Weekly Standard & Richie Beirach response

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Some of you may have seen this article… John Coltrane and the End of Jazz 
https://www.weeklystandard.com/dominic-green/john-coltrane-and-the-end-of-jazz
 
please check out a response by Richie Beirach

Dear Mr Green
 
Reading your article “Coltrane and the end of jazz” was a painful experience for me and many of my close friends.
 
My name is Richie Beirach and I am a professional jazz pianist/composer with over four hundred cds released in the last 50 years. 
 
I am feeling frustration, anger and finally, sadness reading through your article many times. With all that said I must write a retort and try to help you see how incredibly wrong you are in your basic premise about John Coltrane’s status.
 
Trane did not precipitate the end of jazz. This music did not start to die with Coltrane’s playing on Kind Of Blue. The modal void you speak of was not a void but a great opening up of fresh and brilliant possibilities for generations of innovative musicians including Freddie Hubbard,Joe Henderson, John McLaughlin, Dave Liebman, Steve Grossman, Michael Brecker, Randy Brecker, Tony Williams, Jack DeJohnette, Herbie Hancock, McCoy Tyner, Wallace Roney, Kenny Garrett…need I go on further?
 
You might be a professional writer with knowledge of music but you are writing in many instances way over your head in terms of technical accuracy. Your own musical limitations in terms of the ability to actually hear what is going on in Trane’s music has lead you into making unfortunate and flat out wrong assumptions.
 
For example you say in your article that McCoy Tyner laid out with Jimmy Garrison on the piece called “One up one down”(from the new release) because they couldn’t find the tonal center. Totally wrong!! They dropped out intentionally as a regular part of the arrangement of the tune with the song form never lost for one second. They maintained the structure all the way through even during the drums and sax duo. It is your inability to hear the chord changes through the band’s complex and ironclad accurate adherence to the form. You couldn’t hear this form through the powerful and complex patterns of Elvin Jones either. Coltrane and Elvin always played a duo during this tune… It was an arrangement. You obviously never heard them play live which I did, living in manhattan on spring and hudson streets directly across the street from the half note jazz club where one of the greatest versions of “one up, one down” was recorded in 1965 and officially released a few years ago, having been a treasured “bootleg” for many of us. 
 
The whole premise of your article is based on a false assumption that Coltrane represented the end of jazz!! Where have you been in these last 50 years? Are you dismissing the entire generation of brilliant and innovative jazz musicians that have been totally inspired by Trane’s legacy? These are artists who have understood Trane’s unbelievable technical, musical and humanistic innovations towards forging their own personal and important music of lasting quality.
 
“Kind Of Blue” is generally agreed by the jazz world (and beyond by the way) to be the quintessential jazz recording of all time. And you say that jazz started to die with Coltrane’s playing on that iconic recording. “Kind Of Blue” was not an end Mr Green! It was an incredible new beginning offering a fresh approach.
 
The dismissive way you just toss off your “Modal void” statement is wrong information for general readers and young musicians to hear. “Jazz had become too thick with incessant chord changes every 2 beats” as you implied. These progressions (the most famous being “giant steps”)were a new innovation and extension of the bebop legacy with Bird, Diz and Bud Powell. Jazz innovations, especially harmonically moved very quickly in the years between 1949 and ’59.
 
The music world changed forever with “Kind Of Blue.” miles was brilliant, innovative and the essence of a great bandleader with an innate understanding of what jazz needed. This being a more open template and platform upon which improvisers could innovate. The song “So What” provided this need thru a simple but effective bar structure. Miles’ genius was to keep the thirty-two bar form and fill it with only 3 chords or in this case modes. This was not a modal void which you criticize, but rather an opening up of the well worn thirty-two bar form to allow for new and beautiful melodic/harmonic directions. His brilliance was to not throw away the bar structure, but to instill a smooth transition. This innovation would in the next ten years inspire more opening up of forms and incredible innovations of rhythm with miles’ quintets featuring Herbie Hancock, Tony Williams, Wayne Shorter, and then even further with the last quintet including Chick Corea, Jack DeJohnette, Wayne Shorter and Dave Holland.
 
I must point out another mistake in your article. Coltrane’s iconic tune “impressions” is not “So What” changes, but more accurately settles on two mixolydian scales rather than the “So What” dorian format. 
 
You dismiss Trane’s late works as noise, chaos, etc. You are sadly mistaken and I hope this letter will make you go back and try to understand the great music of his late period. Trane was a developmental artist like Beethoven, Monet, Picasso, etc. The so-called “chaotic” late Trane music again shows your limitations, not the music. The great works of art and music don’t change…..We change in our ability to understand these geniuses after much thought and reflection. May I suggest to you to have a bit of humility when approaching these masterpieces, especially the following recordings: “transition” “meditations” and his last one “expression.” 
 
You never spoke once about an essential element of Trane’s late music which was the humanity of his sound, offering the universal lament of the ages. The blues of course, but much more that you cannot overlook. His saxophone tone and nuance was in some ways beyond the content. 
 
The man himself was humble, reflective, modestly self deprecating, never satisfied with his playing, but with a quiet, yet powerful sense of conviction about the direction of his style.
 
You said not one word about the emotionality and obvious spiritual depth that Trane and his groups brought to jazz music after a life of drugs, racial bigotry and much controversy. 
 
Trane did not cause the death of jazz. He gave it new life and enabled ensuing generations to stand on his shoulders, hopefully continuing in the pursuit of this creative and life-giving music we call jazz.
 
It would be great if you took my words as a plea for more understanding from you as a serious writer with a lot to say. I wish you would use your obviously wide scope of knowledge to illuminate the great works of artists that the public should know about.
 
Richie Beirach
 
August 2018
 

 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Meet the Company Preparing to Be the Last CD Distributor Standing | Billboard

Meet the Company Preparing to Be the Last CD Distributor Standing | Billboard

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https://www.billboard.com/articles/business/8472106/last-cd-distributor-standing-alliance-entertainment-retail
 
Meet the Company Preparing to Be the Last CD Distributor Standing
8/24/2018 by Ed Christman
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Warwick Goldby
Alliance’s distribution center in Shepherdsville, Ky., runs 24 hours a day during the fourth quarter.
With streaming’s momentum accelerating, Alliance Entertainment — the largest U.S. wholesaler of physical music — has no choice but to take a contrarian approach.
“We are long on physical — we want to be the last guy standing,” Alliance’s chairman Bruce Ogilvie told Billboard at his bustling company convention last month. 
While Alliance has diversified into DVDs and video games — merging with New York-based video game distributor MECCA deal in May — the company still sees plenty of opportunity in music. That’s in part because even if record labels ultimately decide to get out of the CD business altogether, Alliance hopes it could take over that business as a trusted partner that can license their music for CD manufacturing and distribution. Already, Alliance has been licensing product for the company’s manufacture-on-demand capabilities.
Thanks in part to the sales picked up in the MECCA merger, Alliance now has annualized revenue of about $775 million, even with its retail client Best Buy currently removing CDs from all of its stores. About 52 percent of Alliance’s revenue comes from music, 33 percent from video and the other 15 percent split between video games and pop culture merchandise and accessories. It also participates in third party logistics for Kobalt’s AWAL as well as for some online CD/DVD stores, and “can do internet fulfillment and deliver as fast as Amazon,” says Alliance Entertainment CEO and co-owner Jeff Walker, noting the firm can ship orders around six hours after receiving them.
The Target Corp. logo is see at the entrance of a store at City Point in the New York City.
Read More
Best Buy to Pull CDs, Target Threatens to Pay Labels for CDs Only When Customers Buy Them
 
That capability is thanks to its 700,000-square-foot distribution center — the size of an enclosed shopping mall — in Shepherdsville, Ky. The state-of-the-art center is armed with the latest sortation, packing equipment and computer systems, operating 24 hours a day during the fourth quarter, peak sales season. “Even in the off season, we sit with over $100 million worth of inventory in our warehouse so we are ready for whatever our customers want. That is a win for every one of our retail customers,” Walker said. 
Alliance isn’t ruling out buying a music digital distribution company to complement their physical operation, but in the meantime they are picking up growth in music through their indie distribution arm AMPED, headed up by VP Dean Tabaac, and one of a few partners for indie labels who need physical distributor, something that most major-label-owned distributors won’t do. Recently, for example, South Korean music giant SM Entertainment inked a deal with Alliance to distribute K-pop act Red Velvet’s EP Summer Magic: Summer Mini Album, including a limited edition version with 5 different covers, one of each member.
But even as it diversifies its products and accounts, the Alliance management team wishes that the records labels would be more proactive in supporting physical music product. Sure, they understand why the industry is focused on streaming, but they wonder why the labels can’t walk and chew gum at the same time.
How the industry will wind down the CD format is still unknown, but the Alliance management team argues withholding physical product so that digital can have an advantage is hurting everybody economically.
Drake performs on stage on Oct. 8, 2016, in Toronto, Canada. 
Read More
Why Drake Gave Up More Than a Half-Million Dollars In ‘Scorpion’ Sales
 
Back in the 1980s when vinyl sales first started declining, the labels were happy to embrace the more profitable CD and the portable cassette without doing much to support vinyl. But hindsight showed them that multiple formats provide more revenue, so when the cassette was fading into oblivion, the industry went long on supporting cassette tapes to the very end. Now, wholesalers like Alliance and indie store merchants and other retailers attending the convention say they hope that the industry becomes more aggressive in supporting the CD as its sales wind down.
So far, the Alliance owners have been disappointed because some artists only want to be out in digital, and the labels have been going along with their wishes. “Even if an artist doesn’t want to put out a CD, at least give us something on vinyl,” Walker says. “If artists like Drake and Cardi B each gave us 20,000 units in vinyl, it would give us and the retailers something to sell and it would give their devout fans something tangible from their favorite artist.”
Walker foresees a longer future for vinyl than the CD, even though currently the latter format is 4.5 times larger than the former, with 38 million CDs scanned in the U.S. so far this year, versus 8.3 million vinyl copies. At Alliance, vinyl compromises 25 percent of the company’s music sales, boasting the art and information that became an afterthought with the CD, but which is still coveted by superfans and collectors.
Another possible path for labels to take as the CD winds down is to sell albums one way – without accepting returns – to music merchandisers, like they already do with vinyl. But Ogilvie says labels should do so at a lower wholesale per-unit price, since they wouldn’t incur return expenses.
Alliance Entertainment was formed more than two decades ago in a Wall Street investor rollup of three wholesalers: Florida-based Jerry Bassin Distributors, CD One-Stop, and Ogilvie’s Abbey Road, purchased in 1994. Seven years after that sale, Ogilvie partnered with Super D, a one-stop started by Walker. When Alliance came up for sale, Ogilvie and Walker bought it and merged their Super D operation into it.
Ogilvie and Walker still have debt on the balance sheet from their Alliance acquisition, the amount of which they don’t disclose, but industry sources estimate that Alliance has a very healthy ratio of earnings-before-interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, to interest payments, about 8:1, which helped it acquire MECCA this spring. MECCA, a 40-year-old video game distributor, has vendor status with all of the video game publishers, with B&H Photo, PC Richards, Groupon, Rent-A-Center among its accounts. Ogilvie says he hopes to cross pollinate the retailers that Alliance sells to for MECCA’s goods while tapping MECCA’s merchants to see if they want to buy Alliance’s other product lines. 
At the company’s 20th annual convention in Sunrise, Florida, where its largest office is located, about 400 people attended, including about 100 company staffers vendors from all product sectors, retail accounts, and recording artists; Alliance Entertainment VP of sales Ken Glaser organized and emceed the five-day event. In addition to indie store owners and indie coalitions, the convention brought in online merchandisers like e-Bay, department store chains like Dillards, and home entertainment chains like Trans World Entertainment and Books-A-Million. Other Alliance accounts, some of which just buy from the wholesaler and some of which use its vendor-managed inventory capabilities, include Wal-Mart, Shopko, Meijers and Books-A-Million. It also does both some entertainment software fulfillment for — and bulk sales to — Amazon. Alliance was one of the main vinyl suppliers of Record Store day, and while Alliance may have to do without physical releases coming day and date with the digital release date on some titles, the company cannot complain about the support that it received from record labels and other suppliers in staging its convention, with something like 80 product vendors, including the three major labels, attending.
Since the business of retail and wholesale never stops, the schedule of Alliance Entertainment convention began with product presentations from vendors in the morning, but broke after lunch to allow the staff to be bussed back from the convention hotel to the Sunrise office to take care of business in the afternoon — to make sure retail accounts got the right product on time for their brick-and-mortar and online stores. 
The convention attendees reconvened in late afternoon/early evening for showcases and other events, including a night at a bowling alley staged by Alliance indie-distribution arm AMPED; and an evening in an airport hanger to see a product presentation staged by Paramount, which was decorated to resemble a Mission Impossible soundstage to promote the movie slated to come out on DVD in the fall.
Acts that played the convention included Big Machine’s Lauren Jenkins, RED Music’s Lovely The Band, Republic Records Noah Kahan; and Sony Music Latin’s Jahzel Dotel, Ruf Records’ Mike Zito, Cleopatra Records’ Case and Megaforce Records’ Decker and Les Stroud.
The convention’s high point was a performance from Tony Bennett. Bennett played about a 40-minute set sprinkled with songs from his extensive catalog including “Love Is Here To Stay,” “the Good Life,” “San Francisco” and “Fly Me To The Moon,” in an evening sponsored by Universal Music Group. 
In order to position itself for future growth opportunities, Alliance recently last month brought on board former Sony Music Distribution executive Bob Garbarinias senior VP of business development. (Other key executives include Laura Provozano, senior VP of purchasing; Jeff Skipton, senior VP of VMI; Tony Moyers, VP of consumer products/non-media; John Kutch, CFO replacing George Campagna, who just retired right after the close of the convention; Ben Means, president of Distribution Solutions; Gustavo Bello, VP of international sales; Carlos Franca, VP of eCommerce sales and operations; Bobby Miranda, VP of business development; Tim Hinsley, VP of retail sales; Mary Flynn VP of content and acquisitions of NCircle Entertainment; and the MECCA Entertainment executives, founder Raymond Aboodi and Danny Marshall, while former Alliance CEO Alan Tuchman is on the company’s board of directors.
One such opportunity is licensed pop culture merchandise. “Interestingly enough, there is not a one-stop wholesaler dealing in those goods,” says Walker. “We want to have a wide selection of those products, just like we do for music.”
Ultimately, Alliance wants to provide retailers with all of their entertainment software needs in one shipment, all on the same invoice. “We want to be the one-box solution,” Ogilvie says.
A version of this article originally appeared in the Aug. 25 issue of Billboard.
Halsey Performs at Billboard Hot 100 Fest 2018
 
 

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Correct Link For: Thursday In The Park with GEORGE ‘Braithophone’ BRAITH  JAZZ IN THE GARDEN Thursday, August 23, 2018

Correct Link For: Thursday In The Park with GEORGE ‘Braithophone’ BRAITH  JAZZ IN THE GARDEN Thursday, August 23, 2018

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JAZZ IN THE GARDEN: GEORGE BRAITH
in association with The Jazz Foundation of America and Ariana’s List
Thursday, August 23, 2018
5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
6BC Botanical Garden
622 East 6th Street between B & C NYC
 
GEORGE BRAITH-BRAITHOPHONE
CARL CORNWELL-SAX & BRAITHOPHONE
BEN MEINGER-BASS
SAM KULOK-GUITAR
DARRELL GREEN-DRUMS

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3EVZeoMFVQ
 

 

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Thursday In The Park with GEORGE ‘Braithophone’ BRAITH  JAZZ IN THE GARDEN Thursday, August 23, 2018

Thursday In The Park with GEORGE ‘Braithophone’ BRAITH  JAZZ IN THE GARDEN Thursday, August 23, 2018

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JAZZ IN THE GARDEN: GEORGE BRAITH
in association with The Jazz Foundation of America and Ariana’s List
Thursday, August 23, 2018
5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
6BC Botanical Garden
622 East 6th Street between B & C NYC
 
GEORGE BRAITH-BRAITHOPHONE
CARL CORNWELL-SAX & BRAITHOPHONE
BEN MEINGER-BASS
SAM KULOK-GUITAR
DARRELL GREEN-DRUMS

https://www.youtube.com/WATCH?V=GVIU-CMQ-VI&FEATURE=YOUTU.BE
 

 

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Jack Costanzo, Musician Known as Mr. Bongo, Dies at 98 – The New York Times

Jack Costanzo, Musician Known as Mr. Bongo, Dies at 98 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/26/obituaries/jack-costanzo-musician-known-as-mr-bongo-dies-at-98.html
 
