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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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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.
 

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Jay Leonhart on Concert Window

Jay Leonhart on Concert Window

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Hello everyone:
I will be performing a live broadcast of my music on Concert Window tonight at 8 PM EDT. Wherever you are in the world, you can tune in! I’ll be taking requests and answering your questions. It will happen at 8PM https://www.concertwindow.com/78817-jayleonhart. Hope you can join me!
 
Thank you!
 
Jay
 

 

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Jay Leonhart
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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Jay Leonhart on Concert Window

Jay Leonhart on Concert Window

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www.jayleonhart.com
 

 

Hello everyone:
I will be performing a live broadcast of my music on Concert Window tonight at 8 PM EDT. Wherever you are in the world, you can tune in! I’ll be taking requests and answering your questions. It will happen at 8PM https://www.concertwindow.com/78817-jayleonhart. Hope you can join me!
 
Thank you!
 
Jay
 

 

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Jay Leonhart
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Chancellor Music Co. | PO Box 6, Hope, NJ 07844
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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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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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CDs, vinyl are outselling digital downloads for the first time since 2011 – The Washington Post

CDs, vinyl are outselling digital downloads for the first time since 2011 – The Washington Post

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CDs, vinyl are outselling digital downloads for the first time since 2011
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A vinyl record is played outside a record store during the Record Store Day in Paris in April 2015.  (Etienne Laurent/EPA)
Digital downloads had a short run as the top-selling format in the music industry. It took until 2011, a decade after the original iPod came out, for their sales surpass those of CDs and vinyl records, and they were overtaken by music streaming services just a few years later.
Now, digital downloads are once again being outsold by CDs and vinyl, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.
The RIAA released its 2017 year-end revenue report on Thursday, showing that revenue from digital downloads plummeted 25 percent to $1.3 billion over the previous year. Revenue from physical products, by contrast, fell 4 percent to $1.5 billion.
Morning Mix newsletter
Stories that will be the talk of the morning.
Overall, the music industry grew for the second straight year. And with $8.7 billion in total revenue, it’s the healthiest it has been since 2008, according to the report.
Nearly all the growth was the result of the continued surge in paid music subscription services such as Spotify and Apple Music. Those services grew by more than 50 percent to $5.7 billion last year and accounted for nearly two-thirds of the industry’s revenue. Physical media accounted for 17 percent, while digital downloads made up 15 percent.
RIAA Chairman Cary Sherman called the industry’s recovery “fragile” in a Medium post Thursday.
“We‘re delighted by the progress so far, but to put the numbers in context, these two years of growth only return the business to 60 [percent] of its peak size — about where it stood 10 years ago — and that’s ignoring inflation,” Sherman wrote. “And make no mistake, there’s still much work to be done to make this growth sustainable in the long term.”
The outlook for digital downloads is bleak. This is the third year in a row they’ve posted double-digit declines, according to the RIAA. And this is the first time since 2011 they’ve fallen behind physical music media. If the trend continues, they could wind up going the way of the eight-track tape, which was overtaken in the early 1980s by the cheaper and more compact cassette.
The situation isn’t very rosy for physical media, either. CD shipments continued their years-long decline, falling 6 percent to $1.1 billion in 2017, according to the report.
But vinyl sales were up 10 percent to $395 million — a “bright spot among physical formats,” the RIAA noted. It’s a tiny fraction of the industry’s overall sales, but it was enough to persuade Sony last year to start pressing LPs again after a 28-year hiatus.

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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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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CDs, vinyl are outselling digital downloads for the first time since 2011 – The Washington Post

CDs, vinyl are outselling digital downloads for the first time since 2011 – The Washington Post

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2018/03/23/cds-vinyl-are-outselling-digital-downloads-for-the-first-time-since-2011/?mc_cid=1464a41b9a
 

CDs, vinyl are outselling digital downloads for the first time since 2011
cid:image001.jpg@01D3C6A2.10D8ED90
A vinyl record is played outside a record store during the Record Store Day in Paris in April 2015.  (Etienne Laurent/EPA)
Digital downloads had a short run as the top-selling format in the music industry. It took until 2011, a decade after the original iPod came out, for their sales surpass those of CDs and vinyl records, and they were overtaken by music streaming services just a few years later.
Now, digital downloads are once again being outsold by CDs and vinyl, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.
The RIAA released its 2017 year-end revenue report on Thursday, showing that revenue from digital downloads plummeted 25 percent to $1.3 billion over the previous year. Revenue from physical products, by contrast, fell 4 percent to $1.5 billion.
Morning Mix newsletter
Stories that will be the talk of the morning.
Overall, the music industry grew for the second straight year. And with $8.7 billion in total revenue, it’s the healthiest it has been since 2008, according to the report.
Nearly all the growth was the result of the continued surge in paid music subscription services such as Spotify and Apple Music. Those services grew by more than 50 percent to $5.7 billion last year and accounted for nearly two-thirds of the industry’s revenue. Physical media accounted for 17 percent, while digital downloads made up 15 percent.
RIAA Chairman Cary Sherman called the industry’s recovery “fragile” in a Medium post Thursday.
“We‘re delighted by the progress so far, but to put the numbers in context, these two years of growth only return the business to 60 [percent] of its peak size — about where it stood 10 years ago — and that’s ignoring inflation,” Sherman wrote. “And make no mistake, there’s still much work to be done to make this growth sustainable in the long term.”
The outlook for digital downloads is bleak. This is the third year in a row they’ve posted double-digit declines, according to the RIAA. And this is the first time since 2011 they’ve fallen behind physical music media. If the trend continues, they could wind up going the way of the eight-track tape, which was overtaken in the early 1980s by the cheaper and more compact cassette.
The situation isn’t very rosy for physical media, either. CD shipments continued their years-long decline, falling 6 percent to $1.1 billion in 2017, according to the report.
But vinyl sales were up 10 percent to $395 million — a “bright spot among physical formats,” the RIAA noted. It’s a tiny fraction of the industry’s overall sales, but it was enough to persuade Sony last year to start pressing LPs again after a 28-year hiatus.

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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Warwick, Ny 10990

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Sonny Rollins: The Sax Legend Talks Jazz, ‘Way Out West,’ and Karma | PEOPLE.com

Sonny Rollins: The Sax Legend Talks Jazz, ‘Way Out West,’ and Karma | PEOPLE.com

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Jazz Legend Sonny Rollins Can No Longer Play His Horn, But He’s Still Searching for His Sound
 
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ALEX HEIGL March 27, 2018 04:55 PM
Few, if any, genres of music have gone through a lifecycle as dynamic as jazz. It started in the most earthy way possible — underscoring turn of the century parades, brothels and barrooms (even its original spelling, “jass,” has a whiff of the unsavory). By the post-war era it had cracked the popular mainstream as swing, while simultaneously engaging intellectuals with the highbrow offshoot of bebop. Come the ’60s, jazz was trying to pull away from Earth entirely with the spiritual outbursts of the free movement, before crash landing the following decade in stadiums and the occasional pop chart with fusion. In 1987, this most visceral sound had become such a crucial part of American artistic expression that Congress designated it a national treasure.
Sonny Rollins has, more or less, had the same arc.
It’s impossible to overstate tenor sax man’s influence on the genre, but here are a few of the bullet points:

  • Between 1949 and 1955, he played or recorded with virtually every notable figure in jazz: J. J. Johnson, Bud Powell, Fats Navarro, Roy Haynes, Miles Davis, the Modern Jazz Quartet, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk and Horace Silver.
  • He kicked a heroin habit in 1955 with the then-experimental methadone treatment at the country’s only opiate addiction facility at the time, the Federal Medical Center, in Lexington, Kentucky. The clinic was later immortalized by Nelson Algren and William S. Burroughs.
  • After getting clean, he continued to play and record with jazz luminaries, releasing Saxophone Colossus, his breakthrough album (and an undisputed masterpiece), in 1956.
  • Growing dissatisfied with his own playing, by 1959 he retreated to New York City’s Williamsburg Bridge, where he spent hours each day practicing as he paced the East River. This self-imposed exile lasted nearly three years.
  • The experience inspired his “comeback” album, 1962’s The Bridge. Eight more full-lengths would follow before the end of the decade.
  • He took a hiatus in 1969 and traveled to Jamaica and India, where he lived in ashram while studying yoga and meditation.
  • He played on three tracks on the Rolling Stones’ 1981 album Tattoo You, including the hit “Waiting on Friend.”
  • He’s been awarded multiple honorary doctorates, a Grammy in 2004, a National Medal of the Arts in 2011 and was saluted at Washington DC’s annual Kennedy Center Honors in 2013.

While he initially worked in established milieus, Rollins continuously toyed with the lineups of his groups, made inroads with other styles of music, and fell in and out of vogue with the jazz cognoscenti. Little has stayed the same in his creative life, but one thing he’s never stopped doing is playing. Relentlessly self-critical and exploratory in his music, from 1971 until 2012 he was a constant presence on the world concert stage. When doctors barred him from live performance due to a pulmonary fibrosis diagnosis in 2013, Rollins turned his attention to sharing his substantial archives in the form of an exhibit at the New York Public Library and a reissue of his classic 1957 album, Way Out West. He can currently be found reading the works of major theologians and doing a lot of thinking.
PEOPLE caught up with the 87-year-old icon in February. What follows are edited excerpts from the conversation.
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How is the archiving project?
Well, you know, they’re getting it together at the New York Public Library. It’s gonna take a while, because there was a lot of stuff I didn’t know I had. Now I can get two cars in my garage. [laughs]
What sort of materials are going into the project?
Some horns; I donated one already to Oberlin. A lot of memorabilia, a lot of posters from concerts all over the world, a lot of articles, a lot of tapes of music I recorded with different bands over the years. A whole gang of stuff.
Were you big into recording yourself? Did you tape your live shows?
No, I did not. A lot of this was just stuff that accumulated over the years, but I didn’t save a lot of stuff.
Do you have any specific memories of the record that’s being reissued, Way Out West?
It was a wonderful time for me. It was maybe the first time I went out to the West Coast. You know, I’m a New York guy. I had great musicians, it was a joy for me. I had no idea whether the record was going to be a success, but here it is 60 years later, so I’m very … well, I wouldn’t say I’m surprised, but you never know what to expect in life, in music. I’m so fortunate and I’m so grateful that my life was such that I could appreciate something I did 60 years ago.
Broadly speaking, was there a big difference between the way the East and West Coast jazz scenes were doing things at the time?
Yeah, there was a difference, and not just in name only. I think in New York, that’s where the phrase “hard bop” comes from. The guys were playing in a more sinewy, blood and guts way. The guys in California were more smooth, relaxed. Not as hot, if I could put it that way.
Must be the weather.
[laughs] Maybe. When I went out there, I thought, “This is paradise!” You know, I was born in New York, I grew up with pavement and hard streets. I didn’t know there would be such a place as California.
You were probably one of the only jazz musicians to have a Mohawk for a while. I really want to know the story behind that.
Well, that was before the punk guys. I was playing down in the Five Spot — the new one, there was two of them. Anyway, there was a Native American guy in the crowd with some of the fans and on one of the breaks, we’d be outside, and he was talking with me, and so I got the idea, “Well, let’s give a little salute to the Native Americans, why not?” So it was wanting to pay some sort of homage to the First Americans here. I really hadn’t seen it in anything else but in movies, and I thought it would look cool. I’ve always been the guy who didn’t mind breaking the mold. 
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Charles Mingus supposedly said that his gift for composition came from God, but that his talent on his instrument came from work. You’ve spoken about music as a kind of quest for you, so I’m interested to see what you make of that quote.
A lot of the people I grew up with in my early teens, we all wanted to be jazz musicians — but we didn’t have the talent. It was a gift. Music is a gift. Anybody can learn music, but it’s only a few people who have a gift that are really talented enough — especially these days — to make it in this highly competitive world. So it’s definitely a gift. However, you have to apply yourself, you have to work at it. I had a gift, but I didn’t explore it enough, I feel, and that’s why I was always the guy who practiced incessantly. I was always trying to catch up and learn things.
Is that a rare mindset? Do you feel like you were isolated from other musicians in that? The phrase “cross to bear” came up in an interview last year. 
Well, I don’t want to put it quite that negatively. It was a cross to bear, but I was happily thrust upon that cross. And it’s true, I could never achieve what I wanted to, especially since I had to stop playing some years ago. I felt that I was gaining on the knowledge that I wanted to get; I felt that I was getting there. But in truth, I’m sure that if I got to that place, I would still see another mountain to climb. I feel that there’s always more to do. There’s some musicians that feel that way, and there’s some that don’t — and that’s not a criticism. There’s some guys that play and they have a natural gift and they don’t have to play anymore once they’ve reached a point of acceptance from themselves or the public. Then they go out and play golf, which is okay. But I never had the luxury of feeling like that, if you could call it a luxury.
Yeah, I don’t see you playing a lot of golf.
No, right. [laughs drily]
 
 
 
Sonny Rollins Alfie’s Theme 1973
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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I know you studied a lot of Eastern religions — how did those teachings fit into your quest as a musician?
It’s all a never-ending quest for knowledge. I’m still learning, every day. I’m still reading stuff every day. One thing that I found out in my life is that there’s only one truth, and that truth goes through every religion, every group of people, every color, every race: The Golden Rule. Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. That’s it. And no matter where you’re raised or where you’re from, if you can do that, you got it. And I’m going to paraphrase another quote I heard the other day: Do not do unto others what you would not want done unto you. This is the universal truth. You can’t deny that. And you know, I’ve heard people say it should be, “Do unto others before they can do unto you,” guys saying, “I’ve got to make sure I get mine.” If somebody feels like they’ve got to live that way, fine. I’m not going to criticize anybody. I’m just glad that I am where I am. This is what gives me a sense of a real peace.
You’ve said you believe in reincarnation. Do you believe in karma?
Oh, definitely.
Do you think you’ve built up a good amount of karma in your life?
I’m not sure. I’ve had a rough life and I’m still … who knows? I would say that I accept reincarnation — that’s a better way of putting it. I’ve got this life and then I’ve got who knows how many other lives I’ve got to account for. So maybe in this life — I doubt it — but maybe I’ve accumulated good karma. But how about all the other lives? I’m constantly unraveling my bad karma. And it’s okay, because I feel now that I’m on the right track. I feel very secure in my life. I’m sure it’s taken many, many lives for me to get here, but I still have work to do. If my karma were all shaken out, I wouldn’t have to be here on Earth right now. I’d be somewhere else, wherever that is. I’m trying to be better. We got a short life, and what are we here for? To eat ice cream and have fun with girls? No, I think we’re here to try and improve ourselves, become better people, nicer people, and that’s what I’m doing.

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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Sonny Rollins: The Sax Legend Talks Jazz, ‘Way Out West,’ and Karma | PEOPLE.com

Sonny Rollins: The Sax Legend Talks Jazz, ‘Way Out West,’ and Karma | PEOPLE.com

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http://people.com/music/sonny-rollins-retirement-way-out-west-reissue-interview/
 
Jazz Legend Sonny Rollins Can No Longer Play His Horn, But He’s Still Searching for His Sound
 
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Barbara Zanon/Redferns/Getty
ALEX HEIGL March 27, 2018 04:55 PM
Few, if any, genres of music have gone through a lifecycle as dynamic as jazz. It started in the most earthy way possible — underscoring turn of the century parades, brothels and barrooms (even its original spelling, “jass,” has a whiff of the unsavory). By the post-war era it had cracked the popular mainstream as swing, while simultaneously engaging intellectuals with the highbrow offshoot of bebop. Come the ’60s, jazz was trying to pull away from Earth entirely with the spiritual outbursts of the free movement, before crash landing the following decade in stadiums and the occasional pop chart with fusion. In 1987, this most visceral sound had become such a crucial part of American artistic expression that Congress designated it a national treasure.
Sonny Rollins has, more or less, had the same arc.
It’s impossible to overstate tenor sax man’s influence on the genre, but here are a few of the bullet points:

  • Between 1949 and 1955, he played or recorded with virtually every notable figure in jazz: J. J. Johnson, Bud Powell, Fats Navarro, Roy Haynes, Miles Davis, the Modern Jazz Quartet, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk and Horace Silver.
  • He kicked a heroin habit in 1955 with the then-experimental methadone treatment at the country’s only opiate addiction facility at the time, the Federal Medical Center, in Lexington, Kentucky. The clinic was later immortalized by Nelson Algren and William S. Burroughs.
  • After getting clean, he continued to play and record with jazz luminaries, releasing Saxophone Colossus, his breakthrough album (and an undisputed masterpiece), in 1956.
  • Growing dissatisfied with his own playing, by 1959 he retreated to New York City’s Williamsburg Bridge, where he spent hours each day practicing as he paced the East River. This self-imposed exile lasted nearly three years.
  • The experience inspired his “comeback” album, 1962’s The Bridge. Eight more full-lengths would follow before the end of the decade.
  • He took a hiatus in 1969 and traveled to Jamaica and India, where he lived in ashram while studying yoga and meditation.
  • He played on three tracks on the Rolling Stones’ 1981 album Tattoo You, including the hit “Waiting on Friend.”
  • He’s been awarded multiple honorary doctorates, a Grammy in 2004, a National Medal of the Arts in 2011 and was saluted at Washington DC’s annual Kennedy Center Honors in 2013.

