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Tiger Lily Records: The wild story of the tax scam label run by the notorious Morris Levy

Tiger Lily Records: The wild story of the tax scam label run by the notorious Morris Levy

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Tiger Lily Records: The wild story of the tax scam label run by the notorious Morris Levy (Part II)

 
Recently, Dangerous Minds shined a light on the shady Tiger Lily Records, the tax shelter label owned and operated by the infamous Morris Levy. We explained that the albums released by the company were meant to lose money, resulting in higher tax breaks for investors. We also told readers about some of the musicians who willingly signed deals with the label. Part two of our Tiger Lily exposé will focus on the artists who were wholly unaware—for decades—that an album of their material was released by the company. In each instance, just a few known copies of each LP are known to exist. Why so few? Well, that’s one of the mysteries surrounding the label, but it’s believed Levy shipped the majority of the Tiger Lily stock to the local landfill. 
In record collecting circles, one of the biggest stories in recent years was the eBay listing for one of the rarest and coveted of all the Tiger Lily LPs. The 2014 auction of the album, credited to a little-known group by the name of Stonewall, ended with the winning bid of $14,100 (no, that’s not a typo). Incidentally, the seller found the record at a Goodwill store in New Hampshire; the purchase price there was $1.
 
 
Stonewall were a heavy rock quartet from New York City. The band members were Bruce Rapp (lead vocals/harmonica), Bob Dimonte (guitar), Ray Dieneman (bass), and Anthony Assalti (drums). Assalti recently did an in-depth interview with the magazine, It’s Psychedelic Baby, in which many of the unknowns surrounding the band were revealed. As Assalti tells it, in 1972, Stonewall were put in touch with Jimmy Goldstein, the proprietor of a Manhattan recording studio. Goldstein offered the group free studio time, if they’d be willing to record after normal business hours. Before the evening sessions, the Stonewall guys would smoke a ton of hashish, then show up to the studio, where they’d smoke even more with Goldstein. Then, with Goldstein on keyboards, they’d start recording. 
Stonewall and Goldstein would jam for hours, then use the best sections as the basis for songs. After half a year of experimenting and recording, Goldstein and the band’s manager took hold of the tapes, telling the group they would shop them around to prospective record companies. Eventually, Goldstein told them there were no takers. The band would soldier on for a period before breaking up. 
Years later, after Assalti had relocated to Florida and started a family, he received a phone call from a European collector who had questions about the Stonewall album—which Assalti hadn’t known existed. He was stunned. “It’s kind of sad,” Assalti confessed during the magazine interview last year. “We were four young guys that were ripped off and never got the recognition I believe we deserved.”
Jimmy Goldstein is credited as the copyright holder of the tapes—a strong indicator he was Tiger Lily’s source. The Stonewall LP came out in 1976, the only year the label issued records.
 
 
So, what does a $14,000 record sound like?  
  Like the rest of the album, “Try & See It Through” finds the band balancing the heavy blues rock of Led Zeppelin with the heavy metal riffage of Black Sabbath. Goldstein’s organ is featured prominently in the mix, so there’s an added Deep Purple element, too. Rapp’s raw vocal comes off like a cross between Robert Plant’s guiding light for Zep, Terry Reid, and the raspy singer from Black Oak Arkansas, Jim Dandy. The highpoint of “Try & See It Through” is when Dimonte steps up and throws down an eye-popping guitar solo. 
Unsurprisingly, the Stonewall album has been bootlegged many times. An exact reproduction of the LP can currently be had by way of Amazon
 
 
Assalti is now a grandfather. He doesn’t play the drums much anymore, telling It’s Psychedelic Baby, “Seems like most of the bands around here rather save the money and use a drum machine.”
An odd footnote to the story: After Stonewall disbanded, Assalti became the drummer for Tommy James and the Shondells. James, if you’ll recall from part onealso had his own Morris Levy stories. 
 
 
Austin, Texas band Too Smooth formed in 1973. The original lineup of this southern rock outfit consisted of Jeff Clark, (lead vocals/guitar), Brian Wooten (lead guitar), Danny Swinney (bass), and Tom Holden (lead vocals/drums). The guys lived together on a farm just outside of the city, which is where they honed their craft. Too Smooth soon developed a following and went on to become one of the most popular groups in the area. They opened for a number of touring acts, including Roxy Music, Judas Priest, the Kinks, and Aerosmith—regularly blowing the headliners off the stage. They were frequently top of the bill at beloved Austin venue, Armadillo World Headquarters. 
 
 
In 1974, Too Smooth signed with Just Sunshine Records. The label was owned by Michael Lang, one of the promoters of the Woodstock festival. The band recorded what was to be their debut album at the Record Plant in Sausalito, California. They were in the studio finalizing the record when their manager received a phone call—Just Sunshine was being sold. The new owners were ABC/Dunhill Records, who decided to drop the group. “When we learned of the Just Sunshine meltdown/acquisition, we were obviously crushed,” Jeff Clark told me when I contacted him in 2014. “ABC/Dunhill didn’t know us from Adam, so we were supposedly cut in the transition.”
Too Smooth, though disappointed, were undeterred. The following year, they bounced back with a 45 on Buddah Records, which received some positive, advance attention in Billboard. But just as the single was about to ship, they were informed of yet another corporate takeover, rendering the record—and their Buddah deal—dead in the water. 
 
 
Not much time passed before Mercury Records, after witnessing an explosive concert in front of 1,300 raving fans at the Armadillo, offered Too Smooth a verbal contract. But, yet again, the arrangement fell apart. By 1978, lineup changes began to alter the group. In 1980, they released another 7-inch—this one via the record label started by Armadillo World Headquarters—but a year later, Too Smooth were finished.
 
 
When I emailed Jeff Clark to ask him about Too Smooth’s LP on Tiger Lily I sent him a YouTube link to one of their songs, which included an image of the album cover, and another link, this one to a completed auction listing. This was the first time he’d seen evidence that the label had released a Too Smooth record, though he’d been asked about it previously. “Oddly enough, I had someone question me a few years ago, if we had an album on Tiger Lily,” Clark replied. “Of course, I said ‘No.’” 
 
 
After hearing the song on YouTube and seeing the LP’s track listing, Clark was able to determine that the album consists of recordings from their sessions at the Record Plant. There’s obviously a lot of talent pressed into the grooves of their Tiger Lily record, making it hard not to wonder what might have been, had Just Sunshine not ceased to be. One of the best tunes is the funky, Clark-penned “Long Hair Drug Band” (titled simply “Drug Band” on the Tiger Lily LP). The video embedded below is the same one I sent to Clark in 2014.  
  Like many artists who come to discover a tax scam album of their material exists, Clark has mixed feelings. While he was angry “to learn of our music being STOLEN from us,” he also has the Zen-like belief that “things happen for a reason.”
As is often the case with tax shelter albums, there’s little in the way of clues as to who provided Tiger Lily with the Too Smooth tapes. 
 
 
Beginning in 1988, Too Smooth has periodically reunited. In 2007 The Texas Music Café, a PBS program, filmed two performances for a Too Smooth documentary. The doc has been released on DVD, and you can watch it in its entirety here. It’s a fantastic look at the history of the band and their faithful Austin fans. 
Too Smooth archival material started appearing in 2011. Still is a two-disc set of tracks from the 1970s, featuring songs from the Just Sunshine sessions. Live and Kickin’ is split between ‘70s live recordings and those taped during their 2007 reunion for the PBS cameras. Listen to tracks from both releases via YouTube. Unreleased material has been uploaded to their SoundCloud page.
In 2012, Jeff Clark’s debut solo disc, Just Visiting, was released. His Too Smooth bandmates appear throughout the album. 
Clark recently connected with a Too Smooth fan in Italy, who got into the band after hearing their Tiger Lily LP.  
 
Jeff Clark and his Flying V, on stage at the Armadillo.
Unfortunately, Jeff Clark and Tom Holden have developed health problems that make playing more difficult, “however; don’t ever count out another Too Smooth reunion,” says Clark. 
 
 
Here’s Too Smooth tearing it up on Austin TV in 1977:  
  Dan Chapman and Dennis Wilkinson met in 1965. Chapman had just moved to Granada Hills, California.“I was fourteen and had zero friends,” Chapman told me in an email. One day, he was in the family rumpus room tapping out a beat on his new drum kit, when he noticed someone standing outside. “I was a little stunned to see a shadowy figure through the frosted slats of the full-length window. It was Dennis.”
Chapman and Wilkinson became fast friends, and before long, they’d be writing songs together. Chapman’s father owned a reel-to-reel machine, so they were able to record their material. The first song they captured on tape is called “Till the End”. It’s a tune that’s so Beatle-esque it could be mistaken for a Fab Four outtake (honestly, this one came up in my iTunes recently, and my initial thought was that it was a Beatles demo I’d forgotten about). Pretty impressive for a couple of fourteen-year-old novice songwriters. Soon they’d start their first band, Just Us Four. 
 
Dan Chapman, bottom left; Dennis Wilkinson, top left.
The group morphed into the Vanilla Rain, and the band gigged frequently in Hollywood. They received some press coverage, including national attention in Teenmagazine and Tiger Beat
 
 
The Vanilla Rain disbanded in 1969, with Chapman and Wilkinson going their separate ways for a spell. Wilkinson eventually met a producer named John McCauley, whom he’d introduce to Chapman. It was then that Wilkinson and Chapman decided to renew their partnership. After writing some new tunes, they played them for McCauley, who was impressed. Around 1970, McCauley got them into a Los Angeles studio. It was a state of the art facility, modestly named.
 
Dennis Wilkinson and Dan Chapman. 1970. Photo by John McCauley.
The Recording Studio was co-owned by a businessman named Joe Long. It’s possible some sort of deal was worked out with Long, who had his own production company, though neither Chapman nor Wilkinson can definitively recall. Wilkinson told me he does remember Long telling them he thought they could be a “teen sensation.” As Long felt so strongly about the duo, it seems likely he signed them to a contract. Regardless, Chapman and Wilkinson did go about laying down tracks. In addition to singing, they played all of the instruments. 
Jim Hobson built the studio from the ground up and was another one of the owners. At the time, he was also a member of the country rock act, Morning. He engineered some of the Chapman/Wilkinson sessions and was impressed by the duo. “They weren’t imitating whatever the big group or song of the day was and that’s something I really appreciated.”
One night, Chapman and Wilkinson dropped acid. It was Chapman’s first trip, and when his parents found out they were so upset that they made him promise he’d never have anything to do with Wilkinson ever again. The young Chapman, still in his teens and under the sway of his parents, agreed. 
 
 
Meanwhile, there was a lot of funny business going on at the Recording Studio, and by 1971, Jim Hobson was fed up. He severed all ties with Joe Long and got as far away from the place as he could. 
In August 2012, a record collector in Switzerland reached out to Wilkinson via Facebook. The collector wanted to know if he was the same Dennis Wilkinson involved with a certain set of tracks recorded in the 1970s. “I saw these songs on an obscure vinyl album on Tiger Lily Records,” he added. The LP, titled Made from Plate, was credited to the group Onion. Wilkinson didn’t come across the message until the following May, but after he read it, he immediately phoned Chapman with the news. Chapman then contacted Jim Hobson, which is the first time he’d heard about Tiger Lily. 
 
 
Three of the tracks on Made from Plate were taken from the sessions Chapman and Wilkinson recorded at the Recording Studio. Chapman handles the lead vocal on the first of the duo’s tunes to appear on the record, “My My My My.” Drawing inspiration from mid-period Beatles, its super-catchy chorus will be stuck in your head for days (it’s happened to me).  
  Wilkinson takes the lead on the remaining two numbers, “Believe Me” and “When Something’s Wrong,” which are solid slices of singer-songwriter pop. The harmonies on the latter are gorgeous, sounding like they were plucked from Abbey Road.  
  The musicians that play on the remaining five songs on Made from Plate have yet to be identified. It’s possible these tracks were taken from three different recordings sessions—maybe more.
 
 
A couple of years after Chapman told him about Made from Plate, Jim Hobson was surprised to learn that Hoblong, the publishing company he shared with Joe Long—which had been dissolved years before—appeared amongst the album’s credits.
 
 
Joe Long has ties to a number of tax shelter records, including the Richard Goldman album on Baby Grand Records. By my count, there are seven known Tiger Lily releases with connections to Long. One of those albums is a self-titled release by the band Dakota. “Hoblong” is printed on the labels, and Joe Long is given production credit on the back cover. I sent MP3s of the record to Jim Hobson, and though he no longer remembers specifics, he’s convinced his piano work can be heard on the song that’s identified as both “Dakota Jam”, track #3 on the label, and “Dakota Jim,” track #8 on the back cover (getting the credits right wasn’t a big concern for Tiger Lily). 
Writer/collector and “tax scam records” expert, Aaron Milenski, sent digital files of the Made from Plate tracks to Chapman. Upon hearing the songs for the first time in over 40 years, he was immediately transported back to the time and place they were recorded. Though Chapman was confused and angered that others profited from his music, he was also excited to learn about the album (as was Wilkinson). For Chapman, it offered some closure on a period of his life that had long passed. He considers the chance to revisit the songs of his youth a gift. 
 
 
In the early ‘90s, Chapman and Wilkinson teamed up once again to write songs and have been at it ever since. A few of those collaborations can be heard here.
Dan Chapman is now a successful designer, and creates poster art for Hollywood films. 
Dennis Wilkinson has been dealing with health issues as of late. A few months after we spoke in November 2017, he was hospitalized. He’s still recovering, but told Chapman he’s anxious to record new music. 
 
Roulette Records artist Tommy James, center, signs a management agreement with Leonard Stogel, left. Morris Levy, President of Roulette, right. 1966.
It’s unclear why Morris Levy closed the door on Tiger Lily after a single year. The Tax Reform Act of 1976 tightened tax shelter rules, so that might’ve played a role. Though that didn’t stop other, perhaps more brazen operators from continuing the practice. Fraudulent tax shelter enterprises offering investments in master recordings flourished in the wake of Tiger Lily and would be a thorn in the IRS’s side for years to come. The era of “tax scam records” was just beginning. 
In 1988, Levy and two associates were found guilty of conspiring to commit extortion. The case stemmed from a deal, which went south, to buy millions of cut-out LPs and cassettes from MCA Records, and the subsequent shakedown of John LaMonte, a record wholesaler (Lamonte suffered head injuries during a 1985 visit from mobster and part owner of Roulette, Gaetano “Corky” Vastola). The FBI claimed Levy had been involved with organized crime for twenty years, and that Roulette acted as a front for the Genovese crime family. Levy was sentenced to ten years in prison and fined $200,000.
The case was on appeal when Levy sold Strawberries, his record store chain. He then parted with Roulette, which included his entire catalogue of labels, as well as his music publishing company. Levy reportedly pocketed over $40,000,000 on the Strawberries sale alone. 
During this period, Levy was suffering from heart disease and cancer. When Rhino Records was negotiating to buy Roulette, Richard Foos, the co-owner of Rhino, found the man to be intimidating, despite his various illnesses. “He was physically imposing still,” Foos told Levy biographer, Richard Carlin. “I was surprised how young he looked. And he talked like…he had the Don Corleone type voice.”
Morris Levy, the “Godfather of the music business,” died on May 21st, 1990. He was 62.
 
We’ll leave you with a couple of TV clips from September 1986. The first is Morris Levy’s appearance on the Today show, following his federal indictment. Over the course of the interview, Levy consistently denies the charges, which he says are “ludicrous.” The second segment is a Boston news report covering Levy’s arrest. 
The video is out of sync and has other issues, yet it’s somehow fitting that the clips are in such a state of disarray.  
Previously on Dangerous Minds:
What’s Up Tiger Lily?: The wild story of the tax scam record label run by the notorious Morris Levy
‘Tax Scam Records’: Artist discovers albums of his songs were released by shadowy companies in 1977
‘Almost Famous’: Artist discovers his music was released by shady record companies in 1977 (Part II)
 
 

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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Nathan Davis, Jazz Saxophonist and Educator, Is Dead at 81 NY Times

Nathan Davis, Jazz Saxophonist and Educator, Is Dead at 81 NY Times

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The Windy City Meets The Big Apple!
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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/17/obituaries/nathan-davis-jazz-saxophonist-and-educator-is-dead-at-81.html

 
 

Nathan Davis, Jazz Saxophonist and Educator, Is Dead at 81

By GIOVANNI RUSSONELLO  APRIL 17, 2018

 

 

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The saxophonist Nathan Davis, who founded the jazz studies program at the University of Pittsburgh, in an undated photograph.

Nathan Davis, a jazz saxophonist, composer and educator who helped establish a place for African-American music in the academy, died on April 8 in Atlantis, Fla. He was 81.
His death, at the JFK Medical Center, was confirmed by his son, Pierre, who said the cause was congestive heart failure.
After spending nearly all of the 1960s in Paris, Mr. Davis returned to the United States in 1969 to become the founding director of the jazz studies program at the University of Pittsburgh. Early on, he envisioned the academy as a place where jazz musicians might be able to write their own histories and situate their work within the greater legacy of black American art.
“I wrote the first curriculums for the program, and I think within a year or something like that I got calls from Yale, I got calls from the University of Illinois,” he said in an interview with the Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation in 2013. “I sent it out to a bunch of schools.”
In 1970 he started an annual jazz seminar that continues today; its first edition featured performances and discussions from prominent musicians, including the drummer Art Blakey. (Mr. Davis had played in Blakey’s band in Europe.)
He also founded the university’s Sonny Rollins International Jazz Archives and its International Academy of Jazz Hall of Fame, and he had a recording studio built on the Pittsburgh campus.
Mr. Davis had become part of the jazz scene in Paris after leaving the Army in 1962; while in the service he had been playing in bands overseas. In Paris, where many American expatriate jazz players were thriving, he apprenticed with the drummer and bebop pioneer Kenny Clarke.
 

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Mr. Davis performing in one of the University of Pittsburgh’s annual jazz seminars, which he founded.University of Pittsburgh 

Playing regularly at the club Le Chat Qui Pêche, Mr. Davis accompanied well-known American musicians passing through the city, including the trumpeters Donald Byrd and Woody Shaw.
He became prolific as a bandleader, too, releasing three albums in 1965 alone. He also took classes in ethnomusicology at the Sorbonne, learning about music from India and Brazil.
By the time Mr. Davis moved back to the United States, jazz’s commercial appeal was in decline, but the music was entering a new era of institutional enshrinement. He accepted a three-year contract to help the University of Pittsburgh start its jazz program but ended up staying on for 44 years. He retired in 2013.
Though he never became a star as a bandleader, Mr. Davis was hardly limited by his academic duties. He continued to perform and record frequently, notably on the funk-influenced “If” (1976) and the sprawling “Suite for Dr. Martin Luther King” (1977). All told, he recorded more than 20 albums as a leader.
He was especially abundant as a composer, writing more than 200 jazz tunes, symphonies and film scores. He also published books, including “Writings in Jazz”(2003) and “African American Music: A Philosophical Look at African American Music in Society” (1996), written with his wife, Ursula Broschke-Davis.
She and their son survive him, as do their daughter, Joyce; three grandchildren; and his brother, Raymond.
Nathan Tate Davis was born on Feb. 15, 1937, in Kansas City, Kan., not far from the birthplace of Charlie Parker. His father, Raymond Davis, was a boxer; his mother, Rosemary Gates, who raised him, was a nurse. He began his career in the band of the pianist Jay McShann, who had helped propel Parker to stardom.
Mr. Davis graduated from the University of Kansas, where he studied music education. Years later, while teaching at Pittsburgh, he earned a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology from Wesleyan University in Connecticut.
In the 1980s he formed the Paris Reunion Band, a midsize ensemble featuring heavyweight musicians who had played on the Paris scene in the 1960s, among them the saxophonist Joe Henderson and Mr. Shaw.
In a review of the band’s first performances in 1986, John S. Wilson of The New York Times wrote that it “had the polish, the accomplished ease and a depth in repertory that usually come after much more experience working as a unit.”
On retiring from Pittsburgh, Mr. Davis received the 2013 BNY Mellon Living Legacy Award from the Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation. That same year, the classical cellist Misha Quint performed his composition “Matryoshka Blues” at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall.
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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George Freeman Tells Us How to Lead a Life in Jazz | Chicago Tonight | WTTW

George Freeman Tells Us How to Lead a Life in Jazz | Chicago Tonight | WTTW

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Culture
George Freeman Tells Us How to Lead a Life in Jazz
Marc Vitali| April 11, 2018 5:41 pm 
The Freemans of Bronzeville have been called Chicago’s first family of music – and though tenor saxophonist Von Freeman died in 2012 his son Chico plays on, and Von’s younger brother plays on, too.
Chicago Tonight met the guitarist George Freeman the day before his 91st birthday. He gave a history lesson on how to lead a life in jazz.
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Upcoming event
A Toast to George Freeman celebrates the musician’s life and legacy with a host of performers, including the man himself. The event takes place at noon, Saturday, April 28 at City Winery, 1200 W. Randolph St.
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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‘Classic Brunswick & Columbia Teddy Wilson Sessions 1934-1942’ Review: The Peacemaker of the Piano Marc Myers WSJ

‘Classic Brunswick & Columbia Teddy Wilson Sessions 1934-1942’ Review: The Peacemaker of the Piano Marc Myers WSJ