Jack Costanzo, Musician Known as Mr. Bongo, Dies at 98
Aug. 26, 2018
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Jack Costanzo, left, with Marlon Brando on the CBS program “Person to Person” in 1955.Bettmann/Getty Images
Jack Costanzo, a Chicagoan of Italian descent who taught himself to play the bongos and, somewhat improbably, became a ubiquitous figure in Afro-Cuban jazz, accompanying singers like Nat King Cole and mingling with Marlon Brando and other Hollywood stars, died on Aug. 18 in Lakeside, Calif., near San Diego. He was 98.
The cause was a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm, his wife, Maureen Wilson, said.
Mr. Costanzo, after stints with Stan Kenton, Cole and other prominent artists, became a bandleader himself, recording albums across a half-century, some of them employing his nickname, Mr. Bongo, in the title. He was also a session player on numerous other albums and accompanied performers in television appearances, including Ann Miller during a spunky rendition of “I’m Gonna Live ’Til I Die” on a 1957 episode of “The Dinah Shore Chevy Show.”
Ann Miller and Jack Costanzo in 1957. Video by vintage video clips
Perhaps his starriest celebrity pairing was with Brando, a drumming aficionado. He was sometimes mistakenly credited with teaching Brando the bongos and conga drums, a claim he was careful to correct whenever he got the chance.
“Everybody thinks I taught Marlon Brando,” he told the music site Herencia Latina. “I never taught Marlon how to play. He knew how to play before I met him.”
That initial meeting, he said, had occurred when he was appearing with Cole at Carnegie Hall in 1953; Brando, who admired his playing, came to the stage door and asked to meet him. They became friends, jamming “hundreds of times,” Mr. Costanzo said, often at Brando’s house in the Hollywood Hills. There Brando filmed a segment for Edward R. Murrow’s CBS television program “Person to Person,”giving a tour of the home and showing off the Oscar he had won days before for “On the Waterfront.” Two-thirds of the way through the interview, drumming is heard.
“That’s Jack, I guess,” Brando says, leading the camera into another room where Mr. Costanzo is pounding on conga drums, a set standing idle for Brando.
“I guess we’re now ready to audition a new act: Brando and Costanzo,” Murrow says. “That even rhymes.”
The two proceed to play together for more than a minute.
Brando, Mr. Costanzo told The San Diego Union-Tribune 60 years later, “played very well as a nonprofessional musician.”
Jack James Costanzo was born on Sept. 24, 1919, in Chicago to Matteo and Virginia Sances Costanzo, both immigrants from Italy. He grew up in Chicago at a time when dancing — the kind done in hotel ballrooms — was studied and practiced by young people who envisioned making a career out of it. Mr. Costanzo, at 13 or 14, would go to places like the Merry Garden Ballroom, which had a main ballroom and an annex, to work on his steps.
“The girls came down in long, gorgeous gowns, spaghetti straps,” he recalled in an interview with Whittier College’s “Inside Latin Jazz” series several years ago. “Everybody that was dancing in the annex wanted to be a dancer, and I was one of those persons. And I was dancing with people that were eight, nine years older than I. I was just a young kid. In fact, that’s what they used to call me: ‘the Kid.’ ‘I want to dance with the Kid.’ But nobody kidnapped me.”
During one visit, a band from Puerto Rico was playing.
“The drummer on one song came out in front and played the bongos, and that was the first time I saw a pair of bongos,” he said. “And I went crazy.”
He wanted to learn the instrument, but there was a problem.
“There was nowhere to buy them,” he said. “You couldn’t buy bongos anywhere in Chicago.”
So he made a set out of butter tubs. Mr. Costanzo, though, had not yet abandoned his aspiration to be a dancer; for a time he and his first wife, Mary Margaret Myers, whom he married in 1940, were a professional dance team known as Costanzo & Marda. (They divorced in 1959.)
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Mr. Costanzo on bongos with the pianist and singer Nat King Cole in about 1950. The guitarist is Irving Ashby and the bassist is Joe Comfort.Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
Mr. Costanzo joined the Navy in 1942 and was discharged in 1945 on the West Coast, so he stayed there, teaching dance for three months at the Beverly Hills Hotel before the bandleader Bobby Ramos, who had heard him play at a jam session, offered him a job in 1946. As Mr. Costanzo described it, it was a matter of being in the right place at the right time: Mr. Ramos wanted a bongo player for an engagement at the Trocadero nightclub, and there were no others around.
“It was either me or not having bongos,” Mr. Costanzo said.
In 1947 he joined Stan Kenton’s orchestra, raising his profile considerably, and by 1949 he was playing with Cole, who, after adding him, changed the name of his act from the Nat King Cole Trio to Nat King Cole and His Trio to reflect the fourth member. He stayed with Cole for more than four years.
Mr. Costanzo, his nickname notwithstanding, was also adept on the larger conga drums. “Bongos are the salt and pepper of the rhythm section,” he once explained, whereas congas were more substantive.
Mr. Costanzo acknowledged that he was sometimes snubbed by Latin percussionists who resented that he was playing “their” music.
“They were not happy that Kenton hired me,” he said. “They were not happy that Nat King Cole hired me.”
They wouldn’t teach him beats or otherwise help him learn.
“If I would have not been a natural drummer,” he said, “it would have been impossible.”
Mr. Costanzo was popular in Hollywood, giving lessons to actors like Gary Cooper and Rita Moreno, sometimes so that they could pass as bongo players in movies. He was in movies himself, including the 1965 Elvis Presley vehicle “Harum Scarum.”
His albums in the 1950s included “Mr. Bongo Plays Hi-Fi Cha Cha” and “Latin Fever.” He often performed and recorded with his third wife, the vocalist Gerrie Woo. (They divorced in 1977.)
In his 80s he enjoyed something of a comeback, releasing “Back From Havana” in 2001 and “Scorching the Skins” in 2002, as well as touring. He was still playing in his 90s.
“He put the bongos on the map and is the bridge between Latin jazz and jazz,” the trumpeter Gilbert Castellanos told The Union-Tribune in 2015, when Mr. Costanzo was preparing to play at a local club. “The fact that he’s 96 and still doing it is unbelievable.”
Mr. Costanzo’s second marriage, to Jodi DeMelikoff, ended in divorce in 1966. In addition to his wife, whom he married in 2009 after many years together, he is survived by three daughters, Jill Costanzo, Valerie Woo Costanzo and CeCe Costanzo; a son, Jack James Costanzo Jr.; a stepdaughter, Stacy Coulter; a stepson, Tod Wilson; seven grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.
Mr. Costanzo once told the story of being hired by the director Frank Capra to teach the bongos to Carolyn Jones, an actress later known as Morticia in the television series “The Addams Family,” for a part she was playing in the 1959 Frank Sinatra film “A Hole in the Head.”
“I gave her eight lessons, and the talk circuit in Hollywood was that Frank Capra, everywhere he went, said, ‘I’m paying this Italian bongo player a thousand dollars to give Carolyn Jones eight lessons!’ He couldn’t stand it.”
“I saw the movie, by the way,” Mr. Costanzo added. “She did about three seconds on the bongos.”
A version of this article appears in print on Aug. 27, 2018, on Page A25 of the New York edition with the headline: Jack Costanzo, Who Helped Popularize The Bongos and Latin Jazz, Is Dead at 98. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 
 

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Queeneth Ndaba, Champion of South African Jazz, Dies at 81 – The New York Times

Queeneth Ndaba, Champion of South African Jazz, Dies at 81 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/27/obituaries/queeneth-ndaba-champion-of-south-african-jazz-dies-at-81.html?emc=edit_th_180828
 
Queeneth Ndaba, Champion of South African Jazz, Dies at 81
Aug. 27, 2018
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Queeneth Ndaba in an undated photo. In the face of apartheid, she worked to keep Johannesburg’s most influential home of art and culture alive.Lucky Nxumalo
Queeneth Ndaba, a South African jazz advocate who managed Johannesburg’s most influential home of art and culture during the darkest days of apartheid, died on Aug. 15 at a hospital in Boksburg. She was 81.
The journalist Bongani Mahlangu, a friend of Ms. Ndaba’s family, confirmed the death but did not give a cause.
Ms. Ndaba began her career as a singer, but after illness forced her to give that up she found that she had a particular talent for organizing. In the early 1970s she began to help with booking bands and handling logistics at the arts center, called Dorkay House, and she eventually became its chief proprietor and defender.
By that time, the South African government had expelled black Africans from their homes in the Johannesburg city center, forcing them into townships outside the city. Dorkay House, on the outskirts of downtown, was struggling to survive.
“She was the only person with the vision and grit to try and get it going again after years of local government neglect,” Gwen Ansell, a South African jazz critic and historian, said in an email.
In addition to helping manage the arts center’s operations, Ms. Ndaba invested heavily in the music that she staged. In 1982 she helped form the African Jazz Pioneers, a group of elder musicians who covered a wide range of midcentury music, mostly marabi and kwela, which had been popular styles fusing Zulu tradition with influences from around South Africa and North America.
The Pioneers — led by the saxophonist Ntemi Piliso and also featuring Ms. Ndaba’s husband, the saxophonist Timothy Ndaba — developed an international reputation thanks in part to Ms. Ndaba’s work as a booking agent and promoter. The band became inactive after Mr. Piliso’s death in 2000.
“I would like to keep the legacy of those who influenced our legends,” Ms. Ndaba told the South African journalist Lucille Davie of The Heritage Portal in 2006. “This is my wish.”
She first worked at Dorkay House in 1967, serving as a costume designer and seamstress for a play being presented there. (She later ran her own fashion design business, with a focus on traditional clothing.) Its four-story building was then the nucleus of the city’s artistic world, hosting lessons, rehearsals and performances.
Dorkay House was founded in the mid-1950s by the Union of South African Artists, a group dedicated to supporting black performers. It was where the pianist Todd Matshikiza composed “King Kong,” the wildly successful South African musical that toured globally. Some of the jam sessions and performances that gave rise to South African jazz took place there, with figures like the trumpeter Hugh Masekela and the trombonist Jonas Gwangwa treating it as a home away from home.
Mr. Masekela wrote in his autobiography, “Still Grazing” (2004), that Dorkay House “was the only creative enclave at that time for African musicians, artists, poets, actors and singers.”
For Ms. Ndaba, keeping the venue open in the face of financial struggles required pluck and ambitious thinking. In the 1970s she lured Dolly Rathebe, South Africa’s first black international pop star, out of retirement to play a benefit show. She also organized a variety of other ensembles, including the New Manhattan Brothers, dedicated to the repertoire of a famous vocal group that disbanded in the 1950s. In 1989 she founded the Dorkay House Trust, dedicated to preserving the building’s history.
Queeneth Maria Nkosi, one of eight children, was born on Dec. 5, 1936, in Orlando East, a township outside Johannesburg. Her parents were both amateur singers, and she took to singing at a young age, starting a vocal group called the Hometown Kids while in grade school.
Throat cancer forced her to give up singing early in life. She later took up the saxophone but rarely played professionally.
Ms. Ndaba is survived by two daughters, Matlakala and Mpande; five grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Another daughter, Gay, died before her. Her husband died in 2001.
A version of this article appears in print on Aug. 28, 2018, on Page A21 of the New York edition with the headline: Queeneth Ndaba, 81, Keeper Of South African Jazz Legacy. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 
 

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John Coltrane and the End of Jazz: The Weekly Standard

John Coltrane and the End of Jazz: The Weekly Standard

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/lazy-lester-harmonica-player-and-master-of-louisiana-swamp-blues-dies-at-85/2018/08/25/3b827680-a6f1-11e8-97ce-cc9042272f07_story.html?noredirect=on
 
Lazy Lester, harmonica player and master of Louisiana swamp blues, dies at 85
Terence McArdle
/var/folders/pd/2lg4zts10vld_7zmypp_wkbh0000gp/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/WebArchiveCopyPasteTempFiles/TO3WF2FG6MI6RF6OZSIEEJZPA4.jpgLazy Lester in 1988. (Steve Koress/Alligator Records)
Lazy Lester, a Louisiana-born singer and harmonica player whose rough and rollicking style of swamp blues influenced musicians on both sides of the Atlantic, died Aug. 22 at his home in Paradise, Calif. He was 85.
His death from cancer was announced by Alligator Records, which recorded him in the 1980s.
Lester’s recordings from the 1950s stand at the nexus of blues and rock-and-roll, with a tinge of Cajun and country music thrown into the mix. He sang with a bayou twang, while his amped-up harmonica seemed to be charging out in front of a strident, repetitive electric guitar.
Though Lester’s singles were initially sold only in the South, they were often performed by others and, with time, became staples of barroom blues and rock bands. Freddy Fender took Lester’s “Sugar Coated Love” (1958) to the country charts in 1977, and British rockers the Kinks had covered the rockabilly-flavored “I’m a Lover, Not a Fighter” (1958) on their first album, in 1964. The Ponderosa Stomp, a music festival in New Orleans devoted to “the unsung heroes of American music,” is named for his 1965 harmonica instrumental.
Lester was a mainstay of producer J.D. Miller’s Crowley, La., recording studio, where he often accompanied Miller’s cadre of blues singers — Lonesome Sundown, Lightnin’ Slim and Lester’s cousin and fellow harmonica player, Slim Harpo.
Through Miller’s use of tape echo and primitive percussion — often played by Lester — the Miller studio crafted some of the era’s most atmospheric down-home blues records. Lester played woodblock on Slim Harpo’s 1966 “Shake Your Hips,” and on other recordings, he played harmonica or rhythm guitar. But he also drummed on cardboard boxes and beat rolled-up newspapers against the studio walls in place of snare drums.
“I’d just grab whatever was in the studio and try to get a groove going,” he told the Austin American-Statesman in 1999.
Miller, who leased the recordings to the Nashville-based Excello label, bestowed the colorful stage names on many of his performers. And though Lester, born Leslie Johnson, protested in one song, “they call me Lazy — goodness knows I’m only tired,” the appellation fit his relaxed and behind-the-beat singing style perfectly.
“His words flow into one another,” Peter Watrous wrote in a 1988 review for the New York Times, observing that even on up-tempo songs, Lester “makes his melodies amble along as if they were enjoying a summer day.”
Leslie Carswell Johnson was born June 20, 1933, in Torras, La., near Baton Rouge. His parents were farmers. His early influences included DeFord Bailey, a black harmonica player who performed on the Grand Ole Opry in the 1930s, and yodeling country singer Jimmie Rodgers.
As a teenager, he worked as a gas station attendant, woodcutter and grocery clerk and joined a local blues band, the Rhythm Rockers.
While riding the bus, he met singer-guitarist Lightnin’ Slim. Slim, frantically trying to replace a missing harmonica player for a recording date, gave him an on-the-spot audition and brought him to the studio. The two recorded “Bad Luck and Trouble,” a Southern jukebox hit for Slim in 1956. Lester’s first vocal, “I’m Gonna Leave You Baby,” came out later that year.
Lester claimed that he wrote or co-wrote most of the songs he recorded but had to give all the writing credit and publishing royalties to Miller, the studio owner.
“I had an idea that what we were doing was very special to me, but I didn’t have an idea it would be so big,” Lester told the San Antonio Express-News in 1999. “I didn’t get paid for a lot of what I did, but it was very educational. I got credit [as a performer] but no cash.”
In 1966, Lester and Miller had a falling out when Lester proposed recording a country song. Miller, a successful country tunesmith who had written hits for singers Kitty Wells and Lefty Frizzell, did not want to take a chance on a black country singer. Miller also had a sideline recording pro-segregationist country songs by singer Johnny Rebel.
For the next two decades, Lester worked construction, cut timber and drove trucks. In 1975, he moved to Pontiac, Mich., where he met blues promoter Fred Reif. A popular Texas band, the Fabulous Thunderbirds, recorded three of Lester’s songs and revived interest in his music.
Reif eventually persuaded him to resume performing. The album “Lazy Lester Rides Again,” recorded in Great Britain with English musicians, won the 1988 Blues Foundation award as Best Contemporary Blues Album. In 2015, Lester was inducted into the foundation’s Blues Hall of Fame.
He was featured in a recent Geico commercial, playing harmonica in a scene with the Geico gecko.
A detailed list of survivors could not be determined.
Lester felt comfortable as both a performer and sideman.
“I could concentrate on what other people were doing,” he said in 1999. “I’ve always had a good ear for hearing stuff and putting stuff behind it. A player, a songwriter and a singer, it takes all these things to make one thing. Either I’m good, or I’ve got everybody fooled.”
Read more Washington Post obituaries
Robin Leach, ‘Jacuzzi’ journalist who hosted TV’s ‘Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous,’ dies at 76
Barbara Harris, scene-stealing actress of screen and stage, dies at 83
Aretha Franklin, music’s ‘Queen of Soul,’ dies at 76
 
 

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John Coltrane and the End of Jazz: The Weekly Standard

John Coltrane and the End of Jazz: The Weekly Standard

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https://www.weeklystandard.com/dominic-green/john-coltrane-and-the-end-of-jazz
 
