Specializing in Media Campaigns for the Music Community, Artists, Labels, Venues and Events

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Dave Bailey Sez See You @ The Bash

Dave Bailey Sez See You @ The Bash

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Looking forward to seeing everyone @ The Bash:

 

44th Annual Jazz Record
Collectors’ Bash

June 22-23, 2018
78s, LPs, CDs & Memorabilia
Hilton Garden Inn
Edison
/Raritan Center
50 Raritan Center Parkway
Edison, New Jersey 08837

http://jazzbash.net/

Dave Bailey Sextet Bash

 

 
Jim Eigo
Jazz Promo Services
272 State Route 94 South #1
Warwick, NY 10990-3363
Ph: 845-986-1677 
Cell / text: 917-755-8960
Skype: jazzpromo
E Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
www.jazzpromoservices.com
“Specializing in Media Campaigns for the music community, artists, labels, venues and events.”
NARAS VOTING MEMBER SINCE 1994
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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
http://www.jazzpromoservices.com

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

CHECK OUT OUR NEW YOUTUBE VIDEO

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PLEASE NOTE: IF YOU DO NOT WISH TO BE ON THIS MAILING LIST PLEASE RESPOND WITH ‘REMOVE’ IN THE SUBJECT LINE. IF YOU ARE RECEIVING DUPLICATE EMAILS OUR APOLOGIES, JAZZ PROMO SERVICES ANNOUNCEMENT LIST IS GROWING LARGER EVERY DAY…..PLEASE LET US KNOW AND WE WILL FIX IT IMMEDIATELY!

Copyright (C) 2018 All rights reserved.

Jazz Promo Services

269 State Route 94 South

Warwick, Ny 10990

Add us to your address book

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She was one of the first black women to host a television show

She was one of the first black women to host a television show

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https://timeline.com/she-was-one-of-the-first-black-women-to-host-a-television-show-73fe1dfbe01e
 
She was one of the first black women to host a television show
Then the House Un-American Activities Committee came for her
Ashawnta JacksonJun 19

Hazel Scott performing for a group of students in 1942. (AP Photo/Robert Kradin)
On September 22, 1950, musician Hazel Scott appeared in front of the House Un-American Activities Committee. She’d been named as a subversive — another addition to a long list of those who were somehow plotting against America. Artists, Scott told the committee, “are eager and anxious to help, to serve. We should not be written off by the vicious slanders of vicious and petty men. We are one of your most effective and irreplaceable instruments in the grim struggle ahead.”
That struggle for freedom and equality was a vital part of Scott’s life. The longtime civil rights advocate had broken a barrier two months earlier when she became the first black woman to host a television variety show in America. The Hazel Scott Showwas a weekly musical variety show that showcased Scott’s talents. As Scott’s biographer, Karen Chilton, writes in her book Hazel Scott: The Pioneering Journey of a Jazz Pianist from Cafe Society to Hollywood to HUAC, for each show, Scott was “always costumed in gorgeous gowns, diamonds, and neatly coiffed hair.” The show was a mix of musical styles, sometimes with Scott providing vocals in addition to her playing. She was rejecting the prevailing media images of black women at the time. She was confident, sophisticated, beautiful, and talented, and the viewers loved her. Within a few weeks, the show had found more sponsors and went from a local weekly broadcast to airing nationally three times a week.
She had imagined that her show would shed the stereotypical images of black Americans that were saturating the media, but now, sitting in front of a committee whose mission was to root out Communist influence, Scott was watching that vision dissolve. She brought something new to the media landscape, something that would be gone before it could truly reach its potential. By the end of the month, Scott’s show was canceled, another victim of the 1950s Red Scare.
https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*A7SfQ7h_53eWH6INNi0eYQ.jpeg
Hazel Scott in September of 1950, at the time of her HUAC hearing (AP Photo/Tom Fitzsimmons)
The DuMont Network was new on the scene. An upstart created by the DuMont Laboratories in 1946, it was mostly known as a TV manufacturer. A new station would never get off the ground without a roster of talent to fill its on-air hours, and pianist and singer Hazel Scott was just what it needed. She had it all: a strong, rich voice that just poured over lyrics, piano skills that slid seemingly effortlessly from classical to jazz, and a beauty and style that would easily translate from the nightclub to television. In 1950, Scott was offered a 15-minute program that would air every Friday night on the network’s New York affiliate, making her the first black woman to host a regularly appearing program.
The DuMont Network was experimenting with the traditions of broadcast in many ways. Being new meant they’d have to be innovative. They gave their shows’ producers more freedom in production. Scott’s director experimented with angles, shots, and visuals in shooting. The network also broke with the tradition of having a single sponsor for each show, instead getting multiple advertisers for each program. When The Hazel Scott Show proved itself a success, the network was able to add other sponsors.
“Entertainers are important soldiers in the world battle for the minds of men,” Scott told the House Committee. She believed that her work and her image were important parts of a battle she was eager to fight: equality for all Americans. She saw her role as an entertainer as a way to offer a window into the lives of black America. These were dignified lives, worthy of respect on screen as much as in life. The way she performed showed that. As Karen Chilton writes in her biography: “With Hazel Scott, there would be no obsequious smiles, no hunched shoulders, downcast eyes, or shuffling of any kind.”
Her battles weren’t just confined to the screen. She had long refused to play segregated concerts, and just one year before her show premiered, Scott had mounted a successful civil rights lawsuit against a Washington restaurant that had denied her and her secretary service. An all-white jury awarded her $250, far lower than the $50,000 she’d sought, but it was still a net gain for equality. “I sued and I won,” Scott said. “And I gave all of the money to the NAACP.”
But now, in front of these white male representatives, it seemed as if it were all for nothing. As she sat there, defending her appearances at events, her relationships, her beliefs, did she flash back to a few months earlier, when she had appeared on television in flowing gowns, with beautifully done hair?
An ad executive had asked Scott’s manager, “What are you going to do about your girl, she’s in the book, you know?” The book he was talking about was Red Channels: The Report of Communist Influence in Radio and Television, a pamphlet published by the anti-Communist newsletter Counterstrike. Scott, along with 150 others, had been branded as Communists. As Chilton explains, although Scott was never a card-carrying member of the Communist Party, her “outspokenness on civil rights issues made her a target.” And though she and another black activists were seeing their livelihoods threatened, Scott “did not and would not denounce the party’s efforts on behalf of the struggle.” They, like Scott, considered racial justice an important part of their work, and, as her son recounts to Chilton, Scott’s position was clear: “[She was] not going to relax [her] effort to get the rights for people of color merely because the Communist Party embrac[ed] that effort.” Now the sponsors who were lining up to add their names to Scott’s show were pulling away from what had been an unqualified success. Scott appeared before the committee in an effort to hold on to that success.
“I call upon my colleagues to present a solid front against bigots, and against those networks, sponsors, and agencies which seem willing to tuck their tails between their legs and knuckle under to the bigots,” she told the committee. But it was no use. One week later, her show was canceled.
Film historian Donald Bogle describes a typical Hazel Scott Show in his book Primetime Blues: African Americans on Network Television: “There sat the shimmering Scott … like an empress on her throne.” Scott would never be able to reclaim that throne. After her show ended, she found it hard to get work in America and went to find opportunities overseas. She travelled back to the United States occasionally, but lived primarily in Paris for the next 10 years. In 1978, reflecting on the impact of her blacklisting to Essence magazine, Scott said, “At times, it has almost been overwhelming, the fact that my career was stopped.”
Scott concluded her testimony with a request: that the committee “protect those Americans who have honestly, wholesomely, and unselfishly tried to perfect this country and make the guaranties in our Constitution live.” All she ever wanted was to do the work she loved in a place she fought to protect. And for just a moment, Scott had achieved what no one before her ever had. Another black performer, Billy Daniels, would host his own show for two months in 1952, and Nat King Cole’s show premiered in 1956, their roads paved by Scott’s work. “I’ve been brash all my life, and it’s gotten me into a lot of trouble” Scott told Essence. “But at the same time, speaking out has sustained me and given meaning to my life.”
 
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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
http://www.jazzpromoservices.com

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

CHECK OUT OUR NEW YOUTUBE VIDEO

Unsubscribe | Update your profile | Forward to a friend

PLEASE NOTE: IF YOU DO NOT WISH TO BE ON THIS MAILING LIST PLEASE RESPOND WITH ‘REMOVE’ IN THE SUBJECT LINE. IF YOU ARE RECEIVING DUPLICATE EMAILS OUR APOLOGIES, JAZZ PROMO SERVICES ANNOUNCEMENT LIST IS GROWING LARGER EVERY DAY…..PLEASE LET US KNOW AND WE WILL FIX IT IMMEDIATELY!

Copyright (C) 2018 All rights reserved.

Jazz Promo Services

269 State Route 94 South

Warwick, Ny 10990

Add us to your address book

slide

She was one of the first black women to host a television show

She was one of the first black women to host a television show

jazzLogo.jpg

shem.gif
https://timeline.com/she-was-one-of-the-first-black-women-to-host-a-television-show-73fe1dfbe01e
 
She was one of the first black women to host a television show
Then the House Un-American Activities Committee came for her
Ashawnta JacksonJun 19

Hazel Scott performing for a group of students in 1942. (AP Photo/Robert Kradin)
On September 22, 1950, musician Hazel Scott appeared in front of the House Un-American Activities Committee. She’d been named as a subversive — another addition to a long list of those who were somehow plotting against America. Artists, Scott told the committee, “are eager and anxious to help, to serve. We should not be written off by the vicious slanders of vicious and petty men. We are one of your most effective and irreplaceable instruments in the grim struggle ahead.”
That struggle for freedom and equality was a vital part of Scott’s life. The longtime civil rights advocate had broken a barrier two months earlier when she became the first black woman to host a television variety show in America. The Hazel Scott Showwas a weekly musical variety show that showcased Scott’s talents. As Scott’s biographer, Karen Chilton, writes in her book Hazel Scott: The Pioneering Journey of a Jazz Pianist from Cafe Society to Hollywood to HUAC, for each show, Scott was “always costumed in gorgeous gowns, diamonds, and neatly coiffed hair.” The show was a mix of musical styles, sometimes with Scott providing vocals in addition to her playing. She was rejecting the prevailing media images of black women at the time. She was confident, sophisticated, beautiful, and talented, and the viewers loved her. Within a few weeks, the show had found more sponsors and went from a local weekly broadcast to airing nationally three times a week.
She had imagined that her show would shed the stereotypical images of black Americans that were saturating the media, but now, sitting in front of a committee whose mission was to root out Communist influence, Scott was watching that vision dissolve. She brought something new to the media landscape, something that would be gone before it could truly reach its potential. By the end of the month, Scott’s show was canceled, another victim of the 1950s Red Scare.
https://cdn-images-1.medium.com/max/1600/1*A7SfQ7h_53eWH6INNi0eYQ.jpeg
Hazel Scott in September of 1950, at the time of her HUAC hearing (AP Photo/Tom Fitzsimmons)
The DuMont Network was new on the scene. An upstart created by the DuMont Laboratories in 1946, it was mostly known as a TV manufacturer. A new station would never get off the ground without a roster of talent to fill its on-air hours, and pianist and singer Hazel Scott was just what it needed. She had it all: a strong, rich voice that just poured over lyrics, piano skills that slid seemingly effortlessly from classical to jazz, and a beauty and style that would easily translate from the nightclub to television. In 1950, Scott was offered a 15-minute program that would air every Friday night on the network’s New York affiliate, making her the first black woman to host a regularly appearing program.
The DuMont Network was experimenting with the traditions of broadcast in many ways. Being new meant they’d have to be innovative. They gave their shows’ producers more freedom in production. Scott’s director experimented with angles, shots, and visuals in shooting. The network also broke with the tradition of having a single sponsor for each show, instead getting multiple advertisers for each program. When The Hazel Scott Show proved itself a success, the network was able to add other sponsors.
“Entertainers are important soldiers in the world battle for the minds of men,” Scott told the House Committee. She believed that her work and her image were important parts of a battle she was eager to fight: equality for all Americans. She saw her role as an entertainer as a way to offer a window into the lives of black America. These were dignified lives, worthy of respect on screen as much as in life. The way she performed showed that. As Karen Chilton writes in her biography: “With Hazel Scott, there would be no obsequious smiles, no hunched shoulders, downcast eyes, or shuffling of any kind.”
Her battles weren’t just confined to the screen. She had long refused to play segregated concerts, and just one year before her show premiered, Scott had mounted a successful civil rights lawsuit against a Washington restaurant that had denied her and her secretary service. An all-white jury awarded her $250, far lower than the $50,000 she’d sought, but it was still a net gain for equality. “I sued and I won,” Scott said. “And I gave all of the money to the NAACP.”
But now, in front of these white male representatives, it seemed as if it were all for nothing. As she sat there, defending her appearances at events, her relationships, her beliefs, did she flash back to a few months earlier, when she had appeared on television in flowing gowns, with beautifully done hair?
An ad executive had asked Scott’s manager, “What are you going to do about your girl, she’s in the book, you know?” The book he was talking about was Red Channels: The Report of Communist Influence in Radio and Television, a pamphlet published by the anti-Communist newsletter Counterstrike. Scott, along with 150 others, had been branded as Communists. As Chilton explains, although Scott was never a card-carrying member of the Communist Party, her “outspokenness on civil rights issues made her a target.” And though she and another black activists were seeing their livelihoods threatened, Scott “did not and would not denounce the party’s efforts on behalf of the struggle.” They, like Scott, considered racial justice an important part of their work, and, as her son recounts to Chilton, Scott’s position was clear: “[She was] not going to relax [her] effort to get the rights for people of color merely because the Communist Party embrac[ed] that effort.” Now the sponsors who were lining up to add their names to Scott’s show were pulling away from what had been an unqualified success. Scott appeared before the committee in an effort to hold on to that success.
“I call upon my colleagues to present a solid front against bigots, and against those networks, sponsors, and agencies which seem willing to tuck their tails between their legs and knuckle under to the bigots,” she told the committee. But it was no use. One week later, her show was canceled.
Film historian Donald Bogle describes a typical Hazel Scott Show in his book Primetime Blues: African Americans on Network Television: “There sat the shimmering Scott … like an empress on her throne.” Scott would never be able to reclaim that throne. After her show ended, she found it hard to get work in America and went to find opportunities overseas. She travelled back to the United States occasionally, but lived primarily in Paris for the next 10 years. In 1978, reflecting on the impact of her blacklisting to Essence magazine, Scott said, “At times, it has almost been overwhelming, the fact that my career was stopped.”
Scott concluded her testimony with a request: that the committee “protect those Americans who have honestly, wholesomely, and unselfishly tried to perfect this country and make the guaranties in our Constitution live.” All she ever wanted was to do the work she loved in a place she fought to protect. And for just a moment, Scott had achieved what no one before her ever had. Another black performer, Billy Daniels, would host his own show for two months in 1952, and Nat King Cole’s show premiered in 1956, their roads paved by Scott’s work. “I’ve been brash all my life, and it’s gotten me into a lot of trouble” Scott told Essence. “But at the same time, speaking out has sustained me and given meaning to my life.”
 
shem.gif

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.

CHECK OUT OUR NEW YOUTUBE VIDEO

Unsubscribe | Update your profile | Forward to a friend

PLEASE NOTE: IF YOU DO NOT WISH TO BE ON THIS MAILING LIST PLEASE RESPOND WITH ‘REMOVE’ IN THE SUBJECT LINE. IF YOU ARE RECEIVING DUPLICATE EMAILS OUR APOLOGIES, JAZZ PROMO SERVICES ANNOUNCEMENT LIST IS GROWING LARGER EVERY DAY…..PLEASE LET US KNOW AND WE WILL FIX IT IMMEDIATELY!

Copyright (C) 2018 All rights reserved.

Jazz Promo Services

269 State Route 94 South

Warwick, Ny 10990

Add us to your address book

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Local jazz icon Rebecca Parris dies at 66

Local jazz icon Rebecca Parris dies at 66

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By Emily Clark 
eclark@wickedlocal.com 

Posted Jun 19, 2018 at 2:00 PMUpdated Jun 19, 2018 at 2:21 PM
   
She could take a song and spin it like a top, toss it over her shoulder and flip it.
She could take a song and spin it like a top, toss it over her shoulder and flip it. A composer wrote it and Rebecca Parris would rewrite it, building the plane as she flew it, with dips and yaws and banks you never saw coming. Iconic Boston scene jazz DJ Ron DellaChiesa likened her six-octave voice to a Sarah Vaughan and Carmen McRae, jazz legends who were Parris’ dear friends. Fans likened her voice to nothing they’d ever heard before. She was a prototype, both professionally and in person. To those who knew her, Parris loomed iconic – a tall, commanding and fearless presence who mentored and inspired the fearful.
Parris died Sunday evening at age 66, leaving untold numbers mourning a jazz great with a heart of gold.
Her daughter, Marla Kleman, whom Parris adopted in her mid 40s when Kleman was 39, stressed her mom’s dual powers.
“What stands out the most with her, other than her extraordinary talent, is her mentoring, her mothering, her encouragement of others whether you were a singer or a friend,” Kleman said. “She was an earth mother. She built people up. At JazzCamp she had everybody do her thing. She’d say, ‘You gotta get rid of the ‘I suck’ monster.′ She made insecure people feel secure, like me. In any one of her classes, you came out of there a new person with more confidence.”
Parris’ open-door policy meant people in trouble could park on her couch and find support and love in her environs. Parris had friends everywhere, Kleman added. She drew respect and a certain awe from strangers as well, by the shear force of her formidable presence. Parris entered a room and conversations stopped as eyes turned.
“My admiration for her was her ability to take a song and play with it and scat with it, you know?” Plymouth author, stress guru and humorist Loretta LaRoche said. “All the musicians thought she was amazing. She was bold and she was sassy. She was in your face. She didn’t suffer fools. And she was a survivor. She’d been through heart attack, hip replacement and lost a number of inches. She used to be almost 6 feet tall. Her discs collapsed. She had diabetes and she just kept on trucking. She just had a set, ma’am.”
Plymouth jazz musician Kenny Wenzel said he and Parris were dear friends who had known each other for decades. He recalled the days when they both attended Berklee College of Music in Boston. Most recently, Parris was a regular, sitting in with Wenzel’s jazz group, Kenny Wenzel and Friends, which plays Tuesday nights at Martini’s Bar and Grill in Plymouth.
“We were good friends,” he said. “I feel terrible. I’m blown away that this whole thing happened. I knew her 50 years. She used to sing jazz like a horn player! She was really talented. She always sang when she came to Martini’s. She’d come almost every week and sing three or four songs.”
Wenzel said Parris was a master at improvisation. He would no sooner have briefed his fellow musicians on what she would typically do at a certain point in the song, when she would change it up and surprise them.
“She knew what she was talking about,” Wenzel said. “She was smart and very musical. She had a great time. She was one of the best musicians I ever was with. Absolutely.”
Parris was born Ruth Blair MacCloskey on Dec. 28, 1951, in Needham, into a family of musicians and educators. Her mother and father, Shirley Robinson and Ned MacCloskey, were both accomplished pianists. A choir director, he also taught speech and English at Boston University and French at Boston Conservatory, directed and acted in summer stock.
As her career gained altitude, Parris replaced her original moniker because she preferred the name Becky and added “Parris” due to a favorite song with the city Paris in the title.
Her uncle was the renowned Blair McClosky, (who spelled the name differently), a classical baritone, voice teacher and therapist who taught Parris in addition to the likes of President John F. Kennedy and President Lyndon B. Johnson. Her parents encouraged her to study music and she made her stage debut at age 6. Parris went on to study music at Berklee and, later, at Boston Conservatory of Music.
In time, she would perform in venues worldwide, commanding the stage with Dizzy Gillespie, Buddy Rich, Woody Herman, Terry Gibbs, David “Fathead” Newman, Norman Simmons, Harold Jones, Andy Simpkins, Gerry Wiggins, Bill Cunliffe, Red Mitchell, Buster Cooper and Nat Pierce, among others.
She produced 10 albums, received a Grammy nomination, won 10 Boston Music Awards – nine for outstanding jazz vocals and one for producing an outstanding indy jazz album. When Gary Burton decided to do a vocal album he chose Rebecca Parris. She played the Monterrey Jazz Festival and every other jazz festival in between.
Parris lived in Duxbury with her beloved partner of 34 years, Paul McWilliams, a jazz pianist, and continued to perform in venues around the region.
Known for her signature swagger, Parris’ health had restricted her movements since the early 2000s when she suffered a heart attack. Kleman said her mom also endured crippling back problems, but stressed that Parris was never defined by her illnesses; she was defined by her extraordinary talent, her limitless ability to love and her refusal to buckle to the pain she suffered daily.
“She was first and foremost a storyteller,” Kleman said. “In addition to her genius for improvisation and scatting, when she sang a ballad she wouldn’t go all over the place and do vocal gymnastics. She would get to the heart of the story and have you in the palm of her hand.”
An outpouring of sadness on social media attests to the dizzying breadth of Parris’ sphere of influence as untold numbers of fans mourn her loss.
The dean of Boston jazz radio, Eric Jackson, of WGBH’s “Eric in the Evening” fame, posted a picture of Parris on his Facebook page, declaring that he is heartbroken at her loss.
One of Parris’ dearest friends, Susan Sloane, said Parris’ influence was mind-blowing.
“She touched so many lives; she was like the mother hen,” Sloane said. “She had her flock. People followed her not only to hear her. She made people feel she cared so much about them. When she taught JazzCamp in California there were a number that moved to this area to be near her. She had that much force.”
Sloane said she loved Parris’ sense of humor and her strength of character.
“She had this indomitable spirit,” she added.
Kleman said she was shy and unsure of herself when she met Parris in New York more than 21 years ago. The two became great friends, assuming a mother-daughter relationship as Parris encouraged Kleman and folded her into her life. Kleman, whose birth mother died when she was 2, would visit Parris and McWilliam in their Duxbury home every weekend, she said. In time, it became obvious Kleman was a member of the family.
“She asked me, ‘Would you like me to adopt you?’” Kleman said. “She just had an innate sense that I was missing something. I remember her saying once, before the adoption, ‘You can keep testing me and I’m still going to love you.’ She was one of the most comforting people you could ever meet. She gave encouragement, comfort and unconditional love. She brought out the best in people even if they didn’t think they had it.”
Parris had finished sitting in with McWilliam at a jazz jam at The Riverway in South Yarmouth, Sunday night when she collapsed outside. Parris was taken to Cape Cod Hospital where she died.
The last song she sang was “There Will Never Be Another You,” a fitting tribute to the love of her life who accompanied her on piano.
It was a fitting tribute that defined Parris as well. Sloane put it in a nutshell:
“There will never be another Rebecca Parris.”
Follow Emily Clark on Twitter @emilyOCM.