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‘Classic Brunswick & Columbia Teddy Wilson Sessions 1934-1942’ Review: The Peacemaker of the Piano
A boxed set shows how the musician’s elegant swing transformed the jazz keyboard from an instrument of battle into a conversational member of small groups and big-band rhythm sections.
Marc Myers
April 13, 2018 1:22 p.m. ET
Teddy Wilson c. 1960
Teddy Wilson c. 1960 Photo: Getty Images
Up until Teddy Wilson’s emergence in the mid-1930s, the jazz piano was an instrument of battle. Hard-charging stride pianists such as Fats Waller, Earl “Fatha” Hines, Art Tatum, James P. Johnson and Willie “the Lion” Smith sat down at the keyboard with the express purpose of teaching rivals a lesson.
With the release of “Classic Brunswick & Columbia Teddy Wilson Sessions 1934-1942,” a new seven-CD boxed set from Mosaic Records, we hear how Wilson’s elegant swing refined the jazz piano and transformed the keyboard into a conversational member of small groups and big-band rhythm sections. Over the course of the box’s 169 tracks, Wilson’s piano transitioned from the busy style of early stride contemporaries to a more graceful approach that would influence a generation of pianists in the 1940s and ’50s.
During the nine years covered in this box, Wilson relaxed the pronounced syncopation in his left hand and developed a lushness and sophistication in his right. Like most stylistic shifts in jazz, the evolution was born of necessity. Swing demanded it.
Though the Swing Era began in the early 1930s with the rise of African-American dance bands, the music didn’t reach white audiences until 1935, when Benny Goodman became a national sensation. When Goodman hired Wilson that summer for his trio with drummer Gene Krupa, an oom-pah bass line on the piano would have been too heavy and overpowering. 
Instead, Wilson used his right hand to accompany Goodman, spraying twinkling notes around the clarinetist’s solo lines. It’s also important to note that by joining the Benny Goodman Trio, Wilson became one of the first African-American musicians to appear in an integrated group. The move was risky at the time for both Wilson and Goodman.
Courtly and urbane, Wilson was self-assured even as a child. Born in Austin, Texas, in November 1912, he began formal piano lessons at age 7. Both of his parents were educators. At Talladega College, a historically black school in Alabama, he studied music theory and classical piano but left after a year.
Wilson relocated to Detroit, where his aunt had taken him on summer vacations. He began his professional career there in 1929 before moving on to Toledo, Ohio, where he befriended Art Tatum.
Wilson was a fast study. When Tatum left Milt Senior’s band to take a job playing on WSPD radio in Toledo, Wilson inherited his chair. He spent 1931 and ’32 touring with Senior’s drummer-less band. In 1933, Wilson joined a band assembled by Zilner Randolph to back Louis Armstrong. At 21, with less than four years of professional band work, Wilson was already a standout player.
That fall, Wilson traveled to New York to record with Benny Carter. There, Wilson was befriended by Columbia producer John Hammond, who nudged Goodman to hire Wilson for a nonet recording on May 14, 1934. Then Hammond helped Wilson land a contract with Brunswick.
The new boxed set opens with Wilson’s first four solo recordings: “Somebody Loves Me,” “Sweet and Simple,” “Liza” and “Rosetta.” In October 1935, four more solo recordings were made. As evidenced by the second “Liza,” Wilson’s playing style was fast becoming streamlined.
Many of Wilson’s orchestral sessions are here as well. Once Wilson established himself as a bankable bandleader in 1935, Brunswick began recording him leading groups with A-list artists, including Roy Eldridge, Johnny Hodges and Ben Webster, as well as Goodman and his band’s trumpeter Harry James.
In November 1937, Wilson recorded two solo sides, “Don’t Blame Me” and “Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea,” deftly reworking the songs’ melodies. By April 1941, on his solo recording of “Rosetta,” there are marked shifts in his style and harmony. For example, his signature right-hand tremolo is fully established. Another Wilsonian hallmark is evident: a fondness for letting his right hand amble into the upper register only to swan dive down the keys with a great flourish.
Perhaps the high point on the box is a solo recording session on April 11, 1941 for a series of Columbia 78s. Featured from this session are numerous previously unreleased takes, including nine of “I Surrender Dear” plus the master. These provide a glimpse into the high standards Wilson set for himself. Another charming surprise is the September 1941 session with a 24-year-old Lena Horne singing “Out of Nowhere” and “Prisoner of Love,” with solos by trombonist Benny Morton and clarinetist Jimmy Hamilton.
One small drawback: While this box lays out an engaging roadmap of Wilson’s development, it’s missing all of the Wilson-led Billie Holiday band recordings for Brunswick. Obviously too much for one set.
Clearly, Goodman’s support and roaming clarinet were major influences on Wilson. As Goodman wrote in the foreword to Wilson’s 1996 autobiography, “Teddy Talks Jazz,” “My pleasure in playing with Teddy Wilson equaled the pleasure I got out of playing Mozart, and that’s saying something.”
In the years after 1942, jazz piano styles changed dramatically, starting with bebop in 1946. Through it all, up until his death in 1986, Wilson continued to play in his Swing Era style. Postwar piano greats including Oscar Peterson and Bill Evans were listening.
Mr. Myers, a frequent contributor to the Journal, writes daily about music and the arts at JazzWax.com. He is the author of “Anatomy of a Song” (Grove).
 

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Something Called “High Definition Vinyl” Is on the Way | PigeonsandPlanes

Something Called “High Definition Vinyl” Is on the Way | PigeonsandPlanes

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https://pigeonsandplanes.com/news/2018/04/high-definition-vinyl-in-the-works
 
Something Called “High Definition Vinyl” Is on the Way
The new-and-improved vinyl will have “overall more faithful sound reproduction.”
Eric Skelton
https://complex-res.cloudinary.com/images/c_limit,f_auto,fl_lossy,q_auto,w_1030/rz0bxbfa8tbw9aypaxsx/black-and-white-black-and-white-gramophone-707697
People have been claiming that “vinyl sounds better” than mp3s and other forms of digital music for years. That argument usually comes down to a matter of taste, but an Australian startup is now working on technology that actually improves the quality of vinyl records.
Rebeat Innovation is creating “HD vinyl” that the company claims will have “30 percent more playing time, 30 percent more amplitude, and overall more faithful sound reproduction.”
Pitchfork reports that Rebeat Innovation has received $4.8 million in funding for the project. The improved quality comes from a new process that digitally converts audio to a 3D topographic map. Using lasers, the map is then cut into the vinyl, resulting in more precise, accurate sound. While the creation process is different, these records will still be able to be played on traditional turntables.
As a bonus, Rebeat Innovation say the new technique also allows them to avoid using the chemicals required in traditional vinyl production.
So, when can we get our hands on some HD vinyl? Pretty soon, actually.
“Our goal is to officially present our test stampers at the Making Vinyl conference in October,” the company’s CEO Günter Loibl tells Pitchfork. “It will take another eight months to do all the fine adjustments. So by summer 2019 we shall see the first HD vinyls in the stores.”
While you wait, check out our mini-documentary about the making of traditional vinyl in the video below.
 

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Hot Jazz in a Veterans Club Basement in Harlem – The New York Times

Hot Jazz in a Veterans Club Basement in Harlem – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/13/nyregion/hot-jazz-in-a-veterans-club-basement-in-harlem.html?hp
 
Hot Jazz in a Veterans Club Basement in Harlem
By ANDREW McCORMICKAPRIL 13, 2018

“Seleno brought people together with his music,” said David Lee Jones, 59, pictured above, of Seleno Clarke, the founder of Harlem Groove Band who died in December. “We want to keep that going. We want to keep jazz going here in Harlem.” Anthony Geathers for The New York Times 
On a Sunday afternoon in February, the staccato chords and rousing bass lines of a Hammond B-3 organ shook the walls of American Legion Post 398 in Harlem.
Ba-ba-doo-dee-dee-deep. Bum-ba-ba-ba-bummm.
Hundreds of people had crammed into the humble basement bar to pay tribute to the organ’s owner, the musician Seleno Clarke, who had died in December at 87.
Some said prayers. Some read poems. But mostly they played jazz.
From 3 in the afternoon until 11 p.m., dozens of organists, saxophonists, guitarists, drummers and singers rotated onto the modest stage. They played with verve and abandon, as the crowd hooted and clapped and cried out, “Seleno!”
It might have been a strange sight for an American Legion post. The veterans service organization has struggled to keep up membership nationwide, but Post 398’s reputation as one of the last authentic jazz venues in Harlem has kept its seats full and the atmosphere popping. Every Sunday night for nearly two decades, an unlikely mix of aging veterans, tourists and musicians from around the world have come to enjoy cheap drinks, Southern-style home cooking and jazz.
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A photograph of Mr. Clarke, left, hangs on the wall of American Legion Post 398 in Harlem, where the band he formed still plays. Anthony Geathers for The New York Times 
Legion members say Mr. Clarke’s death left an irreplaceable gap in their close-knit community. Today, the organist can still be spotted smiling, always wearing a suit, in many of the photos lining Post 398’s yellow and blue walls. But Mr. Clarke’s former bandmates, on a mission to uphold his legacy, are tightening their sound, broadening their repertory and playing with more enthusiasm than ever.
“Seleno brought people together with his music,” said David Lee Jones, 59, a veteran alto saxophonist who played with Mr. Clarke for 27 years and who now fills his old mentor’s shoes as bandleader. “We want to keep that going. We want to keep jazz going here in Harlem.”
Post 398 occupies an inconspicuous brownstone on West 132nd Street. The music started in 1998, after Mr. Clarke bought the Hammond B-3 — a legendary instrument played by the likes of Fats Waller, Count Basie and Jimmy Smith — but soon realized there wasn’t space for the 425-pound machine in his Bronx apartment. An Army veteran and Legion regular, Mr. Clarke asked if he could store the organ at Post 398. The post commander at the time said yes, as long as Mr. Clarke agreed to play.
Already a well-known performer around the city, Mr. Clarke started his Sunday afternoon sessions with only a drummer to accompany him. As the informal gigs grew in popularity, he pulled in friends from established venues like Showmans, Smoke and Pepper-n-Salt. He added a saxophonist, a guitarist and the occasional singer, forming the Harlem Groove Band. In a few years, Post 398 had become an unlikely hot spot to jam on a Sunday night in Harlem.
“A lot of clubs in the neighborhood, they were closing then,” said Annette St. John, a Harlem native and longtime jazz singer. “Small’s Paradise, the Baby Grand, the Rennie, La Famille, they were all gone.” Mr. Clarke, she explained, “made the Legion a stronghold.”
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A recent concert. Anthony Geathers for The New York Times 
Big names showed up, too, including the filmmaker Spike Lee; Charles B. Rangel, the congressman representing Harlem and Washington Heights at the time; and the musician George Benson.
Mr. Clarke welcomed everyone with open arms. “It was definitely an all-inclusive atmosphere that he created,” said Judd Nielsen, 31, who made weekly trips to Post 398 from Park Slope, Brooklyn, when he was a teenager to watch Mr. Clarke play. “Even when there wasn’t much time left in the night, Seleno always wanted to get everybody in. If we had a line of guys, he would call them up and say: ‘Come on, short stories, ya’ll! Short stories!’”
Mr. Nielsen is now one of two organists sliding into Mr. Clarke’s seat at the Hammond on Sunday nights. The Harlem Groove Band includes four regular musicians in addition to Mr. Jones, but every session features familiar stand-ins, many of whom have been playing with the band for years. Sundays bring a handful of walk-ins, too, who wait eagerly for a chance to play.
They always get their turn.
“It’s pretty special,” said Zaid Mahiri, a 36-year-old from Oakland, Calif., who alternates with Mr. Nielsen on the organ. “Music in this city can be a rough business. There aren’t many places like this where you can come to learn and try things out on stage.”
Even rarer, Mr. Nielsen and Mr. Mahiri said, is a venue that still has a real organ. In many clubs, if the set includes an organ at all, the instrument has been replaced by a digital keyboard, which lack the Hammond B-3’s iconic and singular sound.
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Judd Nielsen, left, is now one of two organists sliding into Mr. Clarke’s seat at the Hammond on Sunday nights. Anthony Geathers for The New York Times 
In jazz, when an organ is included, it joins the drums in forming the rhythm section of the band. Sean Cameron, 40, the drummer for the Harlem Groove Band, started playing at Post 398 in 2003. Over time, his vibe became deeply meshed with Mr. Clarke’s grooving style.
Mr. Cameron initially had trouble imagining a next chapter for the band with Mr. Clarke gone. But then he saw a transformation in Mr. Jones, who he said subtly adopted many of Clarke’s paternal tendencies.
Even Mr. Jones’s decision to keep the original members of the band together spoke volumes, Mr. Cameron said. “David is not small potatoes,” he explained. “He could have made a few calls and gotten anyone in here. When he told me he was keeping it in the family, that’s when I realized how serious he was about living out Seleno’s vision for this place.”
Though much will stay the same, the band is starting to experiment a bit more. In the old days, the band mostly played songs written by Mr. Clarke. Under Mr. Jones, leading the way on his shiny Selmer Mark VI saxophone, band members are playing around with different styles — everything from progressive to modern to hard bop and blues. Many nights, Mr. Jones simply asks band members what they want to play and lets the music take them from there.
Sessions still close, however, with “BJ Blues,” a song Clarke wrote for his longtime partner, Brenda Chapman. It was the last song Mr. Clarke played at Post 398, on a December night last year when his ailing body had the energy for only two songs.
“It’s a swinging shuffle blues that grooves like hell and defines everything that Seleno was about,” Mr. Jones said.
Correction: April 13, 2018 

An earlier version of this article misspelled the surname of one of the organists in the Harlem Groove Band. He is Judd Nielsen, not Judd Neilsen.
 

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Vintage Advertisement: Cliff Edwards – Singin’ In The Rain 1929 Ukulele Ike – YouTube

Vintage Advertisement: Cliff Edwards – Singin’ In The Rain 1929 Ukulele Ike – YouTube

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Media Advisory–NEA Jazz Masters Tribute Concert on April 16, 2018

Media Advisory–NEA Jazz Masters Tribute Concert on April 16, 2018

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Media Advisory: Tuesday, April 10, 2018
Press Contacts:
Liz Auclair (NEA), auclaire@arts.gov, 202-682-5744 
Chanel P. Williams (Kennedy Center), CPWilliams@Kennedy-Center.org, 202-416-8447
 

NEA Jazz Masters Tribute Concert at the Kennedy Center on April 16, 2018

 
WHAT: National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) honors the 2018 NEA Jazz Masters at a tribute concert held in collaboration with the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC, hosted by Jason Moran, Kennedy Center Artistic Director for Jazz. The concert will also be available via a live webcast and audio broadcast.
 
The 2018 NEA Jazz Masters are:

  •          Todd Barkan – Club Owner, Producer, Artistic Programmer (Recipient of the 2018 A.B. Spellman NEA Jazz Masters Fellowship for Jazz Advocacy)
  •          Joanne Brackeen – Pianist, Composer, Educator
  •          Pat Metheny – Guitarist, Composer, Educator
  •          Dianne Reeves – Vocalist

The tribute concert will be hosted by Jason Moran and will include remarks by the 2018 NEA Jazz Masters, as well as Jane Chu, chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts and Deborah F. Rutter, president of the Kennedy Center. The concert will include performances by Terri Lyne CarringtonNir FelderSullivan FortnerJames FranciesPasquale GrassoGilad HekselmanAngelique KidjoChristian McBrideCamila MezaNEA Jazz Master Eddie Palmieri and the Eddie Palmieri SextetCécile McLorin SalvantAntonio SanchezHelen Sung, and Dan Wilson.
 
WHEN: Monday, April 16, 2018 at 8:00 p.m.
 
WHERE: Kennedy Center Concert Hall (2700 F Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20566); video-streamed live on the NEA and Kennedy Center websites, as well as BMI, Kennedy Center, NPR Music, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Museum of American History, Voice of America (Mandarin, Vietnamese, Khmer, and Indonesian services), WBGO, and WPFW websites; and audio broadcast live on SiriusXM Channel 67, Real Jazz, and WPFW 89.3 FM in Washington, DC.
 
MEDIA RSVP: To secure admission and camera locations, crews must RSVP by Friday, April 13, 2018 at 12:00 p.m. Media are allowed to capture up to 15 minutes of the event and broadcast fewer than three minutes. A mult box will be provided for stage sound. All equipment must be self-contained.
 
ADDITIONAL NEA JAZZ MASTERS EVENTS
In addition to the concert, there are two other events celebrating the 2018 NEA Jazz Masters:

  •          NPR Listening Party with the 2018 NEA Jazz Masters on Sunday, April 15, 2018 at 2:00 p.m.
  •          Howard University Master Class with 2018 NEA Jazz Master Dianne Reeves on Tuesday, April 17, 2018 at 12:40 p.m.

More information about these events are available here.
 
# # #

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Happy Friday The 13th Willie Dixon – I Ain’t Superstitious – YouTube

Happy Friday The 13th Willie Dixon – I Ain’t Superstitious – YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o_hHmikcu3s

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Abbe Lane Swings a Tropical Heatwave ◊ 1965 – YouTube

Abbe Lane Swings a Tropical Heatwave ◊ 1965 – YouTube

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9sLHcLgMieQ

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When this fancy restaurant refused to serve Josephine Baker, her badass takedown didn’t disappoint

When this fancy restaurant refused to serve Josephine Baker, her badass takedown didn’t disappoint

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https://timeline.com/josephine-baker-wanted-dinner-and-lawyered-up-when-racists-refused-761faf7c79de
 
When this fancy restaurant refused to serve Josephine Baker, her badass takedown didn’t disappoint
She lawyered up — and proved that bigotry doesn’t pay
Bené VieraApr 9
Currently: Senior Writer. Formerly: Deputy Editor. Words: New York Times, GQ, ESPN, ELLE, Cosmo, Glamour, Vulture, etc. Catch me on Twitter: @beneviera.

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People protesting outside of the the Stork Club in New York after Josephine Baker’s discriminatory service. (Getty Images)
Josephine Baker arrived with friends in tow at Manhattan’s Stork Club on October 16, 1951, craving shrimp cocktail and steak. It was one of the most prestigious supper clubs in the world, and there seemed no better place for the famous dancer to celebrate her last show at the Roxy. An hour after she placed her order, she noticed that others around her were being served while service to her table had all but stopped.
What Baker didn’t know was that club owner Sherman Billingsleyhad arranged it that way. “Who let her in?” Billingsley had said to a waiter upon seeing her seated in the Cub Room. Baker, who had become the first black entertainer to star in a motion picture and who’d achieved her fame and fortune in Europe, was no stranger to discrimination. She refused to perform in segregated clubs in the States. In addition, she was a major supporter of the civil rights movement and unapologetically vocal about racism. Once she realized what was happening, she called her lawyer, Walter White, who was also executive secretary of the NAACP. From the same phone booth, she also called Deputy Police Commissioner Billy Rowe about being denied service. After the phone calls were placed, a waiter rushed over to the table and finally brought out the steak the star had ordered. But Baker refused to eat it.
“I have no intention of suffering deliberate humiliation without striking back,” she said.
Judging from what happened next, Billingsley probably wished he’d just brought out the steak in a timely fashion. The NAACP began picketing the Stork Club shortly after, calling for its liquor and cabaret licenses to be revoked because of racial bias. The clubs licenses remained intact, but its reputation took a hit. Billingsley learned an important lesson the hard way: racism costs.
 
At Timeline, we reveal the forces that shaped America’s past and present. Our team and the Timeline community are scouring archives for the most visually arresting and socially important stories, and using them to explain how we got to now. To help us tell more stories, please consider becoming a Timeline member.
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Cecil Taylor’s Deceptively Accessible Jazz: Obituary – The Atlantic

Cecil Taylor’s Deceptively Accessible Jazz: Obituary – The Atlantic

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https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2018/04/cecil-taylor-obituary/557507/
 
The Deceptively Accessible Music of Cecil Taylor
The composer and free-jazz giant, who died Thursday at 89, has a reputation for making challenging music, but the reality is far less imposing.
David A. Graham  Apr 10, 2018
Sometimes, when listening to an avant-garde giant of yore, it’s difficult to understand what made her so striking. A vanguard by definition lays the way for imitators, so eventually the things that once made her radical now seem conventional.
This is not a challenge with Cecil Taylor’s music.
The pianist and composer, who died Thursday at 89, retains his ability to shock, despite decades of work and critical acclaim and a lengthy discography and performance history. Taylor’s work is stranger and less immediately legible than that of Ornette Coleman, the other major founding father of free jazz; Coleman, who died in 2015, started his career in R&B bands, collaborated with rock musicians, and became a hip taste even for non-jazz obsessives. Taylor came from a more classical schooling, and his music never lost its strangeness.
As a result, Taylor’s strongest constituency was long among music critics. “If there’s any justice,” WBGO’s Nate Chinen wrote last weekThe New York Times would run its obituary on page A1. It ran on B8 instead. Like many great artists, Taylor was not especially interested in spoon-feeding audiences, though he loved playing for them. As the jazz critic Whitney Balliett once noted, “Coleman’s music is accessible, but he is loath to share it; Taylor’s music is difficult, and he is delighted to share it.” Taylor read his esoteric poetry during performances, and moved around the bandstand. Some critics were not impressed. “Anyone working with a jackhammer could have achieved the same results,” wrote Leonard Feather.
Taylor divided musicians, too. Critic Gary Giddins recalled seeing Tommy Flanagan, a more traditionally swinging pianist, at a gig and asking whether he planned to cover a Taylor tune. “No, but you can bet I’ll be thinking of them,” Flanagan replied. But Miles Davis walked out of a Taylor gig, and in Ken Burns’s Jazz series, which tended to be dismissive of more outré jazz, Branford Marsalis rejected Taylor’s idea that since musicians prepared for shows, listeners should too: “That’s total self-indulgent bullshit, as far as I’m concerned.”
Taylor’s cameo in that series might lead most listeners to consider Taylor too weird to even approach—whether because of his request that listeners get ready for shows, or because of Marsalis’s crisp dismissal. That would be unfortunate, because Taylor’s work, in addition to being often enthralling and riveting, is deceptively accessible.
Consider the reaction of another listener: Jimmy Carter. In 1978, the president, not renowned as an especially sophisticated jazz listener, hosted a jazz festival at the White House. Most of the bill was reasonably mainstream, if widely varying in style—Sonny Rollins, Stan Getz, Clark Terry, Chick Corea—but it also included Taylor, who must have been hard-pressed to fit his expansive music into the requisite five-minute slot. The music was far from plain, but the man from Plains was agog.
“After the last note faded, Jimmy Carter sprang up from the grass and rushed over to Cecil; Secret Service men scrambled to keep pace,” promoter George Wein, who arranged the show, later recalled. “The president took the pianist’s two hands in his own, looking at them with wonderment and awe. ‘I’ve never seen anyone play the piano that way,’ he marveled.”
Carter asked whether the classical pianist Vladimir Horowitz had heard Taylor. Taylor said he doubted it. “You know he was here. He should hear you. How did you learn to do that?” Carter asked. “Hell, I’ve been doing it for 35 years,” Taylor said. Attorney General Griffin Bell also cornered the pianist, wanting to know where he could buy some of Taylor’s records.
Nearly as long as he’d been doing it, Taylor had been eliciting these divided reactions. At a 1958 performance, Balliett observed listeners alternately mesmerized and agitated: “[Members of the audience] fidgeted, whispered, and wandered nervously in and out of the tent, as if the ground beneath had suddenly become unbearably hot.” While the intricacies of Taylor’s music reward deep study, and have attracted obsessive fans from both jazz and contemporary classical music, he also rewards casual listeners.
Taylor was born and raised in Queens, and began piano lessons at a young age. He went on to study at the New England Conservatory, where he drank heavily of European avant-garde composers. His earliest recordings were comparatively conventional jazz, but he quickly struck out in stranger and fresher directions. Over the course of his career, Taylor worked in many formats, including a long association with the saxophonist Jimmy Lyons, solo performances, collaborations with dancers, and larger ensembles. He also taught at universities and eventually won both MacArthur and Guggenheim fellowships.
Trying to convey the experience of listening to any given Taylor composition or performance, much less the breadth of his catalog, is difficult. The initial impression is generally of chaos. This is not music that swings. It is music that fidgets, whispers, and wanders like Balliett’s audience members. It’s ludic and joyful and stretches out over long pieces whose moods shift frequently, sometimes abruptly and other times almost imperceptibly over time.
Taylor’s work was deeply rooted in jazz, but a novice Taylor listener might be best served not thinking about it through the lens of more familiar jazz recordings, but approaching it on its own terms as simply music: which of course is, by definition, organized noise. Another way to think about it is as a conversation between musicians—sometimes tender and sometimes a bit belligerent, but ebbing and flowing as a group conversation tends to do. In this spirit, Giddins likened Taylor to James Joyce:
A lot of bad teachers steered students away from Joyce by telling them that they couldn’t read Joyce until they had read everything from Homer to Vico and all of the previous Joyce works to get to Ulysses. You could spend a lifetime just doing all the preparation and then you are supposed to carry around a thousand pages of footnotes. What pleasure is there in that? But, just take Ulysses on vacation with nothing else and you will find out how truly pleasurable Joyce can be, as long as you don’t expect to get every single line.
Like Joyce, Taylor was a singular genius; like Joyce, he didn’t appear fully formed but sprang from a set of influences. In Taylor’s case, two distinctive jazz influences were Duke Ellington and Thelonious Monk. Taylor played tunes by both on his first, most conventional LP, Jazz Advance in 1956. From Ellington, he took an approach that embraced the full capabilities of the piano; from Monk, most notably, he learned the power of timing, percussiveness, and dissonance. In mid-career performances like Silent Tongues, a glimmer of Fats Waller–style stride piano will occasionally shine through, then fade, grinning, back into the foment of the music.
A tune like “Charge ’Em Blues” from Jazz Advance is helpful for understanding Taylor’s larval form as a Monk-influenced improviser and composer, before reaching his full potential as a musician:
Within a few years, Taylor was making music worlds away from that. “It wasn’t the technique and feeling of jazz that Mr. Taylor was rejecting, only its form: the 32-bar song, the theme-solos-theme progression,” Ben Ratliff writes. Instead, a song might have an 88-bar form.
Taylor’s 1966 Unit Structures has the personnel of a standard jazz combo: piano, bass, drums, and saxophones. It sounds nothing like a standard jazz combo. Instruments stop and start, interweaving snatches of melody. There is often no consistent beat, with drums providing percussion but not rhythm, allowing the drummer to escape the timekeeper role and serve as a full, improvising member of the ensemble. In some ways, the music feels more connected to Dixieland jazz—with a polyphonic flurry of players combining their sounds to create a greater whole—than the more familiar structure of later swing and bebop, in which a soloist plays as a rhythm section accompanies him.
“Steps” begins with a squall of horns offering a near-melody of a Coleman-esque variety, but the resemblance to standard structures soon splinters. A stumbling, jittery rhythmic motif bounces among the drums, the piano, and the saxophone. The band surges forward or halts without clear warning.
“The emphasis in each piece is on building a whole, totally integrated structure,” Taylor told A.B. Spellman the same year. “In doing this, we try to carry on—in ensemble as well as solo sections—the mood of a jazz soloist. I mean that principle of kinetic improvisation that keeps a jazz solo building.”
Not everyone bought this. In October 1962, Milton Bass griped in The Atlantic that Taylor was one of a “group of jazz seekers [who] have been making their sound either by running up and down the scales at breakneck speed while changing chords, according to the phases of the moon, or by grabbing individual notes and beating them to death.”
This was both unfair and untrue. The CD edition of Unit Structures helpfully offers an alternate take of the tune “Enter, Evening,” which gives listeners a chance to see how the piece was not random but replicable. But that’s easily felt from the original LP, too. Consider how the band moves through specific, easily noticed sections of a tune like “Unit Structure/As of a Now/Section”: The instruments entering in turn (drums, piano, sax); then a siren-like bass solo; a melodic fragment; a skittering frenzy. That’s the first two minutes, at least.
Another way to grasp the prodigious intentionality, as well as the great joy, at play in Taylor’s music is to watch a solo piano performance. One senses Taylor’s physicality—by the halfway mark, he has sweated through his shirt—but also of the care he takes; the decisions he makes in producing the music, so far from random clanging on the keyboard; and the range of sounds and tones he can draw from a piano. The music may sound crazed, but it is never accidental. This 1984 concert kicks also offers a taste of Taylor’s poetry recitation, which kicks off the performance:
Genuinely understanding the structures that undergird Taylor’s music is the work of years, and then only for the most sophisticated listeners. I can’t pretend to grasp it, or to command his whole oeuvre. The good news is that there’s no need. With all due respect to Taylor’s suggestions that listeners prepare before consuming his music, the best course is simply to listen. Taylor leaves behind a formidable body of work, but it needn’t be forbidding.
 