John Coltrane and the End of Jazz
Dominic Green 
John Coltrane
John Coltrane (1926 -1967)
Philip Burke
August 26, 2018 at 4:58 AM
Putting his classic quartet’s ‘lost album’ in its context.
The Renaissance, taking man as the measure of all things, produced music for soloists. The Age of Revolutions, gestating democracy and the nation at arms, expressed its collectivism in orchestral music. The 20th century saw the triumph of capitalism, eventually, and the musical format of the market economy was the quartet. A quartet is the cheapest way to mimic an orchestra’s range. Ringo plays the rhythm, Paul holds down the bass, John adds the chords, and George does the decorations. The logical consequence, economically if not musically, was for all four members to sing a bit and write their own tunes. Hence the Beatles, self-contained and self-commodified, with a little help from their friend Brian Epstein.
In the modern arts, the quartet is the format of late style. The economy here is more aesthetic than financial, though it might be significant that Beethoven, the first major composer to make a living without patronage, was also the composer who hit upon the quartet as the arena for technical speculation. The quartet format allows the artist to cover the bases of rhythm, harmony, and melody, but it also leaves plenty of open spaces. The laboratory of Beethoven’s five last quartets incubates a century of harmonic experiment. T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets are a titration, an apocalypse that returns art to religion drip by drip, line by line.
The concept of “late style” was formulated in 1852 by Wilhelm von Lenz. He divided Beethoven’s music into an early style, imitative of Haydn and Mozart; a middle style, grand and exhortatory like the Eroica Symphony; and a late style, more private than public, that meditates on eternal questions of form. This concept has the tripartite tidiness of the dialectic; it rests on the Hegelian assumption that musical biography, like secular history, is a progress towards spiritualization. In late style, the Romantic ego, as if preparing for death, turns inward and considers infinity. Inflated further in the politicized criticism of Theodor Adorno and Edward Said, the concept floats under Freudian cover in Harold Bloom’s theory of the “anxiety of influence.”
Jazz was in a sense always a late style, a timekeeper’s music out of time. In the 1920s, while jazz musicians were playing early show tunes and improvising with rudimentary harmony, the Second Viennese School was pushing ahead into total chromaticism and atonality, and Stravinsky, Milhaud, Prokofiev, and Ravel were experimenting with jazz’s musical signature—its fixed pulse, syncopated rhythm, and emphasis on flattened thirds and sevenths. Jazz was modern long before Modern Jazz was named in the 1940s, for the harmonic modernity of bebop was the chromaticism of Liszt, Chopin, and Wagner. In the wider chronology of Western music, jazz’s harmonic development is a long game of catch-up, finished too late—around 1972, when Miles Davis heard Karlheinz Stockhausen for the first time. Davis had already reached the same conclusions as the joyless German but without losing the funk.
No jazz musician incarnates the legend of late style more than the saxophonist John Coltrane. His early style is undistinguished; he was a bluesy sideman whose grasp of the instrument falls short of the reach of his ear. His middle style, stertorous and ambitious, began in his mid-1950s stint with Miles Davis’s quintet. Coltrane in this period is still less melodious than Hank Mobley and less witty than Sonny Rollins, but his chops are catching up with his ear. Only Johnny Griffin has fleeter fingers and only Rollins can beat him for persistence. Coltrane thinks aloud and never stops thinking; he is the perfect foil for Davis, who is also ironic and intellectual, also latent with eroticism and violence, but who never shows his working, only the finished idea. Coltrane’s sound waves are square and heavy, metallic and dark like lead. He is both implacable and lazy, like a bull elephant: You never know where the charge will take him, only that—as he himself admitted to Davis—once he gets going, he doesn’t know how to stop.
Coltrane’s late style emerged in his 1960s quartets. Now leading and writing for his own group, and newly clean of drink and drugs, he was finally able to pursue his vision and the possibilities of the music to the limits of form and expression—and ultimately beyond both. The further he went, the more ambitious and less accessible the music became, until it was incomprehensible to almost all of his audience and even to some of his closest collaborators. In the logic of modernism, further means better. But “faster” and “louder” aren’t necessarily better, so why should “further” be the supreme critical value? To judge Coltrane’s late-style art is, in an important sense, to judge modernism itself, and especially American modernism. And we have now an opportunity to listen afresh, with the release this summer of what may well be the last significant studio recordings of Coltrane’s classic quartet, Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album.
Jazz is modernist music, and the jazz quartet the home chemistry kit of modernism. The experiments of Coltrane’s 1960s quartets broke the mechanics of jazz’s classical physics, with its show tunes, its blues, and its endless staircases of chords ascending in fourths. The title of Both Directions at Once alludes to a remark Coltrane made to his successor in Miles Davis’s group, the tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter. Coltrane said he wanted to play as though jumping into the middle of a sentence, playing a song outward in both directions at once. The passage backward travels from complexity to simplicity; the passage forward travels from further complexity to the simplicity of a final restatement. The simultaneous execution of both moves evokes the mathematical backflips of 20th-century physics—principles of uncertainty and indeterminacy and relativity. “In my end is my beginning,” as Eliot puts it in his rhythmic reflections on time and space in Four Quartets.
Coltrane’s late style began on the legendary Davis album Kind of Blue (1959), and jazz began to die there too. Working in both directions at once, Coltrane erected ever more complex chordal ziggurats while also flattening the structures of the music back into the formless modal void. After departing the Davis group and signing as a solo artist to Atlantic Records, in 1960 Coltrane created the new chordal landscape of “Coltrane changes” with Giant Steps: Rather than returning to the home key by the traditional cycle of fourths, Coltrane shifted the tonal center by major thirds. Musicians call this challenge to mind, ear, and fingers the “Three Tonic” system.
Coltrane somehow found musicians capable of following him and meshing. His classic quartet—with drummer Elvin Jones, pianist McCoy Tyner, and bassist Jimmy Garrison—remains the heavyweight champion of jazz quartets.
This revolution had been incubating in plain sight, and in some very traditional places. Gershwin’s “I Got Rhythm” (1930), the locus classicus of the cycle of fourths that became a nervous tic in bebop, makes the major-third jump when it enters the bridge, only to return to the home key by a steady sequence of fourths. “Have You Met Miss Jones?” (Rodgers and Hart, 1937) and “I Remember You” (Victor Schertzinger and Johnny Mercer, 1941) also use major-third shifts. Coltrane himself experimented with major-third shifts in a 1956 recording with Davis, “Tune Up.” In the 16-bar sequence of “Giant Steps,” Coltrane made 10 major-third shifts, all set up with two-step chromatic substitutions in fourths, as if to remind us how far we have come. And he played this as fast as possible—too fast for most players: The tonal center changes about every eight beats and it starts to shift after only two beats. Just as your mind and ear find their balance, the harmonic floor gives way beneath your feet. Coltrane hammers through these changes with barely a pause for breath.
Jazz could not get any faster, but it could get louder and deeper. Somehow, the runaway Trane found like minds, capable of following him and meshing with each other. He now had the polyrhythmic fury of Elvin Jones on drums and the weirdly calm McCoy Tyner on piano. Coltrane had taken up the straight soprano saxophone, apparently because he liked Sidney Bechet, but perhaps also because its snake-charming sound fitted his growing interest in pushing the modal envelope into non-Western musics. Coltrane had the studio time and tape to play with, too, after having an unlikely hit in 1961 with a modal take on Richard Rodgers’s “My Favorite Things,” in which the rhythm section’s heavy vamp and Coltrane’s oriental noodling evoke images of the von Trapp family on the nod in Marrakesh. The addition later that year of bassist Jimmy Garrison stabilized the classic Coltrane quartet. This is the unit that we hear on Both Directions at Once, and it remains the heavyweight champion of jazz quartets.
Impulse Records calls Both Directions at Once a lost album, but it isn’t an album and it wasn’t really lost. Nor, despite Coltrane’s interstellar motifs and spatial excursions, has it fallen from the heavens. It has emerged from the attic of Coltrane’s first wife, Naima, as an “audition tape” whose master tape was either lost or destroyed. It was recorded all in one day at the studio of Rudy Van Gelder. In the fifties, Van Gelder had created the Blue Note sound by building a high-ceilinged extension to his house in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, nailing the drums to the floor and running a jazz group through spring-reverb amplifiers the size of refrigerators. Apart from recording Coltrane’s only Blue Note album, Blue Train (1958), Van Gelder also recorded several Coltrane albums for Prestige Records, whose less-polished sessions were a notorious source of cash for drugs.
In 1961, Impulse Records bought Coltrane’s contract from Atlantic and Coltrane and Van Gelder were reunited. Like candidates for the fifth Beatle, there are several candidates for fifth member of Coltrane’s quartet. Coltrane even expanded it into a five-piece with a couple of prospects, saxophonists Eric Dolphy and Pharoah Sanders—the former a subtle altoist who combined Coltrane’s changes with Adderley’s swing, the latter a rootin’, tootin’ tenor honking his way into psychedelic religion. But Van Gelder was more important to the quartet’s development. His church-like space was just right for Coltrane’s increasingly spiritual aspirations, much as Studio 2 at Abbey Road was to become ideal for the Beatles’ orchestral ambitions.
Cover of ‘Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album’
Cover of ‘Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album’
Impulse! Records
Both Directions at Once lacks the finished Van Gelder sound, but you can still hear the Van Gelder space. You can also hear the moment in time, which is what jazz is all about. This is not a real “album,” since it is not a premeditated sequence of songs. In his liner notes, Sonny Rollins compares the recovery of the session tape to “finding a new room in the Great Pyramid.” It is—but the room is a storeroom, or an attic. The music stands in relation to Coltrane’s official studio and live recordings as Keats’s letters do to his verse. It illuminates not just the mind of its creators but also the meaning of their work. Like Coltrane with his changes, Both Directions pushes the concept of late style to breakdown.
As the meaning of each note depends on its harmonic setting and its placement in the chain of melody, so the significance of this newly released recording derives in large part from its place in Coltrane’s chronology. On March 6, 1963, the day Both Directions was recorded, the quartet was approaching the end of a two-week stand at the Birdland jazz club in New York City. That night’s performance would be recorded, and three tunes from those tapes would be issued in April 1964 on the Live at Birdland album. (A fourth, “Vilia,” was eventually included in the Live at Birdland CD reissue.)
More broadly, Both Directions was recorded during a stretch of time in which Coltrane made a trio of albums touching the past and the future of music. On Ballads, recorded in late 1961 and early 1962 but not released until March 1963, Coltrane palpates the most romantic of formats, then turns the diaphanous material of pop harmony inside out, revealing a scorched metallic skeleton. On Duke Ellington & John Coltrane, recorded in September 1962 and released in February 1963, Coltrane made an extended and respectful bow to the first and last jazz composer. And the day after recording Both Directions, Coltrane’s quartet was booked into Van Gelder’s studio to begin recording an album with the crooner Johnny Hartman. The motive for this trio of retrospective records may have been producer Bob Thiele’s attempt to find a hit to follow “My Favorite Things.” But that doesn’t really matter. The Coltrane quartet is playing an art form in the process of self-dissolution. From phrase to phrase, and sometimes within the same phrase, Coltrane teeters between homage and sabotage, articulacy and noise.
The passage of time allows us to hear Both Directions at Once in both directions at once. We look back and trace Coltrane’s development from bop to modal to free jazz. We look forward and anticipate the quartet’s further development in Crescent (1964) and even its final expression, A Love Supreme (1965), the spiritual concept album that leads to the transcendentally incoherent music of the last two years of Coltrane’s life. And we cannot but wonder whether Coltrane’s late style really expresses the same drive towards an apogee that Lenz heard in Beethoven or whether the discharge of energy fizzled away, and if so, when.
Both Directions at Once contains seven tracks from the daytime session in Englewood Cliffs, with a further seven alternative takes on a second CD in the deluxe edition. The alternative takes are only a little less superfluous than usual. We hear Coltrane varying his solos and the trio responding, but it is clear why the album’s compilers, record producer Ken Druker and Coltrane’s saxophonist son Ravi, relegated the alternative takes to the second disc. Further, two of the seven “master” tunes, “Nature Boy” and “Impressions,” are themselves alternative takes on recordings Coltrane released during his lifetime.
“Nature Boy,” written by the proto-hippie Eden Ahbez and most famously recorded in 1948 by Nat King Cole, is fresh and lively, with a feel anticipating the Crescentsessions of early 1964. But the version we already have from early 1965, recorded after the watershed of A Love Supreme, and with Art Davis on bass, is more developed and will remain definitive. The value of this early version is its hint that A Love Supreme is not the revolutionary breach that the critics describe but rather a cohesive summary of the developments that Coltrane had pursued since 1960—an end, not a beginning.
Opinion varies as to the definitive version of “Impressions,” Coltrane’s splicing of the modal sequence of Miles Davis’s “So What” with a theme from the composer Morton Gould. In the 1961 Live in Stockholm recording, Coltrane developed his solo with unusual economy from mellifluousness to fury, only for Dolphy’s alto to pour like honey from the rock. In July 1963, the quartet, with Roy Haynes subbing on drums, recorded an incandescent, chaotic version at the Newport Jazz Festival. In December 1963, recording a live set for Ralph Gleason’s Jazz Casual TV show, Coltrane looked at his sax, played five quick quavers, and the trio crashed into gear, already in the groove at top speed, to give one of the most synergetic recorded performances in jazz history. The version here, and the variations on the bonus disc, add little to our understanding of “Impressions.”
Now for the originals—two tracks that haven’t been heard elsewhere and have been named here for the slate numbers assigned by the studio producer. “Original 11383” is a fast and furious blues number. The chord changes are so heavily overwritten with modality that among the early reviewers, only the pianist Ted Gioia noticed it was a blues piece at all. Again, the suspicion that A Love Supreme is a summing-up is hinted at by the way the pushed emphases in “Original 11383” anticipate “Pursuance,” the third section of A Love Supreme. Meanwhile, “Original 11386” is Latin-inflected, with the stops and structures of fifties hard bop and Coltrane pushing against form with slow belligerence. As you can see the career of Henry Moore foreshadowed in a single Picasso sculpture, so you can hear in Coltrane’s soloing on this track a foreshadowing of the calmer, melodious Pharoah Sanders of the 1980s, in particular Sanders’s “Africa.”
As early as 1961, pianist McCoy Tyner had taken to dropping out when Coltrane’s solos slipped the bonds of chordal harmony. Bassist Garrison often followed when he could no longer find the tonic note. This produced epic saxophone and drum duels between Coltrane and Elvin Jones that, curiously, anticipate the rock theatrics of Pete Townshend and Keith Moon, or Jimi Hendrix and Mitch Mitchell. On “One Up, One Down,” the modal pounding is so heavy that Tyner drops out at the one-minute mark. In 1965, Tyner and Jones were to drop out of the quartet entirely, with Tyner unable to find a niche for his chords and Jones, who understood the difference between music and “a lot of noise,” convinced that Coltrane had slipped into making the latter.
Tyner’s tight, swinging piano on “Slow Blues” is firmly in the fifties, and this pulls Coltrane back into his Prestige Records style. You can also hear how the quartet’s spacious ambience and emotional intensity allowed Coltrane to recharacterize blues phrasing as spiritual questing. The suspended 11th chord calls for redemption by demanding resolution; the sharp 11th is the discord of the soul in torment.
The most valuable track here is the oldest composition. “Vilia” is a theme from Franz Lehár’s Merry Widow. The legend of Coltrane as avant-garde visionary sits uneasily with his pursuit of Habsburgian jollities. But the chronology of jazz sits awkwardly with the modernist ideal of the avant-garde. Jazz harmony developed chronologically but, unlike the developers of classical harmony, the developers of jazz harmony lived in the same period. The generations could and did play together, as Ellington and Coltrane did in 1962. On “Vilia,” the quartet minds its manners as it had done on Ballads and Duke Ellington & John Coltrane, and as it would do the next day with Johnny Hartman. Coltrane’s tenor solo follows the ancient course, the conventional and very difficult path of finding phrases with one foot in the blues and the other in the chord changes. You can sense the storm that might break out at any moment, but Coltrane’s restraint intensifies the impact.
There are many testimonies to American loneliness, and the blues might be the greatest of them. There are fewer testaments to American compendiousness. Coltrane’s quartet is the Moby-Dick of American popular music, with Coltrane still wailing in the depths when he died in 1967. By then, he would no longer be playing popular music. After A Love Supreme, his music bore little relation to the folk music and show tunes from which it had sprung. It became abstract and theoretical, and though it abounds in sincere emotion, there is something false about its donning of mock-African and mock-Asian styles, something overly plodding and earnest in a pastiching that Ellington had done with such light and ironic style in the Cotton Club. Unbounded space becomes mere formlessness.
The English saxophonist Ronnie Scott used to tell a joke about a man who goes to a pet shop in search of a singing parrot. The proprietor turns out to have three in stock. The first and cheapest parrot is a richly plumed specimen that can sing all of Louis Armstrong’s solos. The second is in equally splendid condition, but costs more, because he can sing all of Charlie Parker’s solos. The third is blind, can barely stand on his perch, and has lost most of his feathers. But he costs more than the other two birds combined.
“What does this one sing?” the customer asks.
“I don’t know,” says the proprietor, “but the other two call him ‘Maestro.’”
Most of the people who play jazz view Coltrane’s late period like the proprietor regards his parrot, with baffled respect. We see how he expressed the inner logic of the music, because we have the luxury of hindsight. We applaud the giant steps of harmonic invention that took him there—and admire the quasi-religious devotion that got and kept him there. But hardly any of us go there, and even most saxophonists only visit. The late style of jazz isn’t at the heart of our repertoire in the way that Beethoven’s late quartets and Eliot’s Four Quartets are in their fields. For most jazz musicians, it’s Coltrane’s middle style, rooted in the Modern Jazz of the early forties to the late fifties, that strikes the desired balance between form and content, tradition and deviation. We talk about the “Coltrane changes” more than we play them, and we tend to play them in their milder iteration by Richard Rodgers.
The fact that this 55-year-old recording is the year’s most significant jazz release tells you all you need to know about the health of jazz in 2018.
People who write about jazz tend to place the late style at the top of the pile—but what do they know? Most of them cannot play the music and many of them cannot understand the technicalities. Lacking practical understanding, they fall back on fashion and the hagiographic assumption that if progress is good, then late is great. I am not alone in feeling that, as works of art, Beethoven’s Fifth and Seventh are more successfully realized than his Ninth. Nor am I alone in finding the formal asceticism of Four Quartets less satisfying than the grab-bag of The Waste Land. I have also noticed that when someone claims that Finnegans Wake is better than Ulysses, you should stand by for an act of intellectual imposture. The story goes that Coltrane was using LSD after 1965. If so, then the overreach and incoherence of his final music, and his mingling with admiring but inferior talents like Alice Coltrane, the Yoko Ono of jazz, suggest that Coltrane might be the sixties’ first and foremost acid casualty, flailing out rather than flaming out, the peak of his late style already behind him.
The test of a jazz musician isn’t a facility for imitating terminal Coltrane, but for emulating the blues, finding an individual voice within the chordal and harmonic framework, and playing it with feel. That is what Coltrane and his late quartet are doing on much of Both Directions at Once, though they’re doing it at such intellectual altitude that you don’t notice it most of the time. But the blues is what they’re playing, even when they’ve exchanged chords for modes. That you can’t tell half the time shows that this is the sound of an art form at its furthest extension, which is also the moment of its collapse.
The fact that this 55-year-old recording is the year’s most significant jazz release tells you all you need to know about the health of jazz in 2018. The only real argument is about the clinical symptoms of jazz’s death and when it happened. It would be wrong to claim that jazz died with Coltrane in 1967, the year that rock cemented its takeover at Monterey. For one thing, many of jazz’s inventors were still going. Louis Armstrong, the first of the master soloists, had his biggest hit, “What a Wonderful World,” in 1967. Duke Ellington, the Debussy of the big band, was in 1967 preparing the second of his three “Sacred Music” concerts. And in 1967, jazz still contained the seeds of at least two of its final evolutions. The trumpeters Miles Davis and Donald Byrd had yet to form their electric bands, with Davis heading toward bleary oblivion and Byrd toward the dance floor. But Armstrong’s pop hit was orchestral, Ellington’s band always had been orchestral, and the crowded studios and thick textures of Davis’s In a Silent Way and Byrd’s Places and Spaces were, in their disorderly ways, orchestral too. None of this music was played by acoustic quartets.
The quartet had been the standard working unit in jazz since the 1930s. But by 1965, when Coltrane recorded the group improvisation of Ascension with 10 musicians and no sheet music, the quartet could no longer support the music’s technical and textural development. Nor could acoustic instruments. With the exception of the Hammond organ and Leslie speaker, jazz had electrified in order to make the stringed instruments audible rather than to reshape the sonic palette. Miles Davis tipped the balance towards electricity in 1968, with Miles in the Sky, and he kept tipping it, until he was playing through a wah-wah pedal with an all-electric rock band.
The assumption that it was the musician’s task to develop the music reveals how deeply jazz was soaked in the forms and assumptions of European art music. A Balkan folk musician or a West African griot doesn’t seek to push his people’s music forward technically but to imitate it and preserve their sonic memory. But a jazz musician, like a classical composer, has the modern itch. Imitation is not enough; he must go beyond his sources. He pursues formal development for its own sake and believes in progress. Jazz didn’t exactly die with Coltrane, but he certainly helped to kill it. No one (apart from Miles Davis) read its inner logic so clearly. No one did more to pulverize show tunes and the blues into stardust. Arguably no one did more to reunite secular Western art with religion, which is where secular Western art came from and what it had been striving to rejoin ever since it left. And no one (again apart from Miles Davis) did it better.
Coltrane’s late style peaks between 1961 and 1963, when he can make and unmake the music with equal facility. The rest should have been silence, but the inner logic of the music’s development made it noise. He crossed that threshold six months after the Both Directions session. In September 1963, Klansmen firebombed the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, killing four black girls. Coltrane’s response, “Alabama,” is a mournful, angry dirge whose phrases evoke the cadences of Martin Luther King Jr. The version that Coltrane’s quartet recorded at Birdland in November 1963 is the last blues, the end of jazz in its beginning. After “Alabama,” jazz would never again be so close to its origins, while its sound would only get further away from them.
So Both Directions at Once sounds both antediluvian in form and avant-garde in content. In March 1963, three weeks after the Beatles have recorded their first album, an acoustic quartet wrestles with harmonies and values that Elvis and Chuck Berry have already consigned to the past. As this recording approaches the summit of late style, it becomes the apogee of modernism’s last style. For it is a sad fact of musical history that after Coltrane, there was nothing left to say on the saxophone. But Kenny G said it anyway.
Dominic Green 
Dominic Green is a columnist at Spectator USA and a frequent contributor to The Weekly Standard.
 
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Frank Vignola with the John DiMartino Trio Warwick August 22, 2018

Frank Vignola with the John DiMartino Trio Warwick August 22, 2018

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Frank Vignola with the John DiMartino Trio Warwick August 22, 2018 
Railroad Green Warwick, NY
 
Frank Vignola-guitar
John DiMartino-piano
Ed Howard-bass
Vince Cherico-drums
 
Warwick’s own Frank Vignola just coming back after his serious ATV accident was in fine form last Wednesday (8-22-18) accompanied by the superb jazz  trio of pianist John DiMartino bassist Ed Howard and drummer Vince Cherico.  
 
Here’s a little Warwick NY factoid both John and Vince played with the great conguero and bandleader Ray Barretto who was also a long-time Warwick resident right up until the time of his passing in 2006.
 