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

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

CHECK OUT OUR NEW YOUTUBE VIDEO

Unsubscribe | Update your profile | Forward to a friend

PLEASE NOTE: IF YOU DO NOT WISH TO BE ON THIS MAILING LIST PLEASE RESPOND WITH ‘REMOVE’ IN THE SUBJECT LINE. IF YOU ARE RECEIVING DUPLICATE EMAILS OUR APOLOGIES, JAZZ PROMO SERVICES ANNOUNCEMENT LIST IS GROWING LARGER EVERY DAY…..PLEASE LET US KNOW AND WE WILL FIX IT IMMEDIATELY!

Copyright (C) 2018 All rights reserved.

Jazz Promo Services

269 State Route 94 South

Warwick, Ny 10990

Add us to your address book

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June 21, 1948: The First LP Is Released

June 21, 1948: The First LP Is Released

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1948: Columbia Records puts the needle down on history’s first successful microgroove plastic, 12-inch, 33-1/3 LPs in New York, sparking a music-industry standard so strong that the digital age has yet to kill it.
Columbia engineer Peter Carl Goldmark set out with his staff in 1939 to evolve the 78-rpm record forward to 33-1/3 rpm, extend playback time to more than 20 minutes per side, and shrink vinyl grooves to an accessible, acceptable millimeter size.
Before that time, music labels, including Columbia and RCA Victor, had failed to launch commercially successful 33-1/3 records to market, for various reasons. Although RCA Victor debuted the first commercially available vinyl long-playerdesigned for playback at 33-1/3 in 1931, the Great Depression shelved that ambitious project in 1933.
“When I became general manager of the Victor Division of RCA on July 1, 1933, my first act was to take them off the market,” American Records Corporation president Edward Wallerstein explained. “Most of the records were made from Victorlac, a vinyl compound [and] the pickups available at that time were so heavy they just cut through the material after several plays. The complaints from customers all over the U.S. were so terrific that we were forced to withdraw the LPs.”
Columbia released 33-1/3 10-inchers, but quickly phased them out in 1932, thanks to similarly maddening technical difficulties. The commercial public would not be able to consume and listen to sturdier, lengthier LPs for another 15 years. First, it had to deal with political and economic misery.
The Great Depression and World War II slowed everything down, including Goldmark’s team and its microgroove innovations. But once the war ended, the record business boomed, pulling in more than $10 million in sales by 1945. Cue the applause track.
When Columbia was finally freed from geopolitical conflict and able to resolve the LP’s previous technical difficulties – pickups that were too heavy, grooves that were too wide, playback times that were too short, and audio fidelity that was too crappy – everything changed.
“Goldmark assigned individual researchers to individual problems: cutting-motor and stylus design, pickup design, turntable design, amplifier, radius equalization,” Martin Mayer wrote in a history of the LP published by High Fidelity Magazine in 1958. “The 33-1/3 speed had been established before work began, and it already had become clear that a very narrow groove, something like the .003 inch groove finally adopted, would be necessary to record 22 minutes of music to a side.”
Eventual Columbia president Goddard Lieberson introduced the label’s masterful LP evolution at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in 1948, and the commercially available long-playing record went supernova. Eventually, Columbia copyrighted the term LPoutright, denying other labels recourse to use a ubiquitous industry buzzword to market their individual releases.
Cue the laugh track.
Source: Various
Photo: The first microgroove LP pressing released was Columbia ML4001, the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto in E Minor with soloist Nathan Milstein, and Bruno Walter conducting the Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra of New York. Courtesy 33audio.com

Wired.com has been expanding the hive mind with technology, science and geek culture news since 1995.

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

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

CHECK OUT OUR NEW YOUTUBE VIDEO

Unsubscribe | Update your profile | Forward to a friend

PLEASE NOTE: IF YOU DO NOT WISH TO BE ON THIS MAILING LIST PLEASE RESPOND WITH ‘REMOVE’ IN THE SUBJECT LINE. IF YOU ARE RECEIVING DUPLICATE EMAILS OUR APOLOGIES, JAZZ PROMO SERVICES ANNOUNCEMENT LIST IS GROWING LARGER EVERY DAY…..PLEASE LET US KNOW AND WE WILL FIX IT IMMEDIATELY!

Copyright (C) 2018 All rights reserved.

Jazz Promo Services

269 State Route 94 South

Warwick, Ny 10990

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Rare Louis Armstrong recording released via Deutsche Grammophon – JAZZIZ Magazine

Rare Louis Armstrong recording released via Deutsche Grammophon – JAZZIZ Magazine

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https://www.jazziz.com/rare-louis-armstrong-recording-released-via-deutsche-grammophon/?utm_source=ActiveCampaign
 
Rare Louis Armstrong recording released via Deutsche Grammophon
Matt Micucci6 days ago

Deutsche Grammophon (DG), the world’s oldest and most renowned classical music label, is celebrating its landmark 120th anniversary this year. To mark the occasion, DG and Google Arts & Culture are creating digitized versions of rediscovered and previously unreleased tracks from rare surviving Galvano metal masters. These masters were recorded in the early 1900s and found deep in the vaults of the label’s archives.
The initiative, titled The Shellac Project, will see 400 digitized shellac records released over the next several months. These will include early recordings by the legendary jazz trumpeter Louis Armstrong, Russian opera singer Feodor Chaliapin, Austrian-born violinist and composer Fritz Kreisler, and iconic Russian author Leo Tolstoy giving a rare reading of one of his novels. The first 40 tracks of The Shellac Project have already been released, including an early recording of “St. Louis Blues” by Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra. Click here to listen to these tracks.
This recording of “St. Louis Blues” resulted from an early studio session in Paris, France, and was originally released via the French music label Brunswick. The tracks from this session are known among Armstrong scholars but have always been available in inferior, muffled quality. DG licensed the songs back in 1934 and kept the metal masters until today. They can now be heard in unprecedented quality.
The records will all be made available through DG’s own channels, the Google Arts & Culture platform, and via partner streaming platforms. In addition, DG has curated 12 online exhibitions on the Google Arts & Culture platform through which users can learn more about the label, its artists, how records are made, and its founder, Emil Berliner, the German-born American citizen who invented the gramophone and founded the label in 1898 as the German branch of his Berliner Gramophone company.
For more information regarding other activities celebrating DG’s 120th anniversary, go to https://www.deutschegrammophon.com/en/
Matt Micucci
Matt Micucci
Matt Micucci is the Online Editor of JAZZIZ Magazine.
 

 
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Lyric of the Week Lightnin’ Hopkins, “I’ve Been ‘Buked And Scorned”« American Songwriter

Lyric of the Week Lightnin’ Hopkins, “I’ve Been ‘Buked And Scorned”« American Songwriter

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http://americansongwriter.com/2018/06/lightnin-hopkins-ive-been-buked-and-scorned/
 

Lightnin’ Hopkins, “I’ve Been ‘Buked And Scorned”
Clay Stevens June 18, 2018
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“Lightnin’ struck the west coast, and the blues came rolling down.” — Brownie McGhee
In the original liner notes to one of the finest treasures of blues music, producer Ed Michel observed, “It’s been pointed out, not without justification, in American folk music circles [that] ‘the Seegers take from the Lomaxes, and the Lomaxes take from God.’” A more succinct summation of the genesis of modern American music cannot easily be made. 
The album to which I am referring is First Meetin’, a 1960 studio recording of a rare moment when unscripted genius appeared and the engineer rolled the tape from the warmup. That Bess and John Lomax Jr. were involved in arranging the session would be reason enough to anticipate significance, but it wouldn’t have taken the sense God gave a fencepost to do so — the schedule for the day was to capture for the first time together on record Lightnin’ Hopkins and Brownie McGhee. 
Compounding the importance, eight years prior McGhee had recorded “A Letter to Lightning Hopkins,” a jive-laden homage to the Texas legend. But, in spite of their long-stated mutual admiration, the two had still not met when Bess Lomax informed the brass at World Pacific Studio that Hopkins would be in Los Angeles (with brother John Jr. in tow) around the same time McGhee would be finishing a six-week stint with harp legend Sonny Terry at The Ash Grove.  Apparently, by divine appointment it would now seem, Big Joe Williams was also in town on vacation from St. Louis.  Arrangements were made and with jazz and symphonic bassist Jimmy Bond, brilliantly on an upright, the four bluesmen would proceed that day to record one of the baddest tracks ever laid down on tape. 
Emerging from the unequable tragic beauty of the old spiritual, first printed under the title “Ain’ Gwine Lay My ‘Ligion Down“ in In old Alabama: being the chronicles of Miss Mouse, the Little Black Merchant but more commonly known as “I Been ‘Buked and I Been Scorned,” the highly improvisational jamming and “testifyin’” of “Bucked and Scorned” is a manifestation of the shamanistic power of the blues to summon strength and conjure joy out of authentic testimonies of sorrow and grief. 
The title, corrected in later releases to “’Buked and Scorned” and “I’ve Been ‘Buked’ and I’ve Been Scorned,” forms the essential refrain, while the tonal center exists in the countervailing forces of contradiction — its’ doleful testimony is sung in a major key. On the First Meetin’ recording, the four trade off-the-cuff verses of warning and woe while the guitars of Hopkins, McGhee, and Williams weave an acoustical, cut time torrent of bright leads over Jimmy Bond’s relentless bass line. Illuminated by the plaintiff wails of Sonny Terry’s harp, the result is inescapable hypnosis, a leaning in to observe every word and every note. In a word, it is the blues. 
First recorded by the Tuskegee Institute Singers on February 14, 1914, the origins of the hymn extend back into the shared lamentations and expressions of hope that sustained a people who faced daily the scorn and crushing rebukes of soul and spirit of bond slavery. 
In the midst of such suffering, the voice of the Divine singing psalms of pathos and edification in the temple of the human form is discernible, and although it is true that there exists in both the Psalms of Hebraic antiquity and “I Been ‘Buked and Scorned” a cosmos of unspoken details of experience that belong only to those who lived in that reality when Mahalia Jackson sung it in sanctifying invocation to over 250,000 people of every color at the Civil Rights March on Washington in 1963, its authority to universally bless was a public display of its place in the holy canon.
The intimate musical connection between the raucous romp of “’Buked and Scorned” and the old hymn is not necessarily obvious, despite the direct transcription of the title line. But, a thematic comparison between the lyrics of Odetta’s version of 1956  and those of Hopkins’ 1960 version reveals a common narrative testimony of suffering, personal experiences of talk and being talked about, death, and a final affirmation of faith. So observed, these points of correspondence make clear how close to the surface of conscious creation the words and sentiments of the original were when five musicians, each afflicted with a bad case of the blues, walked into a Los Angeles recording studio, the afflatus surged, and Divinity spoke into being a moment of pure musical joy.
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Jazz and the Images that Hold Us Captive | by Adam Shatz | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books

Jazz and the Images that Hold Us Captive | by Adam Shatz | NYR Daily | The New York Review of Books

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https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2018/06/17/jazz-and-the-images-that-hold-us-captive/?utm_medium=email
 
Jazz and the Images that Hold Us Captive
Adam Shatz
June 17, 2018, 7:00 am
/var/folders/pd/2lg4zts10vld_7zmypp_wkbh0000gp/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/WebArchiveCopyPasteTempFiles/eastman1.jpgDonald W. BurkhartJulius Eastman, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, 1969
I was listening recently to a BBC radio documentary about the photographer and journalist Val Wilmer, who wrote a great book on the free jazz movement in the late 1970s, As Serious as Your Life (recently reissued by Serpent’s Tail). The title was taken from something the pianist McCoy Tyner said to her, explaining just how important music was to him. And Wilmer took that to heart, too, because her book is not only about musical form and expression, but also about the lives of musicians. It should be obvious that art and life are entangled, but for the first half of the twentieth century a bias toward formalism meant that jazz was seldom discussed in relation to the social, economic, and political struggles of those who played it. That changed in the 1950s with the emergence of left-wing jazz critics like Nat Hentoff and Eric Hobsbawm, writing for the New Statesman under the pen name Francis Newton, and, in the 1960s, critics influenced by the emerging black power movement, such as LeRoi Jones (later Amiri Baraka) and A.B. Spellman. But then, a no less misleading tendency developed, which was to analyze jazz, especially formally adventurous, “free,” or avant-garde jazz, as some kind of direct expression of radical politics: the cry of urban rage or the voice of the black revolution. Questions of aesthetics, of the painstaking choices that people made when crafting their art, went out the door, as if music were simply another form of protest.
Wilmer, to her credit, had (and has) great feeling for the aesthetics of jazz. She understood, moreover, that the relationship between art and life is a very complicated one, and that it is forged in struggle or, rather, struggles. She was describing jazz made in an era of civil rights and black power, but she didn’t confine herself to questions of race, and gave particularly sensitive attention to the marginalization of women in jazz. What’s more, she grasped that there is a struggle that precedes all others: the matrix in which other struggles are inscribed, which is simply the human struggle to go through life, to endure, and to make one’s mark, whatever that may be. One needn’t embrace a spurious universalism blind to race and gender, or to other forms of discrimination, to see that this struggle is our common one, even if we experience it in very different ways inflected by our backgrounds and experiences. The making of art is also a struggle, because it involves the creation of something that wasn’t there before; it is a giving birth. 
/var/folders/pd/2lg4zts10vld_7zmypp_wkbh0000gp/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/WebArchiveCopyPasteTempFiles/ray-charles.jpgDavid Redfern/Redferns/Getty ImagesRay Charles during a performance, circa 1970
In her BBC interview, Wilmer speaks of being incredibly moved when she first heard Ray Charles. What overwhelmed her were his cries of pain, which seemed to her more visceral than anything she’d ever heard in the white popular music she’d grown up with in England. The reason we’re so affected by singers like Charles, she goes on to say, is that they remind us of our experience in the womb. I’m more inclined to think that it’s the woman, rather than the child, who undergoes the agony of birth, but, in her somewhat mystical way, I think Wilmer is on to something. We’re moved by artistic expressions of pain, strife, suffering—and other, more joyous emotions—because, in their rawness of simulated emotion, they take us back to the earliest experiences of entering this world. 
Of course, not every artist taps into this emotion directly. When you look at an Agnes Martin painting or listen to Steve Reich’s Music for 18 Musicians—and these are both artists I admire greatly—your first reaction isn’t to be moved by the pain they evoke. But I wonder if, in their calm and ordered elegance, they might suggest an angle of repose, a kind of transcendence from the world’s turbulence: what Cecil Taylor, the great avant-garde pianist who died in April, called “the air above mountains.” They didn’t get there by flying to the top; to reach that place, they first had to climb the mountain; they had to struggle.
wilmer-coleman-braxtonVal WilmerOrnette Coleman and Anthony Braxton, Prince Street, New York City, 1971 

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Lou Reed has a wonderful line in the Velvet Underground song “Some Kinda Love”: “between thought and expression lies a lifetime.” Not just a lifetime, but a history, and a relationship to the larger forces of history. History isn’t a stage; it’s the air we breathe. It enables us, and traps us. It gives us life, and takes it away. I’ve often written about that place between “thought and expression” in the work of musicians and artists, practicing a biographical approach to criticism that is sometimes held in contempt, particularly in the academic world. It’s considered a bit lowly, partly because it’s often done poorly, in the form of facile psychologizing, partly because people’s lives are invariably messier than the work they produce. Art, we’re told, can’t be reduced to the life, which is very evidently true; or increasingly, we’re told that if an artist is a less than exemplary person—or, worse, a sexual predator—the art is no longer of value. This is a position that seems equally troubling to me, since we thereby deny ourselves a lot of valuable work, while flattering ourselves that we’re somehow virtuous for doing so. No question, we have to proceed cautiously in examining the lives of artists—really, of anyone. As James Wood nicely puts it in an essay on W.G. Sebald, “Because we are not God, our narration of another’s life is a pretense of knowledge—simultaneously an attempt to know and a confession of how little we know.” 
So, we have to be humble; we have to own up to the limits of our knowledge. We also have to ask ourselves: Why are we telling this particular story? Why, to take an example of someone I wrote about recently in the Review, are we so fascinated by the story of a composer who died nearly three decades ago in obscurity, a drug-addicted homeless man who spent his last days in Tompkins Square Park, close to starvation? I’m speaking of Julius Eastman, whose music is enjoying an extraordinary revival today. (Actually, revival isn’t the word for the hysteria surrounding Eastman’s work, because that implies rediscovery and this is really a discovery.) It seems to me that if we don’t examine the roots of this fascination, we end up obfuscating the story and creating a legend, a mythology, instead—in this case, the tale of a saint, brought down by the forces of social convention, power, racism, etc. Don’t get me wrong: Eastman battled throughout his life with racism and homophobia. He had a fascination with Joan of Arc, and was enthralled by the idea of martyrdom, hoping that he, too, might die for the cause of gay liberation. He gravitated to everything spiritual, and spiritualized everything he did, including his more hedonistic endeavors. If he were alive, he might very well be pleased by the canonization. 
/var/folders/pd/2lg4zts10vld_7zmypp_wkbh0000gp/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/WebArchiveCopyPasteTempFiles/coleman-wilmer.jpgVal Wilmer/Redferns/Getty ImagesThe Ornette Coleman Quartet, including drummer Ed Blackwell, tenor saxophonist Dewey Redman, alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman, and bassist Charlie Haden, New York, 1971
But it is one thing to say that Eastman was fascinated by heroism, and another to say that he lived his life as a hero, which is the impression left by some of the recent commentary about him. If you go along with that view, you’re missing the great sadness of this story, the struggle that he undertook not only with society but, more intimately, with himself. 
Those who knew Eastman well all speak of this waste of potential, the fact that he succumbed to his demons and drifted away—of his own volition—from what was a very promising career. This is a story of refusal of society’s categories, and there’s something brave and daring about it. But it’s also a story of fragility, deterioration, addiction, and, perhaps, of mental illness. Part of Eastman’s difficulty, to be sure, was that the avant-garde, particularly in classical music, was always defined as always already not-black, as the cultural theorist Fred Moten has argued. But this was not Eastman’s only source of difficulty.
When I was asked to speak at the School of Visual Arts’ Symposium on Arts, Politics, and Narrative, the art critic Kaelen Wilson-Goldie told me she wanted me to discuss “the image.” I haven’t been in school for some time, so I wasn’t sure what “the image,” singular, was. We live in a society of images, not of a single image. But I think I see what she means. There are certain images that hold us captive, that freeze the gaze, that inspire or horrify us, to the point where we can’t see that there are other, related images that would permit us to see a more illuminating montage—or, to use a different metaphor, that would open up the music of an artist’s life to a richer and more complex counterpoint. So, rather than present one of the usual images of Eastman in concert, I have chosen to show some photographs that his former lover, Donald W. Burkhart, sent me. They show a relaxed young man on vacation who is neither performing nor posturing, and I find them touching in their ordinariness. 
eastman3Donald W. BurkhartJulius Eastman at Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, 1969

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Why is there this need for a mythical Eastman, or a prophetic James Baldwin, or an omniscient Hannah Arendt? I sense that those of us who are horrified by the direction of our politics are seeking heroes, people who not only saw far in advance of their societies, but who also somehow lived in advance of them, as if a fully emancipated life were possible in an unfree society. But in this search for superheroes, rather than people, I fear that we’re not doing them much justice. It would be better, I believe, to record their struggles, not on the stage of history but within history—within the politics of their time, and within their own efforts to define themselves, to find their voices, and to move from thought to expression, which is a struggle for all of us, not just artists. And in this, let us remember that, as Cecil Taylor beautifully put it, people are all, at some level, dark to themselves. 