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Yvonne Staples, Member and Manager of the Staple Singers, Dies at 80 – The New York Times

Yvonne Staples, Member and Manager of the Staple Singers, Dies at 80 – The New York Times

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Yvonne Staples, Member and Manager of the Staple Singers, Dies at 80
By LIAM STACKAPRIL 10, 2018
 

 
From left, Pops, Cleo, Yvonne and Mavis Staples performed in the 1970s. Courtesy of the Staples family
Yvonne Staples, who provided background vocals for her family’s hit-making pop and soul group, the Staple Singers, while taking the lead in managing its business affairs, died on Tuesday at her home in Chicago. She was 80.
The cause was colon cancer, said Bill Carpenter, a family friend.
Ms. Staples began singing with her family’s act in 1971 and performed on some of their biggest hits, including “Respect Yourself” and “I’ll Take You There.”
“She was very content in that role,” said Mr. Carpenter, the author of “Uncloudy Day: The Gospel Music Encyclopedia.” “She had no desire to be a front singer, even though people in the family told her she had a great voice.”
Ms. Staples was born in Chicago on Oct. 23, 1937, to Oceola and Roebuck Staples, who was known as Pops.
Her father formed the Staple Singers with his children Pervis, Mavis and Cleotha in 1948. They performed in churches in and around Chicago, toured the South and became active in the civil rights movement, traveling with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Yvonne Staples joined the group in 1971, when Pervis left for military service. The group, whose music blended gospel, soul and pop, had a string of hit songs in the 1970s. “Respect Yourself” reached No. 2 on the Billboard charts in 1971, “I’ll Take You There reached No. 1 in 1972, and “Let’s Do It Again” was a No. 1 hit in 1975.

 
The Staple Singers at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in New York in 1999. From left were Pervis, Cleotha, Pops, Mavis and Yvonne Staples. Albert Ferreira/Associated Press
“On all the big hit records, Yvonne did the background vocals” in addition to acting as the group’s business manager, Mr. Carpenter said.
When her sister Mavis began a solo career in the 1980s, Yvonne performed the same double duty for her, singing background vocals and managing her tours until just a few years ago. At her death she was “pretty much retired,” Mr. Carpenter said.
The Staple Singers were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1999 and received a lifetime achievement award at the 2005 Grammy Awards. They also received the Rhythm and Blues Foundation’s Pioneer Award.
Roebuck Staples died in 2000and Cleotha Staples in 2013.
Yvonne Staples is survived by her brother and her sister Mavis.

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Nathan Davis Pitt jazz professor dies at 81

Nathan Davis Pitt jazz professor dies at 81

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https://pittnews.com/article/130609/uncategorized/pitt-jazz-professor-dies-at-81-2/#
Pitt jazz professor dies at 81
April 11, 2018
Mackenzie Rodrigues| News Editor
Nathan Davis, former professor in Pitt’s Department of Music and renowned jazz musician, died Monday. (Image via University of Pittsburgh)
 
Nathan Davis, a former professor at Pitt’s department of music and renowned jazz musician, died on Monday from natural causes. He was 81.
Davis came to Pitt in 1969 as the director of the jazz studies program. During his time at Pitt, he founded and directed the University’s annual jazz seminar. He also helped create the International Academy of Jazz Hall of Fame — located inside the William Pitt Union — as well as the William Russell Robinson Recording Studio and the Pitt Jazz Ensemble. 
Davis also set up the Sonny Rollins International Jazz Archives and taught music courses, including African American Music, Jazz Improvisation, Saxophone and History of Jazz — an introductory course that still uses Davis’ “Writings in Jazz”textbook.
“We got a history,” Davis said in a 2008 interview with The Pitt News. “And it’s just as valid as anybody else’s history, and we need jazz people teaching it.”
Outside of Pitt, Davis founded the Jazz Studies Program at the Paris American Academy in France and conducted extensive research in the field of ethnomusicology across Tunisia, Brazil, Turkey, Morocco and the Caribbean. 
Davis earned a bachelor’s degree in music education from the University of Kansas and a doctorate in ethnomusicology from Wesleyan University in Connecticut. He played in the U.S. Army Band in Berlin after graduating from Wesleyan until he accepted the offer to start the jazz program at Pitt. 
He was primarily known as a talented saxophonist, but also played the bass clarinet and the flute. He performed with artists such as Ray Charles and Kenny Clarke.
Then-Chancellor Mark Nordenberg spoke at a 2004 press conference about the impact Davis had on the music community. 
“Nathan has always been one to reach out and attract new music-lovers,” Nordenberg said. “[Davis] has left his musical mark wherever he and his work have traveled.”
Davis received the BNY Mellon Jazz Living Legacy Award in 2013 for his achievements at Pitt and abroad following his retirement that June. 
“I wanted to bring dignity — the same dignity and respect afforded physicians, philosophers and other scholars in academia — to jazz,” Davis said in 2013. “And that, I think, I was able to do.”
 

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Her Gospel Truth | Sister Rosetta Tharpe – richmondmagazine.com

Her Gospel Truth | Sister Rosetta Tharpe – richmondmagazine.com

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http://richmondmagazine.com/news/features/sister-rosetta-tharpe/
 
Her Gospel Truth
Sister Rosetta Tharpe invented rock ’n’ roll, but it wasn’t enough for Richmond — her chosen home for a decade — to remember her
Craig Belcher
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Sister Rosetta Tharpe performing at the London Palladium in 1964 (Photo courtesy Pictoral Press Ltd/Alamy Stock)
There’s a two-lane stretch of highway between the Arkansas towns of Cotton Plant and Brinkley that was renamed last year. It’s now the Sister Rosetta Tharpe Highway, in honor of the woman who created rock ‘n’ roll.
Yes, a woman.
And yes, she played an electric guitar.
With a badass manner that defied tradition and expectation, she shouted about the Lord and her lovers — male and female — with a voice full of grit and gall that captivated crowds. Years later, guitar gods like Jimi Hendrix, Keith Richards and Chuck Berry would mimic her movements and playing style, putting the finishing touches on the genre she shaped.
“Can’t no man play like me,” she’d say whenever she was compared with her male peers. “I play better than a man.”
Her strutting confidence shone through in her performances, as she commanded the stage with a charisma that easily enamored audiences.
Beginning in the 1920s and for decades to follow, she came, she saw, she rocked. And then people forgot. Until recently.
The Postal Service issued a stamp with her face on it. In the state where she died, Pennsylvanians declared a day in her honor. This month, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland will finally induct her as an “Early Influencer.”
Then there’s Richmond.
It’s where she lived at the height of her popularity, where she purchased her first home, found her music director and assembled her backing vocalists, The Rosettes. She loved the city so much she held a concert at the then-Mosque (today’s Altria Theater) in 1949 just to celebrate the anniversary of her residency.
But if you visit her home in the 2300 block of Barton Avenue today, you won’t see a historical marker. Nor at the Altria Theater. Or anywhere else. We haven’t had a Sister Rosetta Tharpe Day. Despite Tharpe living here for 10 years and becoming a valued member of the community, Richmond has forgotten the mother of rock ‘n’ roll.
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Sister Rosetta with the Lucky Millinder Orchestra around 1943 (Photo courtesy Pictoral Press Ltd/Alamy Stock)
The question of how a city lost track of one of its most famous residents is an important one. But Tharpe’s contributions to American music aren’t questionable. That discussion was settled long ago.
“She was playing rock ‘n’ roll way before anyone else,” says Lonnie Liston Smith Jr., a jazz, soul and funk musician who played with Miles Davis and Pharoah Sanders and still makes his home in Richmond. “That was way before Chuck Berry and all those guys. Nobody else had even come up with something like that.”
Smith should know. His father, the late Lonnie Smith Sr., was a member of The Harmonizing Four, a popular gospel quartet that often shared billing with Tharpe.
“If anybody deserves it, she really deserves it,” he says, after being told of Tharpe’s induction into the Rock Hall. “What they call rock ‘n’ roll, she was playing it way back then. Eric Clapton, Rolling Stones, she influenced all of them.”
Tharpe was already a star when she settled in Richmond in 1947. She was born Rosetta Nubin in Cotton Plant, Arkansas, in 1915. By the time she was 6, she was singing at revivals and churches with her mother. They later moved to Chicago, where she would combine her country style with the smoother sounds of the city. One of the most prominent gospel music voices of that time was that of the Rev. F.W. McGee (grandfather of Richmond jazz musician and educator Bill McGee), whom music historians credit as an influence on her.

Tharpe’s 1938 release “Rock Me” introduced her unique meld of blues and gospel to the world. (Photo courtesy Dr. Gregg D. Kimball)
Soon Tharpe was touring the South, playing with the likes of Duke Ellington and touring with the gospel outfit The Dixie Hummingbirds. Her first single, recorded for the Decca label, was called “Rock Me.” It’s a gospel song, but Tharpe’s passionate and yearning vocal made listeners ponder what she was really shouting about:
You make my burning brighter
Help me to do good wherever I can
Oh, let thou praise and thrill me
Thou loving kindness fill me
Then you hold me
Hold me in the hollow of the hand
You hold me in the bosom
Till storms of life is over
Rock me in the cradle of our love
After her career took off, Tharpe dabbled in secular music (“I Want a Tall Skinny Papa,” recorded with the Lucky Millinder Orchestra), but she considered herself foremost a gospel artist. One of her signature songs, “Strange Things Happening Every Day,” became one of the first gospel songs to cross over, landing on Billboard’s “race music” chart, a now-notorious catchall category in which all black music was grouped through the late ’50s.
Tharpe, a striking woman who performed in evening gowns with an electric guitar, cannot be categorized easily. She sang with the cadence of a blues artist but looked like the gospel queen she was, with a crowning permanent wave and flowing dresses. Second only to her guitar, her face was her most expressive instrument, punctuating her licks and strokes with winks, raised eyebrows and a smile that set everything straight.
By the 1940s, thanks to a contract with Decca Records — then home of Bing Crosby and the London Philharmonic, later of The Rolling Stones and Paul McCartney — she cemented herself as a bona fide solo act, with the freedoms that status entails. She sought the same freedoms in her personal life, too, divorcing a second husband and, before that marriage ended, entering a partnership with another singer, Marie Knight, with whom she would perform — and live — for many years.
To this day, the subject of their relationship is a difficult one for many of Tharpe’s friends and associates, though some, in a recent book, confirm that the singer was bisexual and in a relationship with Knight.
By stark contrast, the LGBTQ community has adopted Tharpe as an icon, a boundary-smashing figure in her personal as well as professional life and a forerunner of those artists who consciously blurred aesthetic and social lines over the past 50 years.
When Sister Rosetta Tharpe moved to Barton Heights, with her mother and musical partner Marie Knight in tow, it was a very big deal.
Not just for Richmond, which was playing host to a gospel legend, but for Tharpe as well. It was more than finding a home base that made it easy for her to tour the East Coast; the home she moved into was the first she had ever owned.
In “Shout Sister Shout! The Untold Story of Rock and Roll Trailblazer Sister Rosetta Tharpe,” author Gayle F. Wald observes that, having rented in New York, Tharpe “was proud to bursting at having purchased in the ‘Heights,’ a name that itself announced status.”
She wasn’t the only one who was proud. Barksdale “Barky” Haggins, the owner of Barky’s Spiritual Stores record shop on Broad Street, was a teenager at the time, more concerned with his newspaper delivery routes — but he insists he was well aware of Tharpe. “When she bought that house on Barton Avenue, that was an all-white section then, wasn’t any blacks goin’ into Barton,” he says.

Tharpe’s former home in the 2300 block of Barton Avenue had a three-car garage and a rose garden. (Photo by Adam Dubrueler)
Wald describes the home, which still stands, as “swanky.” Visitors recall lush carpets, mirrored walls and ceilings, a three-car garage, a horse named Margaret, and a rose garden. Today, at the back of the property, there’s a large concrete slab, perhaps all that remains of the building that once held all of Tharpe and Knight’s many evening gowns and furs.
Musician and producer Stu Gardner, whose father, William Gardner Jr., was a member of The Dependable Boys, a group that recorded with Tharpe, recalls those days with fondness: “My dad took us over to the house — he used to work with her,” he says. “He was crazy about her. She was a wonderful sweet lady. Loved to laugh. She had an infectious laugh. Her laughing could kill you. When she [would] start laughing, you go ‘n’ laugh.”
Gardner, who was around 5 years old when he met Tharpe, says she was like part of his family. “My father had three sisters, and she was like the fourth sister,” he says. “My father worked at McSweeney’s [butcher shop]. They used to lay him off and on, and she used to financially help him a lot. She used to buy everybody clothes. She was like our godmother.”
Gardner’s story isn’t an aberration.
By all accounts, Tharpe was a cheerful giver, known for sharing her wealth — by one estimate, she made about $200,000 in one year — with those less fortunate. In her heyday, that giving nature made her beloved in the city.
“The city was important to her because of the vibrant gospel scenes it nurtured,” Wald says. “Richmond was a place where there were a lot of vocal harmony groups, both male and female, and that set it apart from some other cities that didn’t have that kind of grass-roots singing culture.”

Lonnie Smith Sr. (far left) in Richmond’s The Harmonizing Four with Joe Williams, Jesse Pryor, Ellis Johnson and Thomas Johnson (Photo courtesy Dr. Gregg D. Kimball)
In the late 1940s, Richmond was home to memorable groups like The Harmonizing Four, The Dependable Boys, The Jewel Gospel Singers, Maggie Ingram and others. Tharpe, exercising her growing power in the music business, acquired one popular local group and changed its name twice as she groomed the singers as her own backups. Eventually, she christened them The Rosettes.
Tharpe’s music lives on, albeit in brief, sometimes scratchy black-and-white YouTube clips, and through the re-release of her records. But most of her friends and associates from her Richmond years aren’t around anymore. Her bandleader, Jimmy Roots, died in 1986. The Rosettes have all passed away. Members of The Harmonizing Four and The Dependable Boys are gone as well.
Fortunately, there are stories that, like the songs, have endured.
“If it wasn’t for Rosetta Tharpe, then I wouldn’t be here. Because that’s how my mom and dad met,” says Richmond jazz singer Desirée Roots. “I always thanked her for being born.”

The Rosettes included (left to right) Lottie Henry (Smith), Shug Fitzgerald, Sarah Brooks (Roots), Barbara Johnson and Bubba Johnson. (Photo courtesy Getty/Michael Ochs Archives)
Her father, Jimmy Roots, was Rosetta’s pianist and bandleader. Her mother, then Sarah Brooks, was one of The Rosettes, Tharpe’s backup singers. Roots was a smooth, fair-skinned piano player with red hair, freckles and a gold dental crown that sparkled under the stage lights when he smiled, as women in the audience screamed and swooned.
Sarah Brooks, a Rosette, wasn’t one of those women — at least, not initially.
“She was like, ‘Ugh! I can’t stand him,’ Desirée recalls her mother saying. “Then the next thing you know, they’re married.”
Family duties eventually called Sarah, and then eventually Jimmy, too, from the road. Her father kept playing music locally, and Desirée has continued the family legacy, touring regionally and performing jazz and R&B standards.
When it was announced that Tharpe would be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Roots was elated, both for Tharpe and for her parents.
“Knowing that my mom and dad were a part of that history,” she says, “I feel like it’s part of my family.”
Tharpe’s Richmond home would never be the same after a tragic accident that occurred hundreds of miles away from Barton Heights.
While Tharpe was on tour in 1949, her partner Marie Knight’s two children died in a fire at the house of Knight’s mother in New Jersey. The tragedy effectively ended her professional relationship with Tharpe.
There would be a reunion, however, when Tharpe decided to wed for the third and final time in 1951, marking the occasion with an over-the-top event, planned by two veteran gospel promoters long before there was ever a groom in mind. Tharpe went along with it.
The wedding was held at Griffith Stadium, home to the American League Washington Senators in Washington, D.C., but it had also had a distinctive Richmond touch: Tharpe’s $800 wedding gown was from Thahilmer’s. African-American customers were not especially welcome at the department store, which had segregated facilities. But the management learned to make an exception for Tharpe after an embarrassing incident. As Wald recounts it, Tharpe was hauled off to the police station after attempting to make an exceptionally large purchase, all in cash. The store apologized after realizing the error and ended up giving Tharpe the merchandise she’d tried to purchase. For the wedding, perhaps to further atone for the incident, Tharpe’s wedding dress and a bridal consultant from the store were driven to the ceremony, where the bride was buttoned into her gown.
More than 15,000 people attended the wedding, according to press accounts.
The attraction was the concert that followed, which was recorded and released as “The Wedding Ceremony of Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Russell Morrison,” featuring the couple’s wedding vows along with performances from The Harmonizing Four and, of course, the bride herself. Fireworks capped off the event, reported the Richmond Afro-American — including one that was a replica of Tharpe with her guitar.
The concert turned out to be one of Tharpe’s last major musical accomplishments. Another gospel singer, Mahalia Jackson, began to eclipse her in popularity on the gospel scene. Decca attempted to market her as an R&B singer, but it didn’t work. And gospel fans were slow to welcome her back after her attempts at secular music.
At a crossroads, she found adoring audiences again overseas, on a British tour that connected her with people eager to hear genuine African-American music, after having heard their countrymen imitate it for years.
As Tharpe clung to relevance abroad, her cavalier attitude about her finances became a liability that would have severe consequences.
“Richmond was a place where there were a lot of vocal harmony groups … and that set it apart from some other cities that didn’t have that kind of grass-roots singing culture.” —Gayle Wald, author of “Shout Sister Shout! The Untold Story of Rock and Roll Trailblazer Sister Rosetta Tharpe”
Tharpe’s time in Richmond ended abruptly, and in a way that has only helped to diminish her legacy.
In 1957, while on tour out of the country, her home and all of her belongings were seized and auctioned. Lonnie Smith Sr. told the Richmond Times-Dispatch in 1981 that the foreclosure of her home had  been related to unpaid taxes.  
It was a sad end to her relationship with the city that for so long had served as a home base. She would never again return to Richmond and never again enjoy the same musical success.
A brilliant star, she ended up, like so many blues greats, obscure, out of style and forgotten.
Stu Gardner, then signed to the record label Stax, recalls the company wanting to sign her in the early 1970s, but they couldn’t locate her.
By this time, Tharpe had developed diabetes. As the disease ravaged her body, the once-statuesque woman was confined to a wheelchair after a leg was amputated.
Still, she played on — a fact that made some of her friends and relatives deeply uneasy. They claimed her husband was behind her difficult touring schedule, determined to exploit her name and earning power.
In the end, she was frail and exhausted, a fraction of the woman she had been, the great and galvanizing force who had changed music.
She died in 1973, her body buried in an unmarked grave in Philadelphia.
Sister Rosetta Tharpe was too good to stay forgotten.
In 2007, she was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in Memphis. Two years later, funds raised from a concert featuring gospel legends, including Marie Knight, were used to purchase a grave marker for Tharpe in Philadelphia.
In 2012, she was inducted into the Arkansas Black Hall of Fame and the following year she joined the Arkansas Entertainers Hall of Fame. A historical marker was placed at her former Philadelphia home at 1102 Master St. in 2011. It reads in part, “One of gospel music’s first crossover superstars … Her home was here.”
In Richmond, however, her former house remains unmarked. There are no memorials in this city of memorials, no acknowledgment that she called this city her home.
For a place that struggles with how to properly recall the pain and triumphs of the past, this should be an easy one. Give a Sister her due.