While he initially worked in established milieus, Rollins continuously toyed with the lineups of his groups, made inroads with other styles of music, and fell in and out of vogue with the jazz cognoscenti. Little has stayed the same in his creative life, but one thing he’s never stopped doing is playing. Relentlessly self-critical and exploratory in his music, from 1971 until 2012 he was a constant presence on the world concert stage. When doctors barred him from live performance due to a pulmonary fibrosis diagnosis in 2013, Rollins turned his attention to sharing his substantial archives in the form of an exhibit at the New York Public Library and a reissue of his classic 1957 album, Way Out West. He can currently be found reading the works of major theologians and doing a lot of thinking.
PEOPLE caught up with the 87-year-old icon in February. What follows are edited excerpts from the conversation.
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<div class=”inner-container”> <img src=”https://peopledotcom.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/gettyimages-113851913.jpg” alt=””> </div>
 
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Rick Diamond/Getty Images
How is the archiving project?
Well, you know, they’re getting it together at the New York Public Library. It’s gonna take a while, because there was a lot of stuff I didn’t know I had. Now I can get two cars in my garage. [laughs]
What sort of materials are going into the project?
Some horns; I donated one already to Oberlin. A lot of memorabilia, a lot of posters from concerts all over the world, a lot of articles, a lot of tapes of music I recorded with different bands over the years. A whole gang of stuff.
Were you big into recording yourself? Did you tape your live shows?
No, I did not. A lot of this was just stuff that accumulated over the years, but I didn’t save a lot of stuff.
Do you have any specific memories of the record that’s being reissued, Way Out West?
It was a wonderful time for me. It was maybe the first time I went out to the West Coast. You know, I’m a New York guy. I had great musicians, it was a joy for me. I had no idea whether the record was going to be a success, but here it is 60 years later, so I’m very … well, I wouldn’t say I’m surprised, but you never know what to expect in life, in music. I’m so fortunate and I’m so grateful that my life was such that I could appreciate something I did 60 years ago.
Broadly speaking, was there a big difference between the way the East and West Coast jazz scenes were doing things at the time?
Yeah, there was a difference, and not just in name only. I think in New York, that’s where the phrase “hard bop” comes from. The guys were playing in a more sinewy, blood and guts way. The guys in California were more smooth, relaxed. Not as hot, if I could put it that way.
Must be the weather.
[laughs] Maybe. When I went out there, I thought, “This is paradise!” You know, I was born in New York, I grew up with pavement and hard streets. I didn’t know there would be such a place as California.
You were probably one of the only jazz musicians to have a Mohawk for a while. I really want to know the story behind that.
Well, that was before the punk guys. I was playing down in the Five Spot — the new one, there was two of them. Anyway, there was a Native American guy in the crowd with some of the fans and on one of the breaks, we’d be outside, and he was talking with me, and so I got the idea, “Well, let’s give a little salute to the Native Americans, why not?” So it was wanting to pay some sort of homage to the First Americans here. I really hadn’t seen it in anything else but in movies, and I thought it would look cool. I’ve always been the guy who didn’t mind breaking the mold. 
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Central Press/Getty Images
Charles Mingus supposedly said that his gift for composition came from God, but that his talent on his instrument came from work. You’ve spoken about music as a kind of quest for you, so I’m interested to see what you make of that quote.
A lot of the people I grew up with in my early teens, we all wanted to be jazz musicians — but we didn’t have the talent. It was a gift. Music is a gift. Anybody can learn music, but it’s only a few people who have a gift that are really talented enough — especially these days — to make it in this highly competitive world. So it’s definitely a gift. However, you have to apply yourself, you have to work at it. I had a gift, but I didn’t explore it enough, I feel, and that’s why I was always the guy who practiced incessantly. I was always trying to catch up and learn things.
Is that a rare mindset? Do you feel like you were isolated from other musicians in that? The phrase “cross to bear” came up in an interview last year. 
Well, I don’t want to put it quite that negatively. It was a cross to bear, but I was happily thrust upon that cross. And it’s true, I could never achieve what I wanted to, especially since I had to stop playing some years ago. I felt that I was gaining on the knowledge that I wanted to get; I felt that I was getting there. But in truth, I’m sure that if I got to that place, I would still see another mountain to climb. I feel that there’s always more to do. There’s some musicians that feel that way, and there’s some that don’t — and that’s not a criticism. There’s some guys that play and they have a natural gift and they don’t have to play anymore once they’ve reached a point of acceptance from themselves or the public. Then they go out and play golf, which is okay. But I never had the luxury of feeling like that, if you could call it a luxury.
Yeah, I don’t see you playing a lot of golf.
No, right. [laughs drily]
 
 
 
Sonny Rollins Alfie’s Theme 1973
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
<div class=”player-unavailable”><h1 class=”message”>An error occurred.</h1><div class=”submessage”><a href=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCDv5NK54u0″ target=”_blank”>Try watching this video on www.youtube.com</a>, or enable JavaScript if it is disabled in your browser.</div></div>
I know you studied a lot of Eastern religions — how did those teachings fit into your quest as a musician?
It’s all a never-ending quest for knowledge. I’m still learning, every day. I’m still reading stuff every day. One thing that I found out in my life is that there’s only one truth, and that truth goes through every religion, every group of people, every color, every race: The Golden Rule. Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. That’s it. And no matter where you’re raised or where you’re from, if you can do that, you got it. And I’m going to paraphrase another quote I heard the other day: Do not do unto others what you would not want done unto you. This is the universal truth. You can’t deny that. And you know, I’ve heard people say it should be, “Do unto others before they can do unto you,” guys saying, “I’ve got to make sure I get mine.” If somebody feels like they’ve got to live that way, fine. I’m not going to criticize anybody. I’m just glad that I am where I am. This is what gives me a sense of a real peace.
You’ve said you believe in reincarnation. Do you believe in karma?
Oh, definitely.
Do you think you’ve built up a good amount of karma in your life?
I’m not sure. I’ve had a rough life and I’m still … who knows? I would say that I accept reincarnation — that’s a better way of putting it. I’ve got this life and then I’ve got who knows how many other lives I’ve got to account for. So maybe in this life — I doubt it — but maybe I’ve accumulated good karma. But how about all the other lives? I’m constantly unraveling my bad karma. And it’s okay, because I feel now that I’m on the right track. I feel very secure in my life. I’m sure it’s taken many, many lives for me to get here, but I still have work to do. If my karma were all shaken out, I wouldn’t have to be here on Earth right now. I’d be somewhere else, wherever that is. I’m trying to be better. We got a short life, and what are we here for? To eat ice cream and have fun with girls? No, I think we’re here to try and improve ourselves, become better people, nicer people, and that’s what I’m doing.

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

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

CHECK OUT OUR NEW YOUTUBE VIDEO

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

Copyright (C) 2018 All rights reserved.

Jazz Promo Services

269 State Route 94 South

Warwick, Ny 10990

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CDs, vinyl are outselling digital downloads for the first time since 2011 – The Washington Post

CDs, vinyl are outselling digital downloads for the first time since 2011 – The Washington Post

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https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2018/03/the-webs-vinyl-superstore-is-trying-to-get-even-bi.html
 
Can One Company Catalog Every Record Ever Made?
Discogs’ ambitions have grown from being a simple database for record collectors to scouring the globe for music no one even knows exists.
At tech conferences and venture-capital firms around the world, web developers and programmers love to mention the buzzy idea that their app or site is going to “disrupt” the status quo, even if that rarely comes to pass. But for almost 20 years, Discogs has managed to actually rattle the cages of the music industry and the undulating marketplace for buying and selling physical copies of albums. Now, it’s trying to expand its reach around the globe and find all the music that’s never been found before.
Get Free Access to the World’s Largest Archive of Live Recorded Music with the Paste & Daytrotter Mobile App
Launched in 2000 by Portland, Oregon-based programmer and DJ Kevin Lewandowski, the site’s original intent was to help folks track and share information about their record collections. But as word spread among music lovers and the site’s user base grew, Discogs evolved into a crowd-sourced hub to find information about the discographies of artists from around the world. It may not get deep into the historical details of the recording sessions, but there’s no better place to track, for example, the 674 different versions of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, or the 280 pressings of the first Velvet Underground album that are known to exist. 
The final step of its development runs parallel to the recent resurgence in vinyl sales, as the site’s programmers responded to requests to open up a space for users to buy and sell records. Users flocked to the site, lured by its simple-to-use platform and a robust feedback system to help slap down shady dealers. The site takes a small percentage of each sale, so the move has provided Discogs with a steady revenue stream. Last year alone, it claims to have facilitated the sale of eight million records. Numbers like that were enough to knock out competitors like GEMM, which folded in 2015, and to put a dent in the number of folks selling pre-owned music on eBay and Amazon. 
“When we announce that a record sells for $15,000 in a physical format as a collector’s item, surely that allows for a new piece by certain artists to be priced a little higher.”
This disruption is starting to trickle down into brick-and-mortar shops and record dealers, who are utilizing the information on Discogs concerning previous sales of a particular record to figure out what they can safely sell it for. “I can go into a record store and ask if they use the site,” says Chad Dahlstrom, Discogs’ CEO, “and sometimes they’ll say no. But then I’ll notice they have it open on a computer there. And they’ll tell me, ‘Oh we just use it to price, but we don’t sell on it.’ So everybody’s using it in different ways.” 
Dahlstrom joined Discogs about four years ago, having previously worked at CD Baby, a Portland company that helps artists sell and promote new music. Since then, an office of 16 employees has grown into a much larger operation with a satellite office in the Netherlands to be able to respond quickly to their European users. Now they’re looking to open a third office in Japan. Along the way, Discogs has hit a few milestones. They boast more than four million active registered users and have been seeing some impressive deals, like an original copy of Prince’s Black Album on grey vinyl that sold last month for over $5,000 and an unreleased 45’ of the Sex Pistols’ “God Save the Queen” on A&M Records, which one lucky collector dropped nearly $15,000 on this past November. 
While they don’t have data or metrics to truly prove this out, Discogs’ head of PR and strategic partnerships Jeffrey Smith believes that news like that is having an effect on the way some labels are responding amid the still-lucrative vinyl resurgence. “When we announce that a record sells for $15,000 in a physical format as a collector’s item,” he says, “surely that allows for a new piece by certain artists to be priced a little higher.” 
This all may sound like a playground for serious collectors or obsessives who need to own every version of, say, Genesis’s Foxtrot. But a look at Discogs’ top-selling records from January tells a different story. Number one on that list: Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon. Also appearing the top 20 were common-core fare like ThrillerRumours and Hotel California.
Read: 10 Classic Rock Albums You Should Own on Vinyl
What that reveals is exactly why Discogs has been able to be such a disruptor in the online music community. It’s earning enough attention worldwide to be able to attract more casual music fans who are content to fill their shelves with canonical albums instead of esoteric rarities. Another factor is how Discogs has managed its growth. One new feature, “Tracks,” lets users see all the different places where a particular song has been released. According to Dahlstrom, that added over 77 million new URLs to the site’s servers. They’re also making sure to support the many dealers who rely on the site by setting up “Crate Diggers” events where sellers can offer their wares in person, and where Discogs employees can meet their users face-to-face. 
Beyond that, says Dahlstrom, he and the rest of the Discogs team have that one big goal in their sights: cataloguing every record ever made. “It’s kind of hard to estimate what percentage is on there,” he says. “I’m pretty sure we’re quite over 50, 60 percent. But if I got into South America, we don’t have nearly as many contributors down there, where there’s a tremendous amount of music. You go east into Russia, India, China, South Korea. There’s archives of music there that we don’t even know about. That international expansion is something we’re focused on. And the marketplace gets to come along for the ride.”
 

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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Can One Company Catalog Every Record Ever Made? :: Paste

Can One Company Catalog Every Record Ever Made? :: Paste

jazzLogo.jpg

shem.gif
https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2018/03/the-webs-vinyl-superstore-is-trying-to-get-even-bi.html
 
Can One Company Catalog Every Record Ever Made?
Discogs’ ambitions have grown from being a simple database for record collectors to scouring the globe for music no one even knows exists.
At tech conferences and venture-capital firms around the world, web developers and programmers love to mention the buzzy idea that their app or site is going to “disrupt” the status quo, even if that rarely comes to pass. But for almost 20 years, Discogs has managed to actually rattle the cages of the music industry and the undulating marketplace for buying and selling physical copies of albums. Now, it’s trying to expand its reach around the globe and find all the music that’s never been found before.
Get Free Access to the World’s Largest Archive of Live Recorded Music with the Paste & Daytrotter Mobile App
Launched in 2000 by Portland, Oregon-based programmer and DJ Kevin Lewandowski, the site’s original intent was to help folks track and share information about their record collections. But as word spread among music lovers and the site’s user base grew, Discogs evolved into a crowd-sourced hub to find information about the discographies of artists from around the world. It may not get deep into the historical details of the recording sessions, but there’s no better place to track, for example, the 674 different versions of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, or the 280 pressings of the first Velvet Underground album that are known to exist. 
The final step of its development runs parallel to the recent resurgence in vinyl sales, as the site’s programmers responded to requests to open up a space for users to buy and sell records. Users flocked to the site, lured by its simple-to-use platform and a robust feedback system to help slap down shady dealers. The site takes a small percentage of each sale, so the move has provided Discogs with a steady revenue stream. Last year alone, it claims to have facilitated the sale of eight million records. Numbers like that were enough to knock out competitors like GEMM, which folded in 2015, and to put a dent in the number of folks selling pre-owned music on eBay and Amazon. 
“When we announce that a record sells for $15,000 in a physical format as a collector’s item, surely that allows for a new piece by certain artists to be priced a little higher.”
This disruption is starting to trickle down into brick-and-mortar shops and record dealers, who are utilizing the information on Discogs concerning previous sales of a particular record to figure out what they can safely sell it for. “I can go into a record store and ask if they use the site,” says Chad Dahlstrom, Discogs’ CEO, “and sometimes they’ll say no. But then I’ll notice they have it open on a computer there. And they’ll tell me, ‘Oh we just use it to price, but we don’t sell on it.’ So everybody’s using it in different ways.” 
Dahlstrom joined Discogs about four years ago, having previously worked at CD Baby, a Portland company that helps artists sell and promote new music. Since then, an office of 16 employees has grown into a much larger operation with a satellite office in the Netherlands to be able to respond quickly to their European users. Now they’re looking to open a third office in Japan. Along the way, Discogs has hit a few milestones. They boast more than four million active registered users and have been seeing some impressive deals, like an original copy of Prince’s Black Album on grey vinyl that sold last month for over $5,000 and an unreleased 45’ of the Sex Pistols’ “God Save the Queen” on A&M Records, which one lucky collector dropped nearly $15,000 on this past November. 
While they don’t have data or metrics to truly prove this out, Discogs’ head of PR and strategic partnerships Jeffrey Smith believes that news like that is having an effect on the way some labels are responding amid the still-lucrative vinyl resurgence. “When we announce that a record sells for $15,000 in a physical format as a collector’s item,” he says, “surely that allows for a new piece by certain artists to be priced a little higher.” 
This all may sound like a playground for serious collectors or obsessives who need to own every version of, say, Genesis’s Foxtrot. But a look at Discogs’ top-selling records from January tells a different story. Number one on that list: Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon. Also appearing the top 20 were common-core fare like ThrillerRumours and Hotel California.
Read: 10 Classic Rock Albums You Should Own on Vinyl
What that reveals is exactly why Discogs has been able to be such a disruptor in the online music community. It’s earning enough attention worldwide to be able to attract more casual music fans who are content to fill their shelves with canonical albums instead of esoteric rarities. Another factor is how Discogs has managed its growth. One new feature, “Tracks,” lets users see all the different places where a particular song has been released. According to Dahlstrom, that added over 77 million new URLs to the site’s servers. They’re also making sure to support the many dealers who rely on the site by setting up “Crate Diggers” events where sellers can offer their wares in person, and where Discogs employees can meet their users face-to-face. 
Beyond that, says Dahlstrom, he and the rest of the Discogs team have that one big goal in their sights: cataloguing every record ever made. “It’s kind of hard to estimate what percentage is on there,” he says. “I’m pretty sure we’re quite over 50, 60 percent. But if I got into South America, we don’t have nearly as many contributors down there, where there’s a tremendous amount of music. You go east into Russia, India, China, South Korea. There’s archives of music there that we don’t even know about. That international expansion is something we’re focused on. And the marketplace gets to come along for the ride.”
 