You can view my pics HERE
 
Check out the unexpected ‘guest’ at about 3:29 on the video.
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMNiU4-ff4s&feature=youtu.be


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Jim Eigo
Jazz Promo Services
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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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A Look Back at 1964, a Pivotal Year in the Career of the Jazz Composer Wayne Shorter | The New Yorker

A Look Back at 1964, a Pivotal Year in the Career of the Jazz Composer Wayne Shorter | The New Yorker

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https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/the-worlds-greatest-living-jazz-composer-celebrates-his-eighty-fifth-birthday
 
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Culture Desk
The World’s Greatest Living Jazz Composer Celebrates His Eighty-fifth Birthday
By Ethan Iverson
August 25, 2018
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If Wayne Shorter had made no other records than the three he recorded in 1964, his perpetual place in the pantheon would still be assured.
Photograph by Bill Wagg / Redferns / Getty
Jazz history is recent history. Wayne Shorter, who was born only thirteen years after Charlie Parker and seven years after Miles Davis and John Coltrane, turns eighty-five today. Shorter is the greatest living jazz composer and a key participant in iconic recordings by Art Blakey, Miles Davis, Weather Report, Joni Mitchell, and Steely Dan. His current quartet—with Danilo Pérez, John Patitucci, and Brian Blade—makes terrific music. Now that Ornette Coleman is gone, Shorter is also the heavyweight champion of elliptical musical thought, especially in conversation.
In Shorter’s very first press profile, from 1959, the author LeRoi Jones (later Amiri Baraka) begins by saying that when they were teen-agers, he knew Wayne as a metaphor: their shared Newark crew would refer to unexpected events as being “as weird as Wayne.” Shorter has only got more oblique over the years, seemingly content to treat interviews as excuses to spontaneously invent Zen koans and review films. In 2014, when Tavis Smiley asked Shorter how much his quartet rehearses, Shorter replied, “How do you rehearse the future?” When I interviewed Shorter for the BBC, he talked about how he wanted his band to sound like the movie “Interstellar,” and made a special point to praise Anne Hathaway.
Shorter’s press office doubles down on his abstract conversational style, suggesting that Shorter is a seer and a superhero. The lovely, poetic note by Esperanza Spalding accompanying Shorter’s new recording and graphic novel, “Emanon,” falls right in line: “After reading and listening to Emanon, you might begin to notice alternative realities glimmering beneath the everyday world around you.”
Shorter might indeed be a superhero, but he’s also more practical than his reputation suggests. Like most durable artists, he takes common material and reshapes it in his own image. His first three records as a leader for Blue Note display especially thrilling powers of transmutation. Shorter’s done a lot since, but, on the occasion of his birthday, many fans—and especially many musicians—will be reaching for “Night Dreamer,” “Juju,” and “Speak No Evil” to celebrate and give thanks.
1964 was a peak year for jazz, a time when the whole continuum was vibrating with extraordinary power. Louis Armstrong’s “Hello, Dolly!” was a hit song on the radio. The big bands of Duke Ellington and Count Basie were at full strength. Singers like Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, and Nina Simone swung ballads from a whisper to roar, and pianists like Erroll Garner, Oscar Peterson, and Ahmad Jamal were glamorous stars. The avant-garde, led by Coleman, Cecil Taylor, and Albert Ayler, drove intellectual discussion and provoked the greatest out of the slightly more conventional small-group leaders: Blakey, Davis, Charles Mingus, Thelonious Monk, Sonny Rollins, and John Coltrane.
Shorter was right in the mix. This was the year that he left Blakey, joined Davis, and signed as a leader to Blue Note—a label that was the great laboratory of mixing traditional values with the cutting edge. For a modern jazz fan, looking at the Blue Note catalogue from around this time is like being a kid in the Willy Wonka factory: It’s all so great, how can we even decide what to consume first? A digit or two away from the Shorter releases in the Blue Note catalogue are disks like Blakey’s “Free for All,” Horace Silver’s “Song for My Father,” Joe Henderson’s “Inner Urge,” Freddie Hubbard’s “Breaking Point,” Dexter Gordon’s “One Flight Up,” Andrew Hill’s “Black Fire,” Eric Dolphy’s “Out to Lunch,” Sam Rivers’s “Fuchsia Swing Song,” Herbie Hancock’s “Empyrean Isles” and “Maiden Voyage”—the list literally goes on and on.
Pressure creates diamonds. In the liner notes to “Night Dreamer,” Shorter says to Nat Hentoff, “I knew that for my first album for Blue Note, I had to create something substantial!” “Night Dreamer” was tracked on April 29th, “Juju” on August 3rd, and “Speak No Evil” on December 24th. It’s intensely personal art, music that could only have been created by Shorter. But one could also say that “Night Dreamer” is in the style of a Blakey album, “Juju” is a Coltrane album, and “Speak No Evil” is a Davis album. These explicit references help explain why this trilogy is so beloved among musicians, who revel in how Shorter puts his own imprint on these major influences.
Shorter’s tenor saxophone anchors the three disks with a surreal sonority, a wild cry that comes from the heart of sorrow. The first chunky and smeary saxophone phrases on the self-titled opening track of “Night Dreamer” tell you all you need to know: this is blues music. He is joined on the front line by another blues musician of the first order, the trumpeter Lee Morgan. These men didn’t just play the blues, they lived the blues life style. Discussing “Charcoal Blues,” Shorter said, “Things were so bad that the only way to go was to laugh—that kept you going.” In 1972, Morgan would be shot and killed, at the age of thirty-three, by his common-law wife at Slugs’, on the Lower East Side, effectively ending that club and an era of New York jazz. (Shorter is interviewed onscreen in the recent documentary about the trumpeter’s death, “I Called Him Morgan.”)
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Beginning in 1959, the front line of Blakey’s Jazz Messengers was made up of Morgan and Shorter, and within a few years, Shorter was the Messengers’ music director and primary composer. Blakey was a powerful drummer, and his Messengers espoused the gospel of hard bop. After the brilliant and intellectual bebop innovations of Monk, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Max Roach, in the nineteen-forties, hard bop tried to bring that brainy material back into a more local and humble perspective. All the hard-bop groups featured heavy syncopations: moments when the rhythm section emphasized discontinuity by ducking away from straight time for a moment. These big-band-derived syncopations were called “hits.” No one set up a hit better than Blakey. After one of his famous press rolls, the launch of the full band into a syncopated figure would shake the walls and rattle the rafters.
Elvin Jones is cast in the Blakey role on “Night Dreamer.” On the hits of “Armageddon,” Jones unleashes his own furious cascades of percussion, a godlike combination of joy and terror. Every other tune on “Night Dreamer” has hits, even the ballad “Virgo.” The hard-bop references on the album are mixed with Coltrane references. Shorter practiced with Coltrane and, in effect, became Coltrane’s greatest student. Coltrane himself, after going all the way to the fastest, most intellectual harmonic jazz, in 1959, with “Giant Steps,” backed off relentless changing harmony to seek more space and blues. His breakout record from 1960, “My Favorite Things,” offered a nearly cheesy Broadway hit redone as a waltzing modal drone. The essential elements were supplied by Coltrane’s pianist and drummer, McCoy Tyner and Elvin Jones. Tyner’s harmonic language was based on quartal chords and pentatonic scales, while Jones played every permutation of threes and fours within the beat. These musicians seemed utterly new at the time, though both were essentially emphasizing elements of various classical musics of Africa and India.
Coltrane and Tyner’s modal palette is heard more clearly on Shorter’s next record. It’s not as drastic a shift as the one from “Giant Steps” to “My Favorite Things,” but there is a similar relaxation of harmonic motion from “Night Dreamer” to “Juju.” The bassist on both is Reggie Workman, who had been with Shorter in Blakey’s band for a few years. Workman had also played with Coltrane alongside Tyner and Jones. It’s fair to call this LP “Wayne Shorter’s quartet date with Coltrane’s rhythm section.” “Juju” is one of Workman’s finest hours as a comparatively straight-ahead player, who came into his own not with Coltrane or Blakey but in later, more avant-garde styles. It all really jells on “Juju.” The leader and composer is playing to the team’s strengths, and the whole disk seems to be a concerto for the band. Tyner, Workman, and Jones groove like crazy on dark vamps, spicy turnarounds, and pure swing.
On top of the churn, Shorter plays a mix of simple and surreal. It’s a Coltrane band, the tunes are not far from Coltrane, either, but the saxophonist is still “as weird as Wayne.” Jones doesn’t pick up brushes once; everything has a heavy vibe, with sticks. The tempos are generally on the slow to medium side, the tempo that showcases Jones’s polyrhythmic style. The one faster piece, “Yes or No,” has headlong momentum and an incandescent piano solo. At the end, the band plays a convoluted “Twelve More Bars to Go” with one of the greatest recorded tenor-saxophone solos in the blues idiom. Wayne is giving even Trane a run with this one. In the notes, Shorter gives an amusing commentary on the song: “The picture I had in mind was of someone having a very good time, going around to every bar in town, it was as if he had a list in his hand. . . . In certain spots, I interjected in the harmony what sounds like a backward progression. I did it both to get away from standard blues harmonies and also to picture a man, slightly intoxicated, who, as he tries to go forward, backs up.”
In late summer, Shorter joined Miles Davis. No African-American jazz master loved European harmony more than Davis. Some of the most magical moments in musical history are when Davis picks up his trumpet and responds helplessly and hopelessly to gorgeous post-Debussy and Ravel harmony supplied by Gil or Bill Evans. Davis’s pianist in 1964 was Herbie Hancock, who had studied Bill Evans and McCoy Tyner on the way to forging his own charismatic style. It was soon apparent that Hancock and Shorter were on the same page, as were the equally brilliant Ron Carter and Tony Williams. The collected recordings of the “Second Great Miles Davis Quintet” are one of the most treasured canons in all of jazz. As with Blakey, Shorter would become that band’s most important house composer.
Hancock and Carter appear on “Speak No Evil,” alongside the major virtuoso Freddie Hubbard (the other trumpeter Shorter played with in the Jazz Messengers) and the returning champion Elvin Jones. It’s a one-time event, the only occasion this group of bona-fide jazz geniuses played together. It was Christmas Eve. There was booze and snacks for the band, so everyone was relaxed, but the material was fresh and beautiful, so everyone was focussed.
The compositions on “Speak No Evil” occupy a rarified plane. They aren’t quite hard bop, they aren’t quite modal. Elements of everything are just there, hanging out in a new and inspired way. The musicians at large loved it, then and now. Every song on “Speak No Evil” has been learned by each new generation of jazz students. Every solo by Shorter, Hubbard, and Hancock has been transcribed and assimilated. A fabulously laid-back drum fill going into the scalding and lyrical tenor solo on “Witch Hunt” is almost enough to place it in my personal pantheon. However, if pressed, I would have to admit that I love “Juju” even more than “Speak No Evil.” After listening for decades, I can hear how Jones is not used to playing with Hancock’s breezy “hide and seek” comping, or maybe Hancock is not always ready to dig into the beat as deeply as Jones. Whatever the case, between them the punctuation is not always exactly right. Ron Carter is deeply swinging and fearlessly experimental—there’s simply no one else like Ron Carter—but he is a shade low in the mix.
Wherever fans and musicians congregate, there are wonderful barstool arguments about Shorter’s career since the heyday of the nineteen-sixties. Weather Report, Joni Mitchell, the fusion albums “Atlantis” and “High Life,” the current quartet: everyone has an opinion and nobody agrees exactly with everybody else. Many of the debates can be stalled by noting that Shorter’s works are all of a piece, a grand statement about American music. However, the 1964 LPs will always elicit consensus. If Shorter had made no other records than this trilogy, his perpetual place in the pantheon would still be assured.
·        Ethan Iverson is a pianist and composer based in Brooklyn.
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50 Ways to Read a Record Part 2 | PS Audio

50 Ways to Read a Record Part 2 | PS Audio

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50 Ways to Read a Record Part 2
Vintage Whine
https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0c3c44dbf6223ffdddaff39592acfd98?s=70&d=mm&r=gBy Bill Leebens
In his last column, Jay Jay French mentioned the optical phono cartridge cartridge made by DS Audio in Japan. Ironically, “DS” stands for “Digital Stream”…go figure.
When you hear of an optical method of record playback, it’s easy to assume that it’s one of the laser-scanning methods that have been proposed and built over the decades—and we’ll get to those designs, eventually—but that’s not the case here. The DS cartridges track the record with a standard diamond stylus/cantilever asssembly. Inside their bodies, the cartridges contain an LED light source which is aimed at a photocell, and between those two elements is the cartridge’s cantilever. As the cartridge tracks the record, the output of the photocell is modulated by the cantilever movement, generating an output voltage which represents what’s in that squiggly groove.
Magnetic cartridges are velocity-sensing, so both increases in frequency and groove excursion cause the voltage output to increase. Photo cartridges like the DS and strain-gauge cartridges (Win, Soundsmith, others) are amplitude-sensing, responding only to the stylus’ movement. The DS and strain-gauge cartridges thus require their own particular equalization—a standard phono pre won’t work.
Here’s the interesting part about this technology: it’s not new. Philco, of all people, brought out the “Beam of Light” cartridge system on a number of products in 1941. It utilized a sapphire stylus mounted on a mirror, modulating light from a bulb—no LEDs there! They also had a 7-function wireless remote control called the “Mystery Control”—again, in 1941. You can take a look at both technologies here; on that page are links to two YouTube videos, one pretty uneventful one showing the cartridge at work, the other showing the remote in use.
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From the ’40s through the ’60s (at least), the inexpensive cartridges found on most portable phonographs and other low-end turntables were of the ceramic or crystal type. Those cartridges utilized a simple piezoelectric generating element  which had much higher output than magnetic cartridges, and a simple RC network provided compliance to the RIAA compensation spec. More or less, anyway—within a couple dB. Hey, they were cheap.
The post-WWII era saw the reinvention of the phono cartridge. The arrival of the  microgroove LP record required the design of not just smaller styli, but the design of better tracking cartridges that would limit record wear. Stronger magnetic materials developed during the war led to smaller, lighter weight magnetic cartridges. The first major development in cartridges after the war were the VR (variable reluctance) cartridges introduced by GE in 1947, which are still highly regarded by fans of vintage audio. The cantilever moved between two pole pieces of the magnetic structure, varying flux-density of the circuit and generating a voltage in a coil. The VR cartridges originally had fixed styli; later variants had “turnover” styli for both microgroove and 78, or replaceable single styli, and in 1958, stereo versions hit the market.
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The term “variable reluctance” refers to a principle of signal-generation, not a specific type of cartridge construction. To clarify: the major forms of magnetic cartridge construction are moving iron, moving magnet, and moving coil—and the moving iron types would be considered variable reluctance cartridges, as they utilize a moving element to modulate the flux in the magnetic circuit, generating a voltage.
Ortofon in Denmark had never abandoned the moving coil cartridge, which in the ’50s  were sold in the US under the brand name ESL. One of the first to revive the type in post-war America was designer Joseph Grado, whose name was later long associated with moving iron cartridges. Grado was an opera singer, watchmaker and inventor; he was also a friend of hi-fi pioneer Saul Marantz, who introduced Grado to Sherman Fairchild.
Fairchild was a multimillionaire serial entrepreneur who founded dozens of companies in many  fields including aircraft, aerial photography, and the Fairchild Recording Equipment Corporation, devoted to products for professional and broadcast audio. The Recording Equipment Corporation, based in Long Island City,  also dabbled in home hi-fi—and that’s where Grado went.
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The Fairchild 225A, shown above, was Grado’s first audio design. He brought a watchmaker’s standards of precision and quality control to Fairchild. Within a few years, he was off on his own as Grado Labs—still in existence today, still making cartridges, although headphones are the company’s focus these days. Grado’s first cartidges on his own were also moving coils, but he soon developed moving iron cartridges with replaceable styli—the type of cartridges still made in the same brownstone in Brooklyn.
At the dawn of the stereo era, Western Electric/Westrex, developed the model 10A moving coil cartridge, a stereo version of the earlier 9A cartridge. The 10A was designed to play the single groove stereo discs developed by Westrex (discussed back in Copper #44).
The hi-fi boom of the 1950s produced a mass market for mainstream magnetic cartridges, as well as some unique technical developments in record playback. We’ll discuss both in the next issue.
 
 

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Paul Broadnax, 92, jazz singer and pianist known for his grace and longevity – The Boston Globe

Paul Broadnax, 92, jazz singer and pianist known for his grace and longevity – The Boston Globe

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Paul Broadnax, 92, jazz singer and pianist known for his grace and longevity


Bryan Marquard  August 20, 2018

Josh Reynolds for The Boston Globe/File
Mr. Broadnax (center) with former Scullers Jazz Club booker Fred Taylor and singer Donna Byrne during a party in Taylor’s honor last year.
Still nimble at 92, Paul Broadnax played his last two gigs on back-to-back days in mid-July.
“Music is in my blood,” he had told a Vermont interviewer years ago. “I couldn’t get rid of it if I tried to, and I never would want to.”
Mr. Broadnax, who died Aug. 1 in his home in Newton’s Lasell Village of complications from a lung disease, had been a staple of New England’s jazz scene for nearly eight decades, appearing as a vocalist and pianist since his Roxbury childhood as a son of classically trained singers.
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As a teenager, he performed at a USO event in Roxbury for World War II-bound soldiers. As a 91-year-old, he was at Brasserie Jo last year paying tribute to former Scullers Jazz Club booker Fred Taylor.
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His baritone still silky a few months after turning 90, Mr. Broadnax performed “I’ve Got You Under My Skin” with his trio two summers ago during an outdoor gig at the Hampton Falls Bandstand in New Hampshire, singing with a hint of a smile: “I’d tried so, not to give in. I said to myself, ‘This affair never should go so well.’ ”
With neither wasted nor gratuitous notes, Mr. Broadnax soloed that day as he often did, with spare, eloquent improvisations and carefully chosen chords.
“I cannot begin to convey the respect this man had from so many, many musicians,” said Donn Trenner, a nationally known pianist, arranger, and longtime friend, who added that as Mr. Broadnax sailed past 90 “he still played wonderfully. He was still performing very, very well.”
The two met in the military during World War II, when both were assigned to Special Services as musicians. While performing for the troops, they launched a friendship that transcended music and lasted more than 70 years.
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“His singing was very honest, very sensitive, and he never showed any ego whatsoever, either in his performance or in his speech,” Trenner said. On the keyboard, Trenner added, Mr. Broadnax’s playing offered “a great message in simplicity. He never played too much.”
Over the decades, Mr. Broadnax either shared the stage with or arranged for a constellation of jazz greats, among them bandleader Lionel Hampton, trumpeter Clark Terry, singer Jimmy Witherspoon, and vocalist Rebecca Parris, who died earlier this year.
He also was a contemporary of jazz singer Joe Williams, to whom he paid tributewith the 1996 CD “Here’s to Joe,” which featured Mr. Broadnax on the cover, toasting Williams with a flute of champagne.
Trenner played with Mr. Broadnax on that album, and they were joined by Herb Pomeroy on flugelhorn, Peter Kontrimas on bass, Matt Gordy on drums, and Fred Haas on saxophones.
“He had a gentle but relentless sense of swing. It was never forced, but regardless of the tempo or the feel, there was always a deep groove,” said Haas, a Dartmouth College professor who played with Mr. Broadnax on four other CDs.
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As a bandleader, Mr. Broadnax “was incredibly generous. Everybody had a chance to solo, everybody got featured,” Haas added. “It was not a competitive kind of energy at all. We were all in this together and we were creating a story that we were telling the audience.”
While playing in the background as other musicians soloed, Mr. Broadnax might slip in substitute chords that enlivened the arrangement and added “a sense of richness that the original composer didn’t get,” Haas said.
Performing with Mr. Broadnax was “an incredible joy,” Hass added. “I’d be smiling all the way home from the gig. And every gig we had together, I couldn’t wait to get there.”

Mr. Broadnax, who was born in Cambridge, shared the stage with and arranged for a constellation of jazz greats.
Born in Cambridge in 1926, Paul Leo Broadnax Jr. was the second of four siblings in a family that moved to Roxbury when he was young. His father, Paul Sr., was a tenor with the Lyric Male Quartet. “They had great voices,” Mr. Broadnax once told an interviewer. “I can remember lying in my bed supposedly sleeping and they were rehearsing in the next room.”
His mother was the former Rebecca Ellastine Lee, a soprano soloist, choral director, and well-known voice teacher. She also was a dressmaker and bartered those talents to secure piano lessons for young Paul.
After graduating from Mechanic Arts High School, Mr. Broadnax was drafted into the Army Air Forces and sent to Texas. “I was a foot soldier for two days,” he recalled in an interview. “Then I was picked up in a staff car, taken to headquarters, and assigned to Special Services as a musician. I couldn’t understand my good fortune.”
Returning to Roxbury after World War II ended, he began playing with ensembles at jazz venues throughout the region. He also set up other sources of revenue to supplement his earnings as a musician. Mr. Broadnax attended what is now the Wentworth Institute of Technology to be certified as an airplane mechanic, and he graduated from Northeastern University with an associate’s degree in engineering.
He worked at Raytheon for many years before leaving to focus more on music, and also ran an Amway business. Mr. Broadnax married Millicent Brooks and they had two sons before their marriage ended in divorce.
“Even though he had the ability to make everyone under the sun feel special, it never took away from his affection and attention to us as his sons. We both felt just as valued and esteemed,” said the Rev. Jay Broadnax, pastor of a church in Philadelphia.
“He was a very spiritual man as well. He loved God and felt his music was a gift that he wanted to share with the world,” his son said.
Mr. Broadnax’s wife, Caroline Schwarz-Schastny, said that the “essence of his life was one of kindness and gentleness.”
When he performed, she added, he “would look out and sing to the audience, and not just sing to be heard. His singing was to the people who were there, and it was for them.”
Though he might have achieved greater fame by decamping to New York City, Mr. Broadnax said in a 2004 interview with the Barre-Montpelier Times Argus in Vermont that he was satisfied “with what I’ve been doing all my life. I haven’t really been looking for kudos. If I were, I probably would have taken a different path. But I’m happy living in New England, playing around New England, and working with guys that I love to play with. So, what more could you ask for?”
In addition to his wife and son, Mr. Broadnax leaves his other son, Marc of Pottstown, Pa.; two sisters, Leona Broadnax Emerson and Rebecca Broadnax Scott, both of Hyde Park; and two grandchildren.
Family and friends will celebrate the life and music of Mr. Broadnax at 11 a.m. Sept. 1 in the St. Paul AME church in Cambridge.
“Elegance is a great word for Paul’s personality, his performance, his taste in music, his feelings about life,” Trenner said. “I cannot even speak of him in the past tense. Paul is here. For me, Paul will always be here.”
Bryan Marquard can be reached at bryan.marquard@globe.com.