Adapted from a lecture given at the School of Visual Arts, New York City in May 2018.
 
 

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Documentary Explores the Jewish Roots of Blue Note Records – Tablet Magazine

Documentary Explores the Jewish Roots of Blue Note Records – Tablet Magazine

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http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-life-and-religion/264254/all-that-jazz-blue-note
 
All That Jazz
A new documentary explores the Jewish origins of Blue Note Records, but evades some tough questions
By Marjorie Ingall
 
Blue Note Records has produced music from the greatest names in jazz: Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, John Coltrane, Art Blakey, Bud Powell, Horace Silver, Cannonball Adderley, Dexter Gordon, Ornette Coleman, Herbie Hancock, and Wayne Shorter. A new documentary by Swiss filmmaker Sophie Huber, Blue Note Records: Beyond the Notes, had its premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival this spring and is currently playing the festival circuit. Hancock and Shorter appear in the film, along with the sly, funny octogenarian Lou Donaldson (hailed as one of the greatest alto sax players ever), the genre-crossing Norah Jones, A Tribe Called Quest co-founder Ali Shaheed Muhammad, and longtime soundman Rudy Van Gelder, who engineered such legendary albums as A Love SupremeWalkin’Colossus, and Song for My Father. (Van Gelder died in 2016, at 91, before the film was completed.) Younger artists, too, speak to the camera about jazz’s continuing importance in their lives and in the American cultural conversation. For jazz fans, the movie is a delicious deep dive into the label’s eight-decade history. But as I watched, I kept thinking about the missed opportunities.
Blue Note was founded in 1939 by Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany, Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff. (Fellow co-founder Max Margulis isn’t discussed in the movie, perhaps because he was more of a behind-the-scenes guy, providing much of the early funding, writing ad copy, giving voice lessons to artists, and reviewing music and stirring things up in lefty publications including The Daily Worker.) We hear scratchy radio interviews in which Wolff and Lion discuss their love of the genre. Lion tells of his mother in Berlin bringing home a jazz album in 1926; in his Yiddish accent, he tells a plummy, mid-Atlantic-inflected, WASP-y radio interviewer, “I vas very much impressed by vhat I heard!” Wolff agrees: “I didn’t understand it; I couldn’t follow it … but I just liked it!” They created Blue Note, the story goes, because they wanted to be around the music all the time. Their artists led them into introducing new jazz forms. “Ve kept making Dixieland records, and then slowly drifted over into the sving and then into the modern, into the bop,” Lion says. That last sentence somehow sounds hilarious in a Yiddish accent.
The film is full of photos (Wolff was a passionate photographer), musical snippets, and footage of black jazz artists from the 1940s to the ’60s doing their thing. Blue Note’s most important behind-the-scenes hire was Van Gelder, another Jew, who was associated with it for decades; for almost seven years in the 1950s, the label’s albums were recorded in Van Gelder’s parents’ living room. Van Gelder, Donaldson, Hancock, Shorter, and jazz historian Michael Cuscuna—a consultant for Blue Note since 1984—talk about how much artists loved Lion and Wolff, how they never took advantage of the musicians who recorded for them, how they were directed by a pure love of the music. Which is probably true! But anyone who pays attention to contemporary music should be clued in to the oft-contentious relationship between African-Americans and Jews in the music business. Were Lion and Wolff extraordinary? How do they fit into the narrative of African-American art forms being capitalized on, popularized, and monetized by Jewish composers from Berlin to Jolson to Gershwin to Bernstein? Black artists have spoken of feeling exploited by white management; Jews have pointed to anti-Semitism in hip hop. Jazz in particular feels like a complex petri dish of cultural anxiety; hip hop has seemingly taken on much of the urgency jazz once had, and jazz audiences today feel heavy on wannabe-down white dudes in fedoras. (As I did on Unorthodox a while back, I shall put in a plug for Jesse Andrews’ musical YA novel The Haters, with its gaspingly hilarious mockery of the pretensions of the current jazz scene.) As its fans age, does an art form get less relevant?
These are big questions. But this movie doesn’t go there. It’s purely a celebration of one label, which may be sufficient for informed jazz fans and lovers of classic jazz, but isn’t enough for viewers who seek to understand jazz’s place in the world now. Young and young-ish Blue Note artists like drummer Kendrick Scott, pianist and educator Robert Glasper, and bassist Derrick Hodge talk eloquently about why jazz mattered back in the day. The film shows footage of civil-rights protests and the musicians reflect on how the music reflected the social upheaval of the era. “Never at any point do I hear the music and hear them being defeated,” Hodge reflects. “Somehow, regardless of what they were fighting with, they’re going down in history, creating something …  in a way that I felt freedom, in a way that brought me joy, in a way that made me want to write music that gave people hope.”
The film doesn’t effectively convey the fury and grief of the civil-rights movement. It’s not until hip-hop producer Terrace Martin shows up that we feel the immediacy and high stakes that jazz must have conveyed in the 1960s. “When I was a kid, the ghettos wasn’t used to seeing motherfuckers with instruments no more,” he says intently. “Because at that point they’d killed all the music programs in the schools.” Director Huber pairs his words with images of crumbling walls, burned-out buildings, graffiti reading “broken promises.” “I think that was one thing that made gangbangers turn up a whole bunch in the ‘80s,” Martin continues, “because the kids had nothing to do. No more afterschool programs, gangbangers turning up, self-hate turning up, murder rate turning up, crack turning up. All that was left was the records, the albums, and turntables—no instruments. Motherfuckers took records and turntables and went to the South Bronx and parks and got down.”
Ali Shaheed Muhammad of ATCQ picks up the thread: “Putting your record player and your neighbor’s record player together—that’s the birthplace of hip hop: that communal need to get together, to understand, to express.”
Blue Note went dormant in the early ’80s. But its influence continued to be felt in hip hop; the label became this burgeoning genre’s first stop for samples. Donaldson’s “Ode to Billie Joe” is now Blue Note’s most sampled track. (“I found out by looking at my royalties,” Donaldson says with a laugh.) Huber illustrates this via recognizable snippets in songs by Kanye, ATCQ, De La Soul, and Eminem.
The label relaunched in 1985. Today, Blue Note’s president is Don Was (né Don Fagenson), a Jew from Oak Park, Michigan. But he’s also a former musician, perhaps an indication that like the label’s founders, he’ll try to make commerce take a back seat to art. Glasper is now one of Blue Note’s clearest voices, blending jazz with hip hop and R&B. He’s determined to move jazz out of where it often seems to be now—a secret society for the cognoscenti—into more mainstream popularity. He’s on Pulitzer Prize-winner Kendrick Lamar’s album To Pimp a Butterfly, along with fellow Blue Note artist Ambrose Akinmusire.
But no one would call Lamar a jazz artist. So what’s the future of jazz? Will it require infusions with hip hop and R&B to be relevant? What’s the role of race and gender (the only woman who appears in the entire documentary is Norah Jones) in the genre as it moves forward?
Who knows? But maybe the fact that jazz is such a collaborative genre bodes well for a callback to the positive aspects of black-Jewish musical relations. As the Chicago Tribune noted, in a review of a different jazz documentary, “The Jews of Tin Pan Alley and early Broadway naturally gravitated to the new, all-American sound, which was jazz. … Ultimately, the two musical cultures shared fundamental truths, which helps explain why visionary black musicians such as Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, and others could find so much meaning in songs written by Jews of Eastern European birth or heritage. And why those songwriters embraced the syntax of black music.” Perhaps jazz in the future can move forward suffused with awareness of how black and Jewish narratives in America have diverged, despite the similar elements in our histories. It seems fitting that a blue note, aka a “worried note,” is a note sung or played at a slightly different pitch than standard. It’s a note for an uncertain time.
***
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Marjorie Ingall is a columnist for Tablet Magazine, and author of Mamaleh Knows Best: What Jewish Mothers Do to Raise Successful, Creative, Empathetic, Independent Children.
 
 

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Matt ‘Guitar’ Murphy, Blues Brothers guitarist, dead at 88 – CNN

Matt ‘Guitar’ Murphy, Blues Brothers guitarist, dead at 88 – CNN

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https://www.cnn.com/2018/06/16/entertainment/blues-brothers-matt-murphy-obit/index.html
 
Matt ‘Guitar’ Murphy, Blues Brothers guitarist, dead at 88

Matt “Guitar” Murphy
(CNN) — Blues Brothers guitarist Matt “Guitar” Murphy has died, according to the official Blues Brothers social media accounts run by Judy Belushi and Dan Aykroyd. 
Murphy was 88, according to IMDb, and was known “as one of the most respected sidemen in blues,” playing on many albums and in concerts.
He released his first album, “Way Down South,” in 1990, according to his IMDb biography. He also starred in both Blues Brothers movies, 1980’s “The Blues Brothers” and 1998’s “Blues Brothers 2000.” Murphy said in a 1999 interview with The Indianapolis Star that he enjoyed the making of The Blues Brothers. 
“At that time, I was in heaven,” he said. “I had never done a movie before. … I didn’t want it to end. We had so much fun doing that thing.”
Murphy was born in Sunflower, Mississippi, according to IMDb.

The Blues Brothers perform in concert at Winterland Arena on December 31, 1978, in San Francisco.
Aykroyd and the late John Belushi started the Blues Brothers in 1978 as part of a sketch on “Saturday Night Live.”
“Through his music, he will live forever. We ask that you join us while we offer condolences to the entire Murphy family,” read a post on the official Blues Brothers Instagram page
Murphy’s nephew, Floyd Murphy Jr., posted a tribute to his uncle on Facebook saying his uncle was a strong man who lived a long, fruitful life and “poured his heart out in every guitar solo he took.”
CNN’s Steve Almasy contributed to this report.
 
 

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Jon Hiseman, 73, Drummer Who Melded Rock, Jazz and Blues: NY Times

Jon Hiseman, 73, Drummer Who Melded Rock, Jazz and Blues: NY Times

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https://chicago.suntimes.com/news/jazz-pianist-composer-ghalib-ghallab-died-67-chicago-las-vegas-music-obituary/
 
06/14/2018, 02:38pm
Jazz pianist, composer, Chicago club favorite Ghalib Ghallab has died at 67
Jazzman Ghalib Ghallab at his custom-made white piano.
Jazzman Ghalib Ghallab at his custom-made white piano. | Provided photo


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Maureen O’Donnell
 
@suntimesobits | email
 
 
Jazz pianist and composer Ghalib Ghallab, a favorite at Chicago clubs and in Las Vegas, died Tuesday.
Mr. Ghallab, 67, had cancer and had been ill for more than a year, according to his wife of 38 years, Toya.
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“His aim was to make everyone happy, and he put that in his music,” she said Thursday from their Nevada home, where his white grand piano, custom-made in China and stamped with his signature, sits in their living room. “He was a gentleman and lover of music.”
At Caesar’s Palace and other Vegas hot spots, James Brown, Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra would come out to listen to Mr. Ghallab, and Natalie Cole and Lou Rawls sat in with him.
HIs sinuous music was influenced by Latin jazz and by performing with jazz giants like fellow pianist Ahmad Jamal.
“He would always talk about Ahmad Jamal,” his wife said. “He was a driving force in the way he played.”
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In Chicago, the Harlan High School graduate appeared at clubs including the Back Room on Rush, the Cotton Club, George’s, Jazz Bulls, M Lounge and the Promontory, where he played in April. He also made several albums.
He got his love of music from his family. When he was 2, his grandfather would sit him down at the family piano.
“I used to bang on the piano all the time,’’ Mr. Ghallab said in an interview on his website.
Ghalib Ghallab performing in May 2014 at the M Lounge in the South Loop at a release party celebrating his recording "I'm Evolving."
Ghalib Ghallab performing in May 2014 at the M Lounge in the South Loop at a release party celebrating his recording “I’m Evolving.” | Maudlyne Ihejirika / Sun-Times
His parents Juanita and Kay also influenced him.
“My mom played jazz in the house, you just, you name it — from Sarah Vaughan, Nancy Wilson,” he said. “My dad was a Frank Sinatra, Miles Davis type of guy, Lou Rawls. You name it, singers — we had ’em. Johnny Mathis, Nat King Cole. And it was like food for my ears, you know, for my growth, and I find myself taking licks from those songs from back in the day, and I apply them to what I do.”
At 13 or 14, he’d hang out in Old Town to listen to jazz trumpeter Ira Sullivan and bassist Johnny Pate.
In high school, he played tuba in the band at Harlan, according to his biography on The History Makers’ website.
He studied with legendary pianist Willie Pickens at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago. Mr. Ghallab later moved to San Francisco, where, his Facebook page said, he continued his music studies at Napa Valley College.
He is also survived by his children Ghalib II, Jihad and Khalid and three grandchildren. Graveside services are planned Friday at Woodlawn Cemetery in Las Vegas. His wife said a Chicago celebration of his life might also be held at some point.
 
 

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Jon Hiseman, 73, Drummer Who Melded Rock, Jazz and Blues: NY Times

Jon Hiseman, 73, Drummer Who Melded Rock, Jazz and Blues: NY Times

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Jon Hiseman, 73, Drummer Who Melded Rock, Jazz and Blues

June 12, 2018

https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/06/13/obituaries/13HISEMAN1/merlin_139463838_5ad13eb2-41b3-47a9-a5e8-94aae2153460-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale
 
Jon Hiseman performing with his band Tempest at the Marquee club in London in 1973.Fin Costello/Redferns, via Getty Images

Jon Hiseman, the British drummer, composer and progressive-rock innovator who led the bands Colosseum and Tempest and played in many other groups, died early Tuesday in Sutton, England. He was 73.
His son, Marcus, said the cause was complications of surgery that Mr. Hiseman underwent in May to remove a brain tumor. He had lived in Sutton, a suburb of London, before entering hospice care there.
Mr. Hiseman was a nimble, hard-hitting player who tuned his drums melodically and kept an improvisational spirit through complex pieces. His music held elements of the classical music he grew up on, the modern jazz and free jazz he played early in his career, and the blues and rock that built his career in 1960s London.
The original Colosseum lasted barely three years, from 1968 to 1971. But the band reunited in the 1990s and continued to perform and record for two decades.
Mr. Hiseman also worked extensively with the musical theater composer Andrew Lloyd Webber. He recorded prolifically with his wife, the saxophonist and composer Barbara Thompson, and established a recording studio and a music publishing company, Temple Music.
He explained his philosophy of drumming in a 2004 interview: “Don’t play the drums, play the band. If you play the band, the drums will play themselves.”
Philip John Hiseman was born on June 21, 1944, in London. He played piano and violin as a child and turned to drums at 12. In his teens, he worked with jazz and R&B groups around London. He also studied accounting.
Mr. Hiseman became a full-time musician in 1966, when he replaced Ginger Baker in a blues band, the Graham Bond Organisation. (Mr. Baker went on to form Cream with Jack Bruce and Eric Clapton.) Mr. Hiseman later worked with the English singer and keyboardist Georgie Fame and with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, appearing on the group’s album “Bare Wires.”
As a studio musician, he performed on Mr. Bruce’s first solo albums, “Things We Like” (1968) and “Songs for a Tailor” (1969).
Mr. Hiseman married Ms. Thompson in 1967; she survives him. Besides her and his son, he is survived by a daughter, the singer Ana Gracey; a sister, Jill Hiseman; and four grandchildren.
Mr. Hiseman left the Bluesbreakers to start the jazz-rock fusion band Colosseum in 1968, with an initial lineup that included two other former Bluesbreakers, Tony Reeves on bass and Dick Heckstall-Smith on saxophone.

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Colosseum in concert in 1970. From left, Dave Greenslade, Tony Reeves, Mr. Hiseman, James Litherland and Dick Heckstall-Smith.Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

While Colosseum often touched down in the blues, its two 1969 albums, “Those Who Are About to Die Salute You” and “Valentyne Suite,” and its 1970 album “Daughter of Time” also drew on big-band jazz, Bach, Japanese music and contemporary chamber music. Its albums reached the Top 10 in Britain, although they received less notice in the United States. After recording “Colosseum Live” in 1971, the group disbanded.
Mr. Hiseman went on to form the progressive-rock band Tempest. Over two years and two albums, it featured the guitarists Allan Holdsworth and Ollie Halsall, who became known as musicians’ musicians.
Mr. Hiseman’s next band featured the guitarist and singer Gary Moore, who had been in (and would return to) Thin Lizzy. Although Mr. Hiseman initially called the band Ghosts, he was persuaded to use the name Colosseum II instead.
Colosseum II made three albums, releasing them in 1976 and 1977 — difficult times for progressive rock with the punk era dawning — before breaking up. Its members, joined by Ms. Thompson, became the core of the studio band for Mr. Lloyd Webber and his brother, the cellist Julian Lloyd Webber, on the 1978 classical-rock fusion album “Variations,” which became a crossover hit and supplied the theme for “The South Bank Show,” an arts series on British television.
Mr. Hiseman continued to work with Mr. Lloyd Webber well into the 1980s, in original productions and on the recordings of the musicals “Cats” and “Starlight Express” as well as Mr. Lloyd Webber’s classical work “Requiem.”
Mr. Hiseman joined his wife’s group, Paraphernalia, in 1979, and the couple recorded her jazz and classical compositions and toured through the next decades. They built a recording studio, provided music for films and advertisements, and signed other musicians to their publishing company, Temple Music.
From 1974 to 2002, Mr. Hiseman and Ms. Thompson were also part of the United Jazz + Rock Ensemble, a collective of avant-gardist German and British jazz musicians that recorded 14 albums.
In 1994, Mr. Hiseman picked up where he had left off with Colosseum’s members from 1971. Their reunion lasted until a farewell concert in 2015; Ms. Thompson took over on saxophone after the death of Mr. Heckstall-Smith in 2004.
Mr. Hiseman and Ms. Thompson both worked on albums by their daughter, Ms. Gracey, who made an appearance on Colosseum’s final album, “Time Is on Our Side.”
In April, Mr. Hiseman formed JCM, a trio with the Colosseum members Clem Clempson, on guitar, and Mark Clarke, on bass. The group made an album, “Heroes,” that contained music written by former collaborators Mr. Hiseman had outlived, among them Mr. Bruce, Mr. Holdsworth, Mr. Heckstall-Smith, Mr. Bond and Mr. Halsall.
JCM began a tour in April, but canceled it as Mr. Hiseman’s brain tumor advanced.
In his long career, Mr. Hiseman released only two albums under his own name as a leader: “A Night in the Sun,” a 1982 collaboration with Brazilian musicians, and “About Time Too!,” a 1986 collection of drum solos recorded live.
“My album is very good for parties,” Mr. Hiseman said with a laugh of “About Time Too!” in 2004, “when you want people to go.”
Daniel E. Slotnik contributed reporting.
 