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Comedy Store owner Mitzi Shore dead at 87

Comedy Store owner Mitzi Shore dead at 87

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http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-mitzi-shore-dead-at-87-story.html
 
Comedy Store owner Mitzi Shore dead at 87
By Valerie J. Nelson
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Mitzi Shore, the owner of the Comedy Store, is seen in 1993. Shore died Wednesday, April 11, at age 87. (Patrick Downs / Los Angeles Times)
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In the 1970s, David Letterman baby-sat her children and Jay Leno slept on the back stairs of her Sunset Strip club, where Jim Carrey later tended the door.
Mitzi Shore was “the den mother of some berserk Cub Scout pack,” as Letterman once said — one that brimmed with a breathtaking array of now-famous comics who broke through because she tapped them to perform.
Shore, who was regarded as the godmother of comedy in Los Angeles and whose Comedy Store was one of the most important showcases for stand-up in the country, died Wednesday after battling Parkinson’s disease, according to a statement from the Comedy Store. She was 87.
“Mitzi was an extraordinary businesswoman and decades ahead of her time who cultivated and celebrated the artistry of stand-up comedy. She was also a loving mother, not only to her own four children, but to the myriad of comedians who adored her. She leaves behind an indelible mark and legacy and has helped change the face of comedy. We will all miss her dearly,” the statement said.
 
Shore had been in hospice care for some time. Her son, actor Pauly Shore, had been helping care for her and tweeting updates about her final days.
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The Comedy Store
@TheComedyStore
 
 
(1 of 2)It is with great sadness and very heavy hearts that we report the passing of Mitzi Shore. Mitzi was an extraordinary woman and leader who identified, cultivated and celebrated comedy’s best performers.
11:06 AM – Apr 11, 2018

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(2 of 2) She helped change the face of comedy and leaves behind an indelible mark and legacy in the entertainment industry and stand-up community.  We will all miss her dearly.
 
The Comedy Store will be closed today.
11:06 AM – Apr 11, 2018

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For at least a dozen years, she was “all-powerful, during a remarkably fertile time for stand-up comedy — the 1970s and early ’80s — when many of today’s comedy stars showed up in L.A. to go onstage at the only place that mattered,” Paul Brownfield, who covered comedy for The Times, wrote in 2003.
The first comedian to officially share her life was her husband, Sammy Shore, who founded the Comedy Store in 1972 with fellow comic Rudy DeLuca. When the Shores divorced two years later, Sammy gave her the club as a way of lowering his alimony payments.
A mother of four, Mitzi Shore in essence gained a fifth child — the Comedy Store that she had named. When she took over, it was more of a variety room than a comedy club, but she transformed it into a three-room showcase for stand-up.
“Comics felt very belittled in those days — they always had to work with a singer,” Shore recalled in 1993 in The Times. “I wanted it to be all comics. No jugglers and magicians. I wanted to give them respectability.”
Her timing was excellent. In 1972, Johnny Carson had moved “The Tonight Show” from New York to Los Angeles, helping to make L.A. the place for young comedians who strove to appear on his show, and the Comedy Store was “the place to be seen,” Brownfield wrote in 2003.
Eventually, she opened three branches, in Westwood, in La Jolla and at the old Dunes Hotel in Las Vegas.
Shore saw herself as an “impresario,” she told The Times in 1979, and few would have disagreed.
The networks’ prime-time schedule in the late 1970s “read like a roster of young comics whose careers she’d fostered,” according to the 2009 book “I’m Dying Up Here,” which documents what author William Knoedelseder calls “the golden age” of Los Angeles comedy.
The list of careers Shore influenced included those of Letterman and Leno as well as Jimmie Walker, Andy Kaufman, Robin Williams, Bob Saget, Richard Lewis, Garry Shandling, Elayne Boosler and dozens of other readily identifiable names.
Richard Pryor used the club almost exclusively to prepare for his 1974 breakthrough album, and the money made from his shows helped Shore rapidly expand her comedy empire, Knoedelseder wrote.
The Comedy Store was an “artists colony,” a workshop for experimenting that wouldn’t work if the comedians were paid, she often said.
For years, the comics acquiesced because a spot on her stage meant exposure to industry insiders looking for the next breakout star. But by 1979, the comedians were openly upset that she paid the commercial headliners who packed the club’s Vegas-style Main Room.
The up-and-comers staged a walkout, picketing the Sunset Strip location. More than five weeks later, Shore settled, agreeing to pay most comics $25 per set.
“I loved each and every one of them,” Shore told The Times during the strike “but they misunderstood. My fairy tale is over.”
She was almost prescient. The strike left scars that never truly healed.
Some activists never again worked her stage and others complained that she penalized strikers by refusing to book them. A booking war also broke out between Shore and Bud Friedman, who had opened the competing Improv a mile away.
The passage of time brought more competition, including from cable television, which found stand-up to be a cheap form of programming, giving audiences one less reason to go out.
The Comedy Store also burned less brightly because Shore was unwilling to extend the club’s brand into TV and media ventures that could help build a younger audience, industry observers told The Times in 2009.
But the first comedy picket line in 1979 did have a positive and lasting effect. News coverage of the strike raised the profile of the fast-growing profession, helping “to fuel the nationwide comedy club boom of the 1980s,” according to the 2008 book “Comedy at the Edge.”
She was born Mitzi Lee Saidel on July 25, 1930, in Michigan. The daughter of a traveling salesman, she grew up near Green Bay, Wis.
At the University of Wisconsin, she studied art but left to marry Sammy after meeting him in 1950 at a summer resort where they both worked. She toured with Sammy, who would later open for Elvis Presley.
The Shores moved to Los Angeles in 1964 and bought a mansion above Sunset Boulevard built by filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille. Mitzi got the house in the divorce.
Only her youngest son, Pauly, became a comedian; in the early 1990s he had his own show on MTV.
“I didn’t encourage Pauly,” his mother told The Times in 1994. “I made it tough for him. He had to work hard all around town before he got a break” at her club.
As their mother’s health declined, Pauly and his older brother Peter took on more responsibilities at the Comedy Store. Pauly helped review and book talent while Peter oversaw finances. But the brothers began to quarrel over club matters.
In 2009, Pauly filed a lawsuit against his brother that charged Peter was exerting “undue influence” over their mother. The suit did not mention details about Mitzi’s will or plans for succession.
Tommy Morris, the club’s longtime talent coordinator and operations manager, told The Times in late 2009 that Pauly and Peter stood to inherit the Comedy Store. They survive her, as does another son, Scott, and a daughter, Sandy.
Over the decades, Shore had developed a reputation as the comedy world’s eccentric mother hen, “equal parts talent scout, employer, lifestyle enabler, landlord and performance critic,” The Times said in December.
Comedians made fun of her squeaky voice and frizzy hair, and her dark, rococo office lit only by Tiffany lamps. In that office, Shore kept a sign that read, “It’s a sin to encourage mediocre talent.”

The Comedy Store owner Mitzi Shore, mother of actor-comedian Pauly Shore, photographed in her office in the early 1970s. (The Comedy Store)
For years, the comics acquiesced because a spot on her stage meant exposure to industry insiders looking for the next breakout star. But by 1979, the comedians were openly upset that she paid the commercial headliners who packed the club’s Vegas-style Main Room.
The up-and-comers staged a walkout, picketing the Sunset Strip location. More than five weeks later, Shore settled, agreeing to pay most comics $25 per set.
“I loved each and every one of them,” Shore told The Times during the strike “but they misunderstood. My fairy tale is over.”
She was almost prescient. The strike left scars that never truly healed.
Some activists never again worked her stage and others complained that she penalized strikers by refusing to book them. A booking war also broke out between Shore and Bud Friedman, who had opened the competing Improv a mile away.
The passage of time brought more competition, including from cable television, which found stand-up to be a cheap form of programming, giving audiences one less reason to go out.
The Comedy Store also burned less brightly because Shore was unwilling to extend the club’s brand into TV and media ventures that could help build a younger audience, industry observers told The Times in 2009.
But the first comedy picket line in 1979 did have a positive and lasting effect. News coverage of the strike raised the profile of the fast-growing profession, helping “to fuel the nationwide comedy club boom of the 1980s,” according to the 2008 book “Comedy at the Edge.”
She was born Mitzi Lee Saidel on July 25, 1930, in Michigan. The daughter of a traveling salesman, she grew up near Green Bay, Wis.
At the University of Wisconsin, she studied art but left to marry Sammy after meeting him in 1950 at a summer resort where they both worked. She toured with Sammy, who would later open for Elvis Presley.
The Shores moved to Los Angeles in 1964 and bought a mansion above Sunset Boulevard built by filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille. Mitzi got the house in the divorce.
Only her youngest son, Pauly, became a comedian; in the early 1990s he had his own show on MTV.
“I didn’t encourage Pauly,” his mother told The Times in 1994. “I made it tough for him. He had to work hard all around town before he got a break” at her club.
As their mother’s health declined, Pauly and his older brother Peter took on more responsibilities at the Comedy Store. Pauly helped review and book talent while Peter oversaw finances. But the brothers began to quarrel over club matters.
In 2009, Pauly filed a lawsuit against his brother that charged Peter was exerting “undue influence” over their mother. The suit did not mention details about Mitzi’s will or plans for succession.
Tommy Morris, the club’s longtime talent coordinator and operations manager, told The Times in late 2009 that Pauly and Peter stood to inherit the Comedy Store. They survive her, as does another son, Scott, and a daughter, Sandy.
Over the decades, Shore had developed a reputation as the comedy world’s eccentric mother hen, “equal parts talent scout, employer, lifestyle enabler, landlord and performance critic,” The Times said in December.
Comedians made fun of her squeaky voice and frizzy hair, and her dark, rococo office lit only by Tiffany lamps. In that office, Shore kept a sign that read, “It’s a sin to encourage mediocre talent.”
Times staff writer Nardine Saad contributed to this report. Nelson is a former Times staff writer.
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The Comeback Trail / Chuck MccCann

The Comeback Trail / Chuck MccCann

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http://www.chuckmccann.net/Comeback%20Trail.htm
 
McCann and Robert Staats, a truly strange and funny character actor, co-starred as a couple of sleazy filmmakers (E. Eddie Eastman and Enrico Kodak) who decide to cover their losses by luring an aging cowboy star named Duke Montana (played by Buster Crabbe in the penultimate movie of his career), taking out an insurance policy on his life, and bumping him off. All their attempts to do him in blow up in their faces, as in this scene, which makes me laugh no matter how many times I watch it.

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Tom Lehrer at 90: a life of scientific satire

Tom Lehrer at 90: a life of scientific satire

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https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-03922-x
 
Tom Lehrer at 90: a life of scientific satire
Andrew Robinson celebrates the high notes in the mathematician’s inimitable musical oeuvre.
04 April 2018
BOOKS AND ARTS
Andrew Robinson
Tom Lehrer performing in San Francisco, California, in 1965.Credit: Ted Streshinsky/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty
In 1959, the mathematician and satirist Tom Lehrer — who turns 90 this month — performed what he characteristically called a “completely pointless” scientific song at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. (He was a PhD student there at the time.) ‘The Elements’, now one of his most cherished works, sets the names of all the chemical elements then known to the tune of the ‘Major-General’s Song’ from The Pirates of Penzance, the comic opera by W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan. Lehrer’s heroically precise, rapid-fire enunciation of 102 elements (reordered to allow flawless end-rhymes), ends with the much-quoted crack, “These are the only ones of which the news has come to Harvard/And there may be many others but they haven’t been discarvard.”
In the 1960s, Lehrer followed up with more than a dozen astringent, cynical and often pointedly political songs, such as ‘So Long, Mom, I’m Off to Drop the Bomb (A Song for World War III)’. As The New York Times had it, “Mr. Lehrer’s muse [is] not fettered by such inhibiting factors as taste.” (Lehrer reprinted the quote in his album liner notes.) In the fraught geopolitics and paranoia of the cold war, however, Lehrer’s social criticism touched a chord with many in the United States. Fans might, however, have been surprised to learn that he had crunched numbers for the National Security Agency as an army draftee in the mid-1950s.
 
 
Tom Lehrer – The Elements – LIVE FILM From Copenhagen in 1967
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
<div class=”player-unavailable”><h1 class=”message”>An error occurred.</h1><div class=”submessage”><a href=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcS3NOQnsQM” target=”_blank”>Try watching this video on www.youtube.com</a>, or enable JavaScript if it is disabled in your browser.</div></div>
Much of Lehrer’s oeuvre — some 50 songs (or 37, by his own ruthless reckoning) composed over nearly three decades — played with tensions at the nexus of science and society. His biggest hit, That Was The Year That Was, covered a gamut of them. This 1965 album gathered together songs Lehrer had written for That Was The Week That Was, the US satirical television show spawned by the BBC original. ‘Who’s Next?’ exposes the dangers of nuclear proliferation. ‘Pollution’ highlights environmental crises building at the time, such as undrinkable water and unbreathable air.
The rousing ballad ‘Wernher von Braun’ undermines the former Nazi — who designed the V-2 ballistic missile in the Second World War and later became a key engineer in the US Apollo space programme. In Lehrer’s view, it was acceptable for NASA to hire von Braun, but making him into an American hero was grotesque. “‘Once the rockets are up, who cares where they come down?’/‘That’s not my department,’ says Wernher von Braun” — lines that still resonate in today’s big-tech ethical jungle. ‘New Math’, meanwhile, skewers the education system through the lens of a misfired revolution in mathematics, with its telling refrain: “It’s so simple, so very simple, that only a child can do it” (A. Bellos Nature516,34–35; 2014).
Lyrical precision
Lehrer — who grew up on New York City’s Upper East Side — certainly sees a connection between his mathematical training, which began at Harvard at the prodigiously young age of 14, and his compositions. He was drawn to songwriting in his teens; after failing to respond to classical-music training, he switched to the study of popular music. In an interview in 2000, he summed up the fields’ dual impact. “The logical mind, the precision, is the same that’s involved in math as in lyrics,” he said. “It’s like a puzzle, to write a song.”
Lehrer agrees with mathematician Stanislaw Ulam (one of the builders of the atomic bomb) that rhyming “forces novel associations … and becomes a sort of automatic mechanism of originality”. As he told me in 2008: “If ‘von Braun’ didn’t happen to rhyme with ‘down’ (and a few other words), the most quoted couplet in the song would not exist, and in all probability the song itself would not have been written.”
His musical career began at university, with the spoof sports song ‘Fight Fiercely, Harvard’. In the early 1950s, Lehrer put on a satirical show in the physics department, The Physical Revue (a pun on the name of the US journal then named Physical Review). With co-performers including Norman Ramsey (later a Nobel laureate in physics) and Lewis Branscomb (who would become a presidential science-policy advisor), he performed ditties such as ‘Relativity’, ‘Fugue for Scientists’ and ‘The Slide Rule Song’. It was a training ground for later triumphs.

The cover of Tom Lehrer’s debut album, released in 1953.Credit: Lehrer Records
He began recording in 1953. Although US radio stations refused to play such ‘controversial’ material, his fame spread through word of mouth. In Britain, the royal approval of unexpected fan Princess Margaret and the support of the BBC significantly raised Lehrer’s profile, and he considered abandoning academia. But in 1960, bored by touring, he returned to Harvard, aiming to complete a long-standing mathematics PhD on modes in statistics. Soon, however, he concluded he had nothing original to contribute academically. As he notoriously wrote in ‘Lobachevsky’, a song named after a nineteenth-century Russian mathematician: “Plagiarize!/Let no one else’s work evade your eyes!/… So don’t shade your eyes,/but plagiarize, plagiarize, plagiarize/— only be sure always to call it, please, research.” Lehrer dropped his doctorate and began to teach mathematics — at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge in 1962 and, from 1972 until his retirement in 2001, at the University of California, Santa Cruz (along with a class in musical theatre).
He also largely gave up songwriting and public performing in the early 1970s. Following the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to then-US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in 1973, Lehrer commented: “Political satire became obsolete.” And in 2002 he remarked, still less optimistically: “Things I once thought were funny are scary now. I often feel like a resident of Pompeii who has been asked for some humorous comments on lava.” About the political earthquakes triggered by US President Donald Trump, Lehrer has been silent.
As for his songs, their vigour, concision, melodic variety and humour never stale. Although Lehrer is absurdly omitted from the Encyclopaedia Britannica(unlike his friend, the lyricist and composer Stephen Sondheim), his scathing creations remain one of the most original — not to mention mathematically elegant — bodies of artistic work to come out of the United States in the twentieth century.
Nature556, 27-28 (2018)
doi: 10.1038/d41586-018-03922-x
 
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From Budapest to Broadway – Will Friedwald WSJ

From Budapest to Broadway – Will Friedwald WSJ

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/from-budapest-to-broadway-1523308293
 
From Budapest to Broadway
‘Carousel,’ whose latest Broadway revival opens this week, traces its roots to a 1909 Hungarian work.
Will Friedwald April 9, 2018 5:11 p.m. ET

The scene from Rodgers and Hammerstein’s ‘Carousel’ (1945) when Billy spots Julie and falls in love with her. Photo: Eileen Darby/The LIFE Images Col
 
Stephen Sondheim’sfamous one-sentence appraisal of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s first two collaborations—“‘Oklahoma!’ is about a picnic, ‘Carousel’ is about life and death”—is only partly true. The power of “Carousel,” whose latest Broadway revival opens this week, is that it’s both things at once, encompassing not only life and death but a “real nice clambake.”
When the Theater Guild first proposed in 1943 that composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II turn Ferenc Molnár’s “Liliom” into a musical, Rodgers initially declined because the play, introduced in Hungary in 1909, “was continually being revived without any help from a songwriting team.” But even then, two years before their show first came to Broadway, the two men were drawn to the possibilities the story opened up for the rapidly expanding medium of musical theater.
Molnár (1878-1952) was known for combining romantic comedy and whimsy with dramatic irony and a heavy dose of moralism. In both “The Guardsman” (1910) and “The Good Fairy” (1930), he plays with notions of infidelity and mistaken identity. Those works and “Liliom” have a considerable amount of sexual intrigue, and all were translated into various languages, staged on Broadway and adapted into early sound films.
Although Rodgers and Hammerstein shifted the setting of “Carousel” from the Budapest of “Liliom” to New England and gave it a distinctly American flavor, they maintained Molnár’s balancing act. Working from his blueprint, they created a Broadway masterpiece, a tale of a wife-beating miscreant who is somehow strangely sympathetic—a story with a message that no soul is beyond redemption, even if he has to transcend his own lifetime and travel back and forth from The Next World to achieve it.
As Tim Carter delineates in his new book, “Rodgers and Hammerstein’s ‘Carousel,’” “Liliom” premiered in Budapest but fared better in Berlin and then Vienna in the immediate pre-World War I period. It was also a hit on Broadway in 1921, produced by the Theater Guild in an English translation primarily (although anonymously) by Rodgers’s future songwriting partner, Lorenz Hart. The basics of “Carousel” are all there: Julie is an innocent but dissatisfied young girl who wants more out of life than the restrictive path that society lays out for her. In contrast to her best friend, Marie (Carrie in “Carousel”), who marries a respectable, hardworking fisherman-cum-businessman, Julie falls for a charming, low-life ex-carnival barker with no employment prospects.
After Molnár saw “Oklahoma!” he was convinced, no less than the Theater Guild, that Rodgers and Hammerstein were the ones to turn “Liliom” into a musical. The collaborators themselves couldn’t resist the challenge of bringing to life the story’s complex antihero. In “Oklahoma!” terms, Billy Bigelow is both Curly (with perhaps even more flamboyance and animal magnetism) and Jud (with his violent and sociopathic tendencies): the good guy and heavy rolled into one. Rodgers and Hammerstein were especially eager to write “Soliloquy,” Billy’s reaction to the news that Julie is pregnant, where he expresses mixed feelings over the notion of paternity in general and the gender of his forthcoming child in particular. This was something entirely new in musical comedy, a number in which a character reveals his inner turmoil and undergoes a complete emotional arc in song, in full view of the audience.

Shirley Jones and Gordon MacRae in the 1956 film version. Photo: 20th Century Fox/Everett Collect
They also created the show’s iconic “bench” sequence, a combination of love scene and romantic duet—incorporating the song “If I Loved You”—that brilliantly and logically brings the two protagonists from first meeting to matrimony in a matter of minutes. (This classic scene lost most of its magic in the disappointing 1956 movie version, whose effervescent Shirley Jones, as Julie, desperately needs a leading man with both charisma and menace. Gordon MacRae seems merely naive; Frank Sinatra, the original casting choice, would have been perfect.) Because Molnár’s ending wasn’t strong enough for the team, they concluded with a rousing finale, which centers on the most anthemic hymn in Broadway history, “You’ll Never Walk Alone.”
In Fritz Lang’s 1934 French film of “Liliom,” when the title character returns from the afterlife, just for one day, he meets his daughter, now 16 years old, and tells her that he was a friend of her late father. She asks if he was a good man and he says, “well, he knew some good songs. Some pretty ones!” Amen to that.
—Mr. Friedwald writes about music and popular culture for the Journal. 