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

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

CHECK OUT OUR NEW YOUTUBE VIDEO

Unsubscribe | Update your profile | Forward to a friend

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

Copyright (C) 2018 All rights reserved.

Jazz Promo Services

269 State Route 94 South

Warwick, Ny 10990

Add us to your address book

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Buell Neidlinger, Acclaimed Genre-Crossing Bassist, Dies at 82 – The New York Times

Buell Neidlinger, Acclaimed Genre-Crossing Bassist, Dies at 82 – The New York Times

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shem.gif
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/25/obituaries/buell-neidlinger-dies.html?hpw
 
Buell Neidlinger, Acclaimed Genre-Crossing Bassist, Dies at 82
By GIOVANNI RUSSONELLO  MARCH 25, 2018


Buell Neidlinger in January. He thrived in almost any musical idiom. Jim Carroll
 
Buell Neidlinger, a masterly bassist who had a significant role in the establishment of free jazz, took part in the premieres of works by John Cage and Igor Stravinsky and had credits on numerous hit songs and soundtracks, died on March 16 at his home in Whidbey Island, Wash. He was 82.
His wife, Margaret Storer, said the cause was a heart attack.
Mr. Neidlinger’s virtuosity manifested itself early, first on the cello, which he played proficiently before his teens, and then on the upright bass. So did his ability to thrive in almost any musical idiom.
He attended Yale for one year, studying classical music and playing in a Dixieland group called Eli’s Chosen Six. Dropping out, he headed to New York, his hometown, to find work on the jazz scene.
“I was going to Yale with a bunch of people that were so much like the people who were running the McCarthy hearings,” he said in a 2003 interview with the website All About Jazz. “So I bailed out.”
In New York, he apprenticed with Walter Page, a former bassist for the Count Basie Orchestra and onetime leader of the Oklahoma City Blue Devils. He also sometimes played with Billie Holiday on club dates in her final years.
In 1956, he joined Cecil Taylor, a young pianist and composer intent on disrupting the fixed linguistics of bebop and hard-bop; Mr. Taylor’s innovations in this period helped establish the avant-garde form known as free jazz. Mr. Neidlinger played with Mr. Taylor’s groups until 1961.
At 24, he also recorded an album with Mr. Taylor, the cheekily titled “New York City R&B.” His playing on the album is rangy but precise — effecting a loping swing on “O.P.,” his own composition, and a faster, more insistent style on Mr. Taylor’s “Cell Walk for Celeste,” reflecting the influence of big-band bassists.
The album was released under Mr. Neidlinger’s name on the Candid label, then reissued by Columbia, this time with Mr. Taylor credited as a co-leader. It would become a classic document of free jazz’s inchoate years.
But Mr. Neidlinger saw early on that a career in jazz could spell hardship. “Being out of town all the time and living in cheap hotels, starving to death,” he told All About Jazz. “And so I was determined to learn to do every style I could, and it’s put me in good stead.”

Mr. Neidlinger teamed with the jazz musician Anthony Braxton, left, for one of his albums for his label, K2B2.
He complemented his jazz gigs with studio work in the early 1960s, recording on a number of pop singles, including Tony Bennett’s “I Left My Heart in San Francisco.”
But after being caught with heroin in his possession, Mr. Neidlinger lost his cabaret card — the New York City-issued license required of musicians playing in nightclubs — and moved to Providence, R.I. He kicked his drug habit while immersing himself again in classical music.
Later he became a member of the Houston Symphony and received a series of performance grants. He played on the debuts of new works by Cage, Stravinsky and other prominent composers and eventually landed a spot in the prestigious Boston Symphony Orchestra.
In 1971, he moved to California, lured by the thriving studio work there. He was hired by the California Institute of the Arts and became the principal bassist for the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. He spent almost 30 years as the principal bassist in the Warner Bros. Studio Orchestra, and recorded with pop stars like Barbra Streisand, Dolly Parton and the Eagles.
As with so many virtuoso musicians a level below stardom, much of his work was unattributed. Mr. Neidlinger liked to tell the story about the night when he was awakened after midnight by an assistant to Ms. Streisand. He went to the studio, he said, and helped her finish writing the song “Evergreen,” which became the theme song of her 1976 movie “A Star Is Born” and a hit as a commercial release.
“She never gave me any publishing on it,” he said, referring to a credit that would allow him to collect royalties. “If she had, I’d be living in Monaco or something.”
But to some degree Mr. Neidlinger took business into his own hands; in 1979 he started a small record label, K2B2, with the saxophonist Marty Krystall. In 1980 the label released “Ready for the 90’s” as Krystall Klear and the Buells, Mr. Neidlinger’s first album as a leader since “New York City R&B.”
Around this time Mr. Neidlinger began his relationship with Ms. Storer, also a professional bassist. His previous three marriages had ended in divorce. She survives him, along with two children from the previous marriages: a daughter, Miranda Neidlinger; and a son, Mike.
Buell Neidlinger was born in New York City on March 2, 1936, and grew up there and in Westport, Conn. His name combined those of his parents: the former Jane Buell and Roger Neidlinger, who ran a business leasing cargo spaces on ships.
After a career of more than 40 years, Mr. Neidlinger moved to Whidbey Island in 1997, where he played in a string quartet every week with Ms. Storer and continued to release albums on K2B2. His latest album, “The Happenings: Music of Herbie Nichols,” featuring Mr. Krystall and the guitarist Harold Alden, came out last year.

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Jazz At Columbus Ave. – YouTube

Jazz At Columbus Ave. – YouTube

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John Windhurst (tp), Jim Andrews (p), Buell Neidlinger (b), Walter Gifford (ds) Album:” John Windhurst Quartet / Jazz At Columbus Ave ” 

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Kit McClure Band on Joan Rivers Show – YouTube

Kit McClure Band on Joan Rivers Show – YouTube

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A Cozy Jazz Club, if You Can Find It – The New York Times

A Cozy Jazz Club, if You Can Find It – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/22/nyregion/a-cozy-jazz-club-if-you-can-find-it.html?hp
 
A Cozy Jazz Club, if You Can Find It
By MATTHEW SEDACCA MARCH 22, 2018
 

 
Tomi Jazz, in Midtown East. Mark Abramson for The New York Times
Around sunset, faint echoes of chatter and saxophone wails start to leak out of a basement-level steel door on East 53rd Street, between Second and Third Avenues. Customers descend the staircase — as if the ghostly melodies have summoned them there — to press a discrete buzzer. Seconds later, the door creaks open, revealing a speakeasy-style Japanese whisky bar and music club called Tomi Jazz.
Behind a wooden counter, bartenders rhythmically rock cocktail shakers. They garnish snow-white cocktails with smoldering cinnamon sticks for off-the-clock diplomats, while I.T. consultants and investment bankers sip Nikka and Yamazaki whisky. More liquor bottles sit on dusty shelves, alongside weathered photos of vintage music acts, a trumpet and woven lamps. After midnight, uninhibited couples get close at an L-shape table, just a foot away from the live music.

 
One musician, who regularly performs at Tomi, said the intimate space is perfect for testing experimental material. “We can feel what they feel,” she said. Mark Abramson for The New York Times
In the 1980s, Japanese businessmen flocked to Midtown Manhattan, following a surge in Japan’s economy. The East Village largely drew younger, more artistic types from Japan, who patronized restaurants and bars, including the original Tomi Jazz, which was part of a Little Tokyo zone around East 9th Street. But in 2000, the club relocated to cater to those Japanese businessmen in Midtown, many of whom also frequented izakayas and hostess bars in the neighborhood.
Raymond Fasanella, a regular who works in the United Nations’ publishing division, first visited the exclusive bar as a guest of a Japanese friend over 20 years ago at its original East Village location. Back then, Mr. Fasanella said, the scene was mostly a mix of white-collar Japanese men from uptown and students, smoking and drinking single malt whisky.
“You could walk out there at seven in the morning,” Mr. Fasanella said, “nothing but black cars in the street waiting for the customers.”

 
After midnight, uninhibited couples often get close at an L-shape table, just a foot away from the live music. Mark Abramson for The New York Times
By 2010, however, Ken Mukohata, a former nightclub manager and Tomi regular, had taken over the space. He opened the bar to anyone who could find it, began to schedule candlelit jazz performances and decorated the walls with silver Heineken and Southern Comfort plaques and calligraphic tapestries.
“These things make people feel nostalgic, calm,” he said about the junk-shop vibe. “Many people, if you look at their apartments, it’s a sleek style. This place, it has a low ceiling. It purposely looks like we forgot to paint.”
Just hours after landing at Kennedy International Airport from Tokyo on a Monday night, Yuki Fujisaki found himself at the bar, bobbing his head to a guitar duo’s rendition of a John Coltrane number. “We don’t have a lot of places like this in Tokyo,” Mr. Fujisaki, a software engineer, said. Back home, he explained, it’s difficult to find “cozy” venues, where musicians can easily reach over and take a swig of customers’ shochu mid-set.

 
A waitress at Tomi Jazz, a Japanese whisky bar and music lounge that also offers izakaya fare like wasabi octopus or chicken wings. Mark Abramson for The New York Times
The bar also offers izakaya fare. Sean Anderson, a derivatives lawyer, picked at his wasabi octopus while chatting with Tomi’s ponytailed sound engineer, Kota Mori, about Japanese craft brewers. Mr. Anderson said after a client brought him to Tomi Jazz a year ago for chicken wings and sake, he returned 11 times over the next 14 days.
On a recent late-winter night, as customers slurped down fat strands of udon and avocado spaghetti, the saxophonist Shoko Igarashi and the pianist Casimir Liberski serenaded them with classics like “Poor Butterfly” and “All of You.” Ms. Igarashi, who regularly performs at Tomi, said the intimate space is perfect for testing experimental material.
“We can feel what they feel,” Ms. Igarashi said, imitating diners recoiling.
Since opening Tomi Jazz to the public, Mr. Mukohata says the clientele has grown far beyond his expectations, many drawn by the speakeasy aesthetic. Recently, he added to the mystique by removing a worn “tomijazz” sign, now hanging on the staircase inside. It worked, but maybe a little too well.
“Across the street there’s a deli,” said Nobu Hirooka, a Tomi employee. “The deli owner always complained that people would come asking ‘Where’s Tomi Jazz?’”

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The New Nightlife Mayor Has Arrived – Where Do We Go from Here?

The New Nightlife Mayor Has Arrived – Where Do We Go from Here?

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https://nitelifeexchange.com/the-new-nightlife-mayor-has-arrived-now-where-do-we-go-from-here/
 
The New Nightlife Mayor Has Arrived – Where Do We Go from Here?
March 23, 2018 NiteLife Exchange Ad Lib on NiteLife 0

NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio signs legislation to repeal the Cabaret Law November 27, 2017. Edwin J. Torres/Mayoral Photography Office.
 
By Marilyn Lester**** Nightlife, the naughty stepchild of live entertainment, may finally be finding redemption and validation with the long-awaited repeal of the so-called “Cabaret Law” and the creation of the City Office of Nightlife. Mayor Bill de Blasio signed the legislation to appoint a New York Nightlife Mayor into law in September 2017, followed by the repeal of the Cabaret Law in November. We are now at a turning point in which really significant opportunities for the cabaret community are on the horizon.
But to figure out where we’re going, let’s take a look at where we’ve been.
Throughout history, many have called this great City the “cultural capital of the world.” New York has always been a crucible of the arts and place of artistic innovation––yet, there’s been a deep, pervasive belief that nothing good happens after dark. Nightlife, born in the post-World War I era, had the great misfortune to enter the scene when the moralists of the day were campaigning for Prohibition. Prior to 1918, nightlife was geared mainly to saloons (where women weren’t allowed), vaudeville, theatre and organized dances. A few tony restaurants offered entertainment with dining, but not many. There were no real nightclubs, supper clubs or cabaret rooms in existence. Then the Jazz Age arrived and with it, a free-spirited mixing of genders and races. “Jazz,” obs

erved the great Duke Ellington, “has always been like the kind of a man you wouldn’t want your daughter to associate with.” The conservatives of the day certainly thought so and in 1926, in the midst of the Harlem Renaissance, with venues such as the Cotton Club thriving, the New York City Cabaret Law was passed. Some historians say the law was motivated by racism. Others dispute that view. Sidney Myer, one of the original members of The Manhattan Association of Cabarets & Clubs (MAC) who managed the late lamented Panache for years, an Award-winning performer and currently the booking manager at Don’t Tell Mama, called the racist aspect of the law a “subplot.” He also believed that anti-gay sentiment was part of what motivated the law to be enforced for so long.
The Cabaret Law made it illegal to host “musical entertainment, singing, dancing or other forms of amusement” without a special cabaret license in New York City. That license was tantamount to the Twelve Labors of Hercules and obtaining it was hugely expensive and time-consuming, requiring the approval of several City agencies. Cabaret licenses were granted only to businesses in commercial or manufacturing zones. All applicants for the license had to be fingerprinted and provide extensive financial records, plus meet (and maintain) standards regarding fire, building, electrical and health codes, which all had fees attached. Inconsistent enforcement made it hard to obtain permits and worse, once the license was obtained, the slightest infraction could mean losing it.

Cabaret Card of Bo Diddley
Beginning in 1940 (and lasting until 1967), the New York Police Department issued regulations requiring musicians and other employees in cabarets to obtain a New York City Cabaret Card. Without it, no performer could legally work in any live entertainment establishment. Another obstacle was added in 1971, when the Cabaret Law was modified, limiting the number of musicians permitted to play on a stage to three. Only pianos, organs, accordions, guitars or any other type of stringed instrument were allowed. Since drums, reeds and horns were not allowed, jazz musicians suffered the most and jazz clubs received constant fines.
Jamie deRoy, former President of MAC and credited with firmly establishing MAC  as a moving force and a well-respected entertainment organization, remembered being in Reno Sweeney at this time when Marsha Malamet was performing with a piano and back-up singer. “Peter Allen, who was Marsha’s writing partner on several songs. including “Love Don’t Need A Reason,” spontaneously jumped onto the stage to sing a song he just wrote with Marsha,” deRoy said. “The audience was thrilled, but Lewis Friedman, who owned the club, was shaking in his boots – afraid a police raid would shut him down.” Surprise police raids were a part of the business then. It was not uncommon for a squad of policemen to suddenly burst into a venue and order everyone off the stage, often closing down the club immediately. The shutdown time was variable and many clubs went out of business because of that. Sidney Myer called it a “hateful time, like the McCarthy era for nightclubs.” DeRoy testified before New York City government and said she “was never so nervous in my life and scared! I don’t know why,” she added. Myer emphatically said that these times were fearful indeed. The three musician rule was challenged almost from the outset, with the musician’s union, Local 802 and MAC both putting pressure on City Hall to repeal the law. Publicist Penny Landau, Founding Charter Member of MAC, recounted the story of literally fighting City Hall. “The city tried to enforce all sorts of rules, especially during an election year. When I repped the Duplex, they came in to count chairs and cited the club for not having an ‘open flame permit’ and blew out all the candles on the tables in the upstairs room. I was standing in the back of the room with the late Bob Harrington, premiere cabaret critic and writer and we asked the inspector why they were doing this. She replied, ‘Well, it’s an election year and it just trickles down.’ That was the most absurd thing we had ever heard and Bob proceeded to write the first of many columns about the City and their treatment of the cabaret community.” Eventually, Local 802 prevailed and in 1986, the limits on types of instruments were ruled unconstitutional via the lawsuit Warren Chiasson v. New York City Department of Consumer Affairs. The three-musician law was struck down. In addition, there was never a chair counting, nor any further discussion about candles on tables, ever again.
In the Rudolph Giuliani years, from 1994 through 2001, nightlife was especially demonized. The Mayor reinstituted the 3-musician rule, forcing some clubs into using taped music, Myer recalled. Giuliani also enacted new regulations and cracked down on the part of the law that decreed there couldn’t be more than three people dancing in a space without a cabaret license. DeRoy remembers places being shut down because of police raids occurring during luckless times when a few giddy patrons might be expressing themselves with body movement around a bar area. In at least one club, an exuberant dan

cing bartender caused an immediate shutdown.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg quietly accelerated a crackdown on New York City’s nightlife, with new policies that regulated the industry. In the face of protests, in 2003, Department of Consumer Affairs Commissioner Gretchen Dykstra proposed repealing the law, but to no avail. At the time, Myer was quoted in the trade paper, BackStage, saying, “It always strikes me as peculiar that in articles on the ‘cabaret laws’ there’s never a footnote for the reader to see that what the code refers to is not a cabaret in the sense we know it today. It’s as if rooms like ours simply don’t exist.” DeRoy added that the little rooms were most affected by the law. “Big rooms had the money to back themselves up,” she said.
Finally, now, 91 years on since the Cabaret Law was passed, the nightlife industry is being called out of the shadows. This great lifeblood of the city has received its official blessing. Ariel Palitz, the former owner of the Sutra nightclub, has been appointed Senior Executive Director of the Office of Nightlife, the new City agency whose creation is owed to Brooklyn city councilman Rafael Espinal, who drafted the legislation in May 2017. The concept, based on a model first launched in Amsterdam in 2014, has enabled the appointment of “Nightlife Mayors” in 30 other cities worldwide.