 

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Jazz Rabbi Greg Wall tells the story of the Village Gate’s famous 1937 Steinway “M”- YouTube

Jazz Rabbi Greg Wall tells the story of the Village Gate’s famous 1937 Steinway “M”- YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzkPkHel_R8
 

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Did You Know That 1937 Steinway Piano from Village Gate Still Lives at this venue

Did You Know That 1937 Steinway Piano from Village Gate Still Lives at this venue

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https://www.facebook.com/pg/Jazz323Westport/about/?ref=page_internal
 
Our Story
JAZZ AT 323 WESTPORT·TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2017
For almost three years we have been THE HOME FOR JAZZ in our area. Our fans are totally committed to preserving this music, and have created JazzFC, a not for profit dedicated to bringing the music to diverse audiences in our area.

 

The fans also pooled their resources and acquired the historic 1937 Steinway piano, used by the greatest jazz pianists of the 20th century at New York’s famed Village Gate nightclub.

Today our weekly Thursday night concerts bring the most exciting jazz artists from the NYC/Tristate area. 
 
 
Jim Eigo
Jazz Promo Services
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Ph: 845-986-1677 
Cell / text: 917-755-8960
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“Specializing in Media Campaigns for the music community, artists, labels, venues and events.”
NARAS VOTING MEMBER SINCE 1994
 

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Wayne Dockery Passed Away |American jazz Player Wayne Dockery Dies – YouTube

Wayne Dockery Passed Away |American jazz Player Wayne Dockery Dies – YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lbXzQ5qYi3E
 


 

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Lorraine Gordon-Jabbo Smith & Me

Lorraine Gordon-Jabbo Smith & Me

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Lorraine Gordon had to be one of the hippest people on the planet.
 

 

As a teenager growing up in Newark NJ she and her brother Phillip Stein (he painted the mural that’s on the back wall of the Vanguard) were members of the Hot Club of Newark.
 


She was married to Alfred Lion the founder of one of the most storied labels in jazz Blue Note Records.


And most famously she was married to the impresario Max Gordon the founder-owner of the Village Vanguard.
 

 

When Max passed she took over the reins.  That was in 1989.
 
Right around that time I received a call from Lorraine who I had been dealing with for her 
Jazz Art record label.
 
During the lean years at The Vanguard Lorraine worked at the Brooklyn Museum gift shop as a buyer.
 
I was in Park Slope so it wasn’t far to go to pick up records.
 
I was helping her to promote and distribute through my Daybreak Express Mail order company.
 
There were two titles on Jazz Art; 
Jabbo Smith and Big Chief Russell Moore.

 

Lorraine had befriended Jabbo over the years and now he needed help after suffering serious burns as the result of a kitchen grease fire.
 
Evidently he was making breakfast balls-assed naked and got burnt up pretty bad. 
 
He was in St. Vincent’s Hospital with no medical insurance and needed to raise money fast so could I help her sell all the inventory for Jabbo’s two Jazz Art LPs.
 
There were like a thousand LPs.
 
I put on my thinking cap who can I call?
 
That’s when I contacted George Buck down in New Orleans owner of GHB, Jazzologyy, Audiophile and a number of other labels.
 
Not only did he purchase all the Jabbo inventory he bought the masters too.
 
You can find them 
here.
 
Lorraine was so grateful she told me you come to the club anytime you like except when Wynton’s playing.
 
R.I.P. Lorraine Gordon.

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Riot At Newport – Pat Harrington, Jr. ‎– Some Like It Hip! YouTube

Riot At Newport – Pat Harrington, Jr. ‎– Some Like It Hip! YouTube

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

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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Riot At Newport – Pat Harrington, Jr. ‎– Some Like It Hip! YouTube

Riot At Newport – Pat Harrington, Jr. ‎– Some Like It Hip! YouTube

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

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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Lorraine Gordon, Keeper of the Village Vanguard Flame, Dies at 95 – The New York Times

Lorraine Gordon, Keeper of the Village Vanguard Flame, Dies at 95 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/09/arts/music/lorraine-gordon-dies.html
 

​Lorraine Gordon kept independent jazz alive at the legendary Village Vanguard in Greenwich Village. The club hosted musical greats like Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis and John Coltrane. Published On June 9, 2018
 
By Tim Weiner
 
 
Lorraine Gordon, Keeper of the Village Vanguard Flame, Dies at 95
June 9, 2018
Lorraine Gordon, who took over the Village Vanguard, New York’s oldest and most venerated jazz nightclub, in 1989 and remained its no-nonsense proprietor for the rest of her life, died on Saturday. She was 95.
The cause was complications from a stroke, said Jed Eisenman, the longtime manager of the club.
“Wherever I happened to be,” Ms. Gordon said in a 2007 interview with The New York Times, “music was always with me.”
Ms. Gordon was married for 40 years to the Vanguard’s founder and owner, Max Gordon. But she had been a jazz fan long before she met him. She fell in love with jazz as a teenager in the 1930s, listening to it on WNYC radio. The music pierced her soul, she said, “like a spike in my heart.” It was the start of a lifelong romance.
“I was lucky,” she said. “I was attracted to something wonderful which appealed to me.”
She made her first trip to the Vanguard in 1940, when she was 17 years old and a member of the Hot Club of Newark, a society of jazz enthusiasts. Not long thereafter, she met her first husband, a fellow music lover: Alfred Lion, the founder of Blue Note Records, a leading jazz label, where she would work selling the music during and after World War II.
Nine years after that first visit to the Vanguard, having divorced Mr. Lion but still in love with jazz, she married Mr. Gordon. More than seven decades later, long after Mr. Gordon’s death in 1989, she was still running the club — booking performers, counting the receipts, taking no guff and keeping the flame.
“When I have to make a decision,” she joked, “I ask, ‘What would Max do?’ Then I do the opposite.”
The Vanguard remained essentially unchanged throughout the decades after Mr. Gordon opened it at 178 Seventh Avenue South in Greenwich Village in 1935: a wedge of a room, one flight down from the sidewalk, seating 123 people. The club has always had immaculate acoustics; more than 100 records recorded live at the Vanguard by musicians like John Coltrane, Bill Evans, Sonny Rollins and Wynton Marsalis attest to that. A good table put a customer practically face to face with a great musician. There were very few bad tables.
Ms. Gordon, often nursing a glass of vodka, presided over the scene with a personal brand of tough love. She played her role like the wisecracking star of a black-and-white movie, and she helped make the Vanguard an unfailing fountain of late-night music. But she was also a hard-driving manager; she had to be.
“We open at 3,” she once said, describing the daily grind. “Deliveries come in, the phones are ringing, the roof is leaking, there’s something always going wrong, and then musicians come to rehearse. Every Tuesday night there’s a new group, so every six nights there’s a changeover. Sound checks have to be done. Instruments have to be brought in or taken out.”
She put in six hours of work before the first of the night’s two sets. The first usually began at 9 o’clock sharp, the second at 11. (In later years the start times were changed to 8:30 and 10:30.)
“I’m a stickler for being on time,” Ms. Gordon said. “And the show goes on — on time.”
Under her direction, the show went on and on. The Vanguard celebrated its 80th anniversary in 2015.
Lorraine Gordon was born Lorraine Stein in Newark on Oct. 15, 1922, at the dawn of recorded jazz and blues. The middle-class daughter of a homemaker and a businessman, she grew up in and around Newark and began traveling to New York to hear music as soon as she was able. (Her older brother, Phillip, who died in 2009, was also a jazz fanatic; he painted the mural on the Vanguard’s back wall.)
As a teenager, she was listening to Blue Note records — which featured some of the greatest jazz musicians of the day — before she met the label’s owner, Mr. Lion, in 1940. They hit it off immediately.
“He presented me with two volumes of all the records he had made until that time,” she recalled. “That was a great present.”
They married not long after Mr. Lion was drafted, early in World War II — or, as she put it, “Blue Note Records and I got married.”
Once he got out of the Army, she worked full time for the label: packing records, mailing them out, handling public relations. At the time the Blue Note label was chartreuse and blue, and the couple painted their first apartment those same colors.
In the summer of 1948 she was trying to promote a Blue Note musician — the pianist Thelonious Monk, then little known — when she met Max Gordon quite by accident on Fire Island. “I accosted Max Gordon,” she remembered. “I’m all business. I told him about Thelonious Monk. He was very interested. He said, ‘I just happen to have an opening in September.’”
They struck a deal. Monk was “in and out in one week,” she said. “But Max and I were not in and out in one week, somehow. Whatever the connections were, they took hold.”
The two were married in 1949 and had two daughters, Rebecca and Deborah. Ms. Gordon said in 2007 that she had made provisions to hand down the Vanguard to Deborah. In addition to her daughters, Ms. Gordon is also survived by a grandson.
The Vanguard had originally been a place for poetry and comedy as well as music. But the advent of television, where comedians and variety acts flourished in the 1950s, meant “the end of nightclub acts of that genre at the time,” Ms. Gordon said. “And that’s when Max decided to stick with jazz.”
In the early 1960s Ms. Gordon became a political activist, protesting against nuclear testing and, later, the war in Vietnam. In 1965 she made an unauthorized trip to Hanoi as a member of the group Women Strike for Peace. She carved out a life for herself apart from the club, working at the Brooklyn Museum as a merchandising manager.
In 1989, when Mr. Gordon died, there was no question that the show would go on — and that it was up to Ms. Gordon to make it go on.
“No one had to ask me,” she said. “There was nowhere else to go but me.”
The Vanguard closed the evening of Mr. Gordon’s death, but “I opened the club the next night,” she recalled in 2007. “I took reservations on the phone; there was a band still playing that Max had booked in advance, fortunately.” She learned the trade as she went along, “from one day to the next,” she said.
“I began, well … running the Village Vanguard,” Ms. Gordon wrote in her 2006 memoir, “Alive at the Village Vanguard: My Life in and Out of Jazz.”
Ms. Gordon’s contributions to jazz were recognized by the National Endowment for the Arts, which announced in 2012 that she was the winner of a Jazz Masters award. The awards ceremony was held in New York in January 2013, but she was too ill to attend.
Until just a few weeks earlier, though, she had still been at the Vanguard almost every night. She usually stayed through the first set, sometimes into the second set, sometimes all night. She felt she had no choice but to go on; the music was always her great passion.
“To keep the music alive,” she said, “is the most important thing there is in my life.”
Jeffery C. Mays contributed reporting.
A version of this article appears in print on June 10, 2018, on Page A22 of the New York edition with the headline: Lorraine Gordon, 95, Owner Of Village Vanguard Club Who Kept Jazz in Her Heart. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 
 

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Lorraine Gordan – R.I.P.

Lorraine Gordan – R.I.P.

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I’m seeing posts on Facebook that Lorraine Gordon has passed.
 
As soon as the official obit is published I will post.

 

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Clarence Fountain, 88, Dies; Led the Blind Boys of Alabama – The New York Times

Clarence Fountain, 88, Dies; Led the Blind Boys of Alabama – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/06/obituaries/clarence-fountain-88-dies-led-the-blind-boys-of-alabama.html?rref=collection%2Fsectioncollection%2Fmusic
 
Clarence Fountain, 88, Dies; Led the Blind Boys of Alabama
June 6, 2018
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George Scott, left, Clarence Fountain and Jimmy Carter of the Blind Boys of Alabama at the Bowery Ballroom in Manhattan in 2002.Jack Vartoogian/Getty Images
Clarence Fountain, who sang gospel music fit to call down the heavens as the leader of the award-winning Blind Boys of Alabama for more than 60 years, died on Sunday at a hospital near his home in Baton Rouge, La. He was 88.
The Blind Boys’ manager, Charles Driebe, said the cause was complications of diabetes.
The Blind Boys of Alabama sang a raucous, exuberant style of gospel that mixed harmony vocals with impassioned call-and-response shouting intended to rouse an audience into a religious fervor.
Explaining the group’s sound to The New York Times in 1987, Ray Allen, a folklorist and music historian, said it had evolved from the more staid style known as jubilee gospel into one that is distinguished by “a prominent lead singer shouting and preaching and backed by a rhythm-and-blues band.”
“Vocally, it made use of stronger rhythms and vocal techniques, such as moaning, melisma, falsetto and trance-induced kinds of behavior that had obvious antecedents in Caribbean or West African worship,” Mr. Allen continued. “The jubilee groups, by contrast, stood up straight and didn’t move around much.” The Blind Boys, he said, “were at the forefront of the transition.”
Mr. Fountain, who had a deep, versatile voice that became weathered over the decades, often sang lead. When he did, he could sound as explosive as James Brown. (Mr. Driebe said it might be more accurate to say that Mr. Brown sounded like Mr. Fountain.)
The Blind Boys had their roots in the mid-1940s at a segregated school for the blind in Talladega, Ala., where Mr. Fountain and five friends formed a group they originally called the Happy Land Jubilee Singers.
Renamed the Blind Boys, the group was well established on the gospel circuit by the time many other performers, including Otis Redding, Little Richard, Sam Cooke and Mr. Brown, became famous for moving from gospel to secular music.
Mr. Fountain said that over the years some producers had tried to persuade him and the group to make pop records, but he refused.
“I didn’t turn my back on the Lord,” he said on the NPR program “Morning Edition” in 2001. “I said I wanted to sing gospel music and I wanted to sing it for the Lord.”
Still, the Blind Boys’ foot-stomping sound appealed to secular audiences — and to secular artists. They worked with Lou Reed, Bonnie Raitt, Willie Nelson, Neil Diamond, Tom Waits, Aaron Neville and Justin Vernon of Bon Iver.
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The Happy Land Jubilee Singers shortly before the group was renamed the Blind Boys of Alabama in 1948. From left were Johnnie Fields, Mr. Fountain, J.T. Hutton, Ollie Thomas, George L. Scott and Velma Traylor.
Beginning in the 1990s, the Blind Boys became more open to covering songs by artists like Mr. Reed, the Rolling Stones, Jimmy Cliff, Bob Dylan, Prince and Curtis Mayfield, as long as the lyrics did not betray their spirituality.
The results could be striking. In one instance the group sang the lyrics to “Amazing Grace” over the Animals’ arrangement of the traditional song “The House of the Rising Sun.”
“I’ve taken the theory that music is music, and all you have to do is just sing it and keep your lyrics clean and you’re on your way,” Mr. Fountain said on NPR’s “Weekend Edition” in 2002. “So we try to put the gospel feel to it, and it makes it much better than it was when it was rock ’n’ roll, you know?”
In 1994 the Blind Boys received a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Their “Spirit of the Century” won the 2001 Grammy for best traditional gospel album, and they went on to win four more Grammys before receiving a lifetime achievement award from the Recording Academy in 2009.
They collectively sang the part of Oedipus in “The Gospel at Colonus,” a musical retelling of “Oedipus Rex,” which starred Morgan Freeman and was presented on Broadway in 1988. They performed all over the world and visited the White House repeatedly, singing for Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama.
Mr. Fountain did not perform for Mr. Obama; he retired from touring with the group in 2007. But he still sang on occasion, Mr. Driebe said, most recently at a performance with Marc Cohn and the Blind Boys in Baton Rouge in May.
Mr. Fountain was born on Nov. 28, 1929, in Tyler, Ala., to Will and Ida Fountain and grew up in Selma. His father was a sharecropper. Clarence lost his vision when he was 2 after a caregiver tried to cure an eye infection with a lye-based solution. He was sent to the Alabama School for the Negro Blind in Talladega (now part of the Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind) when he was 8.
He joined a boys choir there before forming the Happy Land Jubilee Singers. By the late 1940s the group was touring full time, and in 1948 they changed their name to the Five Blind Boys of Alabama. They have used variations on that name ever since, including Clarence Fountain and the Blind Boys of Alabama.
The Blind Boys lineup has changed over the years. The last surviving original member is Jimmy Carter, who is still touring with the group.
Mr. Fountain married Barbara Robertson in 1999. She survives him. His survivors also include several children.
Mr. Fountain said in a 1993 interview that he did not mind performing in secular venues because “God is everywhere, and we think he’s in the nightclub too, if you bring him in there.” By the same logic, he said, he saw nothing wrong with bringing the energy of a rock concert to a revival tent.
“If James Brown could come in here and do the twist, and do the mess around for the Devil, then I feel like it’s all right if I stand up here and mash potatoes for God,” he said at one live performance, moments before launching into “Look Where You Brought Me From.
 
 

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Lost John Coltrane Recording From 1963 Will Be Released at Last – The New York Times

Lost John Coltrane Recording From 1963 Will Be Released at Last – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/07/arts/music/john-coltrane-lost-album-both-directions-at-once.html?action=click
 
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On March 6, 1963, John Coltrane and his quartet recorded at the Rudy Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey. The session was never released — until now.CreditChuck Stewart
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Lost John Coltrane Recording From 1963 Will Be Released at Last
“Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album” was cut by the saxophonist’s classic quartet two years before “A Love Supreme.” Then it was stashed away.
On March 6, 1963, John Coltrane and his quartet recorded at the Rudy Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey. The session was never released — until now.CreditChuck Stewart
By Giovanni Russonello
·        June 7, 2018
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If you heard the John Coltrane Quartet live in the early-to-mid-1960s, you were at risk of having your entire understanding of performance rewired. This was a ground-shaking band, an almost physical being, bearing a promise that seemed to reach far beyond music.
The quartet’s relationship to the studio, however, was something different. In the years leading up to “A Love Supreme,” his explosive 1965 magnum opus, Coltrane produced eight albums for Impulse! Records featuring the members of his so-called classic quartet — the bassist Jimmy Garrison, the drummer Elvin Jones and the pianist McCoy Tyner — but only two of those, “Coltrane” and “Crescent,” were earnest studio efforts aimed at distilling the band’s live ethic.
But now that story needs a major footnote.
On Friday, Impulse! will announce the June 29 release of “Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album,” a full set of material recorded by the quartet on a single day in March 1963, then eventually stashed away and lost. The family of Coltrane’s first wife, Juanita Naima Coltrane, recently discovered his personal copy of the recordings, which she had saved, and brought it to the label’s attention.
There are seven tunes on this collection, a well-hewed mix that clearly suggests Coltrane had his sights on creating a full album that day. From the sound of it, this would have been an important one.
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“Both Directions at Once: The Lost Album” is due on Impulse! on June 29.Credit
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“In 1963, all these musicians are reaching some of the heights of their musical powers,” said the saxophonist Ravi Coltrane, John Coltrane’s son, who helped prepare “Both Directions at Once” for release. “On this record, you do get a sense of John with one foot in the past and one foot headed toward his future.”
That’s true — though as Mr. Coltrane was careful to point out, his father always lived in a state of transition. The poet and critic Amiri Baraka wrote in 1963 that Coltrane’s career was one of simultaneous “changes, resolutions and transmutations.” As the public came to depend on the grounding wisdom of his saxophone sound in the late 1950s and ’60s, Coltrane kept shifting and expanding it.
By the time he signed with Impulse! in 1961, he had mostly left behind the swift harmonic movement of his earlier work. He was resolutely exploring other elements: drones influenced by North African and Indian music; unbounded and jagged melodic phrasing. One of Coltrane’s earliest biographers, C.O. Simpkins, described the quartet’s shows in these years — with Mr. Jones lighting fires and Mr. Tyner splashing them with multihued harmonies — as a kind of euphoric cleanse. The quartet, he wrote, “would beat the unclean air until it begged for mercy.”
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But Coltrane had a funny problem: He was also quite commercially successful, particularly for an improvising musician of such rigor. He had arrived at Impulse! shortly after scoring a megahit with “My Favorite Things,” and the producer Bob Thiele felt obligated to provide a stream of concept-driven and consumer-friendly projects. The other albums he made in 1963 with Coltrane were “Ballads,” “Duke Ellington and John Coltrane” and “John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman.”
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Coltrane, the drummer Elvin Jones, the bassist Jimmy Garrison and the pianist McCoy Tyner in the studio.CreditJim Marshall
“Coltrane” and “Crescent,” the albums that show us Coltrane condensing his quartet’s live persona for posterity, are marvelous. They balance deep blues playing with lengthy, minor-key chants, laced through with an explosively rhythmic group dynamic. But in the two years between their recording — spring 1962 to spring 1964 — we had little to go on until now.
[Read Ben Ratliff on “the miracle of Coltrane.”]
“Both Directions at Once” was recorded at the Rudy Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey, small-group jazz’s premier recording habitat, on March 6, 1963. Two days earlier, Mr. Tyner had taped “Nights of Ballads and Blues” there (it’s an underrated gem that shows the lush shading and ardent poise of his playing). The day after “Both Directions at Once” was recorded, Coltrane’s quartet — which was in the midst of a two-week run at Birdland in Manhattan — returned to the studio with Hartman, a baritone crooner, to knock out that album, which became a classic.
But on this newly discovered collection, we hear something close to the breadth of what Coltrane and his associates were delivering onstage. “You get a lot of that musical meat, but in a context that will be more accessible to a lot of listeners,” said Lewis Porter, a pianist and scholar, who was sent an early copy of the album.
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On “Slow Blues,” Coltrane lights into split-toned incantation almost immediately, then carries a steady improvisation forward for nearly the entire 11-and-a-half minutes of the track, interrupted only by a brief Tyner solo.
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Mr. Tyner, left, and Coltrane. Mr. Tyner recorded his album “Nights of Ballads and Blues” two days before the lost session.CreditJoe Alper
Impulse! is releasing the album as a single disc, featuring one rendition each of the seven tunes the band cut that day. (Ravi Coltrane and the record executive Ken Druker chose the order.) But for those who buy the deluxe edition, with seven alternate takes from the same session on a separate disc, the biggest score will be the four renditions of “Impressions.” Meditative but headlong, this piece had been the quartet’s concert centerpiece for two years at that point, but Coltrane still hadn’t given it a name. (On the tape box that was found, it was untitled.)
An expansive live version would be released later in 1963, on an album called “Impressions,” but this March recording session marked the second and, apparently, final time Coltrane would attempt to wrangle “Impressions” into a studio recording. All the versions hover around the four-minute mark, but each take is different; on two of them, the band rides along at a comfortable, medium tempo with Mr. Tyner adding a chiming, two-chord pattern. On the final two takes, Coltrane ticks the tempo up higher, and slashes boldly without a piano beneath him.
The album also includes two original tunes that seem to have been committed to tape here for the first and only time. They’re identified by the numbering system that Thiele used in the studio. The first, “11383,” is a brisk minor blues, with the swirling momentum typical of Coltrane’s live performances and his most affecting records.
Then there’s “11386,” a shimmying melody that begins with a wide-flung first section — pulpy chords resounding from Garrison’s bass — then a passage of beaming swing. It bears some structural similarity to Coltrane’s “My Favorite Things” arrangement. But as Mr. Porter pointed out, the tune also sounds a lot like the writing of Mr. Tyner. Indeed, throughout the 1960s, the pianist was writing pieces with this same kind of fast, dancing melody, and a similar balancing act between swing and straight rhythms.
“He’s so on top of that piece. It’s just a thought,” Mr. Porter said, referring to Mr. Tyner’s avid playing on all three versions of “11386” featured here. “Where is it written that everything they played had to be by Coltrane?”
It’s a tempting, provocative question, and a good one. It’s one of many that this discovery allows us to start asking about the work of an epochal band in its prime.
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“Boston” Bob Gibson’s Record Collection – Pop Up / Online Grab Bag Sale at Rappcats | Now-Again