 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Jazz Party On The Hudson: Jazz In The Valley Sunday August 19, 2018 Waryas Park Poughkeepsie NY

Jazz Party On The Hudson: Jazz In The Valley Sunday August 19, 2018 Waryas Park Poughkeepsie NY

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Jazz In The Valley 8-19-18

Javon Jackson-Donald Harrison Jazz In The Valley 8-19-18
Photo by Jim Eigo
You Can View All My Jazz In The Valley Pics HERE

 
Peeps let’s give it up for  festival producer Greer Smith for presenting her 19thconsecutive jazz festival in the idyllic Waryas Park in Poughkeepsie NY right on the banks of the mighty Hudson River.
 
You couldn’t ask for a better setting to hear live jazz on a beautiful summer’s day in the Hudson Valley.
 
No rain or sticky-hot humid temps, only hot swinging jazz from five smoking groups hitting the main stage at Noon and going until 6:30pm.
 
Long-time WKCR Thursday night DJ Sharif Abdus Salaam MC’d the proceedings.
 
What an incredible line up of jazz talent:
 
Bassist Mimi Jones’ The Black Madonnaproject featuring guitarist Andrew Renfroe, violist Leonor Falcon and drummer Mark Whitfield Jr.
 
The Eddie Henderson Quintet
Peter Zak-piano, Doug Weiss-bass, Donald Harrison-alto sax, Mike Clark-drums
Props go out to Donald Harrison who missed his flight out of New Orleans and had to take Metro North up to Poughkeepsie made it in time for the last two tunes. He also sat in with Javon Jackson’s band.
 
Javon Jackson Super Bandfeaturing Joanne Brackeen-piano, Gerald Cannon-bass, Willie Jones III-drums plus Donald Harrison sitting in for one number.
 
Rene Marie
Bruce Barth-piano, Elias Bailey-bass and Adam Cruz-drums
 
Mi Afrika Mi Corozon Project
Benito Gonzalez-piano Will Calhoun-drums, Baba Neil Clarke-african percussion, AYANDA CLARKE , african percussion
Rachiim Ausar-Sahu-bass and leader, ANDRE MURCHISON, trombone, IRWIN HALL, sax,Anthony Ware-sax,  SALIEU SUSO, kora, BRYAN CARROTT, vibraphone, Ayanda Clarke, Ron McBee-percussion, Jason Marshall
 
You won’t want to miss Jazz in The Valley 2019 so head over to their website and get on the mailing list:
https://www.jazzinthevalleyny.org
 
 
Jim Eigo
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Here’s a nice article from the Poughkeepsie Journal:
 

Jazz in the Valley: Hundreds enjoy bands on the Hudson River, celebrate classic genre

Jack HowlandUpdated 5:04 p.m. ET Aug. 19, 2018
Hundreds of jazz lovers attended the 19th annual Jazz in the Valley music festival on Sunday in the City of Poughkeepsie. There were several artists playing original songs and classic jazz hits. Video by Jack Howland/Poughkeepsie Journal Wochit
When Lee Carter listens to jazz, he’s reminded of his parents and the music with which they would fill their Harlem home.
The Town of Poughkeepsie resident walked into Victor C. Waryas Park on Sunday afternoon as the band The Black Madonna was in the middle of a rousing set. Carter had never attended Jazz in the Valley before but said the venue — alongside the Hudson River and with people cooking out their own food — made him feel as if he were in New Orleans.
The music, on the other hand, transported him to another time.
“It is reminiscent from the past…I think about my parents,” said Carter, 55. “They loved playing that in the home.”
At the 19th annual festival, hundreds of jazz lovers from the region and beyond packed into the park to enjoy smooth, soulful and searing music with a link to the past.
Lori Campbell, of the City of Poughkeepsie, smiles as she looks up from her program on Sunday. She and her mother were attending the annual event for the first time.Buy Photo
Lori Campbell, of the City of Poughkeepsie, smiles as she looks up from her program on Sunday. She and her mother were attending the annual event for the first time. (Photo: Jack Howland/Poughkeepsie Journal)
The headlining acts included The Black Madonna — which features Mimi Jones, who has performed with Beyonce and Frank Ocean — as well as vocalist Rene Marie and pianist Joanne Brackeen. Eddie Henderson, who used to play alongside jazz icon Herbie Hancock in the 1970s and early 2000s, performed with his band The Eddie Henderson Quintet.
The 77-year-old who lives in Mamaroneck, Westchester County said he always loves this venue, which typically has a relaxed vibe and a crowd that’s “attentive.” But he was approaching the festival as if it were a small club, he said, and his setlist included classics from Hancock and John Coltrane.
“I can’t be dictated by…looking at the audience,” said Henderson, who played the festival two times previously. “I just play who I am.”
The event was hosted by the Kingston-based TRANSART & Cultural Services Inc., and is part of Poughkeepsie’s push to host more artistic events.
Trumpeter Eddie Henderson (left) and upright bassist Doug Weiss (right), a Town of Newburgh resident, smile as they warm up for their set. They're part of the band the Eddie Henderson Quintet.Buy Photo
Trumpeter Eddie Henderson (left) and upright bassist Doug Weiss (right), a Town of Newburgh resident, smile as they warm up for their set. They’re part of the band the Eddie Henderson Quintet. (Photo: Jack Howland/Poughkeepsie Journal)
There was one stage in Waryas Park, where Henderson and The Black Madonna performed, and another in Upper Landing Park. Many people sat under tents, on lawn chairs and atop blankets to watch the various artists.
City resident Lori Campbell, 26, came to the festival for the first time with her mother and joined the large crowds.
“(Jazz) is one of the few music genres that sort of brings people together,” she said. “It’s like a culture.”

More coverage:

PREVIEW: Jazz in the Valley offers rhythm by the Hudson River
VIDEO: Greer Smith talks about Jazz in the Valley 2018
O+: O+ festival brings combo of murals, live music, health care to City of Poughkeepsie
Jack Howland: jhowland@poughkeepsiejournal.com, 845-437-4870, Twitter: @jhowl04

 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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‘A Rhapsody in Blue: The Extraordinary Life of Oscar Levant’ Review – WSJ

‘A Rhapsody in Blue: The Extraordinary Life of Oscar Levant’ Review – WSJ

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-rhapsody-in-blue-the-extraordinary-life-of-oscar-levant-review-1534885851
 
‘A Rhapsody in Blue: The Extraordinary Life of Oscar Levant’ Review
The eight-CD set is an outstanding collection of epic showcases for classical keyboard and a celebration of the Gershwin canon.
Will Friedwald
Aug. 21, 2018 5:10 p.m. ET
Oscar Levant at the piano
Beats there a heart so dead that it doesn’t love George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue”? This is one of those pinnacle achievements, a work that makes you feel good to be alive. Whose soul doesn’t soar at the sound of that remarkable opening, with its clarinet glissando? And even more so at the finale, with its fortissimo crashes, as Gershwin piles on the suspense and the drama with one great staccato burst of melodic energy after another? It’s hard to imagine any work of art—musical, visual, literary, theatrical, or even cinematic—that moves us and thrills us like this extraordinary piece of American music from 1924.
The closest thing this Gershwin classic has to a flaw is the middle; it simply can’t compete with the beginning or the ending. In the hands of most pianists, that middle section is merely a meandering placeholder, a respite between two colossal moments of musical brilliance. I personally prefer the first recording, a truncated 1924 performance with the composer himself and Paul Whiteman’s orchestra, because—at just nine minutes—it condenses the middle section. The only performance I’ve ever heard of the complete “Rhapsody” whose middle section justifies its existence is the brilliant 1945 recording by Oscar Levant, the highest-paid classical artist in America in the 1940s and 1950s.
Levant (1906-1972), whose recorded work is the subject of “A Rhapsody in Blue: The Extraordinary Life of Oscar Levant,” a new eight-CD boxed set from Sony Classical, impels the middle section with amazing force and feeling—his piano propelling the entire Philadelphia Orchestra the way that a great drummer drives a jazz band. Levant has all the technique and volume of an orchestra unto himself, and thus his pairing with conductor Eugene Ormandy often sounds like two full ensembles playing at once, both in cooperation and competition.
Making his work all the more remarkable, Oscar Levant wasn’t even best known as a musician. He was also a songwriter (whose best known number, “Blame It on My Youth,” was sung brilliantly by both Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole) as well as an actor and TV personality. No less than his contemporary Dorothy Parker, Levant with his hundreds of brief, quotable quips foreshadowed Twitter. And he was ahead of his more buttoned-up times, as well, in talking openly about his neuroses on national television during talk-show interviews in the 1950s and 1960s.
The new set contains 109 tracks recorded between 1941 and 1958, the last sessions in stereo, and was produced by Robert Russ.Michael Feinstein supplied a biographical essay and many of the dozens of rare illustrations and photographs for the 124-page hardcover book that housesthe whole package. Levant is best remembered for his interpretations of the Gershwin canon, and the performances here of the “Piano Concerto in F Major,” “Second Rhapsody for Piano and Orchestra,” the “‘I Got Rhythm’ Variations,” and the three remarkable “Preludes” can all be considered definitive. (He also appeared as actor and performer in two classic Gershwin-centric movies, the “Rhapsody in Blue” biopic and “An American in Paris.”)
Yet well beyond the music of his close friend, this set is an outstanding collection of epic showcases for classical keyboard. The eight discs contain dozens of virtuoso pieces that would have been very familiar to mainstream listeners in the 1940s and 1950s, like de Falla’s “Ritual Fire Dance,” Lecuona’s “Malagueña,” and the number that launched a thousand plate-spinners on “The Ed Sullivan Show”: Khachaturian’s “Sabre Dance.” These works were ensured—as if by Lloyd’s of London—to generate a tumult whenever Levant played them, and he delivers them with maximum muscularity and irresistible, driving rhythm.
Still, Levant played in other styles as well. He renders the famous “Liebestod” from “Tristan und Isolde” in a rather dramatic adaptation by film composer Franz Waxman that makes it sound like a vintage Hollywood romance, or, as is Levant himself were playing the leading man in the opera. He plays Brahms’s “Waltz No. 15 in A-Flat Major, Op. 39” and Schumann’s “Träumerei” with uncommon tenderness. He’s no less adept at interpreting the Impressionists than the Romantics: Here’s a “Clair de lune” (Debussy) for the ages and two Ravel masterworks, “Sonatine” and parts of “Le Tombeau de Couperin.” These works were extremely influential among superior jazz and pop orchestrators of the 1950s, like Nelson Riddle, who were especially inspired by his use of polyphony. 
Two works here, the Bach “Partita No. 1 in B-flat Major” and “Blue Plate Special,” are previously unreleased; the latter, by Levant himself, is particularly fascinating in the way it combines stride-like techniques, quixotically repetitive patterns and angular dissonances. In fact, they reveal nothing less than the same antic wit and humor as his talk-show appearances. As we hear on these discs, he channeled that energy into performances that changed the way we understand the classics. Levant famously said, “I don’t want to be known as a wag, I want to be known as a serious musician.” Any one of the performances on this set will leave the listener with no doubt as to what his most valuable legacy actually was.
—Mr. Friedwald writes about music and popular culture for the Journal.
 
 

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Jazz Shorts from Swing to Bop @ New York Public Library 8/29

Jazz Shorts from Swing to Bop @ New York Public Library 8/29

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https://www.showclix.com/event/jazzshorts/tag/nyplnow?utm_source=eNewsletter
 
 
AUG29
Jazz Shorts from Swing to Bop 
Wed. Aug 29, 2018 at 6:30pm EDT 
8 days away 
 
All Ages 
A series of short films from the Library’s collections show jazz through the ages on the big screen. 

FEATURING

o    “Black and Tan” (1929, dir. Dudley Murphy)
o    “Soundies #1” (1940s, dir. none listed)
o    “Harlem Wednesday” (1959, dirs. John Hubley and Faith Elliot)
o    “Dizzy Gillespie” (1964, dir. Les Blank)

Edo Choi, Assistant Programmer for the Maysles Documentary Center, turns to the Library’s collections to curate a night of short films that show how jazz as an art form has been represented in film over the decades.

FIRST COME, FIRST SEATED
For free events, we generally overbook to ensure a full house. Priority will be given to those who have registered in advance, but registration does not guarantee admission. All registered seats are released shortly before start time, and seats may become available at that time. A standby line will form one hour before the program.

PRESS 
Please send all press inquiries (photo, video, interviews, audio-recording, etc.) at least 24-hours before the day of the program to Sara Beth Joren at sarabethjoren@nypl.org.
 
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Remembering Grossinger’s by Barry Lewis: The building will go but the memories last forever + YouTube Bonus

Remembering Grossinger’s by Barry Lewis: The building will go but the memories last forever + YouTube Bonus

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http://www.recordonline.com/opinion/20180819/barry-lewis-building-will-go-but-memories-last-forever
 
Barry Lewis: The building will go but the memories last forever

I understand the need to tear down what’s left of Grossinger’s Hotel, the Grand Dame of the Catskills.
I say that knowing that what’s left isn’t really Grossinger’s.
At least not the place I knew.
Nor is it the place where millions of hotel guests over 72 years created memories that would last a lifetime. “Singles Only” weekends that would turn into family trips. Family trips that would turn into annual reunions. Couples who just wanted to say they vacationed at Grossinger’s. One guest, Eleanor Bergstein, took those memories of dance lessons with Jackie Horner and was inspired to create the film “Dirty Dancing” giving folks who may not have ever visited the famed Sullivan County resort a small sampling of what the Catskills was really all about.
Of course those of us who visited or worked those hotels know that was Hollywood’s version of the Catskills. If they wanted to be true to form they would have called the film “Dirty Eating” about guests who can’t get enough food no matter how much is served.
That was Grossinger’s.
What’s up on that hill overlooking Liberty now is just acres of some old brick and mortar buildings, worn plywood and chipped concrete, overgrown grounds and a graffiti-laced indoor pool which nature turned into a greenhouse – all a reminder that at one time there was something so vast it was like a city on the hill.
The seven-room farmhouse that began with Selig and Malka taking in boarders grew under the watchful eye of their daughter Jennie, the first lady of hospitality. With the help of publicist extraordinaire Milton Blackstone, they turned Grossinger’s into the “Waldorf in the Catskills.” Jennie’s children, Paul and Elaine Etess, turned the showcase into a sprawling 585-room resort spread out over 812 acres, while still maintaining the tradition that Grossinger’s was more than just another place to go on vacation and which the writer Damon Runyon once described as “Lindy’s with trees.”
Where Eddie Cantor discovers Eddie Fisher, where Fisher marries Debbie Reynolds and later takes Liz Taylor who dedicates the indoor pool. Where Rocky Marciano and Muhammad Ali train, Jackie Robinson and Mickey Mantle come for family vacations, Errol Flynn goes horseback riding and Lou Goldstein calls Milton Berle out in a game of Simon Says. And yes, where Eleanor Roosevelt can be spotted walking through the dining room.
That was Grossinger’s.
They had three ski slopes, an Olympic-size outdoor pool, an 18-hole championship golf course, 1,500-seat nightclub, they printed a monthly newspaper, had their own airport and, thanks to Blackstone, their own ZIP code. You could send mail to Grossinger, New York.
I made my first trip to Grossinger’s 50 years ago this summer.
We stayed at the Shady Nook, where my dad worked. The drive from Loch Sheldrake to Liberty was 10 minutes but the two Catskill resorts were light years apart.
Dad was in a group called The Entertainers, made up of, yes, entertainers who performed regularly at what were then hundreds of hotels and nearly a thousand bungalow colonies. At the end of each summer they’d have a show for a charity. They’d rotate locations and in 1968 the show was at Grossinger’s. I remember us driving up the hill, past the guard booth to an entrance, walking to the nightclub and wondering if we really had to go back to the Shady Nook.
Over the years I’d make my way back up the hill to interview a performer, some boxer in training or cover a golf tournament at the Big G. The majesty of the Tudor-style main entrance, manicured grounds and stunning indoor pool with the observation window hadn’t lost its luster.
When Bonnie was pregnant with our oldest we were invited to stay over at the hotel. Elaine Etess insisted and put us up in the Eddie Cantor building. We ate in the dining room, not far from where Eleanor roamed and where Eddie and Liz shared pickles and a bottle of seltzer.
That was Grossinger’s.
blewis@th-record.com

YouTube Bonus
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=it7gvFIQFXY

 
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Maxine Gordon and the Jazz Flame – Jazz in Europe

Maxine Gordon and the Jazz Flame – Jazz in Europe

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https://jazzineurope.mfmmedia.nl/2018/08/maxine-gordon-and-the-jazz-flame/
 
Maxine Gordon and the Jazz Flame
Fiona Ross
Maxine Gordon. Historian, researcher, author, producer, scholar, consultant. President of the Dexter Gordon Society and President of Dex Music LLC (which controls the copyright to Dexter Gordon’s compositions and licenses his name and image). She was also married to Dexter Gordon. Woody Shaw’s ‘Theme for Maxine’ was written for her.  Now that I have had the huge honour of meeting Maxine, I will add role model and utter inspiration to this list.
Maxine has just completed an epic journey of writing ‘Sophisticated Giant: The life and legacy of Dexter Gordon’. The book is a masterpiece. Everything you think you want from a biography and things you didn’t realise you needed. The beautiful combination of historical facts, anecdotes and Dexter’s own words is brought together through Maxine’s own experiences, allowing us a precious insight into not only Dexter Gordon’s world but the wider context of time – this is a much-needed narrative. Maxine’s love and dedication to the role she has in bringing this story to an audience, makes it clear the value she places on the importance of the story that must be told – and told in the right way. Maxine Gordon is someone who carries within her the spark of true jazz, it’s in her very fibre, it runs through her veins and she is not only holding and sharing the flame of Jazz she is an actual part of that fire.
‘Maxine can translate for you. She speaks Be Bop’ – Dexter Gordon
I first met Maxine in a gorgeous, typical Parisian café in the Bastille district of Paris where we discussed her book, life with Dexter Gordon, the Jazz industry and so much more. I left this experience enlightened, inspired and honoured to have had the opportunity to sit and talk to such a legend. The whole experience would be a chapter in any biography of my own life.
I asked her about her experience of writing the book and what she hoped people would take away from it.
MG: I mean I promised him (Dexter Gordon) I would do this, but when I made the promise I didn’t really know what it would take. I mean he died in 1990, I had to go back to college – I wanted to write about jazz in the context of African American history, – but you know, I had to study it. You have to learn research methods, oral history. I mean I didn’t want to just write another jazz biography – that wasn’t what he had in mind. One of the people I quote extensively in the book is Jimmy Heath. He used to say to me, you got to get this book out before you die – and he’s 90! I was like, don’t worry, I’m getting it out. What I had in mind, was Dexter’s life story, as a way of talking about African American history, jazz history, his idea of living outside the country. Dexter read in the paper that we were expatriates ‘I thought we were just living in Europe’ so just because you are travelling and working somewhere else, doesn’t mean you are no longer part of that country. I hope people will think about Jazz in wider terms, people would be encouraged and particularly interested in incarcerated people – we have a very big problem in the US. My idea is to take the book to the prisons, drug users, the drug users union in Copenhagen, I went there and its was so great, I was like, can I put my husband picture up here? And they were like, we love Dexter! He never hid the fact that he was a drug user and he is a great hero. So, I’m interested in people that can identify with Dexter and what he said about his life and yes there were ups and downs, but in the end, he had a happy ending. He was an optimist.
FR: You are only accepting interviews from women and African Americans and all the book launch events are at independent book stores – an obvious question, but why?
MG: Ha, makes me sound a little narrow, doesn’t it? Ha! Well, most Jazz writers, or critics as they are called sometimes, typical ones, are men, of a certain age, white and I have found their approach does not include black cultural history and it doesn’t include the issues of gender and social issues that we are interested in. So, I was hoping that this book would be not so much a jazz biography, but a story of the culture of his life, musical, social and political and that he’d be the character to tell the story but the story would be bigger. My idea was to present him in relationship to African American cultural history. Our focus is Jazz, of course, but there are many other issues that we need to address. The idea for the book tour is to follow the geography of Dexter’s life. LA Nov, New York, Barcelona, Madrid, London etc. the launch in London is at Honest Johns and this is where all the musicians would hang out in London when they came to play at Ronnie Scott’s. Dexter would always go to Honest Johns and buy vinyl – he always liked to keep up with the latest recordings. Honest Johns, you know, they care about music. And I’m only doing independent book stores – I’m not doing chains – and I want to do black owned book stores.
Maxine is deeply passionate about the rights of musicians and the chapter ‘Business Lessons’ shows the harsh reality of contractual law and the impact on musicians lives. She describes Dexter and Miles Davis sharing a single room in 1946, taking turns to sleep in the one bed, but how they loved every minute of it because they were playing on 52nd Street.
MG: I have a chapter on what I call the political economy of bebop. I supported Prince when he put the word slave on his face. Love him. (personal note, a halo literally appeared over Maxine’s head at this point) I thought when I do start to write a book, I want to be clear and in Jazz studies, the focus is always on the big stars at the expense of what made them. You know Count Basie said, ‘I’m nothing without the band’ and Duke Ellington – it’s always about the band. I always tell people, especially young women, if you are going to go in the business and think people are going to say thank you, acknowledge how hard you work – well if they do, and I used to make this joke until it happened –  if they thank you it’s because they have a terminal illness. But then my very good friend, was sick, and he said I want to tell you something, and I got very worried, and I asked him are you sick, and he was like no – but he died a week later – and he just wanted to tell me that he appreciated that I never repeated, anything I saw or heard on the road with him. He said I just want you to know that that’s why we let you stay around. I was like ha, you didn’t let me stay around, I just stayed around! I was like first of all, I can’t remember, second of all, I don’t think about it, I don’t care! I was a road manager with 50 musicians, bookings to deal with, what did I care what they were doing?!