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Chuck McCann, Zany Comic in Early Children’s TV, Dies at 83 – The New York Times

Chuck McCann, Zany Comic in Early Children’s TV, Dies at 83 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/09/obituaries/chuck-mccann-zany-comic-in-early-childrens-tv-dies-at-83.html?action=click&module=Well&pgtype=Homepage

Chuck McCann, Zany Comic in Early Children’s TV, Dies at 83

https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/04/10/obituaries/10mccann-obit-2/mccann-obit-3-superJumbo.jpg
Chuck McCann (center, left) appeared with Bozo the Clown, Jack McCarthy (top) and Joe Bolton in a show for children on the New York station WPIX in 1960. Friedman 
Chuck McCann, a comic whose loopiness defined live children’s television beginning in the 1950s and who later became a familiar TV and film character actor and a versatile voice on cartoons, died on Sunday in Los Angeles. He was 83.
The cause was congestive heart failure, his daughter Siobhan Bennett said.
The Brooklyn-born son of the music arranger at New York’s famous Roxy Theater, Mr. McCann was precocious, irrepressible and persistent.
“You’ve got to be able to pick yourself up, brush yourself off and do it all over again,” he said in a 2007 interview with the American Comedy Archives. “Persistence alone is omnipotent; you have to keep hanging in there.”
He began by doing voice-overs on radio when he was 6 and struck up an enduring cross-country friendship by telephone with Stan Laurel when he was 12 — leading to roles impersonating Laurel’s huskier other half, Oliver Hardy. (He was a founder of the Laurel and Hardy fan club Sons of the Desert.)
He got his big break in his early 20s while performing on “The Sandy Becker Show,” a children’s TV show on what was then WABD in New York. Without advance notice, Mr. Becker left on a Friday for two weeks in South America and asked Mr. McCann to host his show beginning on Monday.
“ ‘So long!’ ” Mr. McCann recalled Mr. Becker saying. “The elevator doors close, and off he went. That was my baptism by fire. The first day was just disastrous.”
Mr. McCann survived to become the host of his own children’s programs and to voice cartoon characters in “DuckTales,” “Chip ‘n’ Dale Rescue Rangers,” “Garfield and Friends,” “The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh,” “The Powerpuff Girls” and commercials for Cocoa Puffs cereal (as the cuckoo bird, crying, “I’m cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs!”). He also appeared as a character actor on “Bonanza,” “Columbo,” “Little House on the Prairie” and other television series.
https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/04/10/obituaries/10mccann-obit-2/mccann-obit-2-superJumbo.jpg
Mr. McCann, right, with the comic actor Tim Conway in 2013 at an event in Beverly Hills, Calif. Chris Pizzello/Invision, via Chris Pizzello/Invision/Ap 
Along with Soupy Sales, Buffalo Bob Smith, Bob Keeshan (better known as Captain Kangaroo), Fran Allison and his mentor, the puppeteer Paul Ashley, Mr. McCann helped shape zany, impromptu preteen local programming in television’s formative years.
In his book “Politics and the American Television Comedy: A Critical Survey from ‘I Love Lucy’ Through ‘South Park’ ” (2008), Doyle Greene compared “The Chuck McCann Show” on WNEW in the mid-1960s to a blend of “Howdy Doody” and the spontaneous, experimental comedy of Ernie Kovacs.
To Mr. Greene, the McCann show represented a “deconstruction of TV taken to Dada levels (whether driving around the studio smashing into props on a scooter while lip-syncing a song, or doing a lengthy impersonation of Jack Benny playing screeching violin worthy of Stockhausen).”
Charles John Thomas McCann was born on Sept. 2, 1934, in Brooklyn to Valentine J. McCann (whose father had performed in “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West” show) and the former Viola Hennessy.
After the family moved to Queens, he attended Andrew Jackson High School, where he once convulsed his classmates by performing a King Kong satire standing on a chair and inviting them to toss paper airplanes at him.
Besides getting his high school diploma, he was also educated at the Roxy, the majestic midtown Manhattan movie palace and venue for vaudeville-style stage shows, where his father played trombone in the orchestra.
“He was not only a great musician, but he was a great arranger,” Mr. McCann said of his father, “and that’s where I think the show business bug bit me, sitting in the pit of the Roxy watching those comedians.”
His mother’s relatives wanted him to follow in the family tradition and become a firefighter, but an introduction to Paul Ashley, the puppeteer, led to a stint on the “Rootie Kazootie” television puppet show.
Mr. McCann later hosted Laurel and Hardy fill-ins during rain delays on Yankees broadcasts as well as another children’s show, “Let’s Have Fun,” on WPIX in New York.
https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/04/09/obituaries/mccann-obit-1/merlin_136621326_74ee2d7c-1182-4162-95c5-cff56e0e4bb4-superJumbo.jpg
Mr. McCann with Ina Balin, stars of the 1971 film “The Projectionist,” in which he played the lonely title character.
During the 114-day New York City newspaper strike in 1962-63, he kept his young television viewers up to speed on the comic strips by playing the characters on camera, echoing a role Mayor Fiorello La Guardia played on radio during a newspaper strike in the 1940s.
“Mayor La Guardia did it many, many years before,” Mr. McCann said, “and I was the first one to do it on television.”
He also helped launch Mr. Becker’s Sunday morning show “Wonderama” on WNEW.
Mr. McCann’s local TV finale in New York was “Chuck McCann’s Laurel & Hardy TV Show,” in 1966, which featured Hanna-Barbera cartoons of the titular comic duo and Mr. McCann’s Oliver Hardy impersonations.
In his movie debut, Mr. McCann played opposite Alan Arkin to critical acclaim as a mentally defective deaf mute in the 1968 adaptation of Carson McCuller’s novel “The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter.”
He went on to play the lead role in “The Projectionist” (1971), as the lonely title character in a movie theater’s projection booth. The film gave him a vehicle with which to demonstrate his dexterity imitating movie stars. Rodney Dangerfield, in his movie debut, played his boss.
In addition to his daughter Siobhan, Mr. McCann is survived by another daughter, Jennifer Strasser, from an earlier marriage, which ended in divorce; his wife, the former Betty Fanning, who was an executive with the William Morris agency; three grandchildren; and a sister, Moe Sanders. A son, Sean, from a still earlier marriage, died in 2009.
Mr. McCann had two mantras: to have as much fun as possible and to keep working to survive, whether he was appearing at the Friends of Old Time Radio Convention in Newark or as the exasperating neighbor bellowing “Hi, guy!” through a shared medicine chest in an early 1970s commercial for Right Guard deodorant.
1971 Right Guard “Hi Guy” Commercial Video by Genius
In 1969, after he moved to California, he appeared in the cast of “Turn On,” George Schlatter’s aborted attempt to match his success in producing “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In.” “Turn On” lasted one episode.
“I did everything,” Mr. McCann told TVParty.com in a 2007 interview. “I never closed doors. If you look at my career — if I had one — I never think of it as a career, I just look at it as things I love to do. I have just as much fun doing a 30-second commercial as I do making a movie.”

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RIP Lee Jeske, Jazz Journalists Association

RIP Lee Jeske, Jazz Journalists Association

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Sad news: Lee Jeske, a jazz writer who could be laugh-out-loud funny, died last weekend, very unexpectedly. Jeske, based in NYC, was an early JJA member and friend to many in the organization; he’s credited on AllMusic.com with having penned liner notes for 93 albums; he was a columnist for the New York Post and Cashbox magazine, as well as a contributor to DownBeat and JVC program guides. Here’s a photo by David Gahr of him (at left) with Ornette Coleman and writer-record producer Jeff Levenson, at Gracie Mansion (the Mayor’s home) during a JVC party in 1990. Lee, we already miss you.

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John Sunier — 1937 – 2018 – Audiophile Audition

John Sunier — 1937 – 2018 – Audiophile Audition

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http://www.audaud.com/john-sunier/
 
John Sunier — 1937 – 2018
Audiophile Audition/
After a glorious career in Audio of over half a century, John Sunier passed away this week.
John’s incredible energy and drive found a distinctive expression in Audiophile Audition.  Starting as a radio show in the 1980s, it transformed into a web site as the 21st century unfolded.  Sunier was recognized far and wide as a definitive expert in all matters audio, all matters for audiophiles.
In the last year of his life, John stepped back from his beloved web site, assuming more of a Professor Emeritus role there.  He was navigating the challenges of advancing years with the warmth and support of his friends; he was well cared for.
John Sunier is survived by his wife Donna, his cat Melinda, and the memories held by all those who knew him—his colleagues, his friends, and his following throughout the Internet.  He will be deeply missed.
 

Audiophile Audition is creating a collection pictures and reflections honoring the life of John Sunier.
If you have something you would like to share, please write to editor@AudAud.com
Remembrances
 

Related
Editorial for April 2016April 1, 2016In “Editorial”
Editorial for March 2015March 1, 2015In “Editorial”
Editorial for August 2017August 1, 2017In “Editorial”
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Bowhead whale songs are as complex as jazz music | MNN – Mother Nature Network

Bowhead whale songs are as complex as jazz music | MNN – Mother Nature Network

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https://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/animals/stories/bowhead-whale-songs-are-complex-jazz-music
 
Bowhead whale songs are as complex as jazz music
New study breaks down just how complex the communication is among these vocal virtuosos.

Bowhead whale tail-slapping: yet another remarkable communication tool that these animals have. (Photo: Olga Shpak/Wiki Commons)
Humpback whales tend to absorb most of the attention for their soothing songs, but it’s their cousins, the bowhead whales, that are the true lyrical maestros of the ocean. The vocals of these blubbery behemoths are so complex, in fact, that researchers are now comparing them to jazz music, reports The Washington Post.
Oceanographer Kate Stafford has spent her whole career studying bowhead whales, most recently embarking on an expedition to record and analyze the animals’ legendary scats. From 2010 to 2014, they dropped hydrophones into the ocean in the Fram Strait, a deepwater passage on the east coast of Iceland. The researchers soon realized that the sounds they were listening to were among the most complex ever recorded in the animal kingdom.
According to Stafford, bowhead whale songs contain “multiple frequencies and amplitude-modulated elements combined into phrases and organized in long bouts.”
She added: “When we heard, it was astonishing.”
Like with humpback whales, bowhead whales appear to sing mostly for the purpose of attracting mates. But the level of complexity is only barely comparable.
“With humpback whales, all the males in the same population may sing the same song, more or less. There are changes, but everybody adopts those changes,” Stafford explained. “With bowhead whales, there don’t appear to be any rules. That’s from my human perspective. There may be rules that all the whales understand.”
Or maybe bowhead whales are simply impressed with the whim and mystery of a complex, undecipherable riff. Whatever the case may be, it’s time to give these baleen bards their due respect in the annals of animal communication.
Vocal crooning aside, Bowhead whales are exceptional for many reasons. For one, they’re the longest living mammals in the world, living for over 200 years. They have some of the thickest blubber of any whale (which is, unfortunately, also what made them a popular target for whalers), and they’re ice-breakers capable of crushing through up to a foot-and-a-half chunk of ice to take a breath.
It’s tragic to think that these leviathans were nearly hunted to extinction until a 1966 moratorium was passed to protect the species. We have so much to learn from these gentle giants with a lot to say.
Related topics: Animal ResearchNatureResearch & InnovationWild Animals

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MajikBus Unlocks CBC’s Historic Music Archives | FYIMusicNews

MajikBus Unlocks CBC’s Historic Music Archives | FYIMusicNews

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http://www.fyimusicnews.ca/articles/2018/04/05/majikbus-unlocks-cbcs-historic-music-archives
 
MajikBus Unlocks CBC’s Historic Music Archives

Vancouver-based MajikBus Entertainment has signed an historic partnership agreement with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to develop music-related content from one of the world’s largest untapped television and radio archives.
The company was co-founded by former EMI and Universal music industry executives Peter Diemer, and Sarah Norris who started negotiating with the pubcaster several years ago, along with former EMI Canada CEO Deane Cameron (now President/CEO of Massey and Roy Thomson Halls). The company is now run by CEO Mark Holden who has been at the forefront of several digital entertainment companies (including Vancouver-based firms Gener8 and Hip Digital Media).
 
 
MajikBus | Uncovers the CBC Archive
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Under License from CBC/Radio-Canada, the first three releases in the Transcription Records Series, featuring albums produced for limited release by the pubcaster in the early ‘70s, are by Edmonton jazz singer Judy SinghMontreal’s Latin-styledEmile Normand Sextet,and ‘70s Stratford, ON-ensemble Perth County Conspiracy(also known with the additional moniker ‘does not exist’), available at the MajikBus store on PledgeMusic
Further releases byJohnny Cash,, The Doors, Jefferson Airplane, Muddy Waters and Willie Dixonare under consideration for release pending clearances.
Holden notes that “It’s a beautiful story about the vinyl, and CBC’s decision to support independent artists that weren’t getting the attention of the mainstream labels,” he says. “They did pick artists they thought were worthy of the investment and that had something to offer Canada and the world.”
Additionally, as MajikBus has licensed some of the corporation’s historic photographs that track the birth of rock ‘n’ roll, references great artists and moments in blues and jazz history, and progressed to the rock icons of the 1960s and 1970s. The pictorial history includes photos of Pete Seeger; Duke Ellington; Nat ‘King’ Cole; Sammy Davis Jr.; Muddy Waters; Johnny Cash; Joni Mitchell; Bob Dylan; Joan Baez; The Rolling Stones; The Beatles; The Doors; Jefferson Airplane; and many more.
MajikBus and publishing partner Off Beat Lounge will showcase these rare images in the exhibition ‘STILL – Music In Revolution,’ which starts its worldwide tour in the UK in June.
Web SiteFacebookInstagramTwitter 
Pledgemusic – https://www.pledgemusic.com/projects/majikbus
Off Beat Lounge – https://www.offbeatlounge.co.uk/cbc

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Slide Hampton to perform at Wallace’s Whiskey Room + Kitchen – Pittsburgh Newswire: A Pittsburgh Press Release Distribution Service

Slide Hampton to perform at Wallace’s Whiskey Room + Kitchen – Pittsburgh Newswire: A Pittsburgh Press Release Distribution Service

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http://pittsburghnewswire.com/1396/slide-hampton-to-perform-at-wallaces-whiskey-room-kitchen/
 
SLIDE HAMPTON TO PERFORM AT WALLACE’S WHISKEY ROOM + KITCHEN
 Posted on March 23, 2018 bythisjustin
 Leave a Comment
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 
Media Contact:
 
Rich Dieter
412-773-0899
rcdieter@verizon.net
 
 
 
  
Image 1: Etta Cox;  Image 2: Slide Hampton  [Click images for larger view]
 
 
 
SLIDE HAMPTON TO PERFORM AT WALLACE’S WHISKEY ROOM + KITCHEN
Legendary Trombonist to be joined by Etta Cox & Al Dowe
 
 
PITTSBURGH, PA (PittsburghNewsWire.com) — Locksley Wellington “Slide” Hampton is an American jazz trombonist, composer and arranger. Described by critics as a master composer, arranger and uniquely gifted trombone player, Hampton’s career is among the most distinguished in jazz. As his nickname implies, Hampton’s main instrument is slide trombone, but he also occasionally plays tuba and flugelhorn.
 
 
Slide will be performing on Saturday, April 14 at 8PM at Wallace’s Whiskey Room + Kitchen, 123 N. Highland Ave., Pgh, 15206. He will be joined by Etta Cox, vocalist; Al Dowe, trombone; Roger Humphries, drums; Jeff Lashway, piano & Tony DePaolis, Bass.
 
 
Slide is presented in cooperation with The Bridge Music Hall. $20 donation. Valet ($6) and street parking.
 
 
Slide Hampton was born in Jeannette, Pennsylvania. Laura and Clarke “Deacon” Hampton raised 12 children, taught them how to play musical instruments and set out with them as a family band. As a child, Hampton was given the trombone set up to play left-handed, or backwards; and as no one ever dissuaded him, he continued to play this way. In 1968 he toured with Woody Herman orchestra, settling in Europe where he remained until 1977.
 
 
He taught at Harvard, artist-in-residence in 1981, the University of Massachusetts, De Paul University in Chicago, and Indiana State University. During this period he led his own nine-trombone, three-rhythm band, World of Trombones, co-led Continuum, freelanced as both a writer and a player. He also played the trombone in Diana Ross Live! The Lady Sings… Jazz & Blues: Stolen Moments (1992) DVD.
 
 
2009 saw the completion of four new compositions titled “A Tribute to African-American Greatness”. The songs honored Nelson Mandela, Oprah Winfrey, Tiger Woods, Venus Williams, Serena Williams and Barack Obama. The songs contained accompanying lyrics written by Hampton and Tony Charles, arrangements honoring Thelonious Monk, Thad Jones, Eddie Harris, Dexter Gordon and Gil Evans round out the program.
 
 
In 1998 he won a Grammy Award for “Best Jazz Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s)”, as arranger for “Cotton Tail” performed by Dee Dee Bridgewater. He was also a Grammy winner in 2005 for “Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album,” The Way: Music of Slide Hampton, The Vanguard Jazz Orchestra (Planet Arts), and received another nomination in 2006 for his arrangement of “Stardust” for the Dizzy Gillespie All-Star Big Band.
 
 
In 2005, the National Endowment for the Arts honored Slide Hampton™ with its highest honor in jazz, the NEA Jazz Masters Award.
 
 
Another very special band, Everything Turned to Color, will be at Wallace’s on Saturday, April 7 at 8 PM. $5 donation.
 
 
“Poetically pop and artfully serene”, Everything Turned To Color is the unlikely but serendipitous musical partnership between veteran songwriters Bryan and Kyle Weber and Neha Jiwrajka.
 
 
Graduates of New York University, brothers Bryan and Kyle began their musical careers as leaders of the Alternative Rock band ZELAZOWA, releasing three full-length albums, touring the world from 2006-2009, and founding the DIY tour booking website IndieOnTheMove.com.
 
 
April continues with a variety of jazz & other fantastic musical offerings.
 
                   4/3, Opera in the Lounge, Desiree Soteres & Friends,
                   4/5, Ken Karsh, Jazz guitar
                   4/10, Richie Cole, Jazz saxophone
                   4/12, Jessica Lee & Mark Strickland, Easy listening jazz vocals & guitar
                   4/17, Soulful Femme, Blues, Soul & R & B
                   4/19, Jeff Berman  & Friends, Worldly Folk/Jazz , Vibraphone & guitar.
                   4/24, Dave DiStefano, Good Times Ahead rock/jam.
                   4/26, Will Binion, Jazz Guitar & keyboard
                Every Saturday from 5-7PM join us for Tony Campbell’s Jazz Surgery Jam session. $5 donation.April 7 & 14, time is from 4-6PM.

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Funeral for CECIL TAYLOR Tuesday April 10, 1:30pm Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel

Funeral for CECIL TAYLOR Tuesday April 10, 1:30pm Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel

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https://www.artsforart.org/cecil-taylor-funeral–memorial.html?utm_source=Audience
 

Cecil Taylor
March 25, 1929 – April 5, 2018
Funeral for CECIL TAYLOR
Tuesday April 10, 1:30pm
Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel
1076 Madison Ave. NYC
 
Memorial Service TBA

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How a Russian Jewish Lullaby Turned into the Anthem of the Forgotten Men and Women of Our Country – Tablet Magazine

How a Russian Jewish Lullaby Turned into the Anthem of the Forgotten Men and Women of Our Country – Tablet Magazine

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http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-arts-and-culture/music/258291/brother-can-you-spare-a-dime?mc_cid=5b77b907c5
 
Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?
How a Russian Jewish lullaby turned into the anthem of the forgotten men and women of our country
On Apr. 7, 1932, Franklin Roosevelt, then governor of New York, gave his first coast-to-coast radio address on the National Broadcasting Company. He calledfor economic solutions that rose “from the bottom up,” and for financial support for farmers and relief to small banks and homeowners. And he asked Americans to have faith “once more in the forgotten man at the bottom of the economic pyramid.”
That summer, a song written in 1930 capturing the spirit of the forgotten man’s struggle shot to the top of the charts: Jay Gorney and E.Y. “Yip” Harburg’s “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?” Gorney had fled Bialystok with his family following a major pogrom, and Harburg was the child of immigrants. Both men were outsiders due to their Jewishness and their left-leaning politics, yet their description of the forgotten American resonated across the nation.
Gorney and Harburg crafted the song for the Lee Shubert revue, Americana, which took the “forgotten man” as the over-arching theme for its variety show of drama, song, dance, and marionette acts. The revue ran for 77 performances and was the third iteration of Americana, after ones in 1926 and 1928. Like its contemporary Show Boat(1927), Americanahad a theme, but unlike that first true “book” musical, Americana’s vaudeville roots showed in the eclecticism of the acts.
Journalist J.P. McEvoy, later an editor for Reader’s Digest, inspired the three Americanamusicals, as did H.L. Mencken’s monthly “Americana” column. The Broadway composer Vincent Youmans collected a $10,000 advance to score the 1932 Americana but promptly left the project due to personal problems. Yip Harburg took up the reigns, bringing in composers with whom he would ultimately collaborate on a career of successful songs: Jay Gorney, Burton Lane, Vernon Duke, Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer, and others.

Brother can you spare a buck (Lyrics) / E. Y. (Edgar Yipsel) Harburg (New York Public Library)
Gorney and Harburg were introduced by mutual friend Ira Gershwin, who was busy writing lyrics to accompany his brother George’s gorgeous jazz pieces. Gorney and Harburg initially labored as staff composers for Paramount’s New York studio. They wrote uncredited pieces for a number of Fleischer Brothers cartoonsand assembled songs and sketches for the variety program The Eveready Hour. The duo crafted the song “What Wouldn’t I Do for That Man?” for the musical Applause(1929) and the song “Hot Moonlight” for the revue Shoot the Works(1931). “What Wouldn’t I Do for That Man?” appeared in the 1929 film, Glorifying the American Girl. Prior to Americana, Gorney/Harburg songs also appeared in Earl Carroll’s Sketch Book(1929),Earl Carroll Vanities(1930), and Ziegfeld Follies(1931).
Jay Gorney was born Abraham Jacob Gornetzky in Bialystok within the Pale of Settlement in 1896. The Gornetzky family resettled in Detroit and Gorney earned two degrees from the University of Michigan. Gorney served in WWI, playing music for the troops at home, and had a successful jazz band. He abandoned law for a career in music. By luck or guile, Gorney became a fixture at the Gershwins’ musical evenings, rubbing shoulders with a network of music professionals who helped his career.
Harburg, born 122 years ago this weekend, was the son of immigrants. He grew up in the Lower East Side of New York City, where Jewish culture dominated his world. Jumping head first into American life, Harburg’s father Lewis took his young son to the theater rather than to synagogue (and hid these escapades from Harburg’s mother Mary). In high school Harburg sat near his friend Ira Gershwin, who introduced him to recordings of Gilbert and Sullivan operettas. Harburg’s stake in an electrical appliance business faltered at the dawn of the Great Depression; by some accounts, the business lost $250,000. Harburg often claimed the death of the business led him to become a full-time lyricist, but the desire to change careers likely preceded the financial downturn.
Jay Gorney’s music for “Brother” grew out of a lullaby his mother had sung him in Russia. Listeners sometimes point out that “Brother” resembles the song that would become Israel’s national anthem, “Hatikvah,” which was adapted by composer Samuel Cohen in 1888 from songs popular in Eastern Europe, including work by Giuseppe Cenci and Bedrich Smetana. Gorney’s music initially had been accompanied by traditional “torch song” (love song) lyrics but Harburg suggested that the tune and its original lyrics were mismatched. As the song’s (possibly apocryphal) creation tale goes, the songwriter and lyricist were walking in Central Park when they came across a man in stylish but shabby clothes who called to them, “Brother, can you spare a dime?” Gorney and Harburg instantly agreed that the phrase captured the mood of the day, and Yip rushed home to set words to paper.
1932 proved a banner year for Harburg, who had hit songs in three Broadway shows concurrently. “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?” ran in Americana, “It’s Only a Paper Moon” (Harold Arlen/Harburg) in The Great Magoo, and “April in Paris” (Vernon Duke/Harburg) featured in Walk a Little Faster. Harburg later became best known for his 1939 work, “Over the Rainbow,” which he wrote with Harold Arlen, and the other songs from the film The Wizard of Oz. “Over the Rainbow” has proved of enduring resonance, with its latest notable use in the finale in the fundraising concert Ariana Grande held in Manchester, England in June 2017 following the terrorist attack in that city.
There are at least 52 recordings of “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?” produced in English within the United States, and the song was also popular abroad. Bing Crosby recorded“Brother” in 1932, followed shortly thereafter by Rudy Vallee’s renditionVariety’s charts of top ranking songs (separated by publisher as well as location—New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles) had both Crosby’s and Vallee’s recordings at No. 1 in various markets in late 1932 or early 1933. Bing’s recording in particular contributed to the immediate and long-term success of the tune, and was a major hit for the singer, who propelled the song’s title into the popular lexicon. The title refrain became the calling card for fundraising efforts and newspaper ads, and appeared widely in popular media.
The Americanasketch preceding the singing of “Brother” involved some gangsters seeking the good will of a local judge and planning for a breadline to be held on a city street as a political stunt. Theater scholar Ethan Mordden calls the song’s importance “really more political than musical.” Its power stems, he says, “not only from the grandeur of Gorney’s melody, but from Harburg’s imagery as well.” It is important to note how the main character of “Brother” has thrown himself into the work of nation building, including the construction of skyscrapers and the laying of track:
Once I built a railroad
Made it run
Made it race against time
Once I built a railroad
Now it’s done
Brother, can you spare a dime?
***
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Lisa Krissoff Boehm is Dean of the College of Graduate Studies at Bridgewater State University and Visiting Scholar at the Women’s Studies Research Center at Brandeis University. Her twitter feed is @BoehmLisa.