What does the repeal of the Cabaret Law and the new Nightlife Mayor bode for the future of cabaret in New York City? A former club owner stated that clubs had to “look over their collective shoulders because there was a fine line that could easily be crossed,”  also noting “there will always be a need for regulation based on common sense, but the repeal of the law will open the way for venues to breathe easier and support full expression of song and dance, which is the foundation and the core of entertainment and expression.”
MAC president and cabaret performer/director, Lennie Watts, reasoned that even though the Cabaret Law was antiquated, it had no real effect on modern cabaret and that the only part of the law that affected cabaret rooms was the three musicians rule. Longtime cabaret activist, Scott Barbarino, publisher of NiteLife Exchange as well as booker at Iridium and a MAC Award-winning performer, had a different point of view, forged from the barricades of fighting the law. “The repeal of the law takes away fear, anxiety and complication,” he said. “This means it becomes easier for those with room in their establishments to put in a cabaret space without red tape, paperwork, rules and special licenses. It was too much already.”
With a $300,000 budget, “Nightlife Mayor” Ariel Palitz has the clout to shape New York City nightlife. Her office will act as an industry ombudsman, to help with licenses and permits and will also include a 12-person Advisory Board consisting of cabaret and nightlife industry members, along with community members, to handle all matters connected with City nightlife. A recent economic study of New York City’s nightlife industry estimates an annual impact of $10 billion on the City’s economy, with admissions to nightlife venues totaling three times more than the attendance of all sporting teams combined. The potential to create a renewed, thriving cabaret culture is filled with endless possibilities.
However, the question remains: who will comprise this 12-member panel? We, Nightlife Exchange, suggest leaders in the cabaret community convene to come up with a list of those qualified to be considered to represent the cabaret community on the Advisory Board as the Office of Nightlife goes forward.
Related
City Establishes Nightlife Advisory Panel and Office of NightlifeSeptember 21, 2017In “Cabaret”
Night #3 of the Mabel Mercer Foundation Cabaret Convention – the Once and Future Age of CabaretOctober 19, 2017In “Ad Lib on NiteLife”
Marta Sanders Takes the Lead in “Follow Me” at The BeechmanNovember 18, 2016In “Cabaret”

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Hazel Smith, 83, Matriarch of Country Music, Is Dead – The New York Times

Hazel Smith, 83, Matriarch of Country Music, Is Dead – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/22/obituaries/hazel-smith-83-nashville-matriarch-of-country-music-dies.html
 
Hazel Smith, 83, Matriarch of Country Music, Is Dead
By BILL FRISKICS-WARRENMARCH 22, 2018
 

 
Hazel Smith with the country singer Wynonna Judd. CMT
NASHVILLE — Hazel Smith, the Nashville music industry matriarch credited with coining the phrase “outlaw country” to describe the unvarnished alternative to mainstream country music, died here on Sunday. She was 83.
Her death, at Skyline Medical Center, was caused by heart failure, her son Terry said.
In 1973, while working as a publicist for the vocal group Tompall and the Glaser Brothers, Ms. Smith received a query from a radio station about what to call the rugged, rock-influenced country music then being made by Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, the Glasers and others.
Her response, inspired by the title of Mr. Jennings’s recent hit single, “Ladies Love Outlaws,” was “outlaw music.” The phrase gained traction, and by 1976 — the year RCA released the million-selling album “Wanted! The Outlaws,” featuring Mr. Jennings, Mr. Nelson and others — a movement was born.
Ms. Smith’s legacy, though, extended well beyond her timely knack for nomenclature. Her nearly five-decade career in country music encompassed everything from songwriting and journalism to artist management and radio and television work.
Along the way she became a respected tastemaker, a trusted confidante of musicians and a prototype for women aspiring to break into the male-dominated country music industry.
“Hazel was one of the female pioneers in country music journalism,” said Beverly Keel, chairwoman of the department of recording industry at Middle Tennessee State University. “She was so strong in her opinions and her views, and she didn’t hold anything back. She championed what she believed in — which was traditional country music — and she wasn’t afraid to blast what she didn’t like, in print or to somebody’s face. She was the moral conscience of country music.”
Lamenting the state of country music in a 1997 interview with the weekly publication Nashville Scene, Ms. Smith observed: “We’ve got people writing songs who have college degrees. There ain’t nothing wrong with education, but I’d rather hear a song with feeling to it than a bunch of educated words written from the neck up that had no feeling at all.

 
Ms. Smith with Garth Brooks. She was credited with helping his career as well as those of many other country stars. CMT
“The songwriters now come dragging in about 9:30 a.m. wearing clean clothes,” she went on to say, alluding to the corporate approach to country songwriting prevalent in latter-day Nashville. “They’ve slept all night in their very own bed in their very own home beside their wife and not somebody else’s wife. They haven’t been chasing somebody at the Holiday Inn. I don’t know how they get their material.”
Hazel Ruth Boone was born on May 31, 1934, in Caswell County, N.C. Her parents were farmers, and her father worked for a time as the local sheriff.
After she graduated from high school, Ms. Smith worked in a hosiery mill and, later, for a tobacco company. She married at age 19 and had her son Terry and another son, Billy, while in her 20s. Her husband, Patrick Smith, played banjo and fiddle and encouraged their boys to become musicians, which they did, growing up to play country and bluegrass professionally as a duo.
Shortly after she and her husband divorced, Ms. Smith met the bluegrass patriarch Bill Monroe at a music festival in North Carolina. She and Mr. Monroe began a romantic relationship that both parties wrote songs about, most notably Mr. Monroe’s “Walk Softly on This Heart of Mine.” It became a Top 40 country hit for the Southern rock band the Kentucky Headhunters.
Ms. Smith and her sons moved to Nashville around 1970. She found a job there as a publicist for the iconoclastic Texas singer-songwriter Kinky Friedman. She also did publicity for the Glaser Brothers and, by the late 1970s, was working for the rock band Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show, which recorded several of her songs.
Ms. Smith also began writing a popular column for Country Music magazine in the late ’70s, and she played a significant role in the development of the careers of several major artists, including Garth Brooks and Brad Paisley.
Ms. Smith was host of CMT.com’s “Hot Dish” program, a popular country news and cooking show, and in 2001, she published the cookbook “Hazel’s Hot Dish: Cookin’ with Country Stars,” which featured contributions from Mr. Brooks, Trisha Yearwood and Alan Jackson, among others.
Ms. Smith is survived by her sons; her brothers, James Daniel Boone and William Henry Boone — the family traces its lineage to the frontiersman Daniel Boone — six grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.
“What set Hazel apart was her voice and her opinions,” Ms. Keel said. “Women coming up the ranks after her tried to fit in. Hazel never tried to fit in, and that’s what made her unique. I hope that that’s a message that will resonate with young women today.”

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When a racist man heckled Lena Horne in a Beverly Hills nightclub, she threw dishes at him

When a racist man heckled Lena Horne in a Beverly Hills nightclub, she threw dishes at him

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https://timeline.com/lena-horne-threw-dishes-at-racist-heckler-bb8e7c71a892
 
When a racist man heckled Lena Horne in a Beverly Hills nightclub, she threw dishes at him
“He had it coming,” her manager said, and her fans agreed
Laura Smith Mar 20
staff writer @Timeline_Now. Bylines @nyt @slate @guardian @motherjones Based in Oakland. Nonfiction book, The Art of Vanishing out from Penguin/Viking in 2018.


Lena Horne entertains a group of fans outside the Imperial Theater in New York, where she was performing in 1958. (AP)
It was 1960 in Beverly Hills and Lena Horne had had enough. The world renowned singer and actress was trying to enjoy an evening out with her husband when a man at the next table began making racial slurs. According to Horne, the man, an engineering executive named Harvey St. Vincent, looked Horne up and down and said, “So that’s Lena Horne, huh? Well, she’s just another black nigger to me. All niggers look alike to me, and there ain’t nothing they can do for me.”
Horne was outraged. She told him to stop. When St. Vincent continued his tirade, Horne picked up an ashtray and threw it at him. Then she threw dishes. And a hurricane lamp.
St. Vincent escaped mostly unscathed, save for a small cut above his left eye. Horne was unrepentant. “I really don’t like to make scenes like that,” she said, “but sometimes people push you too far.”
Fans began filling Horne’s mailbox with letters of support. St. Vincent claimed the attack was unprovoked. But Horne’s manager, Ralph Harris had no doubt about what had gone on. “She’s the most wonderful woman I have ever known,” he said. “If she did it, he had it coming.”
Watch: Hollywood didn’t know what to do with Lena Horne


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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Stephen A. Mandell, Grammy award-winning guitarist for “Dueling Banjos,” dies – Baltimore Sun

Stephen A. Mandell, Grammy award-winning guitarist for “Dueling Banjos,” dies – Baltimore Sun

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http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/obituaries/bs-md-ob-stephen-mandell-20180320-story.html
 
Stephen A. Mandell, Grammy award-winning guitarist for “Dueling Banjos,” dies
Frederick N. Rasmussen

Stephen A. Mandell, who shared a Grammy award with Eric Weissberg for their “Dueling Banjos” performance used in the 1972 movie “Deliverance,” died March 14 from prostate cancer at his Owings Mills home. He was 76.
“Steve was the consummate professional and always fun to play music with,” said Marc Horowitz, a fellow musician and friend for 56 years. “He was always the lead singer when we had a bluegrass session. He had a good voice and solid rhythm.”
“He was a perfectionist when it came to playing bluegrass,” said Mr. Horowitz, of Staten Island, N.Y. “He was a traditionalist who did not like anything newfangled that came along. He liked Earl Scruggs and the other guys like him who came up in the 1940s and 1950s.”
Stephen Arnold Mandell was the son of I. Edward Mandell, a dental technician, and Anne Mandell, a homemaker. He was born in Philadelphia and raised in Mount Vernon, N.Y., and New Rochelle, N.Y.
He graduated in 1959 from New Rochelle High School, then received an associate’s degree in history from the State University of New York at New Paltz.
His interest in music started when he was 12. An uncle gave him a guitar and, by his late teens, he had switched to banjo. By the late 1950s he was a regular bluegrass performer at Washington Square Park in New York City’s Greenwich Village, where musicians gathered on Sunday afternoons.
Mr. Mandell’s first band was the Garrett Mountain Boys, which he established in 1961 with David Grisman, Fred Weisz and Frank Benedetto.
His musical abilities caught the attention of folk singing legend Judy Collins, who asked him to join her band. He toured with Ms. Collins from the early 1960s. He took two years off from 1964 to 1966 when he was in the Army, then rejoined the band and remained until 1974.
Mr. Horowitz recalled meeting Mr. Mandell: “I had a girlfriend who was a peacenik, and she took me [to] Washington Square Park one Sunday in 1962. Steve was one of the first people I met there. He was wearing his Army uniform.”
The two became close friends, and Mr. Horowitz later filled in for Mr. Mandell for several months on Ms. Collins’ tour.
“He took me under his wing, and we went to a lot of bluegrass shows in the Northeast. It was a magical time,” said Mr. Horowitz.
It was while touring with Ms. Collins that Mr. Mandell met his future wife, Terry A. Steinberg, at an August 1973 concert at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale. The concert drew an audience of 20,000. She was 18 and attended with a friend.
“We were both newbie Judy Collins fans,” said Ms. Mandell, now a collection manager for the Ciena Corp. “He was accompanying Judy on the guitar as part of her backup band.
“We were sitting in the front row,” she told The Jewish Times in a 2013 interview. After the concert, she and her friend stayed and watched the band pack up. “Steve glanced over, took a look at my Jewish star, and yelled ‘Lantzman!’ ’’ The phrase generally means “countryman.”
“Steve invited the two girls up to the stage where he chatted them up,” Mr. Horowitz said. “Steve invited Terry to come to dinner that night that someone was giving for Judy. It was obvious he was smitten.”
They maintained a long-distance relationship as Mr. Mandell continued touring with Ms. Collins. The couple married the next year.
Mr. Weissberg, who was known for his banjo playing, received a call in 1972 to play “Dueling Banjos” for the film “Deliverance.” The song was a traditional bluegrass tune, originally composed by Arthur “Guitar Boogie” Smith in 1954 with the title, “Feudin’ Banjos.”
“They asked me if I could play that song and they wanted a guitar and a banjo, so I called Steve Mandell,” Mr. Weissberg told author Craig Rosen for the 1996 book “The Billboard Book of Number One Albums.” After playing it 25 different ways — sad, slow and fast — they were told they had passed the audition.
The two traveled to Clayton, Ga., where the movie was being filmed and directed by John Boorman. Local Clayton actor Billy Redden, who played the character Lonnie, a banjo-playing teenager, did not know how to play the instrument. A musician hiding behind a special shirt actually did the fingering, Ms. Mandell said, and the memorable scene was accomplished by using selected camera angles.
It took nearly four days to film.
“Movies are generally scored after they are finished. In this case, the movie was filmed to the music,” Ms. Mandell said.
The song became a “left-field smash,” said a 2011 article in The Washington Post.
The two men formed the band Eric Weissberg & Deliverance, and toured the country for the next year promoting the movie. The song won a Grammy in 1973.
After “Deliverance,” he continued to tour with Judy Collins.
Mr. Mandell also performed in the 1970 Broadway hit “Purlie,” and performed onstage in “The Robber Bridegroom.” In addition, he did studio work for John Denver, Oscar Brand, Theodore Bikel, Tom Paxton and Lou Reed. He even did advertising jingles, including “You Deserve A Break Today” for McDonald’s.
He also worked at J&R Music World and Grand Central Radio in New York City and later, after moving to Maryland, at Circuit City and Best Buy. He retired in 2006.
“Steve never gave up his day job and worked in audio and video sales in New York, and after moving in 1988, in Owings Mills,” Ms. Mandell said. “That was his tune. He never gave up his day job and played music at night.”
Last year, when Ms. Collins performed at the James Rouse Theatre in Columbia, Mr. Mandell and the folksinger were reunited backstage, his wife said.
Mr. Mandell and his wife became involved at Baltimore’s Temple Emanuel when they formed an arts group that also included music. The couple brought concerts to the synagogue, which closed in 2016.
“Entertainment ranged from bluegrass to folk to Appalachian to jazz and classical guitar,” Ms. Mandell said.
In addition to music, Mr. Mandell enjoyed traveling, photography and watching Baltimore Ravens games with his son.
“Steve was very humble and he never intended to be a front man or star,” said his wife. “He liked being behind the scenes in the recording studio. He never wanted nor sought fame. He just loved music.
“It’s been an amazing journey,” she said.
Funeral services were held Friday at Sol Levinson & Bros. in Pikesville.
In addition to his wife of 43 years, Mr. Mandell is survived by his son, Joshua Mandell of Arbutus; and a sister, Elaine Stiles of Randallstown.
fred.rasmussen@baltsun.com

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Stephen A. Mandell, Grammy award-winning guitarist for “Dueling Banjos,” dies – Baltimore Sun

Stephen A. Mandell, Grammy award-winning guitarist for “Dueling Banjos,” dies – Baltimore Sun

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http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/obituaries/bs-md-ob-stephen-mandell-20180320-story.html
 
Stephen A. Mandell, Grammy award-winning guitarist for “Dueling Banjos,” dies
Frederick N. Rasmussen