Dexter and Maxine Gordon
FR: You must have been so strong and fierce! You must have faced issue with being a woman back then?
MG: No, I just didn’t know it would be that hard. I mean, now, if you thought about it, if you want to be a performer, would you do it? No. If you really thought threw the economics of it and all the things involved, you’d be like never mind.  No, I didn’t have any barriers, actually not. And with the discussions going on at the moment, and talking to women about harassment I wonder why I didn’t have any of those problems. I think it was because I was just always around women. Shirley Scott and I were such good friends and I travelled with her, and we always had back up. It was very different back then, I mean there was a very famous booking agent back then and he paid my very first phone bill with Dexter. I saw this phone bill and was like what am I going to do and what he said was you must be doing a good job if you are making a lot of calls. I showed him the bill, and he said, ok I’ll pay it. And then when I made money and tried to pay him back, he wouldn’t take it. I just think I was around people that, by their experience, knew – you know some people come into the business, but they’re not like musicians, you know. And not that I’m fearless, but I’m not afraid to confront things if they don’t come through. I mean what we know now with the whole’ me too’, but back then, a lot of people are lucky because their careers would have been over. But now, I’ve told some people – don’t take down the music because you don’t know how to act. Don’t mess this up. And women have to be very careful today.  Camille Thurman, I love her. I’m totally devoted to her (even though I’m retired) and Dee Dee Bridgewater and I heard her and we went down and Camille got out of the car and Dee Dee said, ‘look if any one messes with you or touches you, makes you uncomfortable, you call me. You got back up. Maxine and I got your back’. Then she said,’ I’m not going to let them do to you what they tried to do to me’.
I love that. Incredible. Maxine and I talked about how women seem too often get labelled with the term diva or that they are difficult, when in reality they are just being strong, confident and not afraid to stand up for themselves
MG: What I would say about women in the business, always being attacked for being difficult, singers getting the diva label, but you know, I don’t accept that. Sometimes we have to be a little more you know, stronger, forceful, than the norm. Thinking about recording contracts – when I was negotiating Dexter’s first contract, I remember this guy, he was a great guy, and he was like Maxine, what you are asking for is not standard practice, and I said, well your standard practice is very unappealing. It doesn’t apply to what Dexter needs or wants.
Despite Maxine saying she wasn’t especially strong or fierce, she is very clearly an incredible woman.
‘In the end, we are joined together by our love of the music and our love of the musicians who have sacrificed so much to play it night after night’ – Maxine Gordon
This is Part One of this insightful interview, you can read Part Two here.

Interviewer: Fiona Ross
Purchase the book: Sophisticated Giant – The Life and legacy of Dexter Gordon  byMaxine Gordon
More information: The Dexter Gordon Society
Photo credits: Courtesy of Maxine Gordon – and (c) info: all rights go to original recording artist/ owner/ photographer(s).
Dexter Gordon Maxine Gordon
 
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Jack ‘Mr. Bongo’ Costanzo, dead at 98, collaborated with Judy Garland, Nat ‘King’ Cole, Marlon Brando – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Jack ‘Mr. Bongo’ Costanzo, dead at 98, collaborated with Judy Garland, Nat ‘King’ Cole, Marlon Brando – The San Diego Union-Tribune

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http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/entertainment/music/sd-me-music-jack-costanzo-obit-20180819-story.html
 
Jack ‘Mr. Bongo’ Costanzo, dead at 98, collaborated with Judy Garland, Nat ‘King’ Cole, Marlon Brando

George Varga
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Jack “Mr. Bongo” Costanzo had more than enough musical virtuosity to merit being considered synonymous with the percussion instrument to which he dedicated his life.
He also had the charisma and debonair good looks of some the Hollywood stars he collaborated with in the 1950s and ‘60s — whether on screen or as a percussion teacher — including Marlon Brando, James Dean, Gary Cooper and Elvis Presley. His other collaborators included Betty Grable, Barbra Streisand, Yma Sumac and Patti Page.
Costanzo passed away at his Lakeside home, just east of San Diego, late Saturday. His death came only six weeks shy of what would have been his 99th birthday on Sept. 24. The cause appears to have been complications from an aneurysm he suffered 10 years ago, according to his wife, Maureen Wilson Costanzo.
That aneurysm did not keep the tireless “Mr. Bongo” from headling concerts periodically until as recently as late 2015. Nor did it deter him from practicing his drumming at home, nearly every day, until just a few weeks ago.
“He had a charmed life and also a charmed death, because he didn’t suffer long,” said his daughter, Jill Costanzo.
“I think what he was proudest of was that he didn’t smoke or drink,” she continued. “He was square and was proud of it. He hung out with famous musicians who were shooting up, and he never did a thing. He stayed healthy, exercised and took good care of himself. He loved God very much and he was a very sensitive and empathetic person.”
Jack Costanzo’s final performance was on Aug. 9, when he sat in on congas at trumpeter and San Diego Latin-jazz mainstay Bill Caballero’s weekly jam session at Border X in Barrio Logan. Costanzo was admitted to Grossmont Hospital the next day, Aug. 10, then returned a few days later to his Lakeside home, where he received hospice care.
“Jack would always tell me: ‘Oh, I could’ve done better,’ but this last time at Bill’s jam session, he didn’t say that,” recalled Mrs. Wilson Costanzo..”He didn’t play with his usual power, but he enjoyed himself. And it was perfect that he got to perform the night before all this happened.”
Veteran San Diego concert promoter Steve Kader, a longtime friend, agreed.
“It was almost like Jack was passing the torch on to the other percussionists who were playing at the jam session,” said Kader, who also attended the Aug. 9 jam session. “Anyone who plays bongos was influenced by Jack, directly or indirectly.”
“He was a musician’s musician,” added Caballero, a regular musical partner of Costanzo for the past three decades. “Jack’s legacy speaks for itself — he played with Nat “King” Cole, Machito, Stan Kenton, Charlie Parker and so many more. He was in the (1965) Elvis Presley movie ‘Harum Scarum.’ He was all over the place, especially on the L.A. scene, before he moved to San Diego..”
Costanzo is the subject of a partially completed labor-of-love film documentary by director Nelson Datu Anderson, “Mr. Bongo,” which Anderson is seeking backing for to complete. A nearly 20 minute excerpt can be viewed on YouTube.
A Chicago native, Costanzo was 14 when he became enchanted with the bongos after hearing a musician play them at a dance concert at a ballroom in the Windy City. It was an epiphany.
“My eyes came out of my head!” the self-taught Costanzo recalled in a late 2015 Union-Tribune interview..
“I had to learn on my own, which is good, because I developed my own style. It seemed like it came natural. I listened to a lot of music. (Noted Spanish bandleader) Xavier Cugat was big. And, many years later, he hired me.”
Costanzo enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1942 and worked in aviation ordnance in the New Hebrides in the South Pacific. After being discharged in 1945, he moved to Los Angeles and became a dance instructor at the Beverly Hills Hotel.
“I hated it! I did not like being a dance teacher, at all,” he said in the 2015 Union-Tribune interview.
Gigs with various Latin bands, including one headed by Desi Arnaz, led to Costanzo being hired by big-band leader Stan Kenton in 1947. It was while on an East Coast tour with Kenton the same year that he got his stage name.
Leonard Feather — who in the 1960s became the Los Angeles Times’ jazz critic — called out “Mr. Bongo” when he saw Costanzo at a Philadelphia train station after a concert with Kenton. The name stuck.
“Afro Cuban Jazz North-of-the-Border,” Costanzo’s debut album as a band leader,” came out in 1955. In 1957 came “Mr. Bongo,” the first of about half a dozen Costanzo albums that used his stage moniker.
His musical command almost single-handedly — make that double-handedly — establish the bongos as a serious instrument. Costanzo also played a key role in bringing the instrument to the fore in both jazz and Latin jazz. He played the bongos with a winning combination of skill bravura, but always in service of the music.
Thanks to his musical talents and photogenic good looks, he was featured on camera in a number of movies and TV shows. Two highlights, which can both be viewed online on YouTube, are “I’m Gonna Live Till I Die” (which features Costanzo in a sizzling bongos and dance duet with Ann Miller) and “Come Rain or Come Shine” (an even more sizzling duet with Judy Garland).
Costanzo moved to San Diego from Los Angeles in the early 1970s. His two most recent albums of new music, “Back from Havana” and “Scorching the Skins,” were released in 2001 and 2002, respectively. The albums were followed by a concert tour that included at least one date in Canada.
“I wouldn t say he ever really retired,” noted Mrs. Wlson Costanzo. “When he didn’t have an agent anymore, he didn’t pursue jobs. But if someone came to him and said they’d like to use him, he’d jump at that. Jack was a remarkable guy. He was fun to be with and he did so much for me.”
In addition to Mrs. Wilson Costanzo, who was his fourth wife, and his daughter, Jill Costanzo, who is also a San Diego resident, Jack Costanzo is survived by two other daughters from his other marriages, CeeCee Costanzo in San Diego and Valerie Woo in Idaho, a son, Jack “J.J.” Costanzo, also in Idaho, and by Mrs. Wilson Costanzo’s son, Todd Wilson, in Kentucky, and daughter, Stacey Coulter, in San Diego.
His other survivors include seven grandchildren and six great grandchildren, according to Mrs. Wilson Costanzo, along with his third wife, Gerry Woo.
A private memorial service will be held for Costanzo’s immediate family members. A celebration of life concert is tentatively planned for Sept. 23, a day before what would have been his 99th birthday, at the Music Box in downtown San Diego.
george.varga@sduniontribune.com
Twitter @georgevarga
 
 

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William Parker’s Late-Career Bloom | The Nation

William Parker’s Late-Career Bloom | The Nation

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https://www.thenation.com/article/william-parkers-late-career-bloom/
 
William Parker’s Late-Career Bloom
After a 45-year-long career, the jazz bassist is still creating experimental music pulsing with humanity.
By David Hajdu
August 16, 2018 
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William Parker. (Photo by Bill Douthart)
A vast body of musical works refutes a widespread notion distinguishing avant-garde from traditional music: that one is cerebral and abstruse and the other emotive and accessible. However true this may be in any number of instances, William Parker’s work over the past 45 years demonstrates that deep feeling can flourish in the realm of deep experimentation. Over the course of his long and unwaning career as a composer, bandleader, bassist, and event organizer, Parker has produced a catalog of compositions and a legacy of performances distinguished both by their free-thinking, often radical sense of adventure and by their elemental dedication to beauty and human feeling.
More extraordinary, perhaps, Parker appears to be in the midst of a late-career blossoming, having released this summer a new three-album collection of compositions with words and music, sung by an assemblage of singers working in a widely varied range of styles. Titled Voices Fall From the Sky, the set of vocal pieces follows the release last year of an ambitious double album of instrumental ruminations on the meaning of music, Meditation/Resurrection. At 67, Parker is making his heftiest music yet, work that reaffirms the imaginative prowess that has made him a stalwart force in the sphere of “downtown” jazz and art music since the 1970s, and that also makes clear that he deserves more recognition beyond the borders of that ostensibly borderless domain of experimental music.
The first time I heard Parker in person, he was part of the six-member Cecil Taylor Unit, performing at Sweet Basil’s, a now-closed jazz club in Greenwich Village, in 1983. I caught him by accident, mistakenly thinking the Gil Evans Orchestra was playing that night. Curious about but utterly perplexed by the sound of irregular, unfettered, intuitive music that was so different from Evans’s lushly harmonic orchestrations, I toggled my attention from one to another of the musicians in the Taylor ensemble, desperate for grounding. Landing on Parker, I found myself entranced by the raw openness and overall sense of rightness in his playing. I didn’t understand much of what he or anyone else in the band was doing, exactly, but it felt good and true.
Over the decades since, I’ve heard Parker more than a dozen times in nearly as many configurations: playing jazz in small groups led by musicians like trumpeter Bill Dixon, violinist Billy Bang, and saxophonist David S. Ware; in duos with pianist Matthew Shipp; as the leader of his own groups, large and small; and as a frequent performer at the annual Vision Festival of experimental music, dance, and performance in New York, which was founded by dancer-choreographer Patricia Nicholson Parker. (They’re married.) The bulk of his enormous output has been in the vein of free jazz, a discipline of in-the-moment group improvisation that calls for highly sensitive listening and responsiveness and deep resources of musical imagination. Because of the primacy it gives freedom, the form may seem to indulge dilettantes and poseurs, but it actually serves to screen them out. Free jazz is a music for virtuosos of the imagination, and Parker’s achievements in it have proved him to be a creator of boundless inventiveness. At the same time, his music—as both a composer and an ensemble player—never (or rarely) abuses the creative liberty in freely improvised music. At its core, his work, like much of Ornette Coleman’s, has an almost imperceptible but ever-present feeling of the blues.
Parker’s new collection of vocal compositions, Voices Fall From the Sky, is a retrospective work in two ways: It includes some songs that he wrote at earlier points in his life, as well as an impressive number of new pieces; and it feels, overall, like a summing up of Parker’s feelings about life and art. The first disc comprises new or previously unrecorded songs rendered by an international cohort of singers. The tunes shuffle and entwine styles, nodding at chamber music (“Airlift”), post-bop loft jazz (“Bouquet for Borah”), vintage pop (“Small Lobby”), and Mexican folk music (“Despues de la Guerra”). The second disc, a gem from start to finish, is mostly made up of songs that Parker has written over the years and (in most cases) recorded on earlier albums, recast here for voice and bass. The spare treatment (with the exception of one song set for a small ensemble) brings out the delicacy of Parker’s simple melodies and earnest, unpretentious, highly personal lyrics. In “Sweet Breeze,” a gently wafting piece with a gospel strain, Leena Conquest sings:
Sweet breeze on the corner
Brings me back to the place I was born
I see Friday afternoon sun
Fading into evening that has not come
We listen to “Antiques” by Ornette Coleman
Cod fish and rolls

For most of the music on the third album in the set, Parker lays his words and melodies atop denser arrangements that emmploy several large ensembles, including the William Parker Orchestra, Kitchen House Blend, and the William Parker Double Quartet. Five of the nine tracks are new edits of recordings issued earlier on the Parker albums Essence of EllingtonAlphaville SuiteDouble Sunrise Over Neptune, and For Those Who Are, Still. The centerpiece of the third disc, a four-movement suite titled The Blinking of the Ear, may well be Parker’s grandest statement on his great theme: music itself as a life-giving force. Sung by AnnMarie Sandy, the suite is composed for voice, piano, and drums—no bass, presenting Parker as a spectral presence. Sandy sings:
Freedom
Freedom
Freedom
Freedom
Was always here inside my soul where God resides
Lift me up now where sound is light
And love
Music
Music is peace always

After a lifetime in free jazz, William Parker is ruminating on freedom in profoundly personal and spiritual terms. As always with Parker, the music is uncompromising—radical and radically beautiful.
 
 

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Revisit the Historic Night When Dizzy Gillespie Opened for Ray Charles in 1970 :: Music :: Features :: Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Charles :: Paste

Revisit the Historic Night When Dizzy Gillespie Opened for Ray Charles in 1970 :: Music :: Features :: Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Charles :: Paste

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https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2018/04/revisit-the-night-dizzy-gillespie-opened-for-ray-c.html
 
Revisit the Historic Night When Dizzy Gillespie Opened for Ray Charles in 1970
On April 18, 1970, the Fillmore East presented one of the greatest shows in its storied history. We have the tapes.
Did you know that Paste owns the world’s largest collection of live music recordings? It’s true! And what’s even crazier, it’s all free—hundreds of thousands of exclusive songs, concerts and videos that you can listen to and watch right here at Paste.com, from Lightnin’ Hopkins to Cream to Eminem to Prince. Every day, we’ll dig through the archive for the coolest recording we have from that date in history. Search and enjoy!
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There are so many hidden gems in the Paste Vault, sometimes it’s hard to know which to dust off and which to leave for another day. As it happens, April 18 is one of the most remarkable days in the history of live music. A glance through the archive on this date finds performances by Mother Maybelle Carter in 1963, The Staple Singers and Rahsaan Roland Kirk in 1968, Janis Ian in 1976, The Beach Boys and Warren Zevon in 1980, Tears for Fears 1983, Neil Young in 1988, Ezra Furman in 2008, Gary Clark Jr. in 2012, and more. All are priceless documents. But nothing quite compares to the night at the Fillmore East in 1970 when Dizzy Gillespie opened up for Ray Charles.
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This performance, recorded on the final night of one of the most legendary bills Bill Graham ever presented at the Fillmore East, captures the 52-year-old Dizzy Gillespie and his Quintet in remarkable form. Graham was a renowned lover of Latin music and perhaps for that reason, Gillespie may have been encouraged to put a heavy emphasis on that material, which he was also recording for the Perception label around that time. This show is a captivating mix of jazz rhythms and melodies laced with Latin-tinged grooves. Among the highlights are “Matrix,” an adventurous track from Gillespie’s Real Thing album for the Perception label, as well as his homage to Dr. Martin Luther King, “Brother K,” and “Closer.” The music has minimal comparisons to the traditional bop-jazz sound that cemented Gillespie’s reputation.
Following Gillespie were Ray Charles along with the Raelets and his remarkable orchestra. Discovered at the end of the Dizzy Gillespie master reels from this night, only the first 25 minutes of the performance seem to have survived on tape. But it is an astounding sequence, capturing one of the most electrifying evenings to occur on the Fillmore stage.
The Raelets sequence begins with a funky, Memphis soul-driven take on Ashford & Simpson’s “Running Out” and concludes with the deep soul of Don Covay’s “Chain of Fools.” 
Following the Raelets showcase set, the orchestra again takes off into “One Mint Julep,” featuring more incredible horn arrangements, prior to introducing Ray Charles to the stage of Fillmore East. As Charles takes over on piano, everything kicks up a notch and they blaze into another incredible instrumental workout. There are several outstanding solos here, with Charles encouraging Leroy Cooper to take an extended baritone solo that stands out from the rest. 
Prior to the tape stock running out, one tantalizing song is captured featuring Charles’ utterly compelling and emotive vocal, “The Bright Lights And You Girl.” This is another outstanding performance that seems to effortlessly glide along with Charles’s distinctive flare. 
What remains is a superb document of one of the greatest performances ever to occur at Fillmore East.
 