“Boston” Bob Gibson’s Record Collection – Pop Up / Online Grab Bag Sale at Rappcats | Now-Again

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“Boston” Bob Gibson’s Record Collection – Pop Up / Online Grab Bag Sale at Rappcats
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Thurs and Fri June 7th and 8th: Happy Hour – 4–7 pm. (Natural wine tasting too!)
Saturday June 9th: Noon-3 pm.
Rappcats x Ubiquity Records Pt. 3 – EXTENDED. A blow-out sale of thousands of LP’s from legendary dealer “Boston” Bob Gibson’s Collection. New stock added each day.
Not able to make it to the sale? Buy a “Boston” Bob Grab Bag at our web store at Rappcats – 4 pieces of wax selected by Egon.
This is the first pop up in what will be three events – Rappcats is bringing back Ubiquity Records founder Michael McFadin and thousands of records from the collection of “Boston” Bob Gibson for a record shop in our 1500 square foot space in Highland Park. All genres. All styles. Prices from $1 to $20. 
Rappcats previous two pop ups centered around Gibson’s collection focused on the uber-rarities that the sleuth uncovered and his rap records. These events will focus on the core of Gibson’s collection, the staples, from funk and soul to jazz to world music to un-Googleable private-pressed oddities. And they’re all priced cheap. 
Gibson’s collection, which was considered by collectors like DJ Shadow, the Groove Merchant’s Chris Veltri and Chairman Mao to be one of the best of its kind ever assembled, numbered at more than 30,000. His last 8,000 pieces will find a new home to the intrigued music fan at these events.
About Bob Gibson:
Gibson, as his name reflects, lived in Boston which, in the pre-Internet 80s, might as well have been in a different country than New York City. But Gibson was a preternatural collector and, while Ulitmate Breaks and Beats was the biggest direct influencing on the 80s hip hop soundscape, Gibson was using the template as a springboard, and going deep. Deeper than any collector had ever gone. 
He was a collector, first, and a dealer second. He made cassette compilations which he often played, and sometimes sold, at the In Your Ear record shop where he was employed. These compilations were full of the songs that would soon become the hip hop sound of the early 90s.
Gibson was one of the top three, if not the most sought after, record dealer at the legendary New York Roosevelt Record Conventions, Chairman Mao remembers. This convention was populated by a who’s who in the New York hip hop production scene – Q–Tip, Large Professor, Diamond D, Buckwild and the DITC crew, The Beatnuts – and the key dealers shared records that had never been considered sample fodder. Q-Tip remembers that Gibson was the first to discover and showcase the Archie Whitewater LP, later famously sampled by Common. Mao recalls that Gibson often mailed packages to his key customers – and that Large PRofessor’s remix of Nas’s “It Ain’t Hard To Tell” happened the same day that Gibson sent him the source sample, the Blue Jays Nascence LP.
These stories go on and on – and while Gibson was buying records to sell to hip hop’s elite, he himself was buying and filing rare funk by the Detroit Sex Machines, the psychedelic version of Del Jones’s militant album “The Court Is Closed,” or Demon Fuzz’s second album “Roots and Offshoots,” all holy grail pieces of wax to this day. And he was buying hip hop records by the people he influenced, and stretching back to hip hop’s golden age in search of the next inspiration.
This is your chance to buy the actual records from the man’s collection himself. “Was “Boston” Bob an influential dealer?” asked Q-Tip, when we asked him about the legendary stories surrounding him. He immediately answered, “Oh for sure. And he listened to all of the music we were all making too.”
About Michael McFadin:
Beastie Boys’ Mike D, on “Professor Booty:” “This one goes out to my man the Groove Merchant, comin’ through with the beats that I’ve been searching..’” He was shouting out Michael McFadin, Ubiquity/Luv ’N Haight Records’ President and founder of San Francisco’s fabled Groove Merchant record shop, the boutique he opened on Haight Street in early 1990. It was one of the only stores of its kind, nearly three decades ago, and it quickly earned a reputation the world over as a place to find rare records and learn about new sounds. It became a haven for collectors, DJs, and producers looking for soul, funk, jazz and break beats, and inspired the likes of the Beastie Boys, DJ Shadow and Dan the Automator to create landmark albums in the 90s. 
McFadin moved his label’s operations from San Francisco to Los Angeles in the mid-90s and stopped selling used vinyl, focusing instead on issuing new albums that continued the lineage of the music he sold at Groove Merchant and reissuing essential anthologies of music ranging from latin (Bobby Matos) to jazz (Nathan Davis) to disco (Twilight) to soul and funk (Darondo). That was, until he bought one of the best collections America ever saw: that of “Boston” Bob Gibson, the East Coast’s digging king. Egon visited the collection shortly after McFadin bought it in 2004 and confirmed that it was peerless, full of one-off, fabled records, of all genres, but with a specific bent: heavy grooves, and raw funk. 
June 30th: Soul Assassins Special Event TBA.
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8,000 hot jazz LPs and 78s was donated recently by the estate of Donald Ross :The ARChive of Contemporary Music

8,000 hot jazz LPs and 78s was donated recently by the estate of Donald Ross :The ARChive of Contemporary Music

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Amajor collection of 8,000 hot jazz LPs and 78s was donated recently by the estate of Donald Ross and it includes this swell 78rpm jukebox!  Agreat complement to our Great78Project. 
Here is the donors obit that appeared yesterday, linked above, that appeared in the LA Times : 
June 18, 1942 – June 1, 2018 Donald Ross, a playwright and screenwriter, succumbed to cancer after a long battle. He is survived by son Max Ross, daughter Alexis Hill, daughters-in-law Daphne King Ross and Jennifer Fedin, grandchildren Violet Ross and Xander Fedin-Hill, and cousins Lynda Levy and Lenore Stadlen. Donald was predeceased by his wife of 49 years, noted voice over artist Patti Deutsch Ross. Over a 30-year career, Donald wrote some of TV’s most popular variety shows, comedies, and dramas: This is Tom Jones, Dinah!, Diff’rent Strokes, The Love Boat, Matlock, and Murder, She Wrote, including that show’s final episode. Paired with Patti, Donald was successful on camera as a regular on the celebrity game show Tattletales. He tapped his lifelong love of hot jazz to produce and write the Peabody and Christopher Award winning Timex All-Star Swing Festival (1972). Materials from those shows along with six stage plays, the screenplay for Hamburger, the Motion Picture (1985), his Emmy certificate for Dinah!, and other selections from Donald’s career are at the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center at Boston University, his alma mater. In lieu of flowers, consider a donation to The ARChive of Contemporary Music, the next home for Donald’s world-class jazz record collection. And hoist a shot of cheap Scotch, in a rock glass, but no rocks. A celebration of Donald’s life is planned.
Published in the Los Angeles Times from June 5 to June 6, 2018

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8,000 hot jazz LPs and 78s was donated recently by the estate of Donald Ross :The ARChive of Contemporary Music

8,000 hot jazz LPs and 78s was donated recently by the estate of Donald Ross :The ARChive of Contemporary Music

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Amajor collection of 8,000 hot jazz LPs and 78s was donated recently by the estate of Donald Ross and it includes this swell 78rpm jukebox!  Agreat complement to our Great78Project. 
Here is the donors obit that appeared yesterday, linked above, that appeared in the LA Times : 
June 18, 1942 – June 1, 2018 Donald Ross, a playwright and screenwriter, succumbed to cancer after a long battle. He is survived by son Max Ross, daughter Alexis Hill, daughters-in-law Daphne King Ross and Jennifer Fedin, grandchildren Violet Ross and Xander Fedin-Hill, and cousins Lynda Levy and Lenore Stadlen. Donald was predeceased by his wife of 49 years, noted voice over artist Patti Deutsch Ross. Over a 30-year career, Donald wrote some of TV’s most popular variety shows, comedies, and dramas: This is Tom Jones, Dinah!, Diff’rent Strokes, The Love Boat, Matlock, and Murder, She Wrote, including that show’s final episode. Paired with Patti, Donald was successful on camera as a regular on the celebrity game show Tattletales. He tapped his lifelong love of hot jazz to produce and write the Peabody and Christopher Award winning Timex All-Star Swing Festival (1972). Materials from those shows along with six stage plays, the screenplay for Hamburger, the Motion Picture (1985), his Emmy certificate for Dinah!, and other selections from Donald’s career are at the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center at Boston University, his alma mater. In lieu of flowers, consider a donation to The ARChive of Contemporary Music, the next home for Donald’s world-class jazz record collection. And hoist a shot of cheap Scotch, in a rock glass, but no rocks. A celebration of Donald’s life is planned.
Published in the Los Angeles Times from June 5 to June 6, 2018

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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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A Personal Statement Turned Ritual Music – Larry Blumenfeld WSJ

A Personal Statement Turned Ritual Music – Larry Blumenfeld WSJ

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-personal-statement-turned-ritual-music-1528215549
 
A Personal Statement Turned Ritual Music
John Zorn’s ‘The Book Beriah’ brings together many groups across 11 CDs in a work that serves as the culmination of a 25-year project.
Larry Blumenfeld
June 5, 2018 12:19 p.m. ET
In 1992, alto saxophonist and composer John Zorn, then a singular fixture of New York’s Downtown scene, set out to explore his Jewish heritage. He composed and recorded “Kristallnacht,” a searching suite named for a horrifying historical event. Then he began writing more compact compositions based on the scales characteristic of Jewish music and meant to satisfy contemporary improvising musicians. 
Saxophonist and composer John Zorn
Saxophonist and composer John Zorn Photo: Scott Irvine
“It began as my personal answer to what new Jewish music is,” Mr. Zorn told me years ago in an interview. And it was a musical challenge. “After writing so much conceptual music, I wanted to just write a book of tunes—the way Irving Berlin had a book of tunes, the way Thelonious Monk had a book of tunes.” He called that book Masada, for an ancient Judean fortress that was subjected to a deadly siege by troops of the Roman Empire, and which now serves as a symbol of Jewish defiance and pride. 
In 1993, almost on a whim, he performed some of these new pieces with a group including trumpeter Dave Douglas, bassist Greg Cohen and drummer Joey Baron. That quartet became known as Masada, and it grew to be among the signal small jazz ensembles of late 20th-century jazz. Meanwhile, Mr. Zorn kept performing his Masada book, creating other bands as well for its presentation. And he kept writing. By 1996, he had more than 200 Masada compositions. 
In 2004, while wrestling with an orchestral commission, he returned to the Masada project. He wrote a second collection at a furious pace, more than 300 songs in three months, this time distributing the music to other musicians to interpret. That second Masada collection, “Book of Angels,” led to more than 30 recordings by more than two dozen different ensembles on his Tzadik label. Mr. Zorn wasn’t done. A few years later, he composed a third collection, “The Book Beriah.” Its 92 compositions brought Masada’s total to 613, the number of commandments Jews are required by the Torah to observe. 
Now 64, Mr. Zorn, who received a MacArthur grant in 2006, commands a deep and broad following. His music is played at symphony halls and music festivals, jazz and rocks clubs, art museums and film houses, as well as at The Stone, the music venue he founded in 2005, where musicians share booking duties, and which is now housed at the New School’s Glass Box Theater in Manhattan. 
For this third Masada book, rather than release a series of recordings, Mr. Zorn packed these compositions into a limited-edition set of 11 CDs, each featuring a different ensemble (available through the Pledgemusic website). “The Book Beriah” begins with singer Sofia Rei, who was born in Argentina, singing her original lyrics, in Spanish, to Mr. Zorn’s compositions, in duet with J.C. Maillard, who plays bass and saz, a long-necked lute. It ends with another duo, of pianists Craig Taborn and Vadim Neselovskyi, improvising in sometimes starkly contrasting fashions on Mr. Zorn’s themes. In between, the music ranges wildly in style and feeling.
Gnostic Trio—guitarist Bill Frisell, vibraphonist Kenny Wollesen and harpist Carol Emanuel —creates an ethereal, nearly otherworldly sound. Cleric, a quartet that bills itself as “avant metal,” plays ferociously at times. The Spike Orchestra, a 16-piece ensemble, evokes many things, including Charles Mingus’s large-group jazz, surf-rock, and klezmer music. One group, Klezmerson, filters Mr. Zorn’s music through Mexican and gypsy influences to fascinating effect. A few musicians especially shine in multiple contexts: Shanir Blumenkranz, who plays bass, Moroccan gimbri and percussion, is featured in several bands including Abraxas, a quartet he assembled at Mr. Zorn’s urging; Brian Marsella, who plays piano or keyboards with two ensembles, seems to have a special affinity for Mr. Zorn’s work and its harmonic potential. Moods shift from disc to disc, each powerfully conjured: propulsive and with an air of mystery on tracks from Secret Chiefs 3, which blends electric guitars and violin; precise and lovely, with the music’s structural complexity veiled by an overriding sense of ease, on duet tracks from guitarists Julian Lage and Gyan Riley.
For all its variety, “The Book Beriah” sounds cohesive due to the sturdiness of Mr. Zorn’s compositions. There’s some wild and woolly improvisation, some daring interpretation, but also a clear sense of fidelity to these themes. (“At some point in your arrangement,” Mr. Zorn told each band, “I want to hear every note and every rhythm exactly as written.”) These are Mr. Zorn’s stories, based on his understanding of ancient scales and modern-day composition, and rendered here as both complex and accessible. Decades ago, Mr. Zorn was known for a jump-cut aesthetic. His work of late, and especially here, reveals a melodist at heart. Masada, which began 25 years ago as a personal statement and a frame for Mr. Zorn’s own playing, has turned into ritual music for a gathering of tribes whose connections appear less than obvious but who share a sturdy aesthetic faith. 
—Mr. Blumenfeld writes about jazz for the Journal.
 
 

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Kennedy Center jazz honors bassist Charlie Haden – The Washington Post

Kennedy Center jazz honors bassist Charlie Haden – The Washington Post

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/music/kennedy-center-jazz-honors-bassist-charlie-haden/2018/06/03/21d113e8-6661-11e8-81ca-bb14593acaa6_story.html?utm_term=.a29998576b12
 
Kennedy Center jazz honors bassist Charlie Haden
by Michael J. West and style@washpost.comJune 3
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It takes a vast concert to encapsulate the vast legacy of bassist Charlie Haden, who died in 2014 at age 76. “A note to our regular attendees: There is an intermission tonight,” Kevin Struthers, the Kennedy Center’s director of jazz programming, announced from the Terrace Theater’s stage on Friday night. Indeed, Kennedy Center jazz doesn’t do a lot of intermissions — but it doesn’t do a lot of two-band, two-set 2½ -hour concerts either. This one, co-hosted by Haden’s widow, Ruth Cameron, was glorious. 
First came Quartet West, Haden’s longtime Los Angeles-based combo — with Haden protege Darek Oles taking the bass chair. It was an improviser’s showcase. Distinctive tenor sax man Ernie Watts got his jollies on Charlie Parker’s “Passport,” digging in with yelps, shrieks and a chain-link series of tremolos that ventured happily into atonality. For pianist Alan Broadbent it was “Child’s Play,” Haden’s genial calypso, his chordal solo ending with quotes from Sonny Rollins’s “St. Thomas” (jazz’s most famous calypso, on which drummer Rodney Green then built a melodic solo). Oles, until then most remarkable for not sounding like Haden, finally paid tribute to the master with a loping low- and thick-toned intro on the hymn-like ballad “First Song,” then with a volley of double stops on Ornette Coleman’s “Lonely Woman,” the song on which Haden invented free-jazz bass. 
The evening’s second half belonged to Haden’s Liberation Music Orchestra, a 12-piece ensemble directed by legendary composer and pianist Carla Bley (the LMO’s music director since its 1969 creation). Despite its avant-garde pedigree and the portent of “Lonely Woman,” the orchestra focused not on improvisation (free or otherwise) but on Bley’s eccentric but lush arrangements. On Haden’s “Silence,” she slowly emulsified the ensemble, trumpeter Seneca Black opening on an eight-bar line that then repeated, with trombonist Curtis Fowlkes joining in. Each time the line recycled, new players entered until the full band was engaged. It set the tone for the set. 
“We’ll have them taste chef-made bites, invite them to cook for themselves with our appliances, start conversations about the way they live and use their kitchens on a daily basis.” — Brigg Klein, National Director of Showrooms, Sub-Zero, Wolf, and Cove/var/folders/jp/pcc_fmw917s531ggwqbr3_j80000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/WebArchiveCopyPasteTempFiles/26268227-c7b2-4396-98f8-0ca06cf57eaf.jpg&h=40&_=1527628777597  Read More 
There were certainly solos: Bright-toned trumpeter Michael Rodriguez took a feature on “Going Home”; the LMO’s special guest was tenor saxophone icon Joe Lovano, doing remarkable work on “This Is Not America” and “Song for the Whales.” Both soloists, though, were shaped and colored by Bley’s ensemble passages and backgrounds. Nowhere was this more apparent than on her own composition “Silent Spring”: Despite a gorgeous, guitar-like bass intro from Steve Swallow and a mammoth tenor solo from Chet Doxas, it was Bley’s trudging funeral-march form that held sway — in particular, her writing near the end, a long passage for the horns followed by a mad rhythm-section scramble.
If neither act ever broke free, they still made a spectacular presentation of Haden’s range and dimension. The bass great would have been delighted.
style@washpost.com
 
 

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The Louis Armstrong Memorial Dishwasher – The New York Times

The Louis Armstrong Memorial Dishwasher – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/03/nyregion/metropolitan-diary-louis-armstrong-memorial-dishwasher.html#commentsContainer
METROPOLITAN DIARY
The Louis Armstrong Memorial Dishwasher
By Nick Friedman
·        June 3, 2018
Dear Diary:
As my wife and I reviewed plans to finally renovate the dowdy kitchen in our Cobble Hill house two decades after moving in, we steeled ourselves to bid a fond farewell to the Louis Armstrong Memorial Dishwasher.