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Cecil Taylor, Pianist Who Defied Jazz Orthodoxy, Is Dead at 89 – The New York Times

Cecil Taylor, Pianist Who Defied Jazz Orthodoxy, Is Dead at 89 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/06/obituaries/cecil-taylor-dead.html?ribbon-ad-idx=6
 
Cecil Taylor, Pianist Who Defied Jazz Orthodoxy, Is Dead at 89
By BEN RATLIFF  APRIL 6, 2018

Cecil Taylor listening to a recording in 1966 with the composer Luc Ferrari. Laszlo Ruszka/INA, via Getty Images
Cecil Taylor, a pianist who challenged the jazz tradition that produced him and became one of the most bracing, rhapsodic, abstract and original improvisers of his time, died on Thursday at his home in Brooklyn. He was 89.
His death was confirmed by his legal guardian, Adam C. Wilner. No cause was given, but friends said he had been in failing health for some time.
Mr. Taylor wrote music, led bands and for decades worked, as many jazz musicians do, in nightclubs and at festivals. But from early on he seemed to have much greater goals.
He was a supreme example of an uncompromising artist, arguing — mainly through his work, but in principled and prickly interviews as well — against reductive definitions of what a musician of his training and background could or should do.
For Mr. Taylor, a small and vigorous man who in his prime wore athletic clothing onstage — as if to confirm the notion that the audience was watching a physical workout — albums weren’t merely recording sessions and performances weren’t merely gigs.
At the center of his art was that dazzling physicality and the percussiveness of his playing — his deep, serene, Ellingtonian chords and hummingbird attacks above middle C — which held true well into his 80s.
But in concert he also recited his own poems, whose enjambed lines might describe Aztec architecture, paleoanthropology, crocodile reproduction or a woman’s posture. His motions around the instrument and the bandstand were a part of his performance too.
In his system of writing music, working with bands and performing, he was concerned with what he called, in a 1971 interview with the writer Robert Levin, “black methodology”: oral traditions, music as embodied celebration and spiritual homage.
Classically trained, he valued European music for what he called its qualities of “construction” — form, timbre, tone color — and incorporated them into his own aesthetic.
“I am not afraid of European influences,” he told the critic Nat Hentoff. “The point is to use them, as Ellington did, as part of my life as an American Negro.”

Mr. Taylor at his home in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, in 2012. Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times
In a long assessment of Mr. Taylor’s work — one of the first — from “Four Lives in the Bebop Business,” a collection of essays on jazz musicians published in 1966, the poet and critic A. B. Spellman wrote:
“There is only one musician who has, by general agreement even among those who have disliked his music, been able to incorporate all that he wants to take from classical and modern Western composition into his own distinctly individual kind of blues without in the least compromising those blues, and that is Cecil Taylor, a kind of Bartok in reverse.”
Because his fully formed work was not folkish or pop-oriented, did not swing consistently (often it did not swing at all) and never entered the consensual jazz repertoire, Mr. Taylor could be understood to occupy an isolated place. Even after he was rewarded and lionized — he was given a Guggenheim fellowship in 1973, a National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters award in 1990, a MacArthur fellowship in 1991 and the Kyoto Prize in 2014 — his music was not easy to quantify.
If improvisation means using intuition and risk in the present moment, there have been few musicians who took that challenge more seriously than Mr. Taylor. If one of his phrases seemed of paramount importance, another such phrase generally arrived right behind it. The range of expression in his keyboard touch encompassed caresses, rumbles and crashes.
He was capable of performances full of stillness and awe, suggesting a kind of physical movement through musical phrases, as on the unaccompanied “Pemmican” (from the 1981 live recording “Garden”). Or he could go on full attack, as on “Taht” from the 1984 album “Winged Serpent (Sliding Quadrants)” — his fingers hammering and flying across the keys and breaking through the sound of a polytonal, polyrhythmic 11-piece band.
Some of his greatest musical relationships were with drummers, among them Max Roach, Elvin Jones, Sunny Murray and Ronald Shannon Jackson.

Mr. Taylor performed at the Harlem Stage Gatehouse in Manhattan in 2012. His playing was characterized by dazzling physicality and percussiveness. Karsten Moran for The New York Times
A Mother’s Influence
Cecil Percival Taylor was born in Long Island City, Queens, on March 25, 1929, and grew up about four miles away, in Corona. His father, Percy, originally from North Carolina, was a chef for Dr. John Kindred, president of the River Crest Sanitarium in Corona. Growing up, Cecil revered his mother, the former Almeida Ragland, for her learning and her high standards. She spoke French and German, took him to see Bill Bojangles Robinsonand Ella Fitzgerald, and suggested that he read Schopenhauer.
Acknowledging his desire to become a musician, rather than pursuing one of the careers she preferred for him — doctor, lawyer or dentist — his mother insisted that he practice the pianosix days a week, then do what he wanted on Sunday. “That’s when the organization of my music began, when she wasn’t looking,” Mr. Taylor said in an interview in the literary journal Hambone.
She died of cancer when he was 14.
Mr. Taylor studied piano at the New York College of Music in Manhattan and, in the early 1950s, moved to Boston, where he had relatives, to attend the New England Conservatory.
While studying piano, arranging, harmony and solfège notation there, he started going to jazz clubs, which he said helped him develop ideas about his music more than anything he learned in school. He prized Ellington for his orchestral approach to the piano and Horace Silver for his rough, vernacular energy; he saw Charlie Parker, Bud Powell, Sarah Vaughan and the relatively little-known pianist Dick Twardzik, all of whom would contribute to his conception of music, as did Stravinsky did.
(The answer to the question of what music gave rise to Mr. Taylor, and what he liked to listen to, would encompass all those names as well as Marvin Gaye, Gyorgi Ligeti, Betty Carter, Judy Garland and Thelonious Monk. The Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava and the flamenco dancer Carmen Amayahad also influenced him to think about structure, movement and time, he said.)
Back in New York, Mr. Taylor formed groups with the vibraphonist Earl Griffith and the soprano saxophonist Steve Lacy. In 1956, with a quartet rounded out by Mr. Lacy, the bassist Buell Neidlinger (who died on March 16)and the drummer Denis Charles, he made his first album, “Jazz Advance.” Featuring standards as well as his own compositions, it was produced by Tom Wilson, who later worked with Bob Dylan, the Mothers of Invention and the Velvet Underground.
The quartet played at the Newport Jazz Festival the next year, a performance released by Verve Records as one side of an album. (The other side featured a group led by the alto saxophonist Gigi Gryce and the trumpeter Donald Byrd.)
Mr. Taylor’s music at that time was steadily swinging and fit recognizably within the modern jazz idiom — its spiky phrases had a clear connection to Monk’s — but it was also already moving beyond it. “Tune 2,” for example, from the Newport record, had an 88-bar form, a long way from the 32-bar song structure more commonly used in jazz.
He went further in that direction on the 1958 record “Looking Ahead!,” then recorded a session, originally issued as “Hard Driving Jazz,” with an ad hoc group, put together by Mr. Wilson, that included John Coltrane.

Mr. Taylor in 1989. In his system of writing music and performing, he was concerned with what he called “black methodology”: oral traditions, music as embodied celebration and spiritual homage. Calle Hesslefors/ullstein bild, via Getty Images
Listeners ‘Fidgeted’
With renown came a particular kind of scrutiny. In 1959, Gunther Schullerdevoted a long essay in The Jazz Review to the question of whether Mr. Taylor’s music was atonal.
“Listening carefully to his playing leaves no doubt of the fact that Taylor indeed does thinktonally, but the result of his thinking most of the time cannot be analyzed on tonal terms,” he wrote.
Whitney Balliettof The New Yorker described a crowd reacting to Mr. Taylor’s performance at the Great South Bay Jazz Festival on Long Island in 1958: A few were mesmerized, he wrote, while others “fidgeted, whispered and wandered nervously in and out of the tent, as if the ground beneath had suddenly become unbearably hot.”
By 1961, given the chance to contribute half the music on an album under the arranger Gil Evans’s name (the other half showcased the composer Johnny Carisi), Mr. Taylor played only original music: striking pieces with shifting tempos and splintering melodic lines.
The next year he formed a bond with the alto saxophonist Jimmy Lyons, who would work with him for more than 20 years; the two were the core of the Cecil Taylor Unit, a group with an otherwise shifting membership. (Mr. Lyons died in 1984.)
By 1966, when he recorded the album “Unit Structures” for Blue Note, Mr. Taylor was forming a syntax where none had existed. He was using blues tonality and dissonance in his improvisations and original structures in his written music, organized in ways that were not traditional for jazz, even for the relatively new avant-garde sort with which he was generally associated.
In one piece on “Unit Structures,” titled “Enter Evening,” piano, oboe, alto saxophone and bass play staggered and unresolved melodic lines that refer to one another only in a distant sense, coming together loosely only in places. There is percussion, but no steady rhythm.
It wasn’t the technique and feeling of jazz that Mr. Taylor was rejecting, only its form: the 32-bar song, the theme-solos-theme progression.
Instead, his structures often proceeded sequentially, shifting among motifs and tonal centers. When he used written scores for his musicians, melodies were indicated by note letters, but there were no staves or bar lines; this gave musicians more freedom within his music, and, he decided, more investment in it.
“When you think about musicians who are reading music,” he said in “All the Notes,” a 1993 documentary directed by Chris Felver, “my contention has always been: The energy that you’re using deciphering what the symbol is is taking away from the maximum creative energy that you might have had if you understood that it’s but a symbol.”
 
 
Cecil Taylor: All the Notes preview
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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There was no academy for what Mr. Taylor did, and partly for that reason he became one himself, teaching for stretches in the 1970s at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and at Antioch College in Ohio. (He was given an honorary doctorate by the New England Conservatory in 1977.) Not until the mid-1970s, Mr. Lyons told the writer John Litweiler, did the Cecil Taylor Unit have enough work that the musicians could make a living from it — mostly in Europe.
Solos and Duos
During this time Mr. Taylor was giving a lot of solo-piano performances, a practice he started around 1967 and refined through albums like “Indent” (1973), “Fly! Fly! Fly! Fly! Fly!” (1980) and “For Olim” (1986).
He would occasionally perform in a duo with another improviser: pared-down and sometimes jarring situations if the other performer pushed too hard against Mr. Taylor. Those pairings led to a clashing concert with the swing-era pianist Mary Lou Williams in 1977; memorable performances with Max Roach in 1979, 1989 and 2000; and collaborations with the Japanese butoh dancer Min Tanaka. In 1979, he collaborated with the dancers Mikhail Baryshnikov and Heather Watts on a short ballet.
In the summer of 1988, Mr. Taylor played a series of concerts in East and West Berlin — solo, in duos and with groups of various sizes — which were released on the FMP label as an 11-CD set, “Cecil Taylor in Berlin ’88.”
Since 1983, Mr. Taylor had lived alone in a three-story home in the Fort Greene section of Brooklyn. During that time he would perform occasionally in nightclubs, but more often in theaters or even museums around the world.
In 2014, a contractor working on his house, Noel Muir, bilked him out of nearly all of the $500,000 that Mr. Taylor had received for the Kyoto Prize; Mr. Muir was sentenced to one to three years in prison.
No immediate family members survive.
As uncompromising as Mr. Taylor could be, many musicians bear his influence, directly or by general example; a list of pianists alone would include Marilyn Crispell, Vijay Iyer, Craig Taborn, Chucho Valdés and Jason Moran.
In 2016, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York organized a two-week exhibition and residency dedicated to Mr. Taylor; it featured panel discussions, a play, films, dance performances, displays of his written scores and live music. He performed at the beginning and end of the event, playing piano and reading poetry, with Mr. Tanaka and with various ensembles. It was an ambitious attempt to take the full measure of Mr. Taylor as an artist who would not be held to the conventions of any one discipline.
“What I am doing,” he said in 1994, “is creating a language. A different American language.”

Mr. Cecil Taylor played at the Rose Theater at Lincoln Center in 2007. Rahav Segev for The New York Times

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R.I.P. Cecil Taylor From The EyeGo Archiv

R.I.P. Cecil Taylor From The EyeGo Archiv

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From The EyeGo Archiv
Last time I saw him perform:
Whitney April 23, 2016

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RIP: Cecil Taylor, legendary jazz pianist | Music News | Tiny Mix Tapes

RIP: Cecil Taylor, legendary jazz pianist | Music News | Tiny Mix Tapes

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https://www.tinymixtapes.com/news/rip-cecil-taylor-legendary-jazz-pianist
 
RIP: Cecil Taylor, legendary jazz pianist
Shane Mack April 6, 2018
News

From Alex Ross:
One of the greatest, most unswervingly original, most incorrigibly sublime figures in the recent history of music died today, a few days after his eighty-ninth birthday.

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Tsion Café formally Jimmy’s Chicken Shack – The New Yorker

Tsion Café formally Jimmy’s Chicken Shack – The New Yorker

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https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/12/18/at-tsion-cafe-a-lifetime-of-wanderings
 
At Tsion Café, a Lifetime of Wanderings
The Harlem restaurant is at its most interesting when different cultures that the owner has experienced—Ethiopian, Middle Eastern—come together in her excellent dishes.
Nicolas Niarchos

Photograph by Jonno Rattman for The New Yorker
History percolates just about everywhere in Harlem. At 148th and St. Nicholas, there’s a long basement that used to be home to Jimmy’s Chicken Shack, a joint frequented by jazz musicians, where Charlie Parker and Malcolm X once worked. These days, the hen-shaped sign that hung above the door is gone, replaced by an image of a smiling angel, more suitable for a place that’s now named for the center of a holy land: Tsion Café.
Beejhy Barhany, Tsion’s co-owner, can usually be found behind the counter of this Sugar Hill restaurant. Her smile belies her journey. When she was a child, she and her family, who are part of a deep-rooted community of Ethiopian Jews called Beta Israelis, left East Africa on foot to get to Israel. When they arrived, they faced discrimination because they were black. Almost twenty years ago, Barhany decided to move to America, because she appreciated its diversity, and in 2014 she opened Tsion, transforming the Chicken Shack into a beautiful art-filled nook lined with blue banquettes which leads to a sunny back yard.
The excellent food at Tsion reflects Barhany’s wanderings. There are traditional Ethiopian dishes, including a delicious version of tibsin which soft filet mignon is sautéed and served over a fluffy pancake of injera bread. From her Middle Eastern days, there’s malawach, a type of flaky pancake, which comes with spicy awazesauce or drenched in honey and dusted with coconut flakes.
Tsion is at its most interesting when different cultures that Barhany has experienced come together in her dishes. Both the Addis Eggs (spicy scrambled eggs with onions and jalapeños) and the Tsion Eggs (scrambled eggs with smoked salmon) are folded into pockets of injera that serve as perfect vehicles for moving food from plate to mouth, and for mopping up any remains. For those who don’t like injera, a chicken tibscan be ordered with tomato-infused jollofrice, from West Africa. To drink, have the tart ginger tea, cold in the summer and steaming hot in winter.
True to the building’s roots, there’s still lots of music here. Much of it is jazz—the most popular nights feature the Grammy Award-winning tenor saxophonist Wayne Escoffery—but Tsion has also hosted open mikes for poets and singers as well as for indie and folk acts. In the corner is a small library, with works by the likes of W. E. B. Du Bois. Barhany says it’s a way of giving back, and honoring the history of this long basement on St. Nick. (Dishes $11.25-$32.) ♦
This article appears in other versions of the December 18 & 25, 2017, issue, with the headline “Tsion Café.”

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In Harlem, Mourning Another Historic and Cultural Marker – The New York Times

In Harlem, Mourning Another Historic and Cultural Marker – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/03/nyregion/in-harlem-mourning-st-nicks-another-cultural-marker.html?hpw
 
In Harlem, Mourning Another Historic and Cultural Marker
By ASHLEY SOUTHALLAPRIL 3, 2018
 

In 1994, a musician and patrons at St. Nick’s Pub stand behind “Fergie,” known as the unofficial mayor of Harlem. Gerald Cyrus
Rubble is about all that is left of St. Nick’s Jazz Pub, the venerable Harlem hangout whose blood-red facade once beckoned jazz greats like Lena Horne and Miles Davis during the Harlem Renaissance.
The basement pub had been closed for seven years before a fire on March 22engulfed the landmark townhouse on St. Nicholas Avenue at West 149th Street, killing a firefighter. Afterward, contractors chiseled away what remained.
Fire marshals continue to search for the cause of the fire in what’s left of the building in Sugar Hill, a celebrated neighborhood where prominent African-Americans like W.E.B. Du Bois, the scholar and activist, and George Schuyler, a journalist, once lived. Neighbors, musicians and historians have begun asking what will rise in its place.

St. Nick’s Pub had been closed for years after a police raid before it was destroyed in a fire last month. Gerald Cyrus
“We need to know what’s happening here,” Elizabeth Eastman, 58, said on a recent morning as she peered over a metal barricade at the remains of the building.
The club was still a lively place when Ms. Eastman’s parents moved to Harlem in the early 1960s. Today, she lives on West 147th Street, two blocks from the building.
Over the years, historic and cultural markers of the neighborhood’s past have disappeared, like the Renaissance Theater and Casino, where Joe Louis slugged opponents, and the old Childs Memorial Temple Church of God in Christ, where Malcolm X was eulogized. Many were demolished and replaced by expensive apartment buildings, restaurants and shops catering to a wealthier, whiter demographic.
Critics blame their disappearance in part on what they see as bias and bureaucratic inertiaat the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission, which must sign off on plans for the future of the space where St. Nick’s stood. Atiba Kwabena-Wilsonperformed at the pub with his band, the Befo’ Quotet, for several years before it closed, and he is among those who say the commission’s inaction contributes to changes that are erasing Harlem’s past.

Kiane Zawadi and Earl Davis performing at the pub in 1996. Gerald Cyrus
“We pay a price for that,” Mr. Kwabena-Wilson said. “It reflects all of our life experience and informs us of how to move forward. So these are very important legacies.”
St. Nick’s was still drawing a crowdwhen it closed in 2011 after a police raid, and its destruction last month was another blow to Harlem’s jazz scene, coming just 10 months after Lenox Lounge was razed. The lounge, which opened in 1939 and hosted performances by Billie Holiday, John Coltrane and Miles Davis, closed in 2012 amid a rent dispute and sat vacant for years.
An architectural rendering online sparked rumorsthat the lounge will be replaced by a Sephora, the French cosmetics boutique. But Thomas J. LaPorta, a principal at the firm handling the project, Gambino + LaPorta Architecture DPC, said no tenants had been signed to the location.
Few jazz clubs remain, including Showmans Jazz Club, open since 1942, and Minton’s, which opened in 2013 as the second reincarnation of the former Minton’s Playhouse.

In 1994, Laurel Watson, a Harlem legend from the big band era, is second from left at the bar. Gerald Cyrus
Ms. Eastman, who is the treasurer for the West 147th Street Block Association Inc. Between 7th and 8th, said she would like to believe St. Nick’s can rise from the ashes.
“I think there’s a hope that we can preserve some of the old Harlem,” she said. “Blend the old and the new so that we can remember the culture, African-American culture. It’s beautiful.”
St. Nick’s had been the longest-running jazz club in Harlem before it closed. Over its history, the pub had many iterations. It opened as the Pooseepahtuck Club in 1935, and new management seemed always to bring a new name: Luckey’s Rendezvous in the 1940s under Luckey Roberts, the composer and piano player who influenced Duke Ellington, then the Pink Angel in the 1950s under Lillian Lampkin, the current owner’s mother. It became St. Nick’s in the 1960s.
Among the luminaries who frequented the pub was the writer James Baldwin, who introduced friends to the joint. Miles Davis and Charlie Parker clinked glasses at the pub, too. And Stevie Wonder was known to pop in.

Dancer Kathy Sanson hugging tap dancer Buster Brown in 1995. Gerald Cyrus
“They would have good house bands,” Jacob Morris, the director of the Harlem Historical Society, said. “It was always a popular place to go.”
The current owner, Vincent Lampkin, 57, inherited St. Nick’s and the apartments above it after his mother died in 2010. He had hoped to reopenthe pub. He did not return a request for comment submitted through his lawyer, who has said Mr. Lampkin plans to rebuild.
In its last days, the pub had been used as a film set for “Motherless Brooklyn,” an adaptation of Jonathan Lethem’s detective novel set in the 1950s in New York City. The “King Rooster Jazz Club” sign that the film’s crew put up for the shoot hung outside the building until contractors began demolishing it.
Whatever rises in its place must be approved by the preservation panel, which will consider “the design, massing, materials, and how it relates to the streetscape and the historic district,” Zodet Negron, a spokeswoman, said. Neighborhood residents will have a say through the local community board.