Stephen A. Mandell, who shared a Grammy award with Eric Weissberg for their “Dueling Banjos” performance used in the 1972 movie “Deliverance,” died March 14 from prostate cancer at his Owings Mills home. He was 76.
“Steve was the consummate professional and always fun to play music with,” said Marc Horowitz, a fellow musician and friend for 56 years. “He was always the lead singer when we had a bluegrass session. He had a good voice and solid rhythm.”
“He was a perfectionist when it came to playing bluegrass,” said Mr. Horowitz, of Staten Island, N.Y. “He was a traditionalist who did not like anything newfangled that came along. He liked Earl Scruggs and the other guys like him who came up in the 1940s and 1950s.”
Stephen Arnold Mandell was the son of I. Edward Mandell, a dental technician, and Anne Mandell, a homemaker. He was born in Philadelphia and raised in Mount Vernon, N.Y., and New Rochelle, N.Y.
He graduated in 1959 from New Rochelle High School, then received an associate’s degree in history from the State University of New York at New Paltz.
His interest in music started when he was 12. An uncle gave him a guitar and, by his late teens, he had switched to banjo. By the late 1950s he was a regular bluegrass performer at Washington Square Park in New York City’s Greenwich Village, where musicians gathered on Sunday afternoons.
Mr. Mandell’s first band was the Garrett Mountain Boys, which he established in 1961 with David Grisman, Fred Weisz and Frank Benedetto.
His musical abilities caught the attention of folk singing legend Judy Collins, who asked him to join her band. He toured with Ms. Collins from the early 1960s. He took two years off from 1964 to 1966 when he was in the Army, then rejoined the band and remained until 1974.
Mr. Horowitz recalled meeting Mr. Mandell: “I had a girlfriend who was a peacenik, and she took me [to] Washington Square Park one Sunday in 1962. Steve was one of the first people I met there. He was wearing his Army uniform.”
The two became close friends, and Mr. Horowitz later filled in for Mr. Mandell for several months on Ms. Collins’ tour.
“He took me under his wing, and we went to a lot of bluegrass shows in the Northeast. It was a magical time,” said Mr. Horowitz.
It was while touring with Ms. Collins that Mr. Mandell met his future wife, Terry A. Steinberg, at an August 1973 concert at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale. The concert drew an audience of 20,000. She was 18 and attended with a friend.
“We were both newbie Judy Collins fans,” said Ms. Mandell, now a collection manager for the Ciena Corp. “He was accompanying Judy on the guitar as part of her backup band.
“We were sitting in the front row,” she told The Jewish Times in a 2013 interview. After the concert, she and her friend stayed and watched the band pack up. “Steve glanced over, took a look at my Jewish star, and yelled ‘Lantzman!’ ’’ The phrase generally means “countryman.”
“Steve invited the two girls up to the stage where he chatted them up,” Mr. Horowitz said. “Steve invited Terry to come to dinner that night that someone was giving for Judy. It was obvious he was smitten.”
They maintained a long-distance relationship as Mr. Mandell continued touring with Ms. Collins. The couple married the next year.
Mr. Weissberg, who was known for his banjo playing, received a call in 1972 to play “Dueling Banjos” for the film “Deliverance.” The song was a traditional bluegrass tune, originally composed by Arthur “Guitar Boogie” Smith in 1954 with the title, “Feudin’ Banjos.”
“They asked me if I could play that song and they wanted a guitar and a banjo, so I called Steve Mandell,” Mr. Weissberg told author Craig Rosen for the 1996 book “The Billboard Book of Number One Albums.” After playing it 25 different ways — sad, slow and fast — they were told they had passed the audition.
The two traveled to Clayton, Ga., where the movie was being filmed and directed by John Boorman. Local Clayton actor Billy Redden, who played the character Lonnie, a banjo-playing teenager, did not know how to play the instrument. A musician hiding behind a special shirt actually did the fingering, Ms. Mandell said, and the memorable scene was accomplished by using selected camera angles.
It took nearly four days to film.
“Movies are generally scored after they are finished. In this case, the movie was filmed to the music,” Ms. Mandell said.
The song became a “left-field smash,” said a 2011 article in The Washington Post.
The two men formed the band Eric Weissberg & Deliverance, and toured the country for the next year promoting the movie. The song won a Grammy in 1973.
After “Deliverance,” he continued to tour with Judy Collins.
Mr. Mandell also performed in the 1970 Broadway hit “Purlie,” and performed onstage in “The Robber Bridegroom.” In addition, he did studio work for John Denver, Oscar Brand, Theodore Bikel, Tom Paxton and Lou Reed. He even did advertising jingles, including “You Deserve A Break Today” for McDonald’s.
He also worked at J&R Music World and Grand Central Radio in New York City and later, after moving to Maryland, at Circuit City and Best Buy. He retired in 2006.
“Steve never gave up his day job and worked in audio and video sales in New York, and after moving in 1988, in Owings Mills,” Ms. Mandell said. “That was his tune. He never gave up his day job and played music at night.”
Last year, when Ms. Collins performed at the James Rouse Theatre in Columbia, Mr. Mandell and the folksinger were reunited backstage, his wife said.
Mr. Mandell and his wife became involved at Baltimore’s Temple Emanuel when they formed an arts group that also included music. The couple brought concerts to the synagogue, which closed in 2016.
“Entertainment ranged from bluegrass to folk to Appalachian to jazz and classical guitar,” Ms. Mandell said.
In addition to music, Mr. Mandell enjoyed traveling, photography and watching Baltimore Ravens games with his son.
“Steve was very humble and he never intended to be a front man or star,” said his wife. “He liked being behind the scenes in the recording studio. He never wanted nor sought fame. He just loved music.
“It’s been an amazing journey,” she said.
Funeral services were held Friday at Sol Levinson & Bros. in Pikesville.
In addition to his wife of 43 years, Mr. Mandell is survived by his son, Joshua Mandell of Arbutus; and a sister, Elaine Stiles of Randallstown.
fred.rasmussen@baltsun.com

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

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Warwick, Ny 10990

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Quote Of The Day

Quote Of The Day

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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Dan Serro NYC Memorial Saturday, March 24th 12:00pm to 2:00pm @ 5C Cultural Center

Dan Serro NYC Memorial Saturday, March 24th 12:00pm to 2:00pm @ 5C Cultural Center

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March 23, 2018

To: Listings/Critics/Features
From: Jazz Promo Services
www.jazzpromoservices.com

Dan Serro NYC Memorial
Saturday, March 24th
12:00pm to 2:00pm
@ 5C Cultural Center

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A memorial will be held for DAN SERRO in New York City on Saturday, March 24, 2018 at 12:00pm to 2:00pm at the 5C Cultural Center, 68 Avenue C, New York, NY 10009. http://5cculturalcenter.org/

Daniel Serro-Boim born March 22, 1934 in New York passed away on January 26, 2018. His wife Nola Simmons passed away September 2003. Dan resided in Miami with his longtime companion Cassandra. He was very proud of his children and grandchildren. He loved and collected jazz and wrote poetry, produced a ten records, and published 4 books of poetry. He was an avid photographer and traveled to different countries like Japan, Spain, Trinidad, etc. He is survived by his sister Dorothy and his children Jeff, Richard, Jennifer, Christine, Anastacia and grandchildren.

Attendees at the memorial will be welcomed to say a few words, read poetry, or play music in his honor.

To learn more about Dan Serro visit:

http://www.wordmanwrites.com/about-the-word-man-dan-serro/
 

 

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Historic Harlem Jazz Club Destroyed in Tragic Fire

Historic Harlem Jazz Club Destroyed in Tragic Fire

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/23/nyregion/firefighter-dies-harlem-film-set.html
 
St. Nicks Pub (Formally Dude’s Lounge) at 773 St. Nicholas Ave was destroyed in a tragic fire last night in Harlem.
 
Firefighter Dies Responding to Blaze at a Harlem Film Set
By MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ and JONAH ENGEL BROMWICH MARCH 23, 2018

A five-alarm fire broke out Thursday night in the basement of 773 St. Nicholas Avenue in Harlem, which was being used as a filming location for a movie directed by Edward Norton. Michael Schwirtz/The New York Times
A New York firefighter was killed and two others were seriously injured by a fire at a building in Harlem that was being used for a film directed by Edward Norton, officials said Friday morning.
The five-alarm fire broke out in the basement of 773 St. Nicholas Avenue shortly before 11 p.m. Thursday, Daniel A. Nigro, the New York City fire commissioner, said during a news conference early Friday. The building is the former site of St. Nick’s Pub, which closed in 2011.
“Conditions worsened after the hose lines were brought down to the cellar,” Commissioner Nigro said. The flames climbed up through the building and were seen coming through the roof. The commissioner said that it had not yet been determined how the fire had started.
Michael R. Davidson, 37, was responsible for operating the fire hose nozzle for Engine Company 69, the first to arrive, the commissioner said. He was somehow separated from other firefighters when the blaze intensified and forced them to pull back from the building, officials said.
When he was found by other firefighters, he was unconscious, and critically injured. He was taken to Harlem Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
“New York City is in mourning tonight,” Councilman Mark D. Levine said of Mr. Davidson in a tweet. “He made the ultimate sacrifice to save the lives of our neighbors. Horrific tragedy. We pray for his family and loved ones.”
Fire at 773 St. Nicholas Ave, started in basement, now flames coming our through roof. Massive @fdny operation underway. Multiple firefighter injuries reported, at least one serious. (Video via @Alexander_et_al) pic.twitter.com/BLaOE6WdRl
— Mark D. Levine (@MarkLevineNYC) March 23, 2018
Firefighter Davidson was a 15-year veteran of the Fire Department and had been cited for bravery four times, the department said. The names of the two injured firefighters, who were being treated for burns, were not released.

Firefighter Michael R. Davidson New York Fire Department
Commissioner Nigro said that fighting a fire in a cellar is one of the most dangerous tasks that firefighters take on, and that in a building that isn’t fireproof, like the one on St. Nicholas Avenue, flames are liable to spread rapidly. Several other firefighters had less serious injuries and three civilians received minor injuries, the commissioner said.
“This is an awful night,” Eric Phillips, press secretary for Mayor Bill de Blasio, wrote on Twitter. “We’ve lost an NYC firefighter.”
“Sick to my stomach,” he added.
The building, which was one of Harlem’s few remaining jazz clubs before it closed, was being used for the filming of “Motherless Brooklyn,” neighbors said on social media. The film, based on a book by Jonathan Lethem about a detective with Tourette’s syndrome, stars Bruce Willis and Mr. Norton, who is also the director.
William Johnson, 61, who lives on the block, said the fire “looked crazy, like in the movies.”
“It was like a big torch burning up everything,” he added.
The crew had been filming on and off for several weeks in the Harlem location, and Thursday seemed to neighbors like a particularly busy day. Actors in period costumes were spotted milling about in the morning, and the crew was still present on the block as late as 10:30 p.m.
Early Friday morning, the interior of the building looked to be completely gutted, and a neighboring building appeared to have been damaged. A movie supply truck was parked on the street, across from a fleet of classic cars, including a blue finned Chevrolet Bel Air and a green Ford Customline. (The film is set in 1950s New York.)
In a statement, the film’s producers offered condolences to Firefighter Davidson’s family. The statement said that the fire started toward the end of the production’s working day, when the dozens of people working on site noticed smoke coming into their set from below.
“To our great sorrow, we now know that a NYC firefighter lost his life battling the blaze that grew, and our hearts ache in solidarity with his family,” the statement said. “New York City firefighters truly are the bravest in the world. We watched firsthand with astonishment as they charged into the smoke to make sure all were safely out and then fought to contain the blaze and prevent it from spreading.”
A spokeswoman for the producers said the cause of the fire was not yet known.
Firefighter Davidson, who comes from a family of firefighters, is survived by his wife, Eileen, and four children. He was the 1,150th firefighter in the 153-year history of the department to die in the line of duty, Commissioner Nigro said.

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Tony Bennett, Fleetwood Mac and Run-DMC preserved for the ages at Library of Congress – The Washington Post

Tony Bennett, Fleetwood Mac and Run-DMC preserved for the ages at Library of Congress – The Washington Post

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/music/tony-bennett-fleetwood-mac-and-run-dmc-preserved-for-the-ages-at-library-of-congress/2018/03/20/f53a0ac6-2c5c-11e8-8688-e053ba58f1e4_story.html?utm_term=.8fbf1dd80740
 
Tony Bennett, Fleetwood Mac and Run-DMC preserved for the ages at Library of Congress

Stevie Nicks of Fleetwood Mac (Courtesy Warner bros.)

Tony Bennett (Photo by Mark Seliger)
Fleetwood Mac’s “Rumours,” “The Sound of Music” soundtrack, and lacquer disc recordings from the 1945 conference establishing the United Nations are among this year’s selections for the Library of Congress’s National Recording Registry.
Every year, the registry collates for preservation 25 recordings it deems “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” This year’s musical selections are a diverse assortment that includes disco (Chic’s “Le Freak”), early rock (Bill Haley and His Comets’ “[We’re Gonna] Rock Around the Clock”), postwar gospel (Clara Ward and the Ward Singers’ “How I Got Over”), and pop balladry (Tony Bennett’s “I Left My Heart in San Francisco”).
Bennett remembers the first time Ralph Sharon, his pianist and musical director, showed him the sheet music for “I Left My Heart in San Francisco,” which he released in 1962.
“We both thought it would just be a local hit for the upcoming engagement we had at the Fairmont Hotel,” Bennett said in an email. “And even after I recorded it as the B-side to my record of ‘Once Upon A Time,’ which I thought was going to be the hit, it wasn’t until the promotions person from Columbia told me to ‘turn the record over’ as ‘San Francisco’ was the song catching on. I could not have asked for a better signature song.”
“We look for things that have had a real impact on the public,” says Steve Leggett, program coordinator for the National Recording Preservation Board. “Some that are very popular, some that might have had social significance, some which might have had technical significance in terms of preservation or recording history.”
Recordings, which are expected to reflect the American experience, must be at least 10 years old, though almost everything in the registry’s collection of 500 recordings is older. The youngest song on the 2018 list is a 1996 recording featuring Yo-Yo Ma; the oldest is a 1911 single by Victor Herbert and his Orchestra.
The selection process is open to the public in its early stages, though Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden makes the final decisions after recommendations from the board. This year, songs with the greatest public support included “If I Didn’t Care,” the 1939 standard by vocal group the Ink Spots, Kenny Rogers’s “The Gambler” and Kenny Loggins’s “Footloose.”
No song on the list evokes as much plain joy as “Footloose,” the title track to the 1984 Kevin Bacon film about rebellious teens who best a stuffy preacher thanks to the magic of dance.
“I’ve had a lot of time to think about this,” Loggins says in a phone interview. “Other than the pure joy factor, which I totally believe in, that’s what ‘Hound Dog’ was to me, the story of ‘Footloose’ is freedom.” To Loggins, “Footloose” represents the country’s triumph over the heavy hand of religion and politics. “They rebel and they win,” says Loggins. “That’s American history.”

(Courtesy of Warner Bros.)

(Courtesy of Epic)
Arlo Guthrie’s 1967 “Alice’s Restaurant Massacree,” offers a different take on American history. An 18-minute, kind-of-true rambler about how an arrest for illegally dumping garbage on Thanksgiving helped Guthrie avoid the draft, it defined the singer’s career and spawned a movie in which he played himself. Guthrie appreciates the irony of an anti-authority anthem making a list issued by the government. “That’s pretty funny,” he says. “I never imagined that it would become a record, let alone a movie, or almost 50 years later become something of a treasure.”
Run-DMC, the only hip-hop artists on this year’s list, was already a platinum-selling act when “Raising Hell” broke in 1986. A cover of Aerosmith’s “Walk This Way” became the album’s biggest hit and helped foment the coming rap-rock revolution. Initially, the group had rapped only over the opening bars of the song, remembers founding member Joseph “Run” Simmons. “The only reason we listened was for the beginning of the beat, the DJ was in trouble if he let the singing come in,” he says. “We didn’t know the name of the record.”
[The inside story of when Run-DMC met Aerosmith and changed music forever]
Producer Rick Rubin suggested that Run-DMC cover the whole track, telling them to study it first. The group found Aerosmith’s original version, with its tongue-twisty vocals and heavy riffage, incomprehensible. “(We said), ‘What are you talking about? How are we going to study this?’ ” says Simmons, who still sounds doubtful. When the song hit, “It spun us out of control huge,” he says. “It definitely pushed that album over the top to make us universal.”
Like Run-DMC, Kenny Rogers was already an established star when he met his signature song. By the time it found its way to him, “The Gambler” had been through several singers, including Bobby Bare, Johnny Cash, and its original writer, Don Schlitz.
It’s often assumed that the song’s legendary chorus was an already-established bit of wisdom, but Schlitz, then a 23-year-old computer operator, thought it up himself while walking home from work one day. “To be a kid who makes up a song that enters the American imagination as if it’s always been there,” marvels Schlitz, who went on to become a successful Nashville songwriter. “You make up some words — ‘Know when to hold ’em / Know when to fold ’em’ — and people think it’s an old saying.”
 