The Louis Armstrong Memorial Dishwasher had come with the kitchen; the honorific had not. Back then it was a just a battered appliance of indeterminate age, a KitchenAid Imperial model KDI-16 that we were glad to keep because it took an onerous chore off our hands. Its rattle and roar drowned out conversation, but it made our plates sparkle.

We bestowed the name about 15 years ago after one of those classic New York exploratory weekends, this one involving a trip to the Louis Armstrong House Museum in Corona, Queens.

On the tour, we learned that Armstrong’s wife, Lucille, had left the interior of the house unchanged after he died in 1971. When we got to the custom-built kitchen, we spotted it: a circa-1970 KitchenAid dishwasher that looked a lot like ours, but in blue to match the cabinets.

At the gift shop, I bought a postcard of Armstrong blowing his trumpet. I put it in a magnetized frame and stuck it on the front of our KitchenAid.
In a few months, the Louis Armstrong Memorial Dishwasher will perform its final number.
 
 
 

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The Exacting Art of Saxophone Repair – The New York Times

The Exacting Art of Saxophone Repair – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/01/nyregion/the-exacting-art-of-saxophone-repair.html?rref=collection%2Fsectioncollection%2Fnyregion
 
The Exacting Art of Saxophone Repair
By Corey Kilgannon
 
June 1, 2018
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Perry Ritter decided as a young man that he would never play the sax professionally. But he was good at fixing them.Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
Perry Ritter’s tiny saxophone repair shop in Midtown Manhattan is as much a visual flight of fancy as a jazz solo is an auditory one.
The shop — in the heart of the Diamond District, on West 47th Street — is crowded with used instruments and the whimsical sculptures that Mr. Ritter creates during his downtime from spare saxophone parts.
Mr. Ritter, 59, has been repairing saxophones in Midtown for more than 40 years and is the go-to technician for some of the biggest jazz players in New York.
His workbench is nestled in one of the densest commercial hives in the city, in a building largely occupied by jewelry merchants.
Working on these valuable horns, usually vintage Selmers favored by jazz artists, can be tedious — replacing or adjusting delicate keys, rods, pins, springs, cork, and leather pads — so Mr. Ritter often takes breaks to work on his figurative creations.
His output has turned the shop into a menagerie of skeletal dragons and swooping prehistoric birds, as well as quirky figurines and decorative items.
Mobiles hang from the ceiling; movable figures sit on shelves. There is a jazz drummer who plays with the turn of a tiny crank. There is a mobile in the style of the artist Alexander Calder made with saxophone rods and key cups.
A bony reptile lay across Mr. Ritter’s toolbox as he worked on a saxophone by the soft light that filtered in from the air shaft through sooty windows.
A huge gong hangs on the inside of the door, signaling each customer’s arrival with a loud clatter. It announced the entrance of Jonathon Haffner, a saxophonist seeking a tuneup of his horn before heading off to record with the trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith and the drummer Jack DeJohnette.
The next customer was Michael Johnson, who played saxophone in the house band for B.B. King’s club in Times Square before the place closed in April. Mr. Johnson also needed a once-over on his horn and, like Mr. Haffner, he needed it done immediately.
“I’m sort of used to New York being like that,” said Mr. Ritter, who is married with two grown daughters and lives in Rockland County.
He grew up in Palisades Park, N.J. and said he developed delicate mechanical skills early on by working in his father’s machine shop. He played the saxophone in school ensembles, but by college he concluded that he might not have the skills to make a living playing instruments.
“I said, ‘I know — I’ll repair them,’” he recalled.
He attended the Eastern School of Musical Instrument Repair in Union, N.J., and started out at the bustling repair shops that once proliferated along West 48th Street in Midtown, including Art Shell, Silver & Horlan, Alex Music, Manny’s and Sam Ash.
Mr. Ritter can recount endless stories about legendary jazz saxophonists whose horns he has repaired. Ask him about the estimable teeth marks gouged by Sonny Rollins into his mouthpiece after endless hours of intense practice.
Or the time he fixed Pharoah Sanders’s chipped mouthpiece and Mr. Sanders doubled Mr. Ritter’s $150 fee for the work.
The revered saxophonist Michael Brecker visited the shop constantly, seeking minute adjustments to help facilitate his stunning technique.
Mr. Ritter said he introduced Mr. Brecker to the younger saxophonist Chris Potter in the shop so that Mr. Potter could buy one of Mr. Brecker’s saxophones.
It was also in Mr. Ritter’s shop that Mr. Brecker once met Lenny Pickett, the saxophonist in the band on “Saturday Night Live,’’ and invited Mr. Pickett to play his horn.
Mr. Pickett, who is known for his trademark high-register squeals often heard in the opening credits of “Saturday Night Live,” floored Mr. Brecker with a brilliant squealing recital.
Mr. Ritter said he once made a catastrophic blunder of cleaning out the layers of residue in the upper tubing of Illinois Jacquet’s horn, which brightened the sound.
“He said I took the jive out of the horn,” Mr. Ritter said. “Here was this hero of mine lambasting me. But what could I do? I couldn’t put the jive back in his horn. He never came back.”
On the wall was an old Christmas card from the saxophonist Frank Wess, who pulled the young repairman’s leg by feigning anger when picking up his horn.
“He slammed his fist on the table and said, “How much do I owe you, and why?” recalled Mr. Ritter, who would become friends with Mr. Wess, who died in 2013.
Pointing to an empty bottle of Beck’s beer on a shelf, he said, “That was Frank Wess’s last beer.”
Mr. Ritter also makes custom horns, like the three saxes he attached so that the musician Duke Washington could play them at one time. Mr. Ritter said he also maintains the so-called Flame-O-Phone, a fire-spewing baritone saxophone played by Stefan Zeniuk.
Mr. Ritter said he began making sculptures out of sax parts after curtailing his model rocketry hobby.
After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, he said, he was spotted carrying a model rocket in Midtown and was swarmed by police officers.
“After 9/11,” he explained, “you just couldn’t walk around New York with a missile on your shoulder anymore.”
Email character@nytimes.com
 

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1956 – NBC – TODAY – Nellie Lutcher Jazz Pianist – YouTube

1956 – NBC – TODAY – Nellie Lutcher Jazz Pianist – YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sm02YKi6rOc
 

 

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Blues Legend Eddy Clearwater: January 10, 1935 – June 1, 2018

Blues Legend Eddy Clearwater: January 10, 1935 – June 1, 2018

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – June 1, 2018

CONTACT: Marc Lipkin / Alligator Records / 773-973-7736 x235
EMAIL: publicity@allig.com
www.alligator.com
 
BLUES LEGEND EDDY CLEARWATER: JANUARY 10, 1935 – JUNE 1, 2018
 

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Grammy-nominated Chicago blues legend Eddy “The Chief” Clearwater died of heart failure on Friday, June 1, in his hometown of Skokie, Illinois. He was 83.
 
Born Edward Harrington on January 10, 1935 in Macon, Mississippi, Clearwater (as he came to be known) was internationally lauded for his blues-rocking guitar playing, his original songs and his flamboyant showmanship. He was inducted into the Blues Hall Of Fame in 2016, and also won two Blues Music Awards including Contemporary Male Blues Artist Of The Year in 2001.

Clearwater was equally comfortable playing the deepest, most intense blues or his own brand of rocking, good-time party music – a style he called “rock-a-blues,” mixing blues, rock, rockabilly, country and gospel. Between his slashing guitar work and his room-filling vocals, Clearwater was among the very finest practitioners of the West Side style of Chicago blues. DownBeat called him “a forceful six-stringer…He lays down gritty West Side shuffles and belly-grinding slow blues that highlight his raw chops, soulful vocals, and earthy, humorous lyrics.” Blues Revue said he played “joyous rave-ups. He testifies with stunning soul fervor and powerful guitar. He is one of the blues’ finest songwriters.”
 
Clearwater’s musical talent became clear early on. From his Mississippi birthplace, He and his family moved to Birmingham, AL in 1948 when he was 13. With music from blues to gospel to country & western surrounding him from an early age, Clearwater taught himself to play guitar (left-handed and upside down), and began performing with various gospel groups, including the legendary Five Blind Boys of Alabama. After moving to Chicago in 1950, he stayed with an uncle and took a job as a dishwasher, saving as much as he could from his $37 a week salary. His first music jobs were with gospel groups playing in local churches. Through his uncle’s contacts, Clearwater met many of Chicago’s blues stars. He fell deeper under the spell of the blues, and befriended Magic Sam, who would become one of Clearwater’s closest friends and teachers.
 
By 1953, as Guitar Eddy, he was making a strong name for himself, working the South and West Side bars regularly. After hearing Chuck Berry in 1957, Clearwater added a rock and roll element to his already searing blues style, creating a unique signature sound. He recorded his first single, Hill Billy Blues, for his uncle’s Atomic H label in 1958 under the name Clear Waters (his manager at the time, drummer Jump Jackson, came up with the name as a play on Muddy Waters). The name Clear Waters morphed into Eddy Clearwater. He worked the Chicago club circuit steadily throughout the 1950s, 1960s and into the 1970s. He found huge success in the 1970s among the city’s college crowd, who responded to his individual brand of blues, his rock and roll spirit and his high energy stage show.
 
Clearwater’s first full-length LP, 1980’s The Chief, was the initial release on Chicago’s Rooster Blues label, launching him onto the national and international blues scene. Over the decades he recorded over 15 solo albums and never stopped touring, with fans from Chicago to Japan to Poland. His 2003 album on Bullseye Blues, Rock ‘N’ Roll City, was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Traditional Blues Album. He released West Side Strut on Alligator in 2008 to both international popular and critical acclaim. His most recent CD was the self-released Soul Funky in 2014.
 
Clearwater is survived by his wife, Renee Greenman Harrington Clearwater, children Heather Greenman, Alyssa Jacquelyn, David Knopf, Randy Greenman, Jason Harrington and Edgar Harrington and grandchildren Gabriella Knopf and Graham Knopf.

Services will be held on Tuesday, June 5 at 11:00am at Chicago Jewish Funerals, 8851 Skokie Boulevard, Skokie, IL 60077.
 
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Loud music at restaurants could be leading you to order burgers over salads, study says – The Washington Post

Loud music at restaurants could be leading you to order burgers over salads, study says – The Washington Post

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/voraciously/wp/2018/05/29/loud-music-at-restaurants-could-be-leading-you-to-order-burgers-over-salads-according-to-a-new-study/?mc_cid=2ca64918a5
 
Loud music at restaurants could be leading you to order burgers over salads, study says
Noisy restaurants are a source of perennial complaints, but it’s not just diners’ ears that are affected — it’s their waistlines, too. A new study published in the Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science has found that if ambient music played in a restaurant is louder, the customers are more susceptible to choose unhealthful foods.
Dipayan Biswas, a marketing professor at the University of South Florida, conducted the study at a cafe in Stockholm, where various genres of music were played on a loop at 55 decibels and 70 decibels at different times, for several days. When the music was louder, researchers found 20 percent more customers ordered something that was not good for them, compared to those who dined during the lower-volume times.
[Pink Starbursts and brownie edges: How our quirky preferences are driving the future of snacking]
Softer music is calming, and louder music gets us amped up. “Volume is proven to directly impact heart rate and arousal,” according to the study. And it affects our decision-making, as well: In the soothing quiet of some gentle jazz, we have better self-control, and we make better decisions about which foods would be better for us. But in the excitement of loud rock music, we want meat and cheese on a bun, dammit, and some french fries on the side. Oh, and a beer . . . or three.
Though the study is new, it reinforces conventional wisdom that restaurant owners have known for quite some time: Creating the right atmosphere is essential.
Music “creates a vibe. Your body starts tingling,” said Alex McCoy, the chef-owner of Lucky Buns, a burger restaurant in Washington. “The more essential you make the experience, the more your brain just starts going crazy. You want to buy things, you want to eat, you want to meet people.”
McCoy’s internationally inspired burgers and fried chicken sandwiches have been lauded as some of the best in the District, and his restaurant is, according to Yelp reviewers, “wicked loud,” “but worth it!” He typically plays loud Euro house music or reggae, letting the thumping beat pulse through the restaurant, “a playlist that allows [guests] to get lost in the music.”
/var/folders/jp/pcc_fmw917s531ggwqbr3_j80000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/WebArchiveCopyPasteTempFiles/VJWBHC3ZZM3GHLDBRRHJ4L7VJY.jpgChef Alex McCoy at Lucky Buns in Washington. (Dixie D. Vereen for The Washington Post)
“Different songs, mixtures, genres of music, it creates this chaotic setting,” he said. “And to me, those create the best bar vibe, when a song comes on and [diners are] like, ‘Oh yes! That’s the song! Get a round of drinks.’”
McCoy says he has never compared his sales during periods of different volumes of music. But there are four side salads on the menu, and any burger or fried chicken sandwich can be served on a bed of lettuce with no bun. You will not be surprised to learn that these options have not been top-sellers, especially compared with the burgers served with bacon jam and Gouda, or the fried chicken with pickles and Sriracha.
[Do millennials really not know how to cook? With technology, they don’t really have to.]
Restaurants weren’t always this loud. New York Magazine food writer Adam Platt pinned the origin of the “great noise boom” to the late ’90s, when now-disgraced Mario Batali’s restaurant Babbo was known for blasting Led Zeppelin, the Who and the Pixies. (The chef is now facing a criminal investigation after he has been accused of sexual assault.) Chefs such as David Chang began to ascend to the status of rock stars, and they pumped up the volume in their restaurants, all in an effort to draw in younger people who liked the raucous vibe. But loud restaurants can be a deterrent for older guests or the hard of hearing, or people who just want to enjoy dinner conversation without shouting till they are hoarse.
And, in some cases, restaurant volumes can be an occupational hazard for the people who work there. Consistent exposure to noise levels above 70 decibels can cause hearing loss over time. In Platt’s story, he found some restaurants reached decibel levels in the 90s, louder than a lawn mower. The volume at a downtown Washington Shake Shack around 12:30 p.m. — the height of the lunch rush — was 75 decibels including both music and ambient noise, the equivalent of hearing a “freeway at 50 feet from pavement edge,” according to one chart of comparable sounds. A nearby Sweetgreen — a salad chain that used to throw a music festival — came in at 80 decibels, the equivalent of a garbage disposal.
But Biswas’s paper shows that noise can sway diners to order certain types of foods, potentially increasing the value of their check. “Restaurants and supermarkets can use ambient music strategically to influence consumer buying behavior,” said Biswas in Science Daily. According to the study, “These findings allow restaurant managers to strategically manipulate music volume to influence sales.”
So when you hear Cardi B blasting in your local lunch spot, she’s not the only one making money move. And she might be the reason you’re inexplicably craving fries.
More from Voraciously
Dark, masculine restaurants are out. The freshest design is feminine.
Two new shows skewer trendy food culture — through the eyes of a black ex-con and a young white server
 
 

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Turkish Ambassador’s Home Has Deep Jazz Roots: Voice of America

Turkish Ambassador’s Home Has Deep Jazz Roots: Voice of America

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https://learningenglish.voanews.com/a/turkish-ambassador-residence-has-deep-jazz-roots/4400492.html
 
Turkish Ambassador’s Home Has Deep Jazz Roots
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Washington D.C. is home to many embassies and diplomatic offices representing the nations of the world.
Many ambassadors in Washington live in large, beautiful buildings with rich, interesting histories. One of them is home to Turkey’s ambassador, Serdar Kilic.
It is called Everett House. It is in a neighborhood known for its many embassies and diplomatic buildings. The home was built in 1914 for a wealthy businessman named Edward H. Everett. He made his money working in the glass and oil industries.
The Turkish ambassador’s home in Washington was visited by several famous black musicians during segregation. (VOA)
The Turkish ambassador’s home in Washington was visited by several famous black musicians during segregation. (VOA)
After Everett’s death in 1929, the Turkish government began to pay for its use. Later, Turkey bought the home and all its contents.
In 1935, Turkey’s second ambassador to Washington, Mehmet Munir Ertegun, moved into Everett House. He and his two sons – Ahmet and Nesuhi – had a great love for jazz music. They wanted to experience it with musicians in Washington.
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But Ahmet said in a 2005 interview that when he first arrived in the U.S., jazz music by black musicians was not easy to find. This was during a period of segregation – laws and customs that blocked blacks from mixing with whites in America. But, over time, he said his family got to know some famous black musicians by seeing their shows at Washington’s Howard Theatre
The current ambassador says the Ertegun family organized many jazz events and jam sessions at the residence.
“But not only the white Americans, also the black Americans. And that was the segregation period in the United States. And that was a big move on the part of the Turkish ambassador at that time.”
Ahmet Ertegun said several major black performers came to the ambassador’s home. They included black musicians Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong. But the family also invited famous white performers including Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey.
Jazz musicians Lawrence Brown and Johnny Hodges of the Duke Ellington Orchestra are shown playing together at the Turkish ambassador's residence. William P. Gottlieb/Library of Congress
Jazz musicians Lawrence Brown and Johnny Hodges of the Duke Ellington Orchestra are shown playing together at the Turkish ambassador’s residence. William P. Gottlieb/Library of Congress
Kilic said the fact that black musicians were permitted to enter the home upset some powerful people in Washington. He said that one southern member of Congress even wrote a letter to Ambassador Ertegun, expressing shock that black people could be seen walking in and out the front doors. 
“What the Turkish ambassador said, ‘I mean they are equal citizens of the American society, as far as Turkey is concerned, and he invited all the guests through the front door.”
John Whittington Franklin is with the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. He says the Turkish ambassador’s treatment of blacks showed the community that his home was a safe place for them in Washington.
Several major black performers came to the ambassador’s home to perform and join jam sessions. They included black musicians Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong. (VOA)
Several major black performers came to the ambassador’s home to perform and join jam sessions. They included black musicians Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong. (VOA)
“That it gives assurance to African Americans that there are people from Europe who appreciate them and appreciate their music. And treat them as equals.”
Later, Ahmet Ertegun himself made a big mark on American music. In 1947, he co-founded the famous recording company Atlantic Records. His brother helped him run it. Atlantic Records became a very influential part of the music business. It helped launch the careers of some of America’s biggest stars in jazz, rock’n’roll, and rhythm and blues.
I’m Bryan Lynn.
Ozlem Tinaz reported this story for VOA News. Bryan Lynn adapted it Learning English, with additional information from other sources. Caty Weaver was the editor.
We want to hear from you. Write to us in the Comments section, and visit our Facebook page.
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Words in This Story
jam session – n. a gathering or performance in which musicians play together informally without any preparation
assurance – n. the state of being sure or certain about something
appreciate – v. to understand the worth and importance of
 

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Harold and Gwen McKinney Quintet feat. Marcus Belgrave – Freedom Jazz Dance – YouTube

Harold and Gwen McKinney Quintet feat. Marcus Belgrave – Freedom Jazz Dance – YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZflRKgg5fk
 
HAROLD & GWEN MCKINNEY Quintet feat. MARCUS BELGRAVE – tpt, also w DONALD WALDEN-sax, ROD HICKS-bass & IKE DANEY-drums

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(B.) George ( goin’ 2) Washington Crosses the Delaware | ARC Sizzlin’ Summer Record + CD Sale June 9 – 24 • everyday 11am – 6pm

(B.) George ( goin’ 2) Washington Crosses the Delaware | ARC Sizzlin’ Summer Record + CD Sale June 9 – 24 • everyday 11am – 6pm

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https://www.artsjournal.com/rifftides/2018/05/jeff-sultanof-on-an-important-film-reborn.html
 