 

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How Aretha Franklin’s ‘Respect’ Became a Battle Cry for Musicians Seeking Royalties – The New York Times

How Aretha Franklin’s ‘Respect’ Became a Battle Cry for Musicians Seeking Royalties – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/17/arts/aretha-franklin-respect-copyright.html?hp
 
How Aretha Franklin’s ‘Respect’ Became a Battle Cry for Musicians Seeking Royalties
Aug. 17, 2018
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Aretha Franklin in 1980. Though the song “Respect” propelled her to fame, she earned no royalties from the millions of times it played on the radio.Keystone/Getty Images
It was Aretha Franklin’s first No. 1 hit, the cry of empowerment that has defined her for generations: “Respect.”
But for the roughly seven million times the song has been played on American radio stations, she was paid nothing.
When Ms. Franklin died on Thursday at age 76, fans celebrated the song all over again as a theme for the women’s rights movement. But in the music industry, “Respect” has also played a symbolic role in a long fight over copyright issues that, advocates say, have deprived artists like Ms. Franklin of fair royalty payments.
Under an aspect of copyright law that has long irked the record business, American radio stations pay only the writers and publishers of a song, not the artists who perform them. “Respect” was written by Otis Redding, who sang it as a man’s demand for recognition from his wife. Ms. Franklin turned the song upside down — or right-side up — and took it to heights Mr. Redding never dreamed of.
But every time the song is played on the radio, Mr. Redding’s estate — he died in a 1967 plane crash — has been paid. Ms. Franklin never was.
Efforts to change the law go back decades, with “Respect” often held up by the music industry as Exhibit A for why it was unfair. But broadcasters, a powerful lobbying group, have successfully argued that performers already benefit from the promotion they receive from radio play.
“Some recordings more clearly highlight the inequity of the laws, and ‘Respect’ is one of the best examples,” said Mitch Glazier, the president of the Recording Industry Association of America, a trade group representing the major labels.
In recent years, “Respect” has also become a battle song in a fight over digital rights. Laws passed in the 1990s let performing artists collect royalties from internet and satellite radio, but songs were exempt if they were recorded before a change in federal copyright law took effect in 1972.
A 2014 bill to change that was named the Respect Act in honor of the song, which Ms. Franklin recorded in 1967. A lobbying campaign was titled “It’s a Matter of R-E-S-P-E-C-T,” with Ms. Franklin’s approval. And a current bill in Congress, the Music Modernization Act, would force digital radio services to pay royalties for songs recorded before 1972.
But as the bill has encountered opposition in the Senate, Ms. Franklin has again become a face for musicians’ anger.
After Sirius XM announced a tribute to Ms. Franklin on Thursday, David Lowery of the band Cracker, an outspoken artists’ rights advocate, protested on Twitter.
“Best way to pay RESPECT?” he wrote. “Pay her!”
The satellite service Sirius XM agreed in a settlement three years ago to pay record labels more than $200 million for its use of songs created before 1972, and to enter into new licensing deals, which would benefit performers like Ms. Franklin. But it has opposed the bill because it exempts terrestrial radio from the payments.
”Respect” entered Ms. Franklin’s repertoire at a pivotal moment in her career, as she was leaving Columbia Records for Atlantic, where she became a national star. Mr. Redding’s “Respect” had reached No. 4 on the R&B chart in late 1965.
“I liked his version,” Ms. Franklin told The Washington Post in 1987. “Of course, I felt I could bring something new to it.”
According to David Ritz’s biography “Respect: The Life of Aretha Franklin,” the song was already part of her live show by 1966. In the book, the producer Jerry Wexler recounts a conversation with Ted White, Ms. Franklin’s husband and manager at the time. Mr. Wexler was looking for songs for Ms. Franklin, and was fine with “Respect” as long as she “changes it up from the original.”
“You don’t gotta worry about that, Wex,” Mr. White replied, according to the book. “She changes it up all right.”
Ms. Franklin made small but crucial adjustments to the lyrics. Where Mr. Redding sang, “Do me wrong, honey, if you wanna / You can do me wrong, honey, while I’m gone,” for example, Ms. Franklin sang: “I ain’t gonna do you wrong while you’re gone / Ain’t gonna do you wrong ‘cause I don’t wanna.”
She also added what became the song’s signature line: “R-E-S-P-E-C-T / Find out what it means to me.”
Ms. Franklin’s reinvention of Mr. Redding’s song has continued to fascinate critics. Peter Guralnick, the author of books like “Sweet Soul Music: Rhythm and Blues and the Southern Dream of Freedom,” noted that she transformed the original meaning “not so much by changing the lyrics, as by the feeling that she imparted on the song — so that ‘Respect’ became a proclamation of freedom, a proclamation of feminism, a proclamation of an independent spirit.”
While the song has been used as a P.R. weapon in the industry’s policy wars, Ms. Franklin usually remained uninvolved. The song was lucrative for her in other ways, including record sales and concerts. In an interview on Friday, Mr. Ritz said he was not aware of any opinion that she had about royalties for “Respect,” but said that “she felt exploited” by the industry in general.
The Universal Music Publishing Group, which controls Mr. Redding’s songwriting copyright, declined to say how much the song has earned. But the licensing agency BMI said that “Respect” had been played 7.4 million times on commercial radio stations in the United States since it was released.
Barry Massarsky, an economist who specializes in valuing music catalogs, estimated that over the last five years alone, “Respect” has earned about $500,000, about 40 percent of that from commercial radio and the rest from television and streaming services.
For streaming services like Spotify, their use of songs, old or new, is covered by licensing deals that do generally benefit performers like Ms. Franklin. Those services have seen a surge in interest in her music since her death: “Respect” was streamed on Apple Music more than half a million times worldwide on Thursday, the service said.
A spokesman for the National Association of Broadcasters, which represents radio stations, declined to comment. But the organization has long opposed proposals to create a royalty for performing artists. A document on the organization’s website says that such new royalties “could reduce the variety of music radio stations play, and all but eliminate the possibility of new artists breaking onto the scene.”
Mr. Redding’s heirs may profit from the song, but his estate — including his daughter, Karla Redding-Andrews — has supported changing the law covering pre-1972 songs.
Jeff Jampol, who manages the estate, said that for artists like Ms. Franklin and Mr. Redding, unfair financial treatment was built into the fabric of their early careers, and the music industry has not fully made amends.
“The record business has a long history of treating artists like chattel slavery,” Mr. Jampol said. “We’ve grown out of those dark ages a bit, but when it comes to actually paying them fairly, that is the last needle to move.”
Matthew Haag contributed reporting and Alain Delaquérière contributed research.
Follow Ben Sisario on Twitter: @sisario.
A version of this article appears in print on Aug. 18, 2018, on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: ‘Respect’ Didn’t Pay Franklin Much. A Copyright Quirk Endures.. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 
 

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Book Review ‘Playing Changes’ Review: No Longer Wrestling With Ghosts Larry Blumenfeld – WSJ

Book Review ‘Playing Changes’ Review: No Longer Wrestling With Ghosts Larry Blumenfeld – WSJ

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/playing-changes-review-no-longer-wrestling-with-ghosts-1534467375
 
‘Playing Changes’ Review: No Longer Wrestling With Ghosts
A longtime jazz critic contemplates the genre’s present and future.
Larry Blumenfeld
Aug. 16, 2018 8:56 p.m. ET
Kamasi Washington at the Okeechobee Music & Arts Festival in Okeechobee, Fla., on March 4, 2016.
Kamasi Washington at the Okeechobee Music & Arts Festival in Okeechobee, Fla., on March 4, 2016. Photo: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic
In the months leading up to Ken Burns’s 10-part, 19-hour documentary “Jazz,” which first aired on PBS in 2001, the director hit the road with the fervor of a political candidate. One stop along his tour, hosted by Columbia University’s Center for Jazz Studies, brought a telling moment. Professor and author Krin Gabbard gleefully noted “cinematic miracles” performed by the filmmaker through rare photographs and obscure footage. But he had a problem: “The program,” which gives short shrift to the music after the 1960s, “really doesn’t give us a reason to care about the present and future of jazz.” 
In the first chapter of “Playing Changes: Jazz for the New Century”—a book about why readers and listeners might care about jazz’s present and future—author Nate Chinen reports that the five-CD boxed set “Ken Burns Jazz: The Story of America’s Music” sold 40,000 copies before the first episode aired. Mr. Burns boosted jazz’s meager market share (less than 3%) but also promoted jazz as a wondrous story that, alas, had run out of steam. Mr. Chinen cites a moment in Mr. Burns’s film—taken somewhat out of context, he claims—when saxophonist Branford Marsalis explained that, in the 1970s, “Jazz just kind of died. It just kind of went away for a while.”
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Playing Changes
By Nate Chinen 
Pantheon, 273 pages, $27.95
Reports of jazz’s death have been ill-advised and, yes, misquoted. So too have tales of the music’s resurrections and saviors. Mr. Chinen chronicles these with irony, mostly through headlines: “Will Charles Lloyd Save Jazz for the Masses?” (New York Times, 1968), “JAZZ Comes Back!” (Newsweek, 1977), “The New Jazz Age” (Time, 1990).
Mr. Chinen began his dozen years of jazz coverage for the New York Times in 2005. (He is now Director of Editorial Content for WBGO, Newark, one the few public radio stations dedicated to jazz and blues.) His criticism and reporting shy away from grand pronouncements yet amply reflect jazz’s present vitality. Ken Burns’s storyline reached a dead end; today’s improvising musicians, Mr. Chinen argues, “scour jazz history not for a linear narrative but a network of possibilities.”
His book about jazz today begins with “a reflection on the crisis of confidence that distorted jazz’s ecology during the late phases of the twentieth century.” His master-shot sequence for that tension is the 1984 Grammy Awards ceremony: Trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, then 22, accepted his Best Jazz Instrumental Performance award by thanking the masters who “gave an art form to the American people that cannot be limited by enforced trends or . . . bad taste.” For Mr. Chinen, Mr. Marsalis’s comment, offered “with a crooked grin, raised eyebrows and a little head waggle,” targeted a jazz master—pianist Herbie Hancock (then 43), whose “Rockit” won that year’s Best R&B Instrumental Performance award (and introduced a wider public to, among other things, the art of turntablism).
Jazz’s Present and Future
Mr. Marsalis’s startling success paved the way for the establishment of Jazz at Lincoln Center in 1987 and, for Mr. Chinen, carried a message: “At this stage in its history, jazz had to choose between one of two existing models: classical and pop.” By the 1990s, he writes, musicians and critics “felt compelled to take sides in what became a rift colloquially known as ‘The Jazz Wars.’” The jazz wars subsided largely because both sides realized insufficient spoils. Mr. Chinen ignores that fact, yet makes a persuasive case that this once-elemental schism is now largely beside the point. 
Mr. Chinen’s narrative begins with saxophonist Kamasi Washington standing tall onstage at the Coachella Festival (“the desert summit of California boho-chic”) and ends with guitarist Mary Halvorson seated mostly out of view on the bandstand of the Village Vanguard, Manhattan’s basement jazz shrine. He explores the range of stances, broadly visible on our cultural landscape and not, that constitute making jazz today—and “making it” while making jazz.
Thankfully, Mr. Chinen doesn’t seek to define jazz. He focuses on subtler existential dilemmas. Singer Cécile McLorin Salvant impresses because she is “neither wrestling with ghosts nor shouldering a weight of obligation”; she is “both the fulfillment of a promise and the rejection of an idea.” Mr. Chinen quotes novelist David Foster Wallace to relate pianist Brad Mehldau’s quandary: “The old postmodern insurgents risked the gasp and squeal. . . . The new rebels might be artists willing to risk the yawn, the rolled eyes, the cool smile, the nudged ribs, the parody of gifted ironists, the ‘Oh how banal.’ ” That, too, is jazz’s current challenge.
Mr. Chinen recognizes the benefits of jazz institutions (a recent development) but also the stultifying effect of jazz as “America’s classical music.” He reports on a new breed of elder with “no real investment in a rhetoric of purity,” best exemplified through saxophonist Wayne Shorter’s long-running quartet. Yet it’s not just elders showing the way: In search of rhythmic purpose, drummer Questlove hears, in the late-1990s work of beat-making hip-hop producer J Dilla, “someone to lead us out of the darkness, to take us across the desert.”
An old idea for organizing—the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), founded in Chicago in 1965—emerges as freshly and broadly empowering. The institutions where jazz now comfortably resides get doses of insurgent spirit. Pianist Jason Moran installs a special ramp for a collaboration with skateboarders at the Kennedy Center, where he directs jazz programming. Pianist Vijay Iyer, now a Harvard professor, describes the need to “infiltrate and ambush” at elite institutions, such as the Ojai Music Festival, where he recently served as music director.
Jazz fans and critics love to quibble. Yet Mr. Chinen’s choices—his narrative subjects and lists of recommended recordings—are hard to question. Saxophonist Steve Coleman embodies his book’s forward-leaning attitude and intellectual rigor, bassist and singer Esperanza Spalding its open-minded yet knowing positivity. (Still, clearer focus on pianist Geri Allen might have served him well: She bridged the “uptown-downtown” divide he chronicles with rare grace, and shined a light on other jazz heroines such as Mary Lou Williams. )
One chapter, “The Crossroads,” begins and ends with Cuban drummers invoking African deities. In between, it addresses globalization: A Blue Note jazz club opens in Beijing; a pianist with prodigious skills, not yet in his teens, arrives in the U.S. from Bali; the United Nations establishes “International Jazz Day.” Here Mr. Chinen conflates points that beg separate discussions. A deepened focus on elemental roots in the African Diaspora has invigorated jazz while rescuing Afro-Cuban and other traditions from a ghetto called “Latin jazz.” In a related sense, jazz’s present context requires reconsideration of its relationship to American identity. Mr. Iyer, born in the U.S. of Indian descent, hints at this last point. “What is it that we are calling the jazz tradition?” he asks. “Is it more than a series of exclusions?”
In the introduction to his 1970 book, “The Jazz Tradition,” critic Martin Williams described a society in danger of “losing old gods” and claimed that jazz “involves discovery of one’s worthiness from within.” The role of jazz as ritual music with a spiritual function is notably less conspicuous here.
Nevertheless, Mr. Chinen appears bent on a kind of enlightenment. His narrative traces a sturdy, finely crafted and open-ended framework for consideration of where jazz is headed, and why—and a treaty to maintain jazz-war disarmament. Early on, he cites the title of a Steve Coleman composition, “Multiplicity of Approaches (The African Way of Knowing).” He articulates his own version of that idea, too. “Instead of stark binaries and opposing factions, we face a blur of contingent alignments,” he writes. “Instead of a push for definition and one prevailing style, we have boundless permutations without fixed parameters. That multiplicity lies precisely at the heart of the new aesthetic—and is the engine of its greatest promise.” 
—Mr. Blumenfeld has written regularly about jazz for the Journal since 2004.
 
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Nearly two dozen sickened by gas leak at The Iridium jazz club in Midtown – NY Daily News

Nearly two dozen sickened by gas leak at The Iridium jazz club in Midtown – NY Daily News

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http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-metro-iridium-jazz-club-carbon-monoxide-leak-20180816-story.html
 
Nearly two dozen sickened by gas leak at The Iridium jazz club in Midtown
By Kerry Burke  and JOHN ANNESE
Nearly two dozen sickened by gas leak at The Iridium jazz club in Midtown
Firefighters speak with club management outside The Iridium, a basement Jazz club on Broadway at W. 51st St., after a carbon dioxide leak sickened several patrons Thursday night. (Sam Costanza / for New York Daily News)
A carbon dioxide leak at a Midtown jazz club sickened 23 people late Thursday night, officials said.
The gas started blasting out of a leaky soda fountain tank at The Iridium, a basement jazz club on Broadway at W. 51st St., just before 10:15 p.m., police sources said.
At least 19 of those sickened were treated at the scene with oxygen, sources said.People were complaining of dizziness and headaches, sources said. So far, none have needed to go to a hospital.
Medics treat several patrons of The Iridium jazz club on Broadway at W 51st St. after a carbon dioxide leak Thursday night.
Medics treat several patrons of The Iridium jazz club on Broadway at W 51st St. after a carbon dioxide leak Thursday night. (Sam Costanza / for New York Daily News)
Police blocked off the southbound side of Broadway between W. 50th and W. 52nd Sts., as firefighters vented the club.
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The Iridium was hosting a show by British music legend Denny Laine and Beatles audio engineer Geoff Emerick called “From Liverpool to London Town.”
Emerick’s manager, who didn’t give her name, said he was on stage giving a talk at the time of the leak.
“The fire department came in and said “Everybody out!” she said. She was treated with oxygen in an ambulance outside the club.
“People were just enjoying the show, but I got a really bad headache,” she said.
More than 90 people showed up to see the duo, Bo Diaz, 28, who buses tables at the club.
“Initially I didn’t feel it, but when I got outside, I was dizzy and I got a headache,” Diaz said.
The club’s manager, who also didn’t give his name, said no alarms went off before the FDNY showed up.
“There was a leak in the CO2 container — the tanks that give bubble to the soda,” he said. “There was an issue with the ventilation system. We had a problem getting clean air in and dirty air out.”
 