 
Kenny Rogers – The Gambler (1978)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
<div class=”player-unavailable”><h1 class=”message”>An error occurred.</h1><div class=”submessage”><a href=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jj4nJ1YEAp4″ target=”_blank”>Try watching this video on www.youtube.com</a>, or enable JavaScript if it is disabled in your browser.</div></div>
Forty years after its release, “The Gambler” is everywhere, relatable to most everyone. “Don Schlitz and I, neither one are gamblers,” Rogers says. “He said he wrote this song more about a thought of how to live your life, and I think it’s good for that.”
Australian billionaire Kerry Packer told Rogers and his wife, Wanda, over dinner one night that his dream was to have “The Gambler” played at his funeral (and it was, in 2006). Both George H.W. Bush and John Glenn quoted the song when they withdrew from presidential races. “It’s become part of our collective DNA,” Schlitz says. “Hooray for Kenny Rogers, for his work to be included. It’s an honor that you don’t dream of.”
Complete list of additions to National Recording Registry
“Dream Melody Intermezzo: Naughty Marietta” (single), Victor Herbert and his Orchestra (1911)
Standing Rock Preservation Recordings, George Herzog and Members of the Yanktoni Tribe (1928)
“Lamento Borincano” (single), Canario y Su Grupo (1930)
“Sitting on Top of the World” (single), Mississippi Sheiks (1930)
The Complete Beethoven Piano Sonatas (album), Artur Schnabel (1932-1935)
“If I Didn’t Care” (single), The Ink Spots (1939)
Proceedings of the United Nations Conference on International Organization (4/25/45 to 6/26/45)
“Folk Songs of the Hills” (album), Merle Travis (1946)
“How I Got Over” (single), Clara Ward and the Ward Singers (1950)
“(We’re Gonna) Rock Around the Clock” (single), Bill Haley and His Comets (1954)
“Calypso” (album), Harry Belafonte (1956)
“I Left My Heart in San Francisco” (single), Tony Bennett (1962)
“King Biscuit Time” (radio), Sonny Boy Williamson II and others (1965)
“My Girl” (single), The Temptations (1964)
“The Sound of Music” (soundtrack), Various (1965)
“Alice’s Restaurant Massacree” (single), Arlo Guthrie (1967)
“New Sounds in Electronic Music” (album), Steve Reich, Richard Maxfield, Pauline Oliveros (1967)
“An Evening With Groucho” (album), Groucho Marx (1972)
“Rumours,” (album), Fleetwood Mac (1977)
“The Gambler” (single), Kenny Rogers (1978)
“Le Freak” (single), Chic (1978)
“Footloose” (single), Kenny Loggins (1984)
“Raising Hell” (album), Run-DMC (1986)
“Rhythm Is Gonna Get You” (single), Gloria Estefan and the Miami Sound Machine (1987)
“Yo-Yo Ma Premieres Concertos for Violoncello and Orchestra” (album), Various (1996)
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Bassist and Cellist Buell Neidlinger Dies at 82 – JazzTimes

Bassist and Cellist Buell Neidlinger Dies at 82 – JazzTimes

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https://jazztimes.com/news/buell-neidlinger-dies-at-82/
 
Bassist and Cellist Buell Neidlinger Dies at 82
Strikingly versatile musician played with Cecil Taylor and Steve Lacy, and on many classic pop/rock records
By Michael J. West Published 03/18/2018

Buell Neidlinger’s “Rear View Mirror”
Buell Neidlinger, a bassist, cellist and educator who worked within a wide spectrum of jazz styles, from Dixieland to the avant-garde, died suddenly on Friday afternoon at his home on Whidbey Island, Wash. He was two weeks past his 82nd birthday.
His death was confirmed by his wife, Margaret Storer. The cause was a heart attack.
Neidlinger was best known for his early collaboration with pianist Cecil Taylor; they appeared together on six albums made between 1956 and 1961. He also recorded frequently with saxophonists Steve Lacy and Archie Shepp and trombonist Roswell Rudd; played in a trio with pianist Herbie Nichols; was the accompanying bassist on Tony Bennett’s hit 1962 recording of “I Left My Heart in San Francisco”; and collaborated prolifically with saxophonist Marty Krystall over a period of nearly 50 years.
He was extraordinarily prolific outside of the jazz world as well. Neidlinger worked in classical orchestras and was for nearly three decades the principal bassist in the Warner Brothers studio orchestra. His long list of pop credits included Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gormé, Chuck Berry, Frank Sinatra, the Moody Blues, Roy Orbison and Barbra Streisand.
Buell Neidlinger was born in New York City on March 2, 1936, and his family moved to Westport, Conn., when he was 2. He was a child prodigy on the cello, beginning to play the instrument at the age of 7. At 13, urged by a teacher to strengthen his hands by studying the upright bass, Basie veteran Walter Page became his bass teacher.
Admitted to Yale University to study classical music, Neidlinger stayed for one year. During that time he began playing jazz, joining the Dixieland band Eli’s Chosen Six along with trombonist and classmate Rudd. He briefly returned to Westport until trumpeter Max Kaminsky suggested he become a working musician in New York. Neidlinger moved there in 1955, and found work subbing for his mentor Page in the house band at Eddie Condon’s in Greenwich Village and playing with trombonist Conrad Janis’ band. That same year, Neidlinger met Lacy at a Yale alumni event in New York, and Lacy in turn introduced him to Taylor.

Cecil Taylor and Buell Neidlinger’s “New York City R&B”
In 1956, Neidlinger made his first two recordings: Jazz at Columbus Ave., a session by Dixieland trumpeter Johnny Windhurst, and Taylor’s debut, Jazz Advance. He appeared on Lacy’s 1958 debut, Soprano Sax, and worked and recorded regularly with both Taylor and Lacy over the next several years before including them on his own debut record, New York City R&B, in 1961. He also worked in bands led by pianist Nichols and clarinetist Jimmy Giuffre, and began working as a session bassist—through which he recorded with Bennett—and delved into contemporary classical music with John Cage and Gunther Schuller, receiving a Rockefeller performance grant in 1965.
Disillusioned with New York, Neidlinger left the city in 1967. He moved first to Boston, where he joined the Boston Symphony Orchestra under Erich Leinsdorf and became a founding instructor in the jazz department that Schuller had founded at the New England Conservatory. Four years later he was offered a position at California Institute of the Arts, thus relocating to Los Angeles. While living in L.A., he became the principal bassist of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; took the same position in the Warner Brothers Orchestra in 1973 (his first film credit was that year’s Soylent Green); and continued doing session work. Among his hundreds of sessions, he performed on hit records including Dolly Parton’s “Coat of Many Colors,” the Eagles’ “Desperado” and “Hotel California” and the Village People’s “Y.M.C.A.” He also performed on jazz vocal sessions by Diane Schuur, Carmen Lundy and the Manhattan Transfer, and worked in the late 1980s with both pianist Les McCann and alto saxophonist Anthony Braxton.

Anthony Braxton and Buell Neidlinger’s “2By2: Duets”
Neidlinger met Krystall shortly after his arrival in Los Angeles, and the two began a fruitful collaboration that would last for the rest of the bassist’s life. They made 16 recordings together and cofounded a label, K2B2 Records, in 1979.
Neidlinger retired from studio and performance work in 2000 and moved with his wife to Whidbey Island, in Puget Sound outside of Seattle. Returning to his first instrument, the cello, he lived out his days playing the instrument either at home or at a local coffee shop, as well as on occasional records on the K2B2 label. His final album—The Happenings, a trio date on which Neidlinger, Krystall and guitarist Howard Alden performed the compositions of Herbie Nichols—was issued in December.
Neidlinger is survived by Margaret Storer, his wife of 36 years; a daughter, Miranda Neidlinger; and a son, Mike Neidlinger.
Read a JazzTimes profile of Buell Neidlinger.
Read a review of Gayle Force, a recording featuring Neidlinger with Charles Gayle, in the saxophonist’s earliest recording.

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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For jazz club Village Vanguard, music rather than food is its main gig – New York Business Journal

For jazz club Village Vanguard, music rather than food is its main gig – New York Business Journal

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https://www.bizjournals.com/newyork/news/2018/03/08/for-iconic-jazz-club-village-vanguard-music-rather.html
 
For iconic jazz club Village Vanguard, music rather than food is its main gig
Gary M. SternMar 8, 2018, 2:40pm

Village Vanguard sign
Michael Larson
 
 
Unlike almost every jazz club in New York City, the Village Vanguard doesn’t sell any food. Food is where most of these clubs spark additional revenue but not the Vanguard. 
The Vanguard also discourages loud talking, taking videos or photos and cell phone use of any kind.
“There’s a musician playing. Pipe down,” owner Ellen Gordon has said to customers, sounding like a third-grade teacher who won’t take no for an answer.
Max Gordon, who died in 1978, opened the iconic venue in the West Village in 1935. It’s still run by the Gordon family, including Ellen, his 91-year-old widow, and, increasingly, their 65-year-old daughter, Deborah Gordon.  
Located in a basement at 7th Ave. South near 11th Street, the Vanguard has presented most of the greats in jazz, including Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk, Dexter Gordon and Sonny Rollins, as well as present day stars such as saxophonist Joshua Redman and singer Cecile McLorin Savant.
When the Vanguard opened, it started as a place for poets to come and read.  
“My dad Max wanted to be a writer himself and decided to surround himself with writers,” Deborah Gordon noted. “Greenwich Village was chock-filled with writers back then.”
Gradually the Vanguard evolved into a venue for entertainers, when the Revuers — including Judy Holliday, Adolph Green, and Betty Comden, sometimes assisted by a composer named Leonard Bernstein — began performing there. When they started, the poets protested and accused management of displacing them from their space.
“But there was another way not to make money and that was jazz,” Gordon said In a self-deprecating way, suggesting that her father was more interested in art than greed.
As part of that, not serving food is part of the Vanguard’s identity.  
“We’re not a restaurant,” Gordon said. “Food is a whole thing unto itself. We want the focus to be on the music.”  
Her father always warned her: “Never get involved with food.”
Village Vanguard
Village Vanguard sign

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The Village Vanguard seats 123 people and features performances 365 days a year, taking no rest unless there’s a hurricane or major snowstorm.  
When Mel Lewis and Thad Jones in 1966 told Max Gordon they wanted to launch a regular Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, Max replied, “Good idea. Let’s give it a try. We’ll keep it going until it peters out.”  
Fifty-two years later, the 16-piece orchestra performs every Monday night and for a week long stint in February (and for the same $35-plus-one-drink price as seeing a quartet).
The jazz that the Vanguard specializes in is wide ranging, eclectic and doesn’t conform to any particular style. Gordon said that Peter Bernstein, the guitarist, who led a group last week plays “straight ahead jazz,” but saxophonist Ben Wendle is more avant-garde and experimental.  
“We run the gamut,” Gordon said. “Sometimes I warn people about what they’re going to hear, because you don’t want people to be unhappy.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/16/obituaries/nokie-edwards-whose-guitar-drove-the-ventures-is-dead-at-82.html?rref=collection%2Fsectioncollection%2Fobituaries
 
Nokie Edwards, Whose Guitar Drove the Ventures, Is Dead at 82
By RICHARD SANDOMIRMARCH 16, 2018

The Ventures early in their career. From left, Howie Johnson, Don Wilson, Nokie Edwards and Bob Bogle. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
Nokie Edwards, whose virtuosic electric guitar playing helped define the surf-rock style of the Ventures, the immensely popular instrumental band that rose to prominence in the 1960s, died on Monday in Yuma, Ariz. He was 82.
His death, in a hospital, was confirmed by his wife, Judy, who said he had a recurring infection after surgery for a broken hip in December.
Mr. Edwards’s seemingly effortless picking produced a palpitating sound that captured the vibe of the ocean a few years before the Beach Boys began singing about California girls. The Ventures were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2008.
“Although musicologists might argue that Edwards’s country-fueled and steel-guitar-influenced licks owe more to country than pop or rock,” the guitar designer Jol Dantzig wrote in an appreciation of Mr. Edwards on the Premier Guitar website, “there is no denying that Edwards’s twangy tone, wang-bar glides and staccato riffing paved the way for the California surf bands of the 1960s.”
Mr. Edwards was playing lead guitar in the country star Buck Owens’s band when he was spotted by Don Wilson and Bob Bogle in a club in Spokane, Wash., in the late 1950s. Mr. Wilson and Mr. Bogle were construction workers with meager musical experience when they formed the band that became the Ventures. In Mr. Edwards, they recognized a larger talent with a broader musical pedigree who would improve their band.
With Mr. Edwards playing bass and Mr. Bogle on lead guitar, the Ventures recorded “Walk — Don’t Run,” which rose to No. 2 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart. Inspired by a slower, jazzier recording several years earlier by the country star Chet Atkins (the original recording was by the song’s composer, the guitarist Johnny Smith), the Ventures’ version had a propulsive power, driven by heavily amplified guitars and the drumming of Skip Moore.
Although Mr. Bogle’s playing was a key to the single’s success, Mr. Edwards soon replaced him as the band’s lead guitarist; Mr. Bogle’s switch to bass was an acknowledgment of Mr. Edwards’s greater skill. Peter Blecha, the author of “Sonic Boom! The History of Northwest Rock: From ‘Louie Louie’ to ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ ” (2009), said the strength of Mr. Edwards’s playing rested on the “fluidity of his picking” and the way he added “melodic flourishes in surprising places.”
 
 
The Ventures “Walk Don’t Run”
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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The Ventures “Walk Don’t Run” Video by NRRArchives
The band followed “Walk — Don’t Run” with other hits, like “Perfidia,” a much-recorded song that reached No. 15 on the Billboard chart, and “Slaughter on Tenth Avenue,” which peaked at No. 35. “Wipe Out,” a hit for the Surfaris in 1963, became a signature song for the Ventures.
In 1964, the band rerecorded “Walk — Don’t Run” with Mr. Edwards on lead and a new arrangement. The song reached the Top 10 again.
Nearly 50 years later, Mr. Edwards said he had at least two more arrangements of the song. “I may put it out and who knows, I may get another hit out of it again,” he told the website Ultimate Guitar in 2011.
The Ventures’ second-biggest hit was their version of the theme song from the long-running CBS television show “Hawaii Five-O,” which went to No. 4 in 1969. It became a concert staple both for the group and for Mr. Edwards as a solo performer.
Nole Floyd Edwards was born on May 9, 1935, in Lahoma, Okla. His father, Elbert, and his mother, the former Nannie Mae Quinton, were migrant fruit workers. In a family of guitarists, fiddlers, pianists and banjo players, young Nokie was playing guitar by age 5.
About that time, the Edwardses — who by then had 11 children — left their land, then owned by his mother and her Cherokee family, after violent disputes with merchants who wanted them to sell it, Judy Edwards said. They fled in a horse-drawn wagon, crossed the Great Plains, stopped for a time in Idaho and settled in Puyallup, Wash., south of Seattle.
Mr. Edwards stayed with the Ventures until 1968, returned in 1972 and stayed until 1984.
“He left the group a few times,” Mr. Wilson said in a telephone interview. “He said, ‘I’m tired of playing the same songs over and over again.’ ”
After that, he occasionally recorded and toured with the Ventures, sometimes in Japan, where they have been popular for decades. The band, which is still active, has gone through various permutations. Mr. Wilson retired in 2015 but still occasionally records; Mr. Bogle died in 2009.
Mr. Edwards played with various artists in his career, including the country star Lefty Frizzell. In recent years he formed a company, HitchHiker, to make custom guitars, and toured with his own group, the HitchHiker Band. Among other honors, he was inducted into the Native American Music Awards & Association’s Hall of Fame in 2011. His composition “Surf Rider” — which another surf-rock instrumental band, the Lively Ones, recorded in 1963 — was on the soundtrack of the 1994 movie “Pulp Fiction.”
In addition to his wife, the former Judy Bean, Mr. Edwards’s survivors include a daughter, Tina Edwards Nickerson; two stepsons, Patrick Fetters and Seth Chappell; 25 grandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; four great-great-grandchildren; and a sister, Louise Jensen. A daughter, Kim, died in 1988. His marriages to Zelda Wade and Jean Bauers ended in divorce.

 
Mr. Edwards, left, performed with the Ventures in New York when they were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2008. Kevin Mazur
Mr. Edwards played his last show in January 2017, with the HitchHiker Band in Medford, Ore. Despite poor health, he refused to cancel the show and was brought onstage in a wheelchair before shifting to a stool to perform.
“He was in a lot of distress, but he got onstage and played very well,” Dan Estremado, who played guitar with Mr. Edwards that night, said in a telephone interview. “He did the best he could but kind of gave out at the end.”
He went to a hospital afterward, where, his wife said, the doctor remarked that he could have “fallen off the stool and died onstage from internal bleeding.”
In his final days, she said, she played YouTube videos of songs for Mr. Edwards in his hospital room — including Thom Bresh and him playing “I’ll See You in My Dreams.”