A long night at St. Nick’s Pub in 1997, when it was still going strong. Gerald Cyrus
Mr. Morris, the historian, said that St. Nick’s destruction does not have to portend its erasure. He cited the Red Rooster, a bustling restaurant on Malcolm X Boulevard near 125th Street, named in honor of a former speakeasy that attracted African-American luminaries like Nat King Cole, the pianist and singer, and Adam Clayton Powell Jr., the civil rights leader who served 26 years in Congress (and for whom the stretch of Seventh Avenue above Central Park is named).
Like its predecessor, Red Rooster occupies an influential space in Harlem’s core, where it attracts old-timers, newcomers and visitors. President Barack Obama dined at the restaurant in 2011 during a fund-raiser for the Democratic National Committee that raised $1.5 million. Its downstairs speakeasy, Ginny’s Supper Club, is home to a weekly gospel brunch and live music on most nights.
“Even though it’s a completely new entity, they’ve recreated the ambience and the spirit of what the old Red Rooster meant to Harlem,” Mr. Morris said.
He said the loss of St. Nick’s is painful. “What we’re dealing with now is we’ve got a tragedy,” he said. “But out of tragedy can come resurrection and we’d all like to see it.”

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Jazz Notes: FDNY fireman dies battling St. Nick’s fire | New York Amsterdam News: The new Black view

Jazz Notes: FDNY fireman dies battling St. Nick’s fire | New York Amsterdam News: The new Black view

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http://amsterdamnews.com/news/2018/mar/29/jazz-notes-fdny-fireman-dies-battling-st-nicks-fir/?page=2
 
Jazz Notes: FDNY fireman dies battling St. Nick’s fire

Saturday afternoon, the stale smell of smoke was still in the air. A team of firemen and police officers remained on the scene, and 147th Street to 150th Street were still blocked off from traffic. The streets were filled with police cars, fire trucks and one 1950s automobile still parked across the street (149th) from the jazz club.
Police officer Eric Kim of the 30th Precinct explained the scene is still under investigation and the crime scene unit was there. “We want to make sure both buildings are safe before the residents are allowed to return,” said Kim. “There will be a presence for a few days or as long as it takes.”
The only thing left of St. Nick’s Pub is the bright red front that is now scorched from flames. Before the five-story building that housed St. Nick’s Pub was closed in December 2011, on any given Monday night, it was hotter than a Southern Baptist church on a Sunday morning.
Those excited patrons weren’t seeking the word of God, but rather the gospel according to the scriptures of crazy improvised music at its highest level. In its last seven years, the tiny Harlem bar on Sugar Hill had established a worldwide reputation for having one of the hottest Monday night jam sessions in New York City.
The jazz promoter Berta Indeed is credited with bringing the music to the pub after it was purchased by Earl Spain. “St. Nick’s Pub will go down in history as one of the best jazz clubs in Harlem,” said Indeed. “It was an honor for me to share this history with the band I named the Sugar Hill Quartet.”
The saxophonist Patience Higgins and the late bassist Andy McCloud III were original members of the quartet that became the house band, along with drummer Dave Gibson and pianists Les Kurtz and Marcus Persiani.
“It’s like an end of an era and a great learning experience,” said Higgins. “I met many wonderful people at St. Nick’s Pub. The vision and courage of Bertha Alloway to seek and find a venue to satisfy her need to hear jazz in Harlem was a benefit to all of us.”
The primary attraction was the sea of surprise guests, such as Roy Hargrove, Russell Malone, Stanley Turrentine, Tamm E. Hunt, Lawrence Clark, Wycliffe Gordon, Stevie Wonder, George Braith, Olu Dara, David Murray, vocalists Vanessa Rubin and T.C. III, Craig Haynes (Roy’s son), Donald Byrd and Savion Glover, who came by with tap shoes in hand.
James Carter, with his rousting saxophones, made the bar his second home. One evening trumpeter and Pulitzer Prize winner Wynton Marsalis showed off his New Orleans jazz roots. Leopolda Fleming, former percussionist for Nina Simone, was a guest member of the house band and Buster Brown the legendary hoofer was a regular.
Bill Saxton, the saxophonist/composer and owner of Harlem’s Bill’s Place, had a weekly Friday stand for six years. “The community didn’t care how well-known you were but your music had to touch them,” said Saxton. “Playing there kept me in touch with my people and kept my chops up for touring. Patience Higgins first became a band leader at the pub and Grammy winner Gregory Porter developed his craft there, as well as saxophonist Wayne Escoffery.”
Surprising jazz situations happened at the pub, such as George Braith the multi-reed player playing his patented instrument, the Braithophone (a double horn constructed with saxophone parts).
The pub represented an international jazz collaboration where young musicians from New Jersey to Australia interned weekly. These impromptu lessons couldn’t be taught in any classroom.
The pianist and singer Donald Smith was one of the first musicians to perform at the pub during its resurgence in 1994. “I loved playing at the pub and used those opportunities to work out new material I was working on for gigs,” stated Smith. “This was a real tragedy.”
The waiters and waitresses at Luckey’s Rendezvous (1940-54) were often Columbia University music students, who scurried around singing everything from blues to opera. The club’s name went through some changes, but the music remained its focal point into the 1950s, from Pink Angel to Dude’s with Jack McDuff as the house organist, and finally to its closing as St. Nick’s Pub.
“May Michael Davidson the firefighter, who died fighting the fire at St. Nick’s Pub, rest in peace,” said Indeed. “May the memories and history that I shared with the musicians live on forever.”
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Pollstar | The Festival Legend: George Wein – 64 Years Of Producing Festivals From Newport To New Orleans And Far Beyond

Pollstar | The Festival Legend: George Wein – 64 Years Of Producing Festivals From Newport To New Orleans And Far Beyond

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https://www.pollstar.com/article/the-festival-legend-george-wein-64-years-of-producing-festivals-from-newport-to-new-orleans-and-far-beyond-134935
 
The Festival Legend: George Wein – 64 Years Of Producing Festivals From Newport To New Orleans And Far Beyond

Josh WoolGeorge WeinCover photo for April 9, 2018 issue
George Wein and Jay Sweet vividly remember their first big fight. It occurred about a decade ago, and concerned a major act they were considering for the Newport Folk Festival.
 
Sweet was new to the concert business; Wein, of course, had created and overseen the Newport festivals since the 1950s. They won’t share details of the fight, or even whom it concerned, only its outcome.
 
“We were both right,” Wein says of the encounter, which occurred when he was in the process of reacquiring the Newport Jazz and Newport Folk Festivals from the company he had sold his Festival Productions to less than two years earlier. (They had quickly gone belly up).
 
“They didn’t know what they were doing,” Wein says. “Jay was with that company, but there was something about his dedication [to his point of view]. It stuck with me and I thought it was absolutely necessary that Jay stay with us. I saw leadership in him.”
 
Wein and Sweet have been a team ever since. They rebuilt the organization, creating the Newport Festival Foundation as a 501c3 in 2010 with Wein as chairman of the board and Sweet as executive producer of the two main festivals and, now entering its second edition, Bridgefest.
 
The bassist, bandleader and radio personality Christian McBride serves as artistic director for the Jazz Festival; an artist advisory board for Newport Folk helps shape the direction of the festival as well as encourage collaborations during and helps curate the multi-artist sets.
 
My Morning Jacket’s Jim James, Sara Watkins, The Decemberists’ Colin Meloy, and Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes are among the advisers. 

David Salafia The Master And The ProtégéGeorge Wein (left) Jay Sweet at Fort Adams, the 1799 fortress and the longtime home of the Newport Jazz and Folk Festivals.
 
“When I got there, George gave me a lot of rope to hang myself,” Sweet says of his approach to Folk Festival, which he is over-seeing this year for the 10th time. “When I have an issue, I steal George and Pete Seeger’s blueprint for the folk festival, which I call the ‘Island of Misfit Toys.’ To me, anything that isn’t jazz can go on at this other festival.”
 
This year’s Folk Festival, named Pollstar Music Festival of the Year three times between 2011 and 2015, runs July 27-29; the Jazz Festival is Aug. 3-5 with the four-day Bridgefest in the middle. The folk fest has slowly rolled out its lineup – Gary Clark Jr., Brandi Carlile, Jason Isbell, Sturgill Simpson, and The Lone Bellow are among the two dozen announced; another 40 or so names are still to come. Saxophonist Charles Lloyd, who turned 80 on March 15, will headline the Jazz Festival by performing all three days with three different bands. George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic, Pat Metheny, Jose James and super groups led by Robert Glasper and Rene Rosnes with Cecile McLorin Salvant will be among the 50-plus acts performing. 
 
Booking Lloyd was the easy part: His wife called Wein and he agreed to present the saxophonist’s three bands provided Newport got the exclusive and he wouldn’t recreate the musical triptych elsewhere. Not every booking goes as smoothly.
 
“Some artists George calls and they say, ‘Great. What day?’” says Sweet, a former journalist and music supervisor who comes from a folk/Americana/rock ‘n’ roll background. “Metheny took 96 emails with his manager. It’s a massive learning curve coming from folk. Interesting thing for me is I get to be a bad cop.
 
“Christian and George, these two brilliant jazz minds, can come up with something great but since I’m the one who has to sign the check, if we don’t like the deal I can say no. It allows for a counterbalance. In folk, I’m judge, jury and executioner.”
 
Those checks, Sweet notes, are for far smaller amounts than most artists receive for a gig.
 
“What a headliner gets for a festival like Coachella, well, that’s our entire budget for artists,” he says. “I just say, whatever your usual fee is, take a zero off the amount.”
 
Each of the festivals have 30,000 tickets to sell as capacity at Rhode Island’s Fort Adams State Park which can fit 10,000 per day; Bridgefest is a smaller-scale collection of film screenings, concerts and events in and around Newport.
 
They sold out last year’s Folk Festival in eight minutes prior to announcing a single act.
 
And while jazz is a tougher sell – Wein, sharp as a tack, recalls the many times he had to take out ads in the Sunday newspapers the week before the event to sell the last of the tickets – sales are 25 percent better than in 2015 when they put tickets on sale after the full lineup was announced.

Joe Giblin/AP, fileNewport Jazz FestivalFort Adams State Park on Narragansett Bay in Newport, R.I.
 
“What’s happening naturally is the jazz festival and folk fest are coming closer,” Wein notes. “It’s more like a week of music rather than two separate festivals. We find a Jon Batiste. He can play to a folk audience and a jazz audience. Rhiannon Giddens can play to both. Norah Jones.” Sweet offers Trombone Shorty as another example.
 
“It’s a 10-day music experience. Without trying to create that, we have built that. That’s what the future is with music.”
 
Wein, who will turn 93 before the first note sounds at this year’s festivals, grew up in Newton, Mass., aspiring to be a jazz pianist.
 
He left college after a year and enlisted in the Army during WWII, winding up stationed in New Jersey and close enough to Manhattan to catch the thriving club scene of the mid- to late 1940s.
 
Wein would bounce between Gotham and Boston, attending and graduating from Boston University, and working as a pianist, eventually opening his Storyville club in Boston in 1950. In 1958, he opened a summer version of the club on Cape Cod.
 
While the club was Wein’s central focus even as he struggled to turn a profit, he staged the first Newport Jazz Festival in 1954 with backing from a local socialite, Elaine Lorillard and her husband, Louis.
 
“I never had a motivation to do a jazz festival,” Wein says. “I thought, ‘Tanglewood has classical so why not jazz?’ I ended up putting Lennie Tristano and Eddie Condon on the same bill, which nobody would do back then. There was such a separation in jazz at that time, the beboppers and the traditionalists. 
 
But to me there’s no difference – it’s all jazz.”
 
Between the two festivals (the first folk edition was in 1959, booked with the help of the late Pete Seeger), Wein ushered in new eras in music, gave the spotlight to emerging stars, revived the careers of forgotten blues musicians such as Son House and Mississippi John Hurt and created business practices – sponsorships, exclusive bookings/regional rights, the urban festival concept –  that have become commonplace for festival producers.
 
Miles Davis revived his career in 1955 with his Newport set, securing a contract with Columbia Records that would yield some of the most famous – and best-selling – jazz LPs of the 20th century, Kind of Blue, In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew among them. A year later, Duke Ellington gave the performance of a lifetime that was issued as Ellington at Newport in 1959.
 
Newport Folk 1965 may best be remembered for Bob Dylan going electric and being called “Judas” for moving forward from his acoustic past; consider, however, that year’s stellar Jazz Fest lineup, rarely gets any shine: Muddy Waters with Dizzy Gillespie as a guest; an afternoon of avant-garde musicians such as Cecil Taylor, Archie Shepp, and Paul Bley; and a Sunday show of Frank Sinatra, the Count Basie Orchestra, and Oscar Peterson Trio.
 
In the three days, Wein staged a VSOP superstar crossover concert, a sampling of the future of a genre and a finale of powerhouse names. Would any festival today take on that risk?
 
The 1969 Newport Jazz Festival, which Wein considers a failure as it sounded a death knell for jazz, set an attendance record for the three days – 85,000 people.
 
The program was equal parts jazz (Miles Davis, Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, Sun Ra, Bill Evans, etc.) and rock (Led Zeppelin, Sly and the Family Stone, Frank Zappa, Jethro Tull, Jeff Beck, Ten Years After and others), a precursor to Woodstock that would take place six weeks later.
 
After the fallout from Woodstock, Altamont and the unaffiliated Newport ’69 in Northridge, Calif., the festival landscape was permanently altered.
 
Out of control crowds led to Newport Jazz shutting down for more than a decade starting in 1971.
 
“It was sociological,” Wein says. “It was impossible to hold a festival in suburban areas because kids would break the fences down saying music should be free.
 
“We had to go to an urban area, which means you can’t do something small. We went to New York [in 1972] and changed the whole structure, got Carnegie Hall to stay open an extra week for us.
 
“We did midnight concerts at Radio City Music Hall. We had 40-odd concerts over two weeks, at least two concerts a night, and it changed the whole concept of urban festivals.” It introduced the concept of the multi-venue festival.

Douglas Mason/Getty ImagesNewport Folk Festival 2017he Preservation Hall Jazz Band performs during the Newport Folk Festival 2017 at Fort Adams State Park on July 30, 2017 in Newport, Rhode Island
 
At the time, Wein was also promoting festivals throughout the East Coast and taking bands on the road as a traveling edition of Newport Jazz.
 
In 1970, the New Orleans Hotel Motel Association brought in Wein to create the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.
 
“We made New Orleans aware of their own culture,” he notes without going into too much detail.
 
“It’s all in the book,” he often says, referring to his memoir written with Nate Chinen, “Myself Among Others: My Life in Music” that Da Capo published in 2004.
 
New York was in economic turmoil when Wein arrived. 
 
His cachet was the Newport brand, which he found could, in turn, attract hefty sponsorship dollars from the likes of Kool cigarettes and the electronics company JVC.
 
His business thrived as the company names became synonymous with the concerts – Ben & Jerry’s earned brownie points for backing the folk festival from 1988 to 1999, which led to the ice cream company getting into festival promotion and partnerships with musicians.
 
While that money was crucial to Wein’s business, he’s proud to say today it wouldn’t fly.
 
“It’s a totally different approach,” he says. “I wouldn’t change the name Newport Folk Festival for a million dollars. We need sponsors but Jay has a real philosophy: Sponsors should be involved with what we’re doing and the community, not just putting big signs on the field.
 
“Sponsorship is important, and from the financial point of view, we like sponsors. But could we get along without them now? Yes. Very few festivals can say that. I hope we can always have some help.”
 
Sweet explains that the switch to a 501c3 has allowed the company to solicit donations from individuals, a move that has almost made up the amount sponsorships raised.
 
“The less sponsorship the better,” Sweet says. “The more people donate to our nonprofit, the less money we need from sponsors to fund our education component.”
 
Wein offers the caveat, “I am not saying we’re different from other people,” in noting “money is not the driving force for what we do. It’s the music and creating a great event.
 
“I told my board, ‘If you’re looking for us to make money, we won’t. You have to see that we stay alive, we’re building an endowment fund.’ The board understands that and it’s a good feeling.”
 
Wein’s Upper East Side apartment shows few signs of his life in music – it’s much more a showcase for art – but there is a single Grammy Award that sits in a place of honor.
 
He received it in 2015 to recognize his lifetime of creating significant festivals, which Grammy Awards host LL Cool J touted as being at the root of Coachella, Bonnaroo and other festivals.
 
“I didn’t realize it; I didn’t think we were making history,” Wein says.
 
“You’re doing what comes into your head. At my lowest, after the riots, I didn’t think, ‘What are the pieces to pick up?’ I thought, ‘What is the next step?’ After we finish one, I say, ‘Can we do it again next year?’” 

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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Pollstar | The Festival Legend: George Wein – 64 Years Of Producing Festivals From Newport To New Orleans And Far Beyond

Pollstar | The Festival Legend: George Wein – 64 Years Of Producing Festivals From Newport To New Orleans And Far Beyond

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https://www.pollstar.com/article/the-festival-legend-george-wein-64-years-of-producing-festivals-from-newport-to-new-orleans-and-far-beyond-134935
 
The Festival Legend: George Wein – 64 Years Of Producing Festivals From Newport To New Orleans And Far Beyond

Josh WoolGeorge WeinCover photo for April 9, 2018 issue
George Wein and Jay Sweet vividly remember their first big fight. It occurred about a decade ago, and concerned a major act they were considering for the Newport Folk Festival.
 
Sweet was new to the concert business; Wein, of course, had created and overseen the Newport festivals since the 1950s. They won’t share details of the fight, or even whom it concerned, only its outcome.
 
“We were both right,” Wein says of the encounter, which occurred when he was in the process of reacquiring the Newport Jazz and Newport Folk Festivals from the company he had sold his Festival Productions to less than two years earlier. (They had quickly gone belly up).
 
“They didn’t know what they were doing,” Wein says. “Jay was with that company, but there was something about his dedication [to his point of view]. It stuck with me and I thought it was absolutely necessary that Jay stay with us. I saw leadership in him.”
 
Wein and Sweet have been a team ever since. They rebuilt the organization, creating the Newport Festival Foundation as a 501c3 in 2010 with Wein as chairman of the board and Sweet as executive producer of the two main festivals and, now entering its second edition, Bridgefest.
 
The bassist, bandleader and radio personality Christian McBride serves as artistic director for the Jazz Festival; an artist advisory board for Newport Folk helps shape the direction of the festival as well as encourage collaborations during and helps curate the multi-artist sets.
 
My Morning Jacket’s Jim James, Sara Watkins, The Decemberists’ Colin Meloy, and Taylor Goldsmith of Dawes are among the advisers. 

David Salafia The Master And The ProtégéGeorge Wein (left) Jay Sweet at Fort Adams, the 1799 fortress and the longtime home of the Newport Jazz and Folk Festivals.
 
“When I got there, George gave me a lot of rope to hang myself,” Sweet says of his approach to Folk Festival, which he is over-seeing this year for the 10th time. “When I have an issue, I steal George and Pete Seeger’s blueprint for the folk festival, which I call the ‘Island of Misfit Toys.’ To me, anything that isn’t jazz can go on at this other festival.”
 
This year’s Folk Festival, named Pollstar Music Festival of the Year three times between 2011 and 2015, runs July 27-29; the Jazz Festival is Aug. 3-5 with the four-day Bridgefest in the middle. The folk fest has slowly rolled out its lineup – Gary Clark Jr., Brandi Carlile, Jason Isbell, Sturgill Simpson, and The Lone Bellow are among the two dozen announced; another 40 or so names are still to come. Saxophonist Charles Lloyd, who turned 80 on March 15, will headline the Jazz Festival by performing all three days with three different bands. George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic, Pat Metheny, Jose James and super groups led by Robert Glasper and Rene Rosnes with Cecile McLorin Salvant will be among the 50-plus acts performing. 
 
Booking Lloyd was the easy part: His wife called Wein and he agreed to present the saxophonist’s three bands provided Newport got the exclusive and he wouldn’t recreate the musical triptych elsewhere. Not every booking goes as smoothly.
 
“Some artists George calls and they say, ‘Great. What day?’” says Sweet, a former journalist and music supervisor who comes from a folk/Americana/rock ‘n’ roll background. “Metheny took 96 emails with his manager. It’s a massive learning curve coming from folk. Interesting thing for me is I get to be a bad cop.
 
“Christian and George, these two brilliant jazz minds, can come up with something great but since I’m the one who has to sign the check, if we don’t like the deal I can say no. It allows for a counterbalance. In folk, I’m judge, jury and executioner.”
 
Those checks, Sweet notes, are for far smaller amounts than most artists receive for a gig.
 
“What a headliner gets for a festival like Coachella, well, that’s our entire budget for artists,” he says. “I just say, whatever your usual fee is, take a zero off the amount.”
 
Each of the festivals have 30,000 tickets to sell as capacity at Rhode Island’s Fort Adams State Park which can fit 10,000 per day; Bridgefest is a smaller-scale collection of film screenings, concerts and events in and around Newport.
 
They sold out last year’s Folk Festival in eight minutes prior to announcing a single act.
 
And while jazz is a tougher sell – Wein, sharp as a tack, recalls the many times he had to take out ads in the Sunday newspapers the week before the event to sell the last of the tickets – sales are 25 percent better than in 2015 when they put tickets on sale after the full lineup was announced.

Joe Giblin/AP, fileNewport Jazz FestivalFort Adams State Park on Narragansett Bay in Newport, R.I.
 
“What’s happening naturally is the jazz festival and folk fest are coming closer,” Wein notes. “It’s more like a week of music rather than two separate festivals. We find a Jon Batiste. He can play to a folk audience and a jazz audience. Rhiannon Giddens can play to both. Norah Jones.” Sweet offers Trombone Shorty as another example.
 
“It’s a 10-day music experience. Without trying to create that, we have built that. That’s what the future is with music.”
 
Wein, who will turn 93 before the first note sounds at this year’s festivals, grew up in Newton, Mass., aspiring to be a jazz pianist.
 
He left college after a year and enlisted in the Army during WWII, winding up stationed in New Jersey and close enough to Manhattan to catch the thriving club scene of the mid- to late 1940s.
 
Wein would bounce between Gotham and Boston, attending and graduating from Boston University, and working as a pianist, eventually opening his Storyville club in Boston in 1950. In 1958, he opened a summer version of the club on Cape Cod.
 
While the club was Wein’s central focus even as he struggled to turn a profit, he staged the first Newport Jazz Festival in 1954 with backing from a local socialite, Elaine Lorillard and her husband, Louis.
 
“I never had a motivation to do a jazz festival,” Wein says. “I thought, ‘Tanglewood has classical so why not jazz?’ I ended up putting Lennie Tristano and Eddie Condon on the same bill, which nobody would do back then. There was such a separation in jazz at that time, the beboppers and the traditionalists. 
 
But to me there’s no difference – it’s all jazz.”
 
Between the two festivals (the first folk edition was in 1959, booked with the help of the late Pete Seeger), Wein ushered in new eras in music, gave the spotlight to emerging stars, revived the careers of forgotten blues musicians such as Son House and Mississippi John Hurt and created business practices – sponsorships, exclusive bookings/regional rights, the urban festival concept –  that have become commonplace for festival producers.
 
Miles Davis revived his career in 1955 with his Newport set, securing a contract with Columbia Records that would yield some of the most famous – and best-selling – jazz LPs of the 20th century, Kind of Blue, In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew among them. A year later, Duke Ellington gave the performance of a lifetime that was issued as Ellington at Newport in 1959.
 