Jeff Sultanof On An Important Film Reborn
May 25, 2018 by Doug Ramsey 2 Comments
Composer, arranger, educator and jazz authority Jeff Sultanof occasionally honors Rifftides with his insights. This is one of those happy occasions. Jeff has seen a restoration of  King Of Jazz, a pioneering film from the days when motion picture studios had decided that sound was here to stay.
King Of Jazz: A Guest Review By Jeff Sultanoff
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Until 1926, the only sound the movie-going public heard in a theatre was the accompaniment of a piano, organ or symphony orchestra if they went to one of the big movie palaces. There were experiments with sound, but most audiences hadn’t been exposed to them, although if you are a jazz fan, some of them have got into circulation.
Here is Ben Bernie in 1924 via DeForest Phonofilm
Few theaters could run these films, and there were various technical problems. This film actually looks and sounds better than it did back then. But Western Electric came up with a method for film with sound, and convinced Warner Bros. to buy into the concept; the process was called Vitaphone. The first Vitaphone program featured Don Juan as its main attraction, a motion picture with sound effects and symphonic orchestra accompaniment, but the best parts of the program were the short subjects – vaudeville acts and ensembles of all sizes. By 1929, Vitaphone filmed such bands as the Ben Pollack Orchestra with Jack Teagarden and Benny Goodman (this film is currently undergoing restoration from the original negative).
And Red Nichols with Pee Wee Russell and Eddie Condon:
The musicians were Red Nichols, cornet; Tommy Thune and John Egan, trumpet; Herb Taylor, trombone; Pee Wee Russell, clarinet; Irving Brodsky, piano; Eddie Condon, banjo and vocal; and George Beebe, drums. It has become a very well known film that is all over the internet, but here was an excellent-quality version—for a change.
In that same year, Hollywood studios were churning out revues featuring their biggest stars. Such films as The Hollywood Revue of 1929 (M-G-M), and The Show of Shows (Warner Bros.) are pretty dismal affairs for the non-historian and are hard to sit through today; most people featured in them were stars in silent films; many couldn’t adapt to the new talking pictures and couldn’t sing very well. Paramount on Parade (Paramount) is the best of that early bunch; unfortunately, it exists only as a torso, as several sections are missing their soundtracks.
/var/folders/jp/pcc_fmw917s531ggwqbr3_j80000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/WebArchiveCopyPasteTempFiles/images.jpeg?zoom=2&resize=158%2C203&ssl=1Universal Pictures signed Paul Whiteman (pictured left) in October of 1928, but didn’t know what to do with him. He had script approval, and told anyone who would listen that he wasn’t an actor and wasn’t going to be part of a romantic plot. The Whiteman band waited in Hollywood while Universal came up with scripts that Whiteman rejected. They finally returned to the east coast, and this resulted in one of the great missed opportunities in jazz history: Bix Beiderbecke (pictured right)https://i1.wp.com/www.artsjournal.com/rifftides/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/bixbest.jpg?resize=192%2C253&ssl=1 would most certainly have been featured if the film had been made during this period. When the men returned, Bix had been replaced. But Whiteman had several other notable performers in the band: Harry ‘Goldie’ Goldfield, Wilbur Hall, Frank Trumbauer, and the Rhythm Boys, one of whom was Harry “Bing” Crosby.
By that time, it was agreed that Universal would make a revue. John Murray Anderson was hired to produce and direct the film. Even though he’d never made a movie, he was one of the great producer/directors of stage musicals. Anderson brought his noted designer, Herman Rosse, with him, and together they created incredible sets and costumes, all shot in early Technicolor, at that time a red and green process. One problem was that Technicolor could not reproduce a realistic blue, and leaving out “Rhapsody in Blue” was out of the question. The end result was Rhapsody in Teal!By the time the picture was ready, Universal had spent $2,000,000 on this lavish entertainment, but audiences had already tired of movie musicals and stayed away from them. The initial reaction by preview audiences to The King of Jazz was mixed, and some tinkering was done by removing some of the comedy sketches. It didn’t help. For many, this movie was simply a rehash of earlier revues and didn’t offer anything new by the time it came out. It also didn’t help that Universal’s version of All Quiet on the Western Front played to huge crowds and garnered excellent reviews, so the publicity men at the studio spent their time heavily promoting that picture.
King of Jazz played at the prestigious Roxy Theater in New York with Gershwin himself playing the “Rhapsody” on stage with Whiteman for the first week. While Gershwin brought in theater patrons, this diminished the effect of the filmed “Rhapsody.” By the second week, the movie’s attendance tanked.
The film’s failure resulted in a great financial loss for Universal. It was severely recut and reissued in 1933 and did eventually make a profit. After that, it was quickly forgotten. In the mid-1950s, Technicolor asked the studios whether they wanted their two-color negatives back for safekeeping. Since the two-color process was no longer in use, the negatives were unprintable, and except for Universal all of them simply asked Technicolor to junk them, one of the reasons why many Technicolor films from that era don’t exist or can be found only in poor prints. The resurrection of King of Jazz is chronicled in an excellent book by James Layton and David Pierce.
Once it was voted into the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 2013, this prompted NBC/Universal to restore it. Details of the extensive restoration were originally kept quiet; one source was Ron Hutchinson, a founder of the Vitaphone Project which oversees the preservation of early sound films in which the sound was on disc and had been physically separated from the negatives years ago. Ultimately the negative of the complete soundtrack, and the original camera negative of the 1933 reissue were combined with an original print found in England which had been bootlegged over the years and used for a videocassette release in the early 1970s. Where footage was still missing, stills were used. Only one sequence was never found.
On May 13, 2016, a packed house at the Museum of Modern Art watched this restored version of King of Jazz. The audience included relatives of many of the performers. Audience reaction was overwhelming, with applause at the end of each number. The film was soon shown in other venues to sold-out crowds.
Discussion on social media soon began about whether this film would be issued on DVD and Blu-ray. Was there a sizable enough audience for this very special film, and how much would it cost to clear the music rights? No doubt a sizable sum. The likely candidate for such a release was The Criterion Collection, a company owned by Janus Films, that originally started issuing laserdiscs of classic films with cool extras like interviews and commentary; Criterion releases were the model for the modern-day special edition that most DVD/Blu-ray buyers now expect in releases of both new and older films. Sure enough, on March 27 of this year, King of Jazz appeared as a Criterion edition on store shelves and the internet.
What makes King of Jazz special are the appearances of the Whiteman musicians, several now considered legends. “Meet the Boys” was a presentation that Whiteman performed on the road, and features several Whiteman personalities. Such names as Roy “Red” Maier, Chester Hazlett, Wilbur Hall, Harry “Goldie” Goldfield, Roy Bargy and Mike Pingitore can be seen and heard on screen. But perhaps the most priceless part of this section is Joe Venuti and Eddie Lang playing “Wild Cat.” Here is a still from the film.
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This was one of five filmed appearances by Lang, who later became Crosby’s accompanist. Lang passed away suddenly at the age of 30 after a tonsillectomy and both Crosby and Venuti never fully got over his loss. Seeing him and Venuti play together is indescribable.
While the presentation of “Rhapsody In Blue” drew mixed reactions from audiences and writers, seeing and hearing Roy Bargy and the Whiteman ensemble play this classic work is amazing when you think that this ensemble premiered the work six years earlier, and Bargy was one of the earliest pianists to perform it, playing it many times over the radio and on recordings. While Whiteman and Gershwin had a falling out because of Whiteman’s tempo alterations, the work is well performed here. But perhaps the most important footage belongs to Crosby. Even though he was a member of the Rhythm Boys at the time, he has many standout solos and the camera absolutely loves him. In glorious Technicolor, his appearance will be the high point of the film for many.
This is probably the finest example of this early form of Technicolor, simply because it is one of the few original negatives extant, and the printing was aided by sophisticated computer software. At the time of release, Technicolor prints were either excellent or shoddy, crisp and clear with glorious color or blurred and washed-out, part of the reason why Hollywood studios stopped using it. This release makes a good case for the process. At its best, the color has a pastel, shimmering quality, albeit with no blue registration. The sound is excellent, partly thanks to Whiteman’s insistence of pre-recording the music and then shooting to a playback. In 1930, many studios recorded the music live during shooting, and the sound was often badly balanced or distorted.
Anyone interested in pre-swing-era jazz and pop music must see this film. The extras are great too; an audio commentary features Gary Giddins, Gene Seymour and Vince Giordano, who knows more about this era of music than almost anyone. An interview with Michael Feinstein, a visual essay by James Layton and David Pierce using photos and other artifacts reproduced in their book, two Oswald the Rabbit cartoons (there is a cartoon at the beginning of <em>King Of Jazz</em> that may very well be the first color cartoon made), a 1929 short of John Murray Anderson’s “Melting Pot” presentation that is similar to the one in the movie, and a rare 1932 Walter Winchell short which stars the Whiteman ensemble (this is an expecially great find; the short is not even mentioned in Don Rayno’s encyclopedic Whiteman biography). Ironically, the music in this film was shot live, on set.
P.S. – Barnes & Noble usually has a 50%-off sale of Criterion releases at around this time of the year.
#
(The Rifftides staff is  grateful to Jeff Sultanof for illuminating yet another major development in our culture.)
Related
Sultanof On His Big Band Book
A few weeks ago the Rifftides Monday Recommendation was Jeff Sultanof’s new book Experiencing Big Band Jazz. You can read the recommendation here. Sultanof (pictured right) was recently the guest on Michael Fitzgerald’s Jazz Forum program. Discussing his motivation to write the book, he told Fitzgerald what the publisher expected…
March 8, 2018
In “Main”
Jeff Sultanof On Pete Rugolo
Shortly after Pete Rugolo died this week, Jeff Sultanof offered to contribute a piece putting Rugolo’s work in perspective. I was delighted to accept and flattered that he considered Rifftides the proper place for his essay. Jeff is a native of New York City, where he lives and works. He…
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Jeff Sultanof On An Important Film Reborn | Rifftides

Jeff Sultanof On An Important Film Reborn | Rifftides

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https://www.artsjournal.com/rifftides/2018/05/jeff-sultanof-on-an-important-film-reborn.html
 
Jeff Sultanof On An Important Film Reborn
May 25, 2018 by Doug Ramsey 2 Comments
Composer, arranger, educator and jazz authority Jeff Sultanof occasionally honors Rifftides with his insights. This is one of those happy occasions. Jeff has seen a restoration of  King Of Jazz, a pioneering film from the days when motion picture studios had decided that sound was here to stay.
King Of Jazz: A Guest Review By Jeff Sultanoff
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Until 1926, the only sound the movie-going public heard in a theatre was the accompaniment of a piano, organ or symphony orchestra if they went to one of the big movie palaces. There were experiments with sound, but most audiences hadn’t been exposed to them, although if you are a jazz fan, some of them have got into circulation.
Here is Ben Bernie in 1924 via DeForest Phonofilm
Few theaters could run these films, and there were various technical problems. This film actually looks and sounds better than it did back then. But Western Electric came up with a method for film with sound, and convinced Warner Bros. to buy into the concept; the process was called Vitaphone. The first Vitaphone program featured Don Juan as its main attraction, a motion picture with sound effects and symphonic orchestra accompaniment, but the best parts of the program were the short subjects – vaudeville acts and ensembles of all sizes. By 1929, Vitaphone filmed such bands as the Ben Pollack Orchestra with Jack Teagarden and Benny Goodman (this film is currently undergoing restoration from the original negative).
And Red Nichols with Pee Wee Russell and Eddie Condon:
The musicians were Red Nichols, cornet; Tommy Thune and John Egan, trumpet; Herb Taylor, trombone; Pee Wee Russell, clarinet; Irving Brodsky, piano; Eddie Condon, banjo and vocal; and George Beebe, drums. It has become a very well known film that is all over the internet, but here was an excellent-quality version—for a change.
In that same year, Hollywood studios were churning out revues featuring their biggest stars. Such films as The Hollywood Revue of 1929 (M-G-M), and The Show of Shows (Warner Bros.) are pretty dismal affairs for the non-historian and are hard to sit through today; most people featured in them were stars in silent films; many couldn’t adapt to the new talking pictures and couldn’t sing very well. Paramount on Parade (Paramount) is the best of that early bunch; unfortunately, it exists only as a torso, as several sections are missing their soundtracks.
/var/folders/jp/pcc_fmw917s531ggwqbr3_j80000gn/T/com.microsoft.Outlook/WebArchiveCopyPasteTempFiles/images.jpeg?zoom=2&resize=158%2C203&ssl=1Universal Pictures signed Paul Whiteman (pictured left) in October of 1928, but didn’t know what to do with him. He had script approval, and told anyone who would listen that he wasn’t an actor and wasn’t going to be part of a romantic plot. The Whiteman band waited in Hollywood while Universal came up with scripts that Whiteman rejected. They finally returned to the east coast, and this resulted in one of the great missed opportunities in jazz history: Bix Beiderbecke (pictured right)https://i1.wp.com/www.artsjournal.com/rifftides/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/bixbest.jpg?resize=192%2C253&ssl=1 would most certainly have been featured if the film had been made during this period. When the men returned, Bix had been replaced. But Whiteman had several other notable performers in the band: Harry ‘Goldie’ Goldfield, Wilbur Hall, Frank Trumbauer, and the Rhythm Boys, one of whom was Harry “Bing” Crosby.
By that time, it was agreed that Universal would make a revue. John Murray Anderson was hired to produce and direct the film. Even though he’d never made a movie, he was one of the great producer/directors of stage musicals. Anderson brought his noted designer, Herman Rosse, with him, and together they created incredible sets and costumes, all shot in early Technicolor, at that time a red and green process. One problem was that Technicolor could not reproduce a realistic blue, and leaving out “Rhapsody in Blue” was out of the question. The end result was Rhapsody in Teal!By the time the picture was ready, Universal had spent $2,000,000 on this lavish entertainment, but audiences had already tired of movie musicals and stayed away from them. The initial reaction by preview audiences to The King of Jazz was mixed, and some tinkering was done by removing some of the comedy sketches. It didn’t help. For many, this movie was simply a rehash of earlier revues and didn’t offer anything new by the time it came out. It also didn’t help that Universal’s version of All Quiet on the Western Front played to huge crowds and garnered excellent reviews, so the publicity men at the studio spent their time heavily promoting that picture.
King of Jazz played at the prestigious Roxy Theater in New York with Gershwin himself playing the “Rhapsody” on stage with Whiteman for the first week. While Gershwin brought in theater patrons, this diminished the effect of the filmed “Rhapsody.” By the second week, the movie’s attendance tanked.
The film’s failure resulted in a great financial loss for Universal. It was severely recut and reissued in 1933 and did eventually make a profit. After that, it was quickly forgotten. In the mid-1950s, Technicolor asked the studios whether they wanted their two-color negatives back for safekeeping. Since the two-color process was no longer in use, the negatives were unprintable, and except for Universal all of them simply asked Technicolor to junk them, one of the reasons why many Technicolor films from that era don’t exist or can be found only in poor prints. The resurrection of King of Jazz is chronicled in an excellent book by James Layton and David Pierce.
Once it was voted into the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 2013, this prompted NBC/Universal to restore it. Details of the extensive restoration were originally kept quiet; one source was Ron Hutchinson, a founder of the Vitaphone Project which oversees the preservation of early sound films in which the sound was on disc and had been physically separated from the negatives years ago. Ultimately the negative of the complete soundtrack, and the original camera negative of the 1933 reissue were combined with an original print found in England which had been bootlegged over the years and used for a videocassette release in the early 1970s. Where footage was still missing, stills were used. Only one sequence was never found.
On May 13, 2016, a packed house at the Museum of Modern Art watched this restored version of King of Jazz. The audience included relatives of many of the performers. Audience reaction was overwhelming, with applause at the end of each number. The film was soon shown in other venues to sold-out crowds.
Discussion on social media soon began about whether this film would be issued on DVD and Blu-ray. Was there a sizable enough audience for this very special film, and how much would it cost to clear the music rights? No doubt a sizable sum. The likely candidate for such a release was The Criterion Collection, a company owned by Janus Films, that originally started issuing laserdiscs of classic films with cool extras like interviews and commentary; Criterion releases were the model for the modern-day special edition that most DVD/Blu-ray buyers now expect in releases of both new and older films. Sure enough, on March 27 of this year, King of Jazz appeared as a Criterion edition on store shelves and the internet.
What makes King of Jazz special are the appearances of the Whiteman musicians, several now considered legends. “Meet the Boys” was a presentation that Whiteman performed on the road, and features several Whiteman personalities. Such names as Roy “Red” Maier, Chester Hazlett, Wilbur Hall, Harry “Goldie” Goldfield, Roy Bargy and Mike Pingitore can be seen and heard on screen. But perhaps the most priceless part of this section is Joe Venuti and Eddie Lang playing “Wild Cat.” Here is a still from the film.
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This was one of five filmed appearances by Lang, who later became Crosby’s accompanist. Lang passed away suddenly at the age of 30 after a tonsillectomy and both Crosby and Venuti never fully got over his loss. Seeing him and Venuti play together is indescribable.
While the presentation of “Rhapsody In Blue” drew mixed reactions from audiences and writers, seeing and hearing Roy Bargy and the Whiteman ensemble play this classic work is amazing when you think that this ensemble premiered the work six years earlier, and Bargy was one of the earliest pianists to perform it, playing it many times over the radio and on recordings. While Whiteman and Gershwin had a falling out because of Whiteman’s tempo alterations, the work is well performed here. But perhaps the most important footage belongs to Crosby. Even though he was a member of the Rhythm Boys at the time, he has many standout solos and the camera absolutely loves him. In glorious Technicolor, his appearance will be the high point of the film for many.
This is probably the finest example of this early form of Technicolor, simply because it is one of the few original negatives extant, and the printing was aided by sophisticated computer software. At the time of release, Technicolor prints were either excellent or shoddy, crisp and clear with glorious color or blurred and washed-out, part of the reason why Hollywood studios stopped using it. This release makes a good case for the process. At its best, the color has a pastel, shimmering quality, albeit with no blue registration. The sound is excellent, partly thanks to Whiteman’s insistence of pre-recording the music and then shooting to a playback. In 1930, many studios recorded the music live during shooting, and the sound was often badly balanced or distorted.
Anyone interested in pre-swing-era jazz and pop music must see this film. The extras are great too; an audio commentary features Gary Giddins, Gene Seymour and Vince Giordano, who knows more about this era of music than almost anyone. An interview with Michael Feinstein, a visual essay by James Layton and David Pierce using photos and other artifacts reproduced in their book, two Oswald the Rabbit cartoons (there is a cartoon at the beginning of <em>King Of Jazz</em> that may very well be the first color cartoon made), a 1929 short of John Murray Anderson’s “Melting Pot” presentation that is similar to the one in the movie, and a rare 1932 Walter Winchell short which stars the Whiteman ensemble (this is an expecially great find; the short is not even mentioned in Don Rayno’s encyclopedic Whiteman biography). Ironically, the music in this film was shot live, on set.
P.S. – Barnes & Noble usually has a 50%-off sale of Criterion releases at around this time of the year.
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(The Rifftides staff is  grateful to Jeff Sultanof for illuminating yet another major development in our culture.)
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The Forgotten Entertainer Rag – The New York Times

The Forgotten Entertainer Rag – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/24/nyregion/remembering-scott-joplin.html
 