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Nokie Edwards, Whose Guitar Drove the Ventures, Is Dead at 82 – The New York Times

Nokie Edwards, Whose Guitar Drove the Ventures, Is Dead at 82 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/16/obituaries/nokie-edwards-whose-guitar-drove-the-ventures-is-dead-at-82.html?rref=collection%2Fsectioncollection%2Fobituaries
 
Nokie Edwards, Whose Guitar Drove the Ventures, Is Dead at 82
By RICHARD SANDOMIRMARCH 16, 2018

The Ventures early in their career. From left, Howie Johnson, Don Wilson, Nokie Edwards and Bob Bogle. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
Nokie Edwards, whose virtuosic electric guitar playing helped define the surf-rock style of the Ventures, the immensely popular instrumental band that rose to prominence in the 1960s, died on Monday in Yuma, Ariz. He was 82.
His death, in a hospital, was confirmed by his wife, Judy, who said he had a recurring infection after surgery for a broken hip in December.
Mr. Edwards’s seemingly effortless picking produced a palpitating sound that captured the vibe of the ocean a few years before the Beach Boys began singing about California girls. The Ventures were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2008.
“Although musicologists might argue that Edwards’s country-fueled and steel-guitar-influenced licks owe more to country than pop or rock,” the guitar designer Jol Dantzig wrote in an appreciation of Mr. Edwards on the Premier Guitar website, “there is no denying that Edwards’s twangy tone, wang-bar glides and staccato riffing paved the way for the California surf bands of the 1960s.”
Mr. Edwards was playing lead guitar in the country star Buck Owens’s band when he was spotted by Don Wilson and Bob Bogle in a club in Spokane, Wash., in the late 1950s. Mr. Wilson and Mr. Bogle were construction workers with meager musical experience when they formed the band that became the Ventures. In Mr. Edwards, they recognized a larger talent with a broader musical pedigree who would improve their band.
With Mr. Edwards playing bass and Mr. Bogle on lead guitar, the Ventures recorded “Walk — Don’t Run,” which rose to No. 2 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart. Inspired by a slower, jazzier recording several years earlier by the country star Chet Atkins (the original recording was by the song’s composer, the guitarist Johnny Smith), the Ventures’ version had a propulsive power, driven by heavily amplified guitars and the drumming of Skip Moore.
Although Mr. Bogle’s playing was a key to the single’s success, Mr. Edwards soon replaced him as the band’s lead guitarist; Mr. Bogle’s switch to bass was an acknowledgment of Mr. Edwards’s greater skill. Peter Blecha, the author of “Sonic Boom! The History of Northwest Rock: From ‘Louie Louie’ to ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ ” (2009), said the strength of Mr. Edwards’s playing rested on the “fluidity of his picking” and the way he added “melodic flourishes in surprising places.”
 
 
The Ventures “Walk Don’t Run”
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
<div class=”player-unavailable”><h1 class=”message”>An error occurred.</h1><div class=”submessage”><a href=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owq7hgzna3E” target=”_blank”>Try watching this video on www.youtube.com</a>, or enable JavaScript if it is disabled in your browser.</div></div>
The Ventures “Walk Don’t Run” Video by NRRArchives
The band followed “Walk — Don’t Run” with other hits, like “Perfidia,” a much-recorded song that reached No. 15 on the Billboard chart, and “Slaughter on Tenth Avenue,” which peaked at No. 35. “Wipe Out,” a hit for the Surfaris in 1963, became a signature song for the Ventures.
In 1964, the band rerecorded “Walk — Don’t Run” with Mr. Edwards on lead and a new arrangement. The song reached the Top 10 again.
Nearly 50 years later, Mr. Edwards said he had at least two more arrangements of the song. “I may put it out and who knows, I may get another hit out of it again,” he told the website Ultimate Guitar in 2011.
The Ventures’ second-biggest hit was their version of the theme song from the long-running CBS television show “Hawaii Five-O,” which went to No. 4 in 1969. It became a concert staple both for the group and for Mr. Edwards as a solo performer.
Nole Floyd Edwards was born on May 9, 1935, in Lahoma, Okla. His father, Elbert, and his mother, the former Nannie Mae Quinton, were migrant fruit workers. In a family of guitarists, fiddlers, pianists and banjo players, young Nokie was playing guitar by age 5.
About that time, the Edwardses — who by then had 11 children — left their land, then owned by his mother and her Cherokee family, after violent disputes with merchants who wanted them to sell it, Judy Edwards said. They fled in a horse-drawn wagon, crossed the Great Plains, stopped for a time in Idaho and settled in Puyallup, Wash., south of Seattle.
Mr. Edwards stayed with the Ventures until 1968, returned in 1972 and stayed until 1984.
“He left the group a few times,” Mr. Wilson said in a telephone interview. “He said, ‘I’m tired of playing the same songs over and over again.’ ”
After that, he occasionally recorded and toured with the Ventures, sometimes in Japan, where they have been popular for decades. The band, which is still active, has gone through various permutations. Mr. Wilson retired in 2015 but still occasionally records; Mr. Bogle died in 2009.
Mr. Edwards played with various artists in his career, including the country star Lefty Frizzell. In recent years he formed a company, HitchHiker, to make custom guitars, and toured with his own group, the HitchHiker Band. Among other honors, he was inducted into the Native American Music Awards & Association’s Hall of Fame in 2011. His composition “Surf Rider” — which another surf-rock instrumental band, the Lively Ones, recorded in 1963 — was on the soundtrack of the 1994 movie “Pulp Fiction.”
In addition to his wife, the former Judy Bean, Mr. Edwards’s survivors include a daughter, Tina Edwards Nickerson; two stepsons, Patrick Fetters and Seth Chappell; 25 grandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; four great-great-grandchildren; and a sister, Louise Jensen. A daughter, Kim, died in 1988. His marriages to Zelda Wade and Jean Bauers ended in divorce.

 
Mr. Edwards, left, performed with the Ventures in New York when they were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2008. Kevin Mazur
Mr. Edwards played his last show in January 2017, with the HitchHiker Band in Medford, Ore. Despite poor health, he refused to cancel the show and was brought onstage in a wheelchair before shifting to a stool to perform.
“He was in a lot of distress, but he got onstage and played very well,” Dan Estremado, who played guitar with Mr. Edwards that night, said in a telephone interview. “He did the best he could but kind of gave out at the end.”
He went to a hospital afterward, where, his wife said, the doctor remarked that he could have “fallen off the stool and died onstage from internal bleeding.”
In his final days, she said, she played YouTube videos of songs for Mr. Edwards in his hospital room — including Thom Bresh and him playing “I’ll See You in My Dreams.”

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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Gary Burden, Designer of Famous Album Covers, Dies at 84 – The New York Times

Gary Burden, Designer of Famous Album Covers, Dies at 84 – The New York Times

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/16/obituaries/gary-burden-designer-of-famous-album-covers-dies-at-84.html?rref=collection%2Fsectioncollection%2Fobituaries
 
Gary Burden, Designer of Famous Album Covers, Dies at 84
By NEIL GENZLINGERMARCH 16, 2018

Gary Burden, left, with Neil Young on Malibu Beach in California in 1975. Henry Diltz
Gary Burden, who beginning in the late 1960s designed memorable album covers for Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, the Doors and numerous other stars of rock and folk-rock, died on March 7 in Los Angeles. He was 84.
His wife and frequent collaborator, Jenice Heo, confirmed the death. No cause was given.
Working in the predigital era, when music was sold primarily on vinyl and artists were often trying to make a personal statement with their albums, Mr. Burden created cover after cover that seared their way into the minds of fans.
He designed the first Crosby, Stills & Nash album in 1969, featuring a Henry Diltz photograph of the three on a ragged couch. He also designed the cover of Ms. Mitchell’s acclaimed 1971 album, “Blue,” a striking close-up of the singer in blue and black tones. He put the Eagles in Wild West regalia for “Desperado” and Mr. Young in a cheesy yellow jacket for “On the Beach” (1974). Among his most recent work was Conor Oberst’s “Salutations,” released last year.
In a 2015 video interview with NPR’s “World Cafe,” Mr. Burden had a simple description of his work. “How to visualize the music,” he said. “That’s been my mission.”

 
Mr. Burden’s design cover design for “The Papas & The Mamas” (1968) redirected his career. He used a photograph by Henry Diltz, his frequent collaborator, as the cover for “Crosby, Stills & Nash” (1969). From left: Dunhill Records; Atlantic Records
Mr. Oberst was one appreciative beneficiary.
“Gary always wanted the album packaging to reflect the spirit of the music and the wishes of the artists as much as possible,” he said by email. “He was often at odds with record labels when they sought to cut costs at the expense of what he and the artist had envisioned. Gary usually won those battles.”
Mr. Burden was born on May 23, 1933, in Cleveland to Lowell and Agatha Burden. He grew up primarily in South Florida, perpetually restless.
“I came from a very conservative family,” he said, “and I didn’t fit in. I don’t know why it was chosen for me to be their kid.”
But his escape route from that conservatism was unusual: At 16, persuading his mother to lie about his age, he left home to join the Marines. After leaving the service, he ended up in California, living what he described as a beatnik life for a time but eventually studying architectural design at the University of California at Berkeley. It was Cass Elliot of the Mamas and the Papas who redirected his career in the 1960s.
“I met her and she asked me to do a remodel of her home in Laurel Canyon,” he said, referring to the section of Los Angeles where many musicians were settling. “So she’s the one who said, ‘You know, Gary, you should make our new cover; you know how to design stuff.’ ”

 
Mr. Burden dressed Neil Young in cheap polyester clothing for the cover of Mr. Young’s “On the Beach” (1974) and was nearly bitten by a horse taking the cover photo for “Crazy Horse” (1971) Reprise Records
He designed the group’s 1968 album, “The Papas & the Mamas,” and that was that.
“I blew off my three-piece suit and never looked back,” he said. “That was kind of when I was born, the real me. Before that I was living somebody else’s idea of who I should be.”
The Mamas and the Papas were on the Dunhill label, and Mr. Burden in short order got the designing assignments for other Dunhill groups like Steppenwolf and Three Dog Night. Through Ms. Elliot, he also met numerous other performers living in and around Laurel Canyon, including Mr. Young, who became a regular customer and collaborator.
Mr. Burden designed more than 40 albums for Mr. Young, beginning in 1970 with “After the Gold Rush,” and later they collaborated on designs. When Mr. Young won his first Grammy Award, in January 2010, it wasn’t for his music, but for “best boxed or special limited-edition package” for “Neil Young Archives Vol. 1,” an art-direction honor he shared with Mr. Burden and Ms. Heo.
In a 2015 interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation , Mr. Burden said that his cover for Mr. Young’s “On the Beach” was his favorite.
“This was about America in the ’70s when everything was cheaper than it looks,” he said. The cover is a photograph of a beach scene, a piece of a Cadillac jammed into the sand beside some yellow beach furniture, Mr. Young in the background, his back to the camera.

 
A striking, moody closeup of Joni Mitchell adorned Mr. Burden’s cover for “Blue” (1971). He used a photograph of Jim Morrison and The Doors standing in Los Angeles’s Morrison Hotel to illustrate the 1970 album of the same name. From left: Reprise Records; Elektra Records
“Neil and I went to a store that sold cheap polyester clothing and we got a jacket and pants for him to wear,” he recalled.
The band with which Mr. Young has often performed, Crazy Horse, released an album in 1971, titled simply “Crazy Horse,” that provided Mr. Burden with another of his many stories. The cover is a distorted close-up of a horse.
“I seldom, if ever, took the photos myself, because I was very intimidated by the camera,” he told the CBC. “But I took the picture of that horse. It was trying to bite me, and after I had the image, I stretched it so it looked totally weird.”
Mr. Burden teamed with Mr. Diltz for many of his covers. One assignment became the Doors’ 1970 album “Morrison Hotel,” featuring the band (whose lead singer was Jim Morrison) in the window of the Morrison Hotel in Los Angeles. The manager at the front desk, Mr. Burden recalled, refused them permission to take the shot.
“So we went outside and I thought we could just take the picture outside with the sign in the background,” he said, “but as we were doing that I noticed the desk manager leave and get into the elevator, and we ran in.”

Mr. Burden in 1970. The first album he designed for Mr. Young, “After the Gold Rush,” was released that year. Henry Diltz
Mr. Diltz, who was outside, photographed the band members just inside the front window looking out.
The first Crosby, Stills & Nash album cover, a photograph also taken by Mr. Diltz, is among the most famous rock images of the period, and resulted in an amusing tale that Mr. Burden liked to tell. The image shows Graham Nash, Stephen Stills and David Crosby — in that order — on a beat-up couch in front of an equally beat-up house. The group, Mr. Burden said, was so new it hadn’t named itself when the picture was taken.
Once the band was named, “we decided, O.K., we’ll just go back tomorrow and reshoot it, and you guys can sit in the proper order,” Mr. Burden said in the “World Cafe” interview. But they found an empty spot where the house had been.
“Back at the back of the lot was a stack of wood and building materials,” he said. “They had bulldozed it and just pushed it back out of the way. We obviously decided that was God telling us that we should go with what we had, so we did.”
There was no immediate information on survivors other than his wife.
The advent of the CD and digital downloading naturally affected Mr. Burden’s work, though he continued to design.
“As times changed in the music industry,” Mr. Oberst said, “he adapted to the new formats and technology, but the LP was always his favorite — he said because it felt the best to hold in your hand and was the easiest to roll a joint on.”
 
 
Gary Burden (Album Cover Artist) on World Cafe: Sense of Place – LA
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Gary Burden (Album Cover Artist) on World Cafe: Sense of Place – LA Video by World Cafe

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Happy St. Paddy’s Day

Happy St. Paddy’s Day

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Swingin’ Shillellaghs Rodney Foster Jazzmen

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Blue Note Label Boss, Don Was, Is Not Ready To Give Up On Jazz: Forbes

Blue Note Label Boss, Don Was, Is Not Ready To Give Up On Jazz: Forbes

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https://www.forbes.com/sites/passionoftheweiss/2018/03/13/don-was-interview/#5f24a1445456
MAR 13, 2018 @ 09:00 AM 1,746 The Little Black Book of Billionaire Secrets
Blue Note Label Boss, Don Was, Is Not Ready To Give Up On Jazz