Newport Folk 1965 may best be remembered for Bob Dylan going electric and being called “Judas” for moving forward from his acoustic past; consider, however, that year’s stellar Jazz Fest lineup, rarely gets any shine: Muddy Waters with Dizzy Gillespie as a guest; an afternoon of avant-garde musicians such as Cecil Taylor, Archie Shepp, and Paul Bley; and a Sunday show of Frank Sinatra, the Count Basie Orchestra, and Oscar Peterson Trio.
 
In the three days, Wein staged a VSOP superstar crossover concert, a sampling of the future of a genre and a finale of powerhouse names. Would any festival today take on that risk?
 
The 1969 Newport Jazz Festival, which Wein considers a failure as it sounded a death knell for jazz, set an attendance record for the three days – 85,000 people.
 
The program was equal parts jazz (Miles Davis, Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, Sun Ra, Bill Evans, etc.) and rock (Led Zeppelin, Sly and the Family Stone, Frank Zappa, Jethro Tull, Jeff Beck, Ten Years After and others), a precursor to Woodstock that would take place six weeks later.
 
After the fallout from Woodstock, Altamont and the unaffiliated Newport ’69 in Northridge, Calif., the festival landscape was permanently altered.
 
Out of control crowds led to Newport Jazz shutting down for more than a decade starting in 1971.
 
“It was sociological,” Wein says. “It was impossible to hold a festival in suburban areas because kids would break the fences down saying music should be free.
 
“We had to go to an urban area, which means you can’t do something small. We went to New York [in 1972] and changed the whole structure, got Carnegie Hall to stay open an extra week for us.
 
“We did midnight concerts at Radio City Music Hall. We had 40-odd concerts over two weeks, at least two concerts a night, and it changed the whole concept of urban festivals.” It introduced the concept of the multi-venue festival.

Douglas Mason/Getty ImagesNewport Folk Festival 2017he Preservation Hall Jazz Band performs during the Newport Folk Festival 2017 at Fort Adams State Park on July 30, 2017 in Newport, Rhode Island
 
At the time, Wein was also promoting festivals throughout the East Coast and taking bands on the road as a traveling edition of Newport Jazz.
 
In 1970, the New Orleans Hotel Motel Association brought in Wein to create the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.
 
“We made New Orleans aware of their own culture,” he notes without going into too much detail.
 
“It’s all in the book,” he often says, referring to his memoir written with Nate Chinen, “Myself Among Others: My Life in Music” that Da Capo published in 2004.
 
New York was in economic turmoil when Wein arrived. 
 
His cachet was the Newport brand, which he found could, in turn, attract hefty sponsorship dollars from the likes of Kool cigarettes and the electronics company JVC.
 
His business thrived as the company names became synonymous with the concerts – Ben & Jerry’s earned brownie points for backing the folk festival from 1988 to 1999, which led to the ice cream company getting into festival promotion and partnerships with musicians.
 
While that money was crucial to Wein’s business, he’s proud to say today it wouldn’t fly.
 
“It’s a totally different approach,” he says. “I wouldn’t change the name Newport Folk Festival for a million dollars. We need sponsors but Jay has a real philosophy: Sponsors should be involved with what we’re doing and the community, not just putting big signs on the field.
 
“Sponsorship is important, and from the financial point of view, we like sponsors. But could we get along without them now? Yes. Very few festivals can say that. I hope we can always have some help.”
 
Sweet explains that the switch to a 501c3 has allowed the company to solicit donations from individuals, a move that has almost made up the amount sponsorships raised.
 
“The less sponsorship the better,” Sweet says. “The more people donate to our nonprofit, the less money we need from sponsors to fund our education component.”
 
Wein offers the caveat, “I am not saying we’re different from other people,” in noting “money is not the driving force for what we do. It’s the music and creating a great event.
 
“I told my board, ‘If you’re looking for us to make money, we won’t. You have to see that we stay alive, we’re building an endowment fund.’ The board understands that and it’s a good feeling.”
 
Wein’s Upper East Side apartment shows few signs of his life in music – it’s much more a showcase for art – but there is a single Grammy Award that sits in a place of honor.
 
He received it in 2015 to recognize his lifetime of creating significant festivals, which Grammy Awards host LL Cool J touted as being at the root of Coachella, Bonnaroo and other festivals.
 
“I didn’t realize it; I didn’t think we were making history,” Wein says.
 
“You’re doing what comes into your head. At my lowest, after the riots, I didn’t think, ‘What are the pieces to pick up?’ I thought, ‘What is the next step?’ After we finish one, I say, ‘Can we do it again next year?’” 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Sax linked to King’s last request to be displayed at Civil Rights Museum

Sax linked to King’s last request to be displayed at Civil Rights Museum

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https://www.commercialappeal.com/story/news/2017/08/31/precious-lord-ben-branch-saxophone-permanent-display-national-civil-rights-museum-feet-where-dr-mart/618488001/

Precious Lord! Saxophone linked to MLK’s last request to be on permanent display at National Civil Rights Museum

Marc PerrusquiaUpdated 10:59 a.m. CT Aug. 31, 2017
Vivian Branch, widow of jazz saxophonist Ben Branch, said Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. asked her husband to play “Precious Lord” and to play it real pretty. “And Ben said he told him, ‘You know I will,’ Branch recalled. Moments later, King was shot. Yalonda M. James/The Commercial Appeal
Ben Branch’s saxophone will stay in Memphis, after all – on permanent display at the National Civil Rights Museum.
After months of bouncing around, from a glass case, to storage, to a Whitehaven closet, the horn will be featured on the second floor of the Civil Rights Museum, feet from where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. stood as he spoke with Branch moments before his assassination in 1968.
“See, this is home to Ben,” Vivian Branch, the musician’s widow, said of her decision to keep the tenor saxophone in Memphis. It was housed for 16 years at Downtown’s Rock N’ Soul Museum before she severed the arrangement last fall, saying she might send the horn to a place where it would be more appreciated, perhaps to a museum in the East.
More: Sax linked to Martin Luther King Jr.’s last words hidden in Memphis closet
Museum president Terri Lee Freeman said she’s excited by the addition.
“It’s going to be something we really treasure,” Freeman told Branch as the two women finalized the deal. “We’re going to make you proud.”
Freeman plans to display the horn on the second floor near the museum’s most-popular exhibit, Room 306, where King was staying on April 4, 1968, when he was shot by a sniper outside on the balcony of the former Lorraine Motel.
From the balcony, King spotted Branch down in the parking lot, asking him to play his favorite song at a rally later that night. “I want you to play ‘Precious Lord’ for me,” King shouted. “Play it real pretty.”
Branch believes the Henri Selmer Paris saxophone the museum now owns is the one her husband had with him in 1968, though a serial number recently spotted on the back indicates it was built later, around 1973. Jon Huff, manager of Saxquest, a St. Louis woodwind pro-shop, who has personally reviewed Henri Selmer Paris’ archival records in France, said a horn of that serial range couldn’t have been built before 1972, though Branch possibly might have retained parts from an earlier horn, such as the neck and mouthpiece, and added a newer horn body at some point.
Freeman said the discrepancy doesn’t dampen the horn’s importance. 
“While we are aware of the issue surrounding the saxophone’s precise date of manufacture, it is more important that we have a part of Mr. Branch to help complete the story,” she said in a prepared statement. “And knowing that Mrs. Branch is pleased the instrument has a home in Memphis, at the National Civil Rights Museum, is also important. By displaying the saxophone, we are affirming Mr. Branch’s historical significance, and the significance of his music, especially his rendition of Precious Lord which was a special inspiration to Dr. King.”
 

Freeman’s enthusiasm is steeped in rich history.
Ben Branch was a big name in the Memphis blues scene in the 1950s and early ‘60s, leading the house band at Currie’s Club Tropicana and backing B.B. King on his early recordings. After moving to Chicago in 1964, Branch became active in civil rights, leading the Southern Christian Leadership Conference’s Operation Breadbasket Orchestra that came to Memphis in April 1968 as King tried to rally the city’s striking sanitation workers.
Freeman said it will be at least a couple months before the exhibit is ready for display.
The plan is to construct a custom, transparent case and display the horn between the  “Promised Land’’ exhibit, featuring King’s “Mountaintop Speech’’ the night before he was shot, and room 306.
“That area is a high-traffic, very significant area. People can really feel what the moment was like.’’ said Noelle Trent, the museum’s director of interpretation. Branch’s saxophone exhibit will include a phone on which visitors can listen to Branch playing Precious Lord.
“The goal would be for people to not only see this but to hear it.’’ Trent said. “We will treat it with the utmost respect.’’

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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Sax linked to King’s last request to be displayed at Civil Rights Museum

Sax linked to King’s last request to be displayed at Civil Rights Museum

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shem.gif

https://www.commercialappeal.com/story/news/2017/08/31/precious-lord-ben-branch-saxophone-permanent-display-national-civil-rights-museum-feet-where-dr-mart/618488001/

Precious Lord! Saxophone linked to MLK’s last request to be on permanent display at National Civil Rights Museum

Marc PerrusquiaUpdated 10:59 a.m. CT Aug. 31, 2017
Vivian Branch, widow of jazz saxophonist Ben Branch, said Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. asked her husband to play “Precious Lord” and to play it real pretty. “And Ben said he told him, ‘You know I will,’ Branch recalled. Moments later, King was shot. Yalonda M. James/The Commercial Appeal
Ben Branch’s saxophone will stay in Memphis, after all – on permanent display at the National Civil Rights Museum.
After months of bouncing around, from a glass case, to storage, to a Whitehaven closet, the horn will be featured on the second floor of the Civil Rights Museum, feet from where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. stood as he spoke with Branch moments before his assassination in 1968.
“See, this is home to Ben,” Vivian Branch, the musician’s widow, said of her decision to keep the tenor saxophone in Memphis. It was housed for 16 years at Downtown’s Rock N’ Soul Museum before she severed the arrangement last fall, saying she might send the horn to a place where it would be more appreciated, perhaps to a museum in the East.
More: Sax linked to Martin Luther King Jr.’s last words hidden in Memphis closet
Museum president Terri Lee Freeman said she’s excited by the addition.
“It’s going to be something we really treasure,” Freeman told Branch as the two women finalized the deal. “We’re going to make you proud.”
Freeman plans to display the horn on the second floor near the museum’s most-popular exhibit, Room 306, where King was staying on April 4, 1968, when he was shot by a sniper outside on the balcony of the former Lorraine Motel.
From the balcony, King spotted Branch down in the parking lot, asking him to play his favorite song at a rally later that night. “I want you to play ‘Precious Lord’ for me,” King shouted. “Play it real pretty.”
Branch believes the Henri Selmer Paris saxophone the museum now owns is the one her husband had with him in 1968, though a serial number recently spotted on the back indicates it was built later, around 1973. Jon Huff, manager of Saxquest, a St. Louis woodwind pro-shop, who has personally reviewed Henri Selmer Paris’ archival records in France, said a horn of that serial range couldn’t have been built before 1972, though Branch possibly might have retained parts from an earlier horn, such as the neck and mouthpiece, and added a newer horn body at some point.
Freeman said the discrepancy doesn’t dampen the horn’s importance. 
“While we are aware of the issue surrounding the saxophone’s precise date of manufacture, it is more important that we have a part of Mr. Branch to help complete the story,” she said in a prepared statement. “And knowing that Mrs. Branch is pleased the instrument has a home in Memphis, at the National Civil Rights Museum, is also important. By displaying the saxophone, we are affirming Mr. Branch’s historical significance, and the significance of his music, especially his rendition of Precious Lord which was a special inspiration to Dr. King.”
 

Freeman’s enthusiasm is steeped in rich history.
Ben Branch was a big name in the Memphis blues scene in the 1950s and early ‘60s, leading the house band at Currie’s Club Tropicana and backing B.B. King on his early recordings. After moving to Chicago in 1964, Branch became active in civil rights, leading the Southern Christian Leadership Conference’s Operation Breadbasket Orchestra that came to Memphis in April 1968 as King tried to rally the city’s striking sanitation workers.
Freeman said it will be at least a couple months before the exhibit is ready for display.
The plan is to construct a custom, transparent case and display the horn between the  “Promised Land’’ exhibit, featuring King’s “Mountaintop Speech’’ the night before he was shot, and room 306.
“That area is a high-traffic, very significant area. People can really feel what the moment was like.’’ said Noelle Trent, the museum’s director of interpretation. Branch’s saxophone exhibit will include a phone on which visitors can listen to Branch playing Precious Lord.
“The goal would be for people to not only see this but to hear it.’’ Trent said. “We will treat it with the utmost respect.’’

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.

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269 State Route 94 South

Warwick, Ny 10990

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Pittsburgh Jazz Legends: Harold Betters at 90

Pittsburgh Jazz Legends: Harold Betters at 90

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http://communityvoices.post-gazette.com/arts-entertainment-living/get-rhythm/item/41298-pittsburgh-jazz-legends-22-harold-betters-at-90
 
Pittsburgh Jazz Legends 22: Harold Betters at 90
Wednesday, 21 March 2018 11:25 AM Written by  Rich Kienzle
Trombone great Harold Betters, another Pittsburgh jazz icon, was born 90 years ago today, on March 21, 1928 in the Fayette County river city of Connellsville, Betters’ family was musical and Harold’s desire to play trumpet (already claimed by his brother Jim) gave way to trombone His youngest brother Jerry (who died in 2007) sang and became an ace drummer for decades. A fan of Tommy Dorsey’s smooth melodic trombone and Jack Teagarden’s hot swing improvisations, Harold later embraced bebop and the modern trombone of J. J. Johnson.
His mother worked to get him to Ithaca College in New York , where he studied music education (he never had interest in teaching). He spent another year in Brooklyn at the Conservatory of Music. Racial prejudice was present in Connellsville, though it never hit him hard until he joined the Army. Wanting to play in the 308thArmy band at Camp Edwards in Massachusetts, a bigoted commander resisted until Betters’ mother arrived and in person, forcefully argued his case.
After insisting he take a test, Betters was voted into the band. Following his discharge, he spent time in New York before setting up shop in Connellsville around 1953. He worked locally and later toured in a band with topical comedian and civil rights activist Dick Gregory. He later spent time in the Ray Charles Orchestra, sickened by the segregation he saw in the South.
While close to many of other trombone greats like Johnson, Jeannette native Slide Hampton and Kai Winding, traveling never agreed with Betters, who returned to the area and began a regional career in local clubs like the Pitt Pot, the Pink Cloud and the Encore. His jazz approach, aggressive but pragmatic, stressed melody to please the less jazz-minded audience members, unleashing the improvisation on the hotter tunes. That idea enhanced his status as an entertainer able to dazzle jazz fans and reach the mainstream. In the 60’s, Merv Griffin visited the Encore, heard Betters, and booked him on his variety show. The trombonist later guested on Mike Douglas’s syndicated daytime show when it was based in Cleveland.
1962: At The Encore.The Encore Cocktail Lounge was located in Shadyside. Accompanying Betters were pianist John Hughes, drummer Joe Ashliman and bass player Al O’Brian.

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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Pittsburgh Jazz Legends: Harold Betters at 90

Pittsburgh Jazz Legends: Harold Betters at 90

jazzLogo.jpg

shem.gif
http://communityvoices.post-gazette.com/arts-entertainment-living/get-rhythm/item/41298-pittsburgh-jazz-legends-22-harold-betters-at-90
 
Pittsburgh Jazz Legends 22: Harold Betters at 90
Wednesday, 21 March 2018 11:25 AM Written by  Rich Kienzle
Trombone great Harold Betters, another Pittsburgh jazz icon, was born 90 years ago today, on March 21, 1928 in the Fayette County river city of Connellsville, Betters’ family was musical and Harold’s desire to play trumpet (already claimed by his brother Jim) gave way to trombone His youngest brother Jerry (who died in 2007) sang and became an ace drummer for decades. A fan of Tommy Dorsey’s smooth melodic trombone and Jack Teagarden’s hot swing improvisations, Harold later embraced bebop and the modern trombone of J. J. Johnson.
His mother worked to get him to Ithaca College in New York , where he studied music education (he never had interest in teaching). He spent another year in Brooklyn at the Conservatory of Music. Racial prejudice was present in Connellsville, though it never hit him hard until he joined the Army. Wanting to play in the 308thArmy band at Camp Edwards in Massachusetts, a bigoted commander resisted until Betters’ mother arrived and in person, forcefully argued his case.
After insisting he take a test, Betters was voted into the band. Following his discharge, he spent time in New York before setting up shop in Connellsville around 1953. He worked locally and later toured in a band with topical comedian and civil rights activist Dick Gregory. He later spent time in the Ray Charles Orchestra, sickened by the segregation he saw in the South.
While close to many of other trombone greats like Johnson, Jeannette native Slide Hampton and Kai Winding, traveling never agreed with Betters, who returned to the area and began a regional career in local clubs like the Pitt Pot, the Pink Cloud and the Encore. His jazz approach, aggressive but pragmatic, stressed melody to please the less jazz-minded audience members, unleashing the improvisation on the hotter tunes. That idea enhanced his status as an entertainer able to dazzle jazz fans and reach the mainstream. In the 60’s, Merv Griffin visited the Encore, heard Betters, and booked him on his variety show. The trombonist later guested on Mike Douglas’s syndicated daytime show when it was based in Cleveland.
1962: At The Encore.The Encore Cocktail Lounge was located in Shadyside. Accompanying Betters were pianist John Hughes, drummer Joe Ashliman and bass player Al O’Brian.

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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The tragic life of Red Sun, comic figure in Louis Armstrong book | NOLA.com

The tragic life of Red Sun, comic figure in Louis Armstrong book | NOLA.com

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http://www.nola.com/vintage/2018/03/the_tragic_life_of_red_sun_com.html
 
The tragic life of Red Sun, comic figure in Louis Armstrong book
By James Karst, NOLA.comThe Times-Picayune Updated Mar 18; Posted Mar 18

A story about the death of Arthur Brooks, AKA Red Sun, from Jan. 3, 1918.
Among the characters Louis Armstronginteracted with as a child growing up in New Orleans is a boy he calls Red Sun. Armstrong, in his 1952 autobiography, introduces Red Sun as the central figure in one of the “funny incidents” that occurred while the future jazz great was incarcerated at the city’s Colored Waifs Home, a reformatory at which he served at least two stints and where he became the starof the home’s brass band.

Louis Armstrong, 11, parading on Memorial Day in 1913
It was perhaps his first public appearance as a member of the Waifs Home band
Armstrong and other children under the care of Capt. Joseph Jones at the home were doing drills on the campus one day when a child riding bareback “on a real beautiful horse” approached, he writes. (In an interview on “The Mike Douglas Show” in January of 1964, Armstrong repeats the anecdote but says the children had been playing ball when they saw the horse.)
“We all wondered who it could be,” Armstrong writes in “Satchmo: My Life in New Orleans.” “Mr. Jones stopped the drill and waited with us while we watched the horse and rider come towards us. To our amazement it was Red Sun.”
The boy, who was often in trouble with the law (“he would steal everything which was not nailed down,” Armstrong writes), had only recently been released from the home, so his return was a surprise.
As the boys gathered around to admire the horse and greet Red Sun, Jones asked him how he had acquired the animal.
“I have been working,” Red Sun answered, according to Armstrong. “I had such a good job that I was able to buy the horse.”
Red Sun spent the day at the waifs home, which was located near the intersection of Conti Street and City Park Avenue. The other children took rides on the horse, and Red Sun stayed for dinner. “Oh, we had a ball!” Armstrong writes.
After the meal, Armstrong played “Taps” on the bugle, and Red Sun hopped on his horse and rode off into the sunset. The children who remained marveled at how Red Sun had turned his life around.
Armstrong writes that a day later (or three days later, he says in the Mike Douglas interview), an official from the waifs home marched Red Sun into Jones’ office. He had been arrested for stealing the horse.
*******
Armstrong is not known to have addressed the life of Red Sun beyond his writing and interview about the episode with the horse. But details about the young man are sprinkled throughout public records and New Orleans newspapers of the early 20th century. They tell a sadder tale, confirming his many arrests and revealing his violent death as a teenager, just as Armstrong was finding himself as a professional musician. And they also show his real name: Arthur Brooks.
Brooks lived in Algiers with his mother, Eleanor Hoffman. (In the Mike Douglas interview, Armstrong notes that the job that purportedly supplied Red Sun with the money to buy the horse was at a dairy in the West Bank community.) He was identified in numerous newspaper stories as having been arrested or sought by police between 1915 and 1918. (Armstrong served at least two stints at the Colored Waifs Home, one in 1910and one from 1913 to mid-1914; it’s not clear when Red Sun’s arrest for stealing a horse occurred.) Though Red Sun is most commonly given as his alias, it also appears as Red Son and even Rising Sun.

Exclusive: New details emerge about Satchmo’s arrest at 9
Future jazz star was accused of gleaning brass from ruins of burned building
Brooks was accused in May of 1915 of throwing a rock or brick at a woman from whom he stole a purse in Algiers, just days after he had been released from jail for theft from Standard Oil, according to reports in the local newspapers.
In 1916, Brooks was accused of crimes including stealing rope from the Southern Pacific Railway, trying to burglarize the home of man who ran a dairy in Algiers and shooting a pistol at an ice cream shop near the intersection of Verret and Newton streets.
That November, two police officers and a civilian spotted Brooks eating a cheese sandwich near a canal around the corner from his home on Saux Lane in Algiers. They confronted him for reasons that are not explained in newspaper accounts of the time, and one of them shot him in the stomach after he reportedly “made a motion to draw a weapon from his hip pocket.”
Brooks was later found to be unarmed, but he was arrested at his house anyway, as was his mother. He escaped from a hospital while he was undergoing treatment, wrote the New Orleans States.
Arthur Brooks’ short, tragic life came to a violent end when he was shot in the back of the head on Jan. 3, 1918. Late that morning, he entered an out-of-service Southern Pacific train at Toulouse and North Prieur streets, in what’s now the Lafitte Greenway.
Richard M. Scheiner, a private guard for the railroad, said later in an interview that he saw Brooks in a railcar trying to remove a brass handle from a door, an alleged crime reminiscent of Armstrong’s arrest in 1910.
Scheiner confronted the man later identified as Brooks, and Brooks pulled out a pistol and began shooting. Scheiner, who was hit in the abdomen, returned fire. 
“I followed him to the platform,” Scheiner later told the New Orleans Item from his bed at Charity Hospital, “and as he endeavored to step down I shot him through the head and killed him.”
Scheiner survived his injuries. Brooks died at the scene. According to his death certificate on file with the Secretary of State’s Office, he was 18 years old. The cause of death was listed as “penetrating and perforating gunshot wound of chest, abdomen and head, int. and ext. hemorrhage.”
“Deceased was unmarried, a laborer and resided at Saux Lane, Algiers,” the coroner’s report concludes.
 

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