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Aretha Franklin Had Power. Did We Truly Respect It? – The New York Times

Aretha Franklin Had Power. Did We Truly Respect It? – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/16/arts/music/respect-aretha-franklin-death.html?hp
 
Aretha Franklin Had Power. Did We Truly Respect It?
Aug. 16, 2018
An Appraisal
By Wesley Morris
 
https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/08/17/arts/17franklinappraisal4/merlin_142423365_e0f5c251-1b8a-4b11-b2ec-3f5192b99cd0-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale
Aretha Franklin turned Otis Redding’s plea into the most empowering popular recording ever made.Lee McDonald/Las Vegas News Bureau, via EPA/Shutterstock
Officially, “Respect” is a relationship song. That’s how Otis Redding wrote it. But love wasn’t what Aretha Franklin was interested in. The opening line is “What you want, baby, I got it.” But her “what” is a punch in the face. So Ms. Franklin’s rearrangement was about power. She had the right to be respected — by some dude, perhaps by her country. Just a little bit. What did love have to do with that?
Depending on the house you grew up in and how old you are, “Respect” is probably a song you learned early. The spelling lesson toward the end helps. So do the turret blasts of “sock it to me” that show up here and there. But, really, the reason you learn “Respect” is the way “Respect” is sung. Redding made it a burning plea. Ms. Franklin turned the plea into the most empowering popular recording ever made.
Ms. Franklin died on Thursday, at 76, which means “Respect” is going to be an even more prominent part of your life than usual. The next time you hear it, notice what you do with your hands. They’re going to point — at a person, a car or a carrot. They’ll rest on your hips. Your neck might roll. Your waist will do a thing. You’ll snarl. Odds are high that you’ll feel better than great. You’re guaranteed to feel indestructible.
Aretha Franklin – “Respect”Video by Aretha Franklin – Topic
Ms. Franklin’s respect lasts for two minutes and 28 seconds. That’s all — basically a round of boxing. Nothing that’s over so soon should give you that much strength. But that was Aretha Franklin: a quick trip to the emotional gym. Obviously, she was far more than that. We’re never going to have an artist with a career as long, absurdly bountiful, nourishing and constantly surprising as hers. We’re unlikely to see another superstar as abundantly steeped in real self-confidence — at so many different stages of life, in as many musical genres.
That self-confidence wasn’t evident only in the purses and perms and headdresses and floor-length furs; the buckets and buckets of great recordings; the famous demand that she always be paid before a show, in cash; or the Queen of Soul business — the stuff that keeps her monotonously synonymous with “diva.” It was there in whatever kept her from stopping and continuing to knock us dead. To paraphrase one of Ms. Franklin’s many (many) musical progeny: She slayed. “Respect” became an anthem for us, because it seemed like an anthem for her.
https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/08/17/arts/17franklinappraisal3/merlin_142424142_e4dffd09-f6a6-4447-a1a7-998e4c8b95aa-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale
Most Americans had never heard anything quite as dependably great and shockingly big as Ms. Franklin’s voice.Las Vegas News Bureau, via Reuters
[Never miss a pop music story: Sign up for our weekly newsletter, Louder.]
The song owned the summer of 1967. It arrived amid what must have seemed like never-ending turmoil — race riots, political assassinations, the Vietnam draft. Muhammad Ali had been stripped of his championship title for refusing to serve in the war. So amid all this upheaval comes a singer from Detroit who’d been around most of the decade doing solid gospel R&B work. But there was something about this black woman’s asserting herself that seemed like a call to national arms. It wasn’t a polite song. It was hard. It was deliberate. It was sure. And that all came from Ms. Franklin — her rumbling, twanging, compartmentalized arrangement. It came, of course, from her singing.
Because lots of major pop stars now have great, big voices, maybe it’s easy to forget that most Americans had never heard anything quite as dependably great and shockingly big as Ms. Franklin’s. The reason we have watched “Showtime at the Apollo” or “American Idol” or “The Voice” is out of some desperate hope that somebody walks out there and sounds like Aretha. She established a standard for artistic vocal excellence, and it will outlast us all.
She, along with Sam Cooke, Ray Charles, Otis Redding, Tina Turner and Patti LaBelle, changed where the stress fell in popular singing. Now you could glean a story from lyrics but also hear it in the tone of the singer’s voice — agony, ecstasy and everything beyond and in between. Roots, soil, pavement on one hand, the stratosphere on the other.
I know. That does just sound like the art of singing. But when gospel left the church and entered the body — the black body — we called that soul. And a good soul artist could make singing for sex sound like she was singing for God. They call that secular music. But it just repositioned what else could be holy. Almost nobody — and even then, maybe just Ray Charles — did as much toggling between and conflating of the religious and the randy with as much sincere athletic imagination and humor and swagger as Ms. Franklin.
“Dr. Feelgood (Love Is a Serious Business),” the hit from 1967 that she co-wrote, never fails to chill, arouse and amuse. Ms. Franklin performs it with a mix of exasperation and smoldering anticipation. That song’s never sounded better or more theatrical than it does on “Aretha Live at Fillmore West,” from 1971. Its structural brilliance is that there’s no robust chorus or melody, just Ms. Franklin, her piano, a blues groove and her mood. She wants a friend to get going so she can have sex with her man. But who’s been shown the door with this much flair?
The song starts, “I don’t want nobody always sitting around me and my man.” You could bake a pie in the pause between “nobody” and “always.” And when she gets to “sitting,” she takes a deep, five-second drag on the “s” so that it sounds less like a consonant and more like a lit fuse. The remaining six and a half minutes put you in exhilarated suspense over when her top’s gonna blow.
Almost nobody was able to switch between the religious and the randy with as much sincere imagination and humor as Ms. Franklin.Keystone/Getty Images
There are so many things to love about this performance: its sexiness, its playfulness, its resolve, all the space in the arrangement for Ms. Franklin’s singing to stay low until it takes off high, the way that once she finally connects with Dr. Feelgood himself, the crowd audibly connects with the song or, really, just more deeply connects, since people had been shouting stuff like, “Sing it, Aretha!” between her pauses. You can feel in that moment the hold Ms. Franklin had over anybody who ever saw — or heard — her sing. She worked with bottomless reserves of swagger.
We tend not to think of Ms. Franklin that way — as an artist of bravado and nerve and daring, as a woman with swagger. We tend not to think of her this way even though nearly every song she sang brimmed over with it. (She sang about taking care of business — the old “tcb” — and, consequently, having her business taken care of, as much as she sang about respect.) Swagger we left to the Elvis Presleys and James Browns and Mick Jaggers. But “swagger” is the only word for, say, her approach to the music of other artists.
It didn’t matter whether it was a Negro spiritual or something by the Beatles. It was all wet clay to her. The Supremes, Frank Sinatra, Leonard Cohen, Adele, Simon and Garfunkel, James Taylor, ? and the Mysterians, C & C Music Factory: She oversaw more gut renovations than a general contractor. In 1979, she took the occasion of B.B. King’s “The Thrill Is Gone” to allow her backing singer to exclaim that she (and they) were “free at last.” Toward the end of her funked-up, very fun version of Sam & Dave’s “Hold On, I’m Comin’,” from the 1981 album “Love All the Hurt Away,” she tossed in some “beep-beeps” and a couple of lines from “Little Jack Horner” because she knew she could make it work.
If good soul music is like good barbecue — slow cooked, falls off the bone — by the 1980s, she’d become a pit master, yelping and barking and wailing, but also talking in songs, sermonizing. You know the char and gristle, the bits of sugar and salt and fat on, say, a perfectly done slab of ribs? Most of this woman’s songs were blackened that way. Yet if Ms. Franklin told you she was going to take a classic R&B song and throw in a little nursery rhyme, you’d be nervous. Did 1986 really need a cover of “Jumpin’ Jack Flash?” Probably not. But she did it anyway — and robustly — and threw in a “hallelujah” while she was at it.
But, by that point, Ms. Franklin seemed well on her way to becoming somebody who might have relished the culture’s doubt. She loved music too much to be vestigial or nostalgic or relegated. She wanted — you know, what she wanted. And eventually respect was tricky to come by. I, at least, remember sitting on my bed watching the 1998 Grammys and hearing that she’d be filling in for Luciano Pavarotti and rolling my eyes. Ms. Franklin knew. She went out there, sang some Puccini, and left the nation in shock. The Queen of Opera, too? 
Is it possible that despite the milestones and piles of Grammys (the now-defunct female R&B vocal performance category seemed invented just for her; she won the first eight), despite famously having been crowned the greatest singer of all time in a vast Rolling Stone survey, despite being Aretha Franklin, the Greatest was also rather underrated — as a piano player, as an arranger (who had a greater imagination when it came to coloring a song with backing singers), as an album artist? Despite the world’s bereavement over her death, despite her having been less a household name and more a spiritual resident of our actual home, despite giving us soundtracks for loneliness, for lovemaking, for joy, for church, cookouts and bars, despite the induction ceremonies, medals and honorary degrees, despite her having been the only Aretha most of us have ever heard of, is it possible that we’ve taken her for granted, that in failing to make her president, a saint or her own country, we still might not have paid her enough respect? Just a little bit.
 
 

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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Aretha Franklin Had Power. Did We Truly Respect It? – The New York Times

Aretha Franklin Had Power. Did We Truly Respect It? – The New York Times

jazzLogo.jpg

shem.gif
shem.gif
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/16/arts/music/respect-aretha-franklin-death.html?hp
 
Aretha Franklin Had Power. Did We Truly Respect It?
Aug. 16, 2018
An Appraisal
By Wesley Morris
 
https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/08/17/arts/17franklinappraisal4/merlin_142423365_e0f5c251-1b8a-4b11-b2ec-3f5192b99cd0-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale
Aretha Franklin turned Otis Redding’s plea into the most empowering popular recording ever made.Lee McDonald/Las Vegas News Bureau, via EPA/Shutterstock
Officially, “Respect” is a relationship song. That’s how Otis Redding wrote it. But love wasn’t what Aretha Franklin was interested in. The opening line is “What you want, baby, I got it.” But her “what” is a punch in the face. So Ms. Franklin’s rearrangement was about power. She had the right to be respected — by some dude, perhaps by her country. Just a little bit. What did love have to do with that?
Depending on the house you grew up in and how old you are, “Respect” is probably a song you learned early. The spelling lesson toward the end helps. So do the turret blasts of “sock it to me” that show up here and there. But, really, the reason you learn “Respect” is the way “Respect” is sung. Redding made it a burning plea. Ms. Franklin turned the plea into the most empowering popular recording ever made.
Ms. Franklin died on Thursday, at 76, which means “Respect” is going to be an even more prominent part of your life than usual. The next time you hear it, notice what you do with your hands. They’re going to point — at a person, a car or a carrot. They’ll rest on your hips. Your neck might roll. Your waist will do a thing. You’ll snarl. Odds are high that you’ll feel better than great. You’re guaranteed to feel indestructible.
Aretha Franklin – “Respect”Video by Aretha Franklin – Topic
Ms. Franklin’s respect lasts for two minutes and 28 seconds. That’s all — basically a round of boxing. Nothing that’s over so soon should give you that much strength. But that was Aretha Franklin: a quick trip to the emotional gym. Obviously, she was far more than that. We’re never going to have an artist with a career as long, absurdly bountiful, nourishing and constantly surprising as hers. We’re unlikely to see another superstar as abundantly steeped in real self-confidence — at so many different stages of life, in as many musical genres.
That self-confidence wasn’t evident only in the purses and perms and headdresses and floor-length furs; the buckets and buckets of great recordings; the famous demand that she always be paid before a show, in cash; or the Queen of Soul business — the stuff that keeps her monotonously synonymous with “diva.” It was there in whatever kept her from stopping and continuing to knock us dead. To paraphrase one of Ms. Franklin’s many (many) musical progeny: She slayed. “Respect” became an anthem for us, because it seemed like an anthem for her.
https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/08/17/arts/17franklinappraisal3/merlin_142424142_e4dffd09-f6a6-4447-a1a7-998e4c8b95aa-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale
Most Americans had never heard anything quite as dependably great and shockingly big as Ms. Franklin’s voice.Las Vegas News Bureau, via Reuters
[Never miss a pop music story: Sign up for our weekly newsletter, Louder.]
The song owned the summer of 1967. It arrived amid what must have seemed like never-ending turmoil — race riots, political assassinations, the Vietnam draft. Muhammad Ali had been stripped of his championship title for refusing to serve in the war. So amid all this upheaval comes a singer from Detroit who’d been around most of the decade doing solid gospel R&B work. But there was something about this black woman’s asserting herself that seemed like a call to national arms. It wasn’t a polite song. It was hard. It was deliberate. It was sure. And that all came from Ms. Franklin — her rumbling, twanging, compartmentalized arrangement. It came, of course, from her singing.
Because lots of major pop stars now have great, big voices, maybe it’s easy to forget that most Americans had never heard anything quite as dependably great and shockingly big as Ms. Franklin’s. The reason we have watched “Showtime at the Apollo” or “American Idol” or “The Voice” is out of some desperate hope that somebody walks out there and sounds like Aretha. She established a standard for artistic vocal excellence, and it will outlast us all.
She, along with Sam Cooke, Ray Charles, Otis Redding, Tina Turner and Patti LaBelle, changed where the stress fell in popular singing. Now you could glean a story from lyrics but also hear it in the tone of the singer’s voice — agony, ecstasy and everything beyond and in between. Roots, soil, pavement on one hand, the stratosphere on the other.
I know. That does just sound like the art of singing. But when gospel left the church and entered the body — the black body — we called that soul. And a good soul artist could make singing for sex sound like she was singing for God. They call that secular music. But it just repositioned what else could be holy. Almost nobody — and even then, maybe just Ray Charles — did as much toggling between and conflating of the religious and the randy with as much sincere athletic imagination and humor and swagger as Ms. Franklin.
“Dr. Feelgood (Love Is a Serious Business),” the hit from 1967 that she co-wrote, never fails to chill, arouse and amuse. Ms. Franklin performs it with a mix of exasperation and smoldering anticipation. That song’s never sounded better or more theatrical than it does on “Aretha Live at Fillmore West,” from 1971. Its structural brilliance is that there’s no robust chorus or melody, just Ms. Franklin, her piano, a blues groove and her mood. She wants a friend to get going so she can have sex with her man. But who’s been shown the door with this much flair?
The song starts, “I don’t want nobody always sitting around me and my man.” You could bake a pie in the pause between “nobody” and “always.” And when she gets to “sitting,” she takes a deep, five-second drag on the “s” so that it sounds less like a consonant and more like a lit fuse. The remaining six and a half minutes put you in exhilarated suspense over when her top’s gonna blow.
Almost nobody was able to switch between the religious and the randy with as much sincere imagination and humor as Ms. Franklin.Keystone/Getty Images
There are so many things to love about this performance: its sexiness, its playfulness, its resolve, all the space in the arrangement for Ms. Franklin’s singing to stay low until it takes off high, the way that once she finally connects with Dr. Feelgood himself, the crowd audibly connects with the song or, really, just more deeply connects, since people had been shouting stuff like, “Sing it, Aretha!” between her pauses. You can feel in that moment the hold Ms. Franklin had over anybody who ever saw — or heard — her sing. She worked with bottomless reserves of swagger.
We tend not to think of Ms. Franklin that way — as an artist of bravado and nerve and daring, as a woman with swagger. We tend not to think of her this way even though nearly every song she sang brimmed over with it. (She sang about taking care of business — the old “tcb” — and, consequently, having her business taken care of, as much as she sang about respect.) Swagger we left to the Elvis Presleys and James Browns and Mick Jaggers. But “swagger” is the only word for, say, her approach to the music of other artists.
It didn’t matter whether it was a Negro spiritual or something by the Beatles. It was all wet clay to her. The Supremes, Frank Sinatra, Leonard Cohen, Adele, Simon and Garfunkel, James Taylor, ? and the Mysterians, C & C Music Factory: She oversaw more gut renovations than a general contractor. In 1979, she took the occasion of B.B. King’s “The Thrill Is Gone” to allow her backing singer to exclaim that she (and they) were “free at last.” Toward the end of her funked-up, very fun version of Sam & Dave’s “Hold On, I’m Comin’,” from the 1981 album “Love All the Hurt Away,” she tossed in some “beep-beeps” and a couple of lines from “Little Jack Horner” because she knew she could make it work.
If good soul music is like good barbecue — slow cooked, falls off the bone — by the 1980s, she’d become a pit master, yelping and barking and wailing, but also talking in songs, sermonizing. You know the char and gristle, the bits of sugar and salt and fat on, say, a perfectly done slab of ribs? Most of this woman’s songs were blackened that way. Yet if Ms. Franklin told you she was going to take a classic R&B song and throw in a little nursery rhyme, you’d be nervous. Did 1986 really need a cover of “Jumpin’ Jack Flash?” Probably not. But she did it anyway — and robustly — and threw in a “hallelujah” while she was at it.
But, by that point, Ms. Franklin seemed well on her way to becoming somebody who might have relished the culture’s doubt. She loved music too much to be vestigial or nostalgic or relegated. She wanted — you know, what she wanted. And eventually respect was tricky to come by. I, at least, remember sitting on my bed watching the 1998 Grammys and hearing that she’d be filling in for Luciano Pavarotti and rolling my eyes. Ms. Franklin knew. She went out there, sang some Puccini, and left the nation in shock. The Queen of Opera, too? 
Is it possible that despite the milestones and piles of Grammys (the now-defunct female R&B vocal performance category seemed invented just for her; she won the first eight), despite famously having been crowned the greatest singer of all time in a vast Rolling Stone survey, despite being Aretha Franklin, the Greatest was also rather underrated — as a piano player, as an arranger (who had a greater imagination when it came to coloring a song with backing singers), as an album artist? Despite the world’s bereavement over her death, despite her having been less a household name and more a spiritual resident of our actual home, despite giving us soundtracks for loneliness, for lovemaking, for joy, for church, cookouts and bars, despite the induction ceremonies, medals and honorary degrees, despite her having been the only Aretha most of us have ever heard of, is it possible that we’ve taken her for granted, that in failing to make her president, a saint or her own country, we still might not have paid her enough respect? Just a little bit.
 
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Jazz In The 21st Century Is All About ‘Playing Changes’ : NPR

Jazz In The 21st Century Is All About ‘Playing Changes’ : NPR

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https://www.npr.org/2018/08/14/637199001/jazz-in-the-21st-century-is-all-about-playing-changes
 
Jazz In The 21st Century Is All About ‘Playing Changes’
Vince PearsonAugust 14, 20185:00 AM ET

Kamasi Washington, a 37-year-old saxophone player from Los Angeles, is a major player in Nate Chinen’s new book Playing Changes.
Amy Harris/AP
The history of jazz in the 20th century is well known, but the course of the genre in the 21st century is still being charted. According to Nate Chinen, music critic for NPR Music and WBGO, jazz in the new millennium has enjoyed a type of Renaissance thanks to some key players.
Chinen’s new book Playing Changes: Jazz for the New Century opens with a spotlight on Los Angeles saxophonist Kamasi Washington. At 37, Washington’s collaborations range from jazz greats like Herbie Hancock to rappers like Kendrick Lamar.
“His emergence is just utterly remarkable,” Chinen says. “He has this intense physicality as a performer. His music strives for transcendence and I think, often communicates that.”
And while artists like Washington are making jazz cool in the new millennium, Chinen’s aim with Playing Changes is to get the root of the resurgence. “This is a perennial question — this idea of a savior or a messiah figure in jazz,” Chinen explains. “I wanted to get to the heart of that question: ‘Why do we need someone like that?’ What it comes down to I think is a baseline insecurity about the art form’s foothold in larger culture.”
Whereas jazz artists used to have to fight to be taken seriously, the perception of jazz in this century has almost calcified to a point where it’s seen as a genre that should be respected but not enjoyed. In Chinen’s opinion, the image of jazz has become “too good.”
“Jazz used to be disreputable. It used to grasp and scramble for respect for cultural esteem. And we no longer have that problem,” he says.
And although that’s a good thing, Chinen argues that esteem comes with a certain cost. “When the push for esteem comes with such a strong veneration for history and for a canon of recordings. Then you begin to see the music at large as a kind of museum piece,” he says.
Like Kamasi Washington, trumpeter Wynton Marsalis was greeted as a savior when he arrived on the national scene in the 1980s. Marsalis led a Renaissance that raised public appreciation for jazz through a return to its traditional values. Chinen says that became polarizing when Marsalis became the head of New York’s Jazz at Lincoln Center. This drew a clear divide between what Chinen calls “the traditionalist wing and the experimental wing” of jazz musicians in New York City. This divide was literal just as much as it was figurative.
“Jazz at Lincoln Center and the mainstream jazz clubs were uptown and The Knitting Factory and places like Tonic were downtown,” Chinen says. “There was a kind of sorting into camps.”
But luckily, this rigid division has been relaxed in the last 20 years. Chinen uses Playing Changes to give attention to particular artists who represent something about where jazz is in this moment. Jazz pianist Vijay Iyer is an example of an artist whose work is based on experimentation.
“Vijay is to me a really important figure because he comes out of an avant garde tradition,” Chinen says. “He’s second generation Indian American. But really he is able to appeal to a really broad base of listeners. He’s become sort of a consensus figure for the Jazz establishment.”
And Chinen calls vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant the “greatest new arrival on the jazz vocal scene.”
“If she had come up in the 90s, her interest in the past would have led a lot of people to kind of slot her in this idea and it would have become a kind of trap,” Chinen says.
That means jazz’s next great hero could be a heroine.
 

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

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