The Forgotten Entertainer Rag
May 24, 2018
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The Victorian Vaudeville Quartet, keeping things lively at the annual Scott Joplin concert at St. Michael’s Cemetery in Queens.Adrienne Grunwald for The New York Times
Wesley Gill stood in the rain holding an umbrella last Saturday as he looked at a small bronze plaque at St. Michael’s Cemetery in East Elmhurst, Queens. Violets sprouted around it, and its inscription read: “Scott Joplin. American composer. November 24, 1868 — April 1, 1917.”
Mr. Gill, 65, had driven in from Pittsburgh to attend the annual springtime concert honoring Joplin, the king of ragtime, at the cemetery that afternoon. “I come to this concert every year to pay respect to him,” he said. “I don’t remember the first time I heard ragtime, but it has always been part of my life. What drew me to it was its happiness.”
But he was also aware of the tragedy of Joplin’s grave. Joplin died penniless, and he was buried with a man and a teenage girl in a plot that went unmarked until 1974. “I was sad the first time I saw the grave,” said Mr. Gill. “I knew it would be small, but it was so small that it was disappointing. I respect him more than any other composer. He should have a big monument.”
Mr. Gill walked up the wet road to a little chapel where other Joplin enthusiasts had gathered. Several gripped walking sticks as they sat in the aisles. The members of a barbershop quartet adjusted their boater hats and a six-piece band featuring a clarinet and an upright bass prepared to play. The foot-tapping swing of ragtime was soon flowing from the chapel to the cemetery outside.
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Scott Joplin, the king of ragtime, has been famous and forgotten, in life and in death.Michael Ochs Archives, via Getty Images
St. Michael’s Cemetery has hosted this tribute concert to Scott Joplin every spring for the last 14 years, and the composer would have probably been delighted by the spectacle. He popularized ragtime, an early form of American music combining classical European harmonies with syncopated African rhythms, in the late 1800s with his hit, “Maple Leaf Rag” — the sheet music sold half a million copies, and the song became a soundtrack to the Gay Nineties. In 1907 he moved from St. Louis to New York City, arriving as a famous composer. But he died a decade later at the age of 49, destitute in an asylum on Wards Island as ragtime was fading in popularity.
Joplin predicted that his music would one day be critically recognized, but the acclaim he has been bestowed in death may have shocked him. He is ingrained in American folklore, immortalized on postage stamps and honored with a posthumous Pulitzer Prize. And ragtime experienced an unlikely revival in the 1970s after the Academy Award-winning movie “The Sting” featured his music prominently and a version of his song “The Entertainer” reached No. 3 on the Billboard chart.
The St. Michaels concert typically takes place on a sunny lawn, and free barbecue is usually served, but last weekend’s weather repelled all but the devoted. “We’re ragtime lovers,” said Mary E. Doran, 76. “Rain doesn’t stop us.” She described how she became smitten by ragtime. “The year is 1951,” she said theatrically. “A lonely kid is growing up in an Irish family. Ted Mack’s “Original Amateur Hour” comes on. I can still hum the solo. The whole thing caught me and never let go.”
“Scott Joplin’s story is tragic,” she continued. “He was cheated. He was segregated. You name it. Buried in a pauper’s grave here with two people.” She stopped herself. “Oh, Scott,” she said tenderly. “I don’t want to say anything to besmirch you. But you made your mistakes.”
Joplin, who died penniless in an asylum on Wards Island, shares his grave with two others; the grave was unmarked for nearly 60 years.Adrienne Grunwald for The New York Times
Sona Kludjian, a newcomer, raised an observation. “I’m disturbed there are no black people here,” she said. “Doesn’t that seem strange?”
It’s hard to know what Scott Joplin would have made of this gathering in a Queens cemetery a century after his death. Despite the happy tenor of his music, his life was difficult and marked by adversity.
“People always commented that he never smiled,” said Edward A. Berlin, who wrote the biography “King of Ragtime: Scott Joplin and His Era,” and helps organize the concert. “One of his best friends was a stage comedian and said, ‘I used to crack jokes and I could never get a smile out of him.’”
Joplin was born near Texarkana, Tex., in either 1867 or 1868; his father was a former slave and his mother was a maid. He taught himself the piano as a child on the old instrument of a white family in his neighborhood, and he left home in his early teens to become a traveling musician on the honky tonk and brothel circuit lining the Mississippi River.
The “Maple Leaf Rag” sheet music sold more than 500,000 copies around the turn of the century.Stark Music Company, via Library of Congress
Ragtime was being born in these smoky saloons across the Mississippi Valley, but the genre did not thrive until Joplin composed “Maple Leaf Rag” in 1899. It was more sophisticated than rags before it, and the tune sparked a national sensation. Hundreds of rags were soon being written, and a publishing industry hungry to capitalize on the trend formed overnight.
Joplin became famous and New York soon called out to him. When he got to Manhattan in 1907, Tin Pan Alley was already filled with imitators of his work, and the Wanamaker department store had referenced “Maple Leaf Rag” in a newspaper ad. Living on West 29th Street, he finished his ambitious three-part opera, “Treemonisha,” in 1911.
It told the story of a plantation heroine, Treemonisha, who defeats a mystic who is keeping his followers enslaved through ignorance. The opera was an allegory about improving the African-American condition through education, but investors were not interested in it. Joplin became obsessed with bringing the opera to life and spent most of his money trying to do so. It received one informal performance, at a theater hall in Harlem, with few in attendance and Joplin playing the piano himself.
Jazz was starting to supplant ragtime in popularity by 1917, and Joplin had become ravaged by syphilis he contracted as a young man. Losing control of his hands and suffering from dementia, he was committed to the Manhattan State Hospital on Wards Island. He died in the asylum two months later, and was interred at St. Michael’s Cemetery that April.
The annual Joplin concert and celebration in East Elmhurst.Adrienne Grunwald for The New York Times
Joplin was forgotten, and ragtime became an obscurity of Americana. Fifty years passed before the Joplin renaissance occurred. “Treemonisha” was finally staged in 1972 to critical acclaim, and “The Sting” catapulted his music into the spotlight. The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers honored his grave with plaque in 1974, and he was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his contributions to American music in 1976.
But Joplin fever eventually subsided and interest in his grave faded with it. By 2004 the site seemingly had no visitors when a director at St. Michaels named Ed Horn was rummaging through old articles about the cemetery and rediscovered it. Determined that Joplin be honored more regularly, he conceived of the concert. Last year, a bench was also installed near the plaque. “The grave used to get no foot traffic,” said Mr. Horn. “Now people come asking us for directions to it.”
The band finished playing around 5 o’clock. They had performed hits like “Wall Street Rag” and lesser-known tunes like “Bethena” and “Weeping Willow.” The band’s leader eventually announced: “Who wants to go take a walk in the rain?” Thus what has become a curious Queens springtime tradition took place: the crowd rose from their seats and started walking down the road leading to Joplin’s grave.
The plot sits at the far corner of a field beneath an arched tree. A member of the procession, Michael Katsobashvili, 43, considered Joplin’s legacy. “King Oliver died destitute and is buried in the Bronx,” he said. “Jelly Roll Morton died penniless. These are the fathers of our American music. They are our Mozarts. But they were only lionized later. They died in misery.”
A circle formed around the grave and the barbershop quartet performed a mournful a cappella from “Treemonisha” called “We Will Rest Awhile.” It is sung by field workers eager to take a break from their labor. The quartet’s harmonious voices rose through the mist. “We will rest awhile,” they sang. “We will rest awhile because resting is very fine.”
The crowd left and people started driving back home in the rain. Joplin’s grave was lonesome again. But the devout will be back again next year to keep him company.
 
 

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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Jack Reilly, RIP | Rifftides

Jack Reilly, RIP | Rifftides

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https://www.artsjournal.com/rifftides/2018/05/jack-reilly-rip.html
 
Jack Reilly, RIP
May 24, 2018 by Doug Ramsey Leave a Comment
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Bill Charlap reports that the pianist Jack Reilly (pictured) died of a massive stroke yesterday in at his home in New Jersey. Mr. Reilly, 86, was an accomplished classical pianist who returned to his native New York in 1954 following Navy service and pursued graduate studies at the Manhattan School of Music. His early experience in jazz was with John LaPorta, Sheila Jordan, Ben Webster and George Russell, among other prominent figures in the bebop and post-bop eras.
From the biography on Mr. Reilly’s website:
He was Professor and Head of the Jazz Studies Departments at the New England Conservatory of Music Boston, The New School, for Social Research, and The Mannes College of Music, where he wrote the curriculum for full Degree in Jazz Music. He is the author of the critically acclaimed The Harmony of Bill EvansVolumes 1 and 2The Harmony of Dave Brubeck and several books of jazz piano arrangements.
Bill Charlap was one of the many pianists who studied with Reilly and gave him credit for inspiring them and accelerating their development. The Charlap quote in the June, 2008, Rifftides post below is typical of the regard in which his students held him.
Originally posted on June 20, 2008
Recently, I came across this quote:
Jack Reilly’s music is singular, almost private, and yet it reaches beyond his personal vision. This is music that speaks to the colllective spirit of all mankind – Bill Charlap
The quote is by a student of Reilly who is one of his most dedicated fans and has himself gone on to considerable renown. It led to a search that turned up video of Reilly in a performance that melds Chopin and Strayhorn. His subtle key changes are central to the fun and fascination.
For links to Jack Reilly’s publications and albums, see this page of his website.
Funeral or memorial services for Mr. Reilly have not been announced.
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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
http://www.jazzpromoservices.com

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

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PLEASE NOTE: IF YOU DO NOT WISH TO BE ON THIS MAILING LIST PLEASE RESPOND WITH ‘REMOVE’ IN THE SUBJECT LINE. IF YOU ARE RECEIVING DUPLICATE EMAILS OUR APOLOGIES, JAZZ PROMO SERVICES ANNOUNCEMENT LIST IS GROWING LARGER EVERY DAY…..PLEASE LET US KNOW AND WE WILL FIX IT IMMEDIATELY!

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Warwick, Ny 10990

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Who was the real ‘Girl from Ipanema’? | Dangerous Minds

Who was the real ‘Girl from Ipanema’? | Dangerous Minds

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https://dangerousminds.net/comments/the_girl_from_ipanema?utm_source=Dangerous+Minds+newsletter
 
Who was the real ‘Girl from Ipanema’?
 
“The Girl from Ipanema” is one of the most covered songs of all time—second only to “Yesterday”—and an “elevator music” cliché the world over. The story behind the bossa nova standard is so well-known to most Brazilians that our readers there might find this a really obvious thing to write about, it’s not so well-known anywhere else, I don’t think. 
Ipanema is trendy, beach district in south Rio de Janeiro. Near Ipanema Beach was Antonio Carlos “Tom” Jobim’s favorite hang-out, the Bar Veloso. Every day, the married musician would await the arrival of a “tall, and tan, and young and lovely” young girl who would pass by the bar on her way to the beach, never making eye contact with the bar’s patrons, even when she came in to buy cigarettes for her mother.
From our partners at 
Portraits of Young Hollywood: Anna Rose Holmer
Jobim invited his friend, a writer and poet named Vinicius de Moraes to come by the Veloso to see this girl.  Eventually, after several days had passed, she walked by. Jobim said to his friend, ““Nao a coisa mais linda?” (Isn’t she the prettiest thing?) and de Moraes replied, “E a coisa cheia de gracia” (She’s full of grace).  Moraes wrote their banter on a napkin and this exchange became the seed from which the original Portuguese lyrics of “A Garota de Ipanema” (“The Girl from Ipanema”) grew.  
 A few years later, “The Girl from Ipanema” as performed by Astrud Gilberto, João Gilberto and Stan Getz, from album Getz/Gilberto became one of the top-selling records of 1964. Only the Beatles outsold the song and it was nominated for, and won, several Grammy awards.
 
 
But who was this beautiful girl from Ipanema?
From Stan Shepkowski’s “The Girl from Ipanema”:
Heloísa Eneida de Menezes Paes Pinto was a born and raised Rio de Janeiro girl – a true carioca.  The daughter of an army general from whom her mother divorced when Helô was 4, she grew up on the Rua Montenegro, some blocks up from the Bar Veloso.  At age 17 she was shy and quite self-conscious: she had crooked teeth, she felt she was too skinny, she suffered from frequent asthma attacks, and she had an allergy that reddened her face.  And on her way to and from school and on her treks to the beach, she had to walk by the Bar Veloso.
Although the song had been around since 1962, it wasn’t until 1964 that Helô learned the truth.  Friends introduced her to Tom Jobim, who still hadn’t worked up the courage to talk with her.  But with the ice finally broken, he set out to win her heart.  On their second date, he stated his love for her and asked her to marry him.  But she turned him down.  Two things got in the way.  Helô knew Tom was married and that he was “experienced,” whereas she was inexperienced and would not make him a good wife.  The other was that she had been dating a handsome young lad named Fernando Pinheiro from a prosperous family in Leblon since she was 15.  Undaunted by her refusal, Tom told her that she was the inspiration for the song.  This confirmed the rumors she had heard from others and, of course, thrilled her beyond imagination, but she still turned him down.
The world would not learn the truth until 1965.  Tired of all the gossip and particularly concerned that a contest was going to be held to select “the girl from Ipanema” Vinicius de Moraes held a press conference.  In a detoxification clinic in Rio where he was undergoing treatment (you’ve got to love poets), and with Helô at his side, de Moraes told the world.  And he offered her one more testament:
“She is a golden girl, a mixture of flowers and mermaids, full of light and full of grace, but whose character is also sad with the feeling that youth passes and that beauty isn’t ours to keep.  She is the gift of life with its beautiful and melancholic constant ebb and flow.”
  
Although Helô became an overnight sensation, Brazil was a very conservative country at the time and she did not take advantage of the modeling contracts and movie roles she was offered, opting instead to become a mother and housewife, marrying Fernando Pinheiro the following year.
That might have been the last the world would have heard of Helô Pinheiro, but in the late 1970s Pinhero’s companies fell on hard times and Helô gave birth to a handicapped son. Although reluctant to do so her entire life, faced with the situation she was in, Helô decided to capitalize on her identity as “the girl from Ipanema” and became a successful model, gossip columnist and television host. She endorsed over 100 products.“You move mountains, when it comes to providing for your children” she said.
In 2003, at the age of 58 and still quite lovely, Helô Pinheiro appeared with her own daughter, supermodel, actress and reality TV star, Ticiane Pinheiro in the pages of Playboy magazine, making her their oldest model, ever. She now owns a successful line of swimwear and boutiques under the “Garota de Ipanema” name.
 
 
Astrud Gilberto and Stan Getz performing “The Girl from Ipanema” on TV in 1964.
 
 

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Betty Davis Was a Raw Funk Pioneer. Her Decades of Silence Are Over. – The New York Times

Betty Davis Was a Raw Funk Pioneer. Her Decades of Silence Are Over. – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/22/arts/music/betty-davis-they-say-im-different-documentary.html?hp
 
Betty Davis Was a Raw Funk Pioneer. Her Decades of Silence Are Over.
May 22, 2018
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The trailblazing funk singer, bandleader and producer Betty Davis dropped out of public for decades. A new documentary, “Betty: They Say I’m Different,” tells her story.Robert Brenner
For a few short years in the 1970s, no one made funk as raw as Betty Davis did. She sang bluntly about sex on her own terms, demanding satisfaction with feral yowls and rasps, her voice slicing across the grooves that she wrote and honed as her own bandleader and producer. Her stage clothes were shiny, skimpy, futuristic fantasies; her Afro was formidable.
A major label, Island, geared up a big national push for her third album, “Nasty Gal,” in 1975. But mainstream radio didn’t embrace her, and Island rejected her follow-up recordings. Not long afterward, she completely dropped out of public view for decades.
Ms. Davis’s voice now — speaking, not singing — resurfaces in “Betty: They Say I’m Different,” an impressionistic documentary that will have its United States theatrical premiere on Wednesday at the Billie Holiday Theater in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, as part of the Red Bull Music Festival. The film includes glimpses of virtually the only known concert footage of Ms. Davis in her lascivious, head-turning prime, performing at a 1976 French rock festival. The present-day Ms. Davis is shown mostly from behind and heard in voice-over, though there is one poignant close-up of her face.
This month Ms. Davis, 72, gave a rare interview by telephone from her home near Pittsburgh to talk about the film and her music. After years of entreaties from and conversations with its director, Phil Cox, and producer, Damon Smith, she agreed to cooperate on “Betty: They Say I’m Different” because, she said, “I figured it would be better to have them cover me when I was alive than when I was dead.”
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Mr. Cox said, via Skype from England, “Betty doesn’t want sympathy, and she’s found her own space now. To me, that is just as interesting as that woman she was in the 1970s. It’s the antithesis of the age we live in, where everybody wants to be on social media all the time.”
Ms. Davis has longtime fans from the ’70s and newer ones who have discovered her in reissues and through hip-hop samples. They have clung to a catalog and a persona that were musically bold, verbally shocking and entirely self-created. Long before the current era of explicit lyrics, Ms. Davis was cackling through songs like “Nasty Gal” — “You said I love you every way but your way/And my way was too dirty for you” — and “He Was a Big Freak,” which boasts, “I used to whip him/I used to beat him/Oh, he used to dig it.” She still won’t reveal who was, or whether there was, a real-life model for songs like those.
Betty Davis – “Nasty Gal”Video by funknroll
“I wrote about love, really, and all the levels of love,” she said. That emphatically included sexuality. “When I was writing about it, nobody was writing about it. But now everybody’s writing about it. It’s like a cliché.”
Ms. Davis was born Betty Mabry in Durham, North Carolina, in 1945, and she grew up there and in Pittsburgh. She headed to New York City in the early 1960s, when she was 17, and enrolled at the Fashion Institute of Technology. She supported herself as a model and a club manager; she reveled in the city’s night life, meeting figures like Andy Warhol, Sly Stone, Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix.
She had been writing songs since she was 12, and she got a chance to record some independent soul singles in the mid-1960s. In 1967, the Chambers Brothers recorded one of her songs, “Uptown to Harlem,” which vows, “If the taxi won’t take me I’ll take a train,” and in 1968, her then-boyfriend Hugh Masekela arranged a single for her, “Live, Love, Learn,” that she now dismisses as “so mushy.”
She caught the eye of Miles Davis, who had already caught hers. “I saw this great-looking man at this dance concert,” she said. After she found out who he was, she went to hear him perform at the Village Gate. Mr. Davis spotted her and sent over his bodyguard to tell her, she recalled, that the trumpeter would “like to have a drink with you.”
They were married in 1968 and divorced after a turbulent, sometimes violent year. “Every day married to him was a day I earned the name Davis,” she says in the film.
Her face is on the cover of “Filles de Kilimanjaro,” an album Mr. Davis recorded in 1968. He produced recording sessions for his wife in 1969 with his musicians — including Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter and John McLaughlin — along with Jimi Hendrix’s rhythm section, Billy Cox and Mitch Mitchell. Shelved by Columbia Records, the sessions were released in 2016 as “The Columbia Years: 1968-69.”
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Why participate in a documentary now? “I figured it would be better to have them cover me when I was alive than when I was dead,” Ms. Davis said.Robert Brenner
One of the songs she recorded was Cream’s “Politician,” but, Ms. Davis said, “That song made him so uptight, because it was so suggestive for his wife to say ‘Get into the back seat.’” It led, Ms. Davis said, to a song title Miles Davis would release years later: “Back Seat Betty.”
After the divorce, Ms. Davis forged her own music career. She had written a trove of songs; she knew top musicians. “I never considered myself a great singer,” Ms. Davis said. “I think Chaka and Aretha are great singers. But I could connect with the ambience of a song. I could project my feelings and my words to the music.”
Michael Lang, a promoter of the 1969 Woodstock festival, signed her to his label, Just Sunshine, and Greg Errico, the drummer from Sly and the Family Stone, produced her 1973 debut album, “Betty Davis,” backing her with San Francisco luminaries. To tour, Ms. Davis assembled a band named Funk House.
Encouraged by Miles Davis, who told her she had all the skills she needed, she produced her next two albums herself. She sang each line of the arrangements. “Betty would get the ideas for the music, and she would put it on tape. She’d be humming on the cassette, and we’d learn all the parts,” said Fred Mills, the guitarist in the final lineup of Funk House, in a telephone interview. “She had it in her head all the time. And she would always be, like, ‘You got to get rough!’ Lord have mercy, she was killing me.” He chuckled.
There was never any question, Ms. Davis said, that she was in charge. “I never got any woman-man situations going on with the music,” she said. “Everyone was very cooperative. The music that I made, I never had any problem with the musicians.”
Ms. Davis saw herself following through on the blues and rock ’n’ roll she had grown up on in the 1950s. Her song “They Say I’m Different” name-checks Big Mama Thornton, Howlin’ Wolf and Chuck Berry as role models. But she was well aware that her performances drew strong reactions. “I used to make the guys uptight sometimes,” she said. “The women were very receptive with me.”
Was she making a feminist statement? “How could I think about feminism with the songs I was writing?” she said, and laughed. “I never thought women had power. We had power in the bedroom, but we didn’t have political power.”
In 1975, “Nasty Gal” was to be her make-or-break moment. Along with her most jaggedly assertive funk, it also included “You and I,” a ballad written with Miles Davis and arranged by Gil Evans. But the album was too radical for its era. Ms. Davis and Funk House recorded what was to be a follow-up album, including the bitter “Stars Starve, You Know,” but Island did not release it and dropped her contract.
“When I was told that it was over, I just accepted it,” she said. “And nobody else was knocking at my door.”
After the death of her father in 1980, “I went to another level,” she said. “It was no longer about the music or anything, it was about me losing a part of myself. It was devastating.”
There was one more flicker in her performing career. In the early 1980s, she said, she spent a year in Japan, where she played club dates with a Japanese band. The film reveals that in a visit to Mount Fuji, where she met silent monks, she found a spiritual revelation. After her time in Japan, she said, “I just got very quiet.”
Mr. Cox said, “She had a battle with inner demons and a desire for solitude. I think she was just exhausted as well.”
But her music was not forgotten. In the 2000s, persistent longtime fans convinced her to allow reissues of her recordings on the dedicated archival label Light in the Attic. It has released all three of her 1970s albums, as well as her Columbia sessions from the 1960s and her last ’70s sessions with Funk House.
Belatedly, she has been acknowledged as an influence and inspiration for generations of musicians, from Prince and Rick James to Erykah Badu and Janelle Monáe. Yet even with her music restored and her story being told, Ms. Davis has ruled out performing again. “With age, your looks change,” said Ms. Davis, who prefers not to disturb her fans’ image of her. “I want to leave them with what they had,” she said.
 
 

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