Founded by Francis Wolff and Alfred Lion in 1939, Blue Note Records has been synonymous with extraordinary jazz since its inception. If you don’t know the name, you’ve probably heard at least one of the albums they commissioned from genre titans like Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk, Cannonball Adderley, Donald Byrd, Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Lee Morgan, Art Blakey, Grant Green, Eric Dolphy—the list goes on ad infinitum.
If you’ve somehow avoided jazz your entire life, you’ve likely seen (or seen the influence of) Blue Note album covers: the vibrant, brilliantly designed combinations of text, image, and color that, in many ways, gave credence to the words “cover art.” Or, if you’ve seen a black-and-white photo of the above-mentioned artists in the studio, you can probably thank Francis Wolff for lighting/shooting those now-storied sessions. While labels like Verve, Prestige, Concord, Argo, and Impulse! deserve equal commendation for their contributions to one of the greatest American artforms, you could argue that none defined “cool” like Blue Note.
Though Blue Note could’ve coasted on the material they released in their first forty years, they’ve continued to release new records to an increasingly dwindling jazz-listening public. Thus, when former president/CEO Bruce Lundvall left the label in 2012 due to failing health (he’s since passed away), Blue Note’s parent company, Capitol Records, considered relegating the label to reissues alone. 
Fortunately, Don Was, the Detroit-born musician (Was (Not Was)) and record producer (The Rolling Stones, Elton John, Iggy Pop, Brian Wilson, and more) took the helm. Since arriving, he’s culled rising talents like Gregory Porter, Trombone Shorty, and GoGo Penguin, continued working with innovative, genre-defying artists like Robert Glasper and signed revered elder statesmen such as Dr. Lonnie Smith.
Blue Note’s latest endeavor is the Blue Note Review (BNR), a subscription-based, biannual vinyl box set. In many ways, the BNR is a bridge between the label’s past and future. The inaugural edition of BNR, Peace, Love & Fishing, which was announced late last year, features a re-issue of Blue Mitchell’s 1963 album Step Lightly, which never received a proper U.S. release, and an LP of new/previously unreleased songs by everyone from the Blue Note All-Stars and Dr. Lonnie Smith to the Wayne Shorter Quartet and Charles Lloyd & The Marvels. 
The music and elegant packaging are complemented by a thoughtfully edited zine. Inside, you’ll find comedian/actor/jazz-enthusiast Jeff Garlin (Curb Your Enthusiasm) interviewing Wayne Shorter about recording with Miles Davis and Art Blakey, as well as a comic illustration of the time Stanley Turrentine choked Alfred Lion for a few dollars (as told by the late Bobby Hutcherson) and a poem by Jack Grapes. To top it off (and perhaps justify the $200 pricetag), there are gorgeous prints of black-and-white photos of Wayne Shorter and Stanley Turrentine taken by Francis Wolff, as well as a turntable mat and a John Varvatos-designed scarf. On paper, some of the above might sound corny, but Was and Blue Note have imbued it all with the label’s ageless aesthetic.
In early February, I spoke to Was about the BNR, the L.A. jazz renaissance, the future of the genre, and much more (e.g., a Shades of Blue sequel). Calling from his office inside the Capitol Records building in Hollywood, where he works with a dedicated four-person team, Was was somehow both mellow and excited, his voice like an enthused whisper. Throughout our conversation, as he discussed the un-cool truths about running a jazz label in 2018, his candor was unwavering. More importantly, his affection and reverence for the label came through in each answer, many of which are filled with references to artists and albums that we would be all be wise to listen to or revisit. For now, it looks like Blue Note couldn’t be in better hands. 
Max Bell: When we tried to connect last week, you were on a ship. If you don’t mind my asking, what were you doing?
Don Was: [laughs] I was hosting the Blue Note at Sea Cruise, which, despite everything you might know about cruises, was a whole lot of fun. There were about 2,500 Blue Note devotees on board, and there was some awesome music, too. On my favorite night, Charles Lloyd & the Marvels came on board in Ocho Rios. I sat through both sets, which were excellent. Then I walked to the back of the ship and the Blue Note All-Stars (Robert Glasper, Derrick Hodge, Kendrick Scott, Lionel Loueke, Ambrose Akinmusire, Marcus Strickland) were playing. That was a great night of music, and every night was on that level. 
It was seven days. We do it every year. We do it in conjunction with the Blue Note clubs, which we don’t own and are not actually affiliated with but have become quite friendly with.
Bell: What do you make of the current renaissance of the L.A. jazz scene? I’m thinking of guys like Kamasi Washington, Terrace Martin, Miles Mosely, Josef Leimburg…
Was:  Of course. Kamasi is a friend. I know Miles, too. There’s some exciting things happening here. That Low End Theory was going for a while. That was pretty happening. I like what Adrian Younge and his guys are doing. They got this club called Jazz is Dead on Figueroa in Highland Park. He’s also got a great studio, too. We’re going to do some work there. I think there’s a next generation thing that’s uniquely L.A. based and has a very distinctive sound and distinctive roots. 
Bell: If I have my jazz history correct, I believe Ornette Coleman and several other major players were based in L.A. for a while. 
Was: A lot of guys were based out here. Charles Lloyd just sent me a picture of him and Bobby Hutcherson playing in a club in Pasadena in 1957 or something like that. I can’t remember the name of the club, but it’s not there anymore, obviously. Eric Dolphy came from out here. Bobby Hutcherson told me that his sister used to go out with Eric Dolphy. These guys all played together. There was definitely a scene here.
But the current scene needs a place, a central grounding location. If you think of the Village in the early 60s, there was a series of clubs. Or even in the 70s, there were things on 7th Avenues. That’s missing right now. And I think that’s the problem with L.A. and being part of a sprawl.
BellHow do you feel about jazz crossing over into rap once again? I’m thinking specifically of Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly.
Was: It’s the way it should it should be, man. People think that to appreciate jazz you have to take ten years of music theory. Really, jazz or any kind of improvisational music, when done right, is simply a conversation without words. If you think about your own conversations at parties, [they’re all improvisation]. You’re talking about any number of things that you’ve read, experienced, or absorbed. Robert Glasper, who is on Blue Note and played on that Kendrick album, is a great example of someone who will play a Thelonious Monk song and then quote J Dilla and a McDonald’s commercial in the course of a solo. You don’t need to identify the mode he’s playing in. You just follow his stream of consciousness and either it speaks to you or it doesn’t. 
I do feel that artists should reflect the times they live in and the milieu that they’re a part of. And I don’t know how you live in these times without absorbing some hip-hop culture, beats, and vibes. You have to reflect that back. That’s what you’re supposed to be doing. What I’m not partial to, and I don’t think a lot of other people are partial to it either, is to keep looking backwards and keep imitating what happened in 1965. What happened in 1965 is amazing, and we have an incredible catalog of music from 1965 that you can listen to anytime you want. But we should be looking forward and not doing karaoke from one generation to the next.
The reason that the Blue Note catalog, which goes back 79 years, is so enduring and relevant is because that’s what the musicians always did. In fact, the guy who founded the label, Alfred Lion, made it his point to find people who were looking forward. Because Thelonious Monk has become such a part of the musical vocabulary his early work may not seem as revolutionary as it was in 1948, but what Thelonious Monk did on those Blue Note albums radicalized the way people approach composition, soloing, and voicing chords. The same goes for Art Blakey and Horace Silver and the hard bop guys in the ’50s. It was radical music. In the ’60s, what Wayne Shorter and Herbie Hancock were doing with furthering the modal experiments and Miles Davis’s band—that was radical. Eric Dolphy Out to Lunch! That’s radical. Ornette Coleman’s At the Golden Circle Stockholm, that’s radical.
BellBefore you worked for Blue Note, what was your relationship with the label?
Was: I’ve been a fan of Blue Note since I was 14 years old, which would be 1966. I remember the moment I discovered it. I was running errands with my mom, and she left me in the car with the keys so I could play the radio. I landed on a radio station, which was then called WDET. It was the jazz station in Detroit, and I was unaware of it. I came in during a piece as the saxophone solo came in on what I later discovered was “Mode for Joe” by Joe Henderson, who was also from Detroit. And the solo was just like the anguished cries that sort of transcended the vocabulary of saxophone playing. It wasn’t about notes or technique. He was speaking to me through this thing. About 20 seconds into the solo, the drummer, Joe Chambers, comes in and starts playing this really swinging groove. It sort of calms Joe Henderson down and he falls into the groove. It was like Joe Henderson was saying, “Don, you’ve got to groove in the face of adversity.” It really spoke to me. 
I went out the next week and bought a portable FM radio so I could listen to it in the house. There wasn’t a whole lot going on for FM radio in 1966, mostly muzak and some simulcasting from AM. But there was this great jazz station where the DJ, a guy named Ed Love, who is like 90 and still on the air in Detroit, would back announce every record and tell you who all the players were. I soon learned that a lot of the music that I liked was coming from this little label Blue Note. 
Back in those days, record stores were owner-operated, independent. The stock in each record store would vary according to the taste of the owner. Before we could drive, we would get on buses and ride across Detroit and call around and see what albums the stores had. If they had a Blue Note record that we hadn’t seen or heard before, we’d get on a bus and ride for 45 minutes just to hold the record. You couldn’t necessarily buy it, but you could read the liner notes, check out the personnel, see what songs they were doing, and maybe con the owner into breaking the plastic wrap and actually playing the record for you.
It wasn’t just the music, either. It had something to do with the art, the covers, and the black-and-white photography. Look at those pictures taken by Francis Wolff, one of the founders of the company, at all of those recording sessions. They were lit in a crazy way and you could never see the walls. It just looked like they were in these black rooms. You’d see the cigarette smoke, the cool clothes, and a saxophone—to a 14 of 15-year-old, it was so romantic, man. I just wanted to be in that room with those cats.
BellYou took over as president of Blue Note in 2012. Has the job been everything you anticipated?
Was: [laughs] Let me put it this way. I’m not saying it’s not challenging, and I’m not saying I was born to read a profit/loss statement, but I love the gig. I feel a real responsibility to the musicians who are currently on the roster and to the musicians who came before to make sure that the music is heard. The founders of the label wrote a little manifesto in 1939 that kind of laid out the philosophy of what they were trying to do. In essence, it was about a search for authentic forms of expression and unlimited artistic freedom for the artist. I take that manifesto very seriously. 
I’m sitting here at the office at Capitol Tower now and there’s this picture of Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff on the wall. Just below that is a shot of Bruce Lundvall, who took over in 1984 and ran the company for 30 years until his health kind of gave way. He retired, which opened the door for me to come in. I’m proud to represent what they stood for and make sure it’s maintained, and keep the doors open during what is essentially a time of tumultuous transition in the music business. That’s a challenge, but so far they haven’t closed us down. And I’m really proud of the artists that we have and the records they’re making.
BellWhat are some of your proudest moments in your six years with the label?
Was: It was incredible to re-sign Wayne Shorter, who is a great hero of mine and made some albums that are arguably the crown jewel of the Blue Note catalog in the ’60s. That was one of the first things I did. I also brought in Charles Lloyd and Dr. Lonnie Smith, who I used to see in Detroit a lot in the ’70s. 
But then there’s another couple of generations of guys who are here. Ambrose Akinmusire. Brian Blade, who is just an incredible drummer. Chris “Daddy” Dave just put out a new album. Derrick Hodge, Kendrick Scott, Ravi Coltrane, Robert Glasper, Gregory Porter. 
I actually got the job because of Gregory Porter. I had gone to see him when I was in New York producing a record in 2011. I had a night off and went to a club near Harlem called Smoke and saw Gregory Porter. The next day I was having breakfast with an old buddy of mine named Dan McCarroll, who I knew as a drummer years earlier. He became the president of Capitol Records, and when we were having breakfast I asked him if Blue Note was still part of Capitol. Then I said that if it was, he should sign Gregory Porter.
Unbeknownst to me, he told that they were considering shutting Blue Note down. With Bruce Lundvall retiring, no one quite knew how to push the aesthetic forward. There was some talk about making it a website that just sold catalog and Blue Note t-shirts. I think that anyone that walked in with an idea that day would’ve been offered the gig. [laughs] It was just chance that I brought this up, and he offered me the job over breakfast. It was irresistible, man. 
Before Blue Note, I was a musician and a producer, neither of which I considered to be work. It was always fun. My goal in life had been to avoid having a job. I almost made it, but I couldn’t resist [laughs].
Bell: Are there any contemporary jazz labels that you look to for inspiration or that you think are instrumental in keeping the genre alive?
Was: Anybody who can keep the doors open deserves respect and awe. It’s really tough to be able to fund the records. If actual sales diminish to a certain point, then you can’t really afford to pay to make good records. Records that would routinely sell 100,000 fifteen years ago now sell 3,000. You have to be very creative and determined to keep going in the face of that. To me, that’s the fun part, coming up with new stuff. 
The Blue Note Review is an example of what makes it fun and how you respond to the challenge of diminishing sales. We were just trying to evoke that same feeling for fans, the same feeling that I got with my buddies when we’d ride around and hold those vinyl albums. It was a tactile, experiential encounter with the music. The accoutrement—the artwork, the photos, the liner notes—gave you a greater sense of connection with the music. We were like, “How can we do that when even CD booklets are becoming rare?” If you can even open up a CD booklet, you need a f**king magnifying glass to make any connection with anything.
BellOn a financial note, what’s the Blue Note policy on sampling? Really, what’s it going to cost to sample some Art Blakey drums in 2018?
Was: [laughs] That’s been nice financially, at least for the Art Blakey estate. We’ve been heavily sampled, and I think that that’s one of the things that enabled this bridge. The late 60s and early 70s stuff that had these great grooves underneath and brought a new generation of music fans into the world of Blue Note. So we encourage sampling.
The biggest problem is that up until 1972 we didn’t have multi-track tapes, so everything was mixed live. Except for a few odd drum breaks, you can’t isolate Art Blakey and loop him. 
Bell: Would you say the label is pretty artist-friendly when people ask for sample clearance?
Was: Let me put it this way. Blue Note is part of Universal Music Group, which has a different division that handles all that. They don’t call me up. But they would call if they were having a problem. And there were a couple times—it wasn’t for samples, but it was for films where people wanted to use the music and couldn’t afford the rates. We intervened and tried to make it happen. We want the music to live on.
A big success story was Us3 that did “Cantaloop,” that was the first million-selling record in the history of the label. What happened was this DJ out of the UK came to Bruce Lundvall and said, “Would it be okay if we sampled ‘Cantaloupe Island’ and build a new track on it?” Bruce heard it and said, “Not only is it okay, but we’d like to open our vaults to you and have you do a whole album.” We also had Madlib do a whole album that was very successful. 
Bell: Since you brought it up, have you ever approached Madlib about doing a sequel to Shades of Blue?
Was: He has an open door here at Blue Note. Anytime he wants to, we would love to have him do part two.
Bell: I’m so happy to print those words.
Was: [laughs] Good. I hope he reads it and calls. I’ll let you know.
Bell: Are you familiar with the hashtag #ListenToMoreJazz?
Was: Nope, but I’m going to be. [laughs]
Bell: It was started by a fellow music journalist, Barry Schwartz. He uses the hashtag on Twitter to hip people to jazz songs he enjoys, as well as songs on his #ListenToMoreJazz Spotify playlist, which has some excellent stuff on it.
Was: Sounds cool, man. I’m definitely going to check that out.
Bell: The selection of Blue Note playlists on Spotify is pretty robust. Who curates those playlists? Are they successful? 
Was: They’re all done by a guy named Cem Kurosman, who has worked at Blue Note for 20 years. He’s our senior  guy, although he’s younger than me. He’s really an authority on the music and loves it, and he makes those playlists. He’s done an incredible job, and Spotify loves what he’s done. He’s very comprehensive, and he continues to make more of them. In the future, that’s probably how people are going to listen to Blue Note music. The way he is categorizing them and arranging them is great. 
Bell: Apart from the Blue Note Review, are you guys focusing more on digital these days?
Was: We’re focused on everything these days. We have the 80th anniversary of the label coming up, and we’re planning to announce a very big vinyl campaign towards the end of the year. For our 75th anniversary we did 100 titles that were priced under $20. We tried to keep it reasonable so people could take a chance. We’ll be doing more of that, but also some extensive audiophile things.
Bell: The label still puts out a significant number of reissues each year, correct?
Was: Yeah. The last couple of years have been less, so we’re going to use the 80th anniversary to set up an extensive reissue campaign that will last for years.
Bell: In the the Blue Note Review insert, you mention Jack White and Third Man Records. Is it fair to say they were a big influence in your decision to do these box sets?
Was: I love what he does. I’ve known Jack for a number of years, and he’s such an impressive and imaginative cat. He’s got a real profound vision. I was just at the Third Man store in Detroit, and it’s like Willy Wonka’s factory. It’s this wonderland of cool s**t. You walk to the back and he’s got this spotless record-pressing plant. You stand in the store behind the glass and watch these guys in lab coats press vinyl. It’s brilliant. Anyway, I knew we had to do something that expanded on the experience of 12” vinyl. 
Initially, we thought about doing a magazine with a CD inside. I liked the idea of an exclusive anthology album. When I was first learning about jazz in the mid-’60s, there was an album that Impulse! put out called The New Wave in Jazz that had Coltrane, Archie Shepp, Albert Ayler, and all these guys, and that’s how I found out about them. I knew Coltrane, but that was my first exposure to Shepp and Ayler. There’s also a label out in New York called ESP that does some pretty radical s**t. They put out an ESP-sampler vinyl that you could buy for a $1.99. It didn’t have whole songs, but it had bits of everything from Sun Ra to William Burroughs to Pharoah Sanders. It was all very extreme music, and that’s how I learned about it.
And I wanted to do something like that with our roster, and I knew I wanted to do an anthology record that you couldn’t stream or download anywhere. [I had all of these ideas], and I then I saw what Jack was doing with the Third Man vault series. It’s just a combination of things, and we tried to come up with our own identity for it. I’m very proud of it, and I hope we can continue to do two a year for a very long time.
Bell: How long did it take you to produce the zine/record insert?
Was: Because we work in that business, everything took a long time just to get the balance right. Now that we know what it is, we’re going to make some adjustments for the next box. I think it has its own identity that we’re going to continue to hone. We’re almost done with the second anthology record, which is all new stuff commissioned specifically for the next theme.
Bell: Jack Grapes is a fantastic poet and a big champion of beat literature (i.e. On the Bus). Why did you reach out to him for the zine?
Was: You’re one of the first people to mention that. I was honestly worried that you couldn’t read the typeface. No one was mentioning it, and I thought, “It’s not the poem, it’s that they can’t read it.” [laughs] One of our goals is to make it more readable next time, but I’m glad you dig that. There was a woman who we talked to about the [insert] and she was taking a poetry class from Jack. She said, “You have to have a Jack Grapes piece in there.” I said, “Of course.”
Bell: Where did you find the story about Stanley Turrentine attacking Alfred Lion? Are there more stories like this? Are they all just transcribed in a book somewhere in the Blue Note office?
Was: That’s exactly as told to me by Bobby Hutcherson, who passed away. He recorded his last album for Blue Note. At one point I had a Sirius XM radio show called the Blue Note Hour, and on one of the shows I interviewed him and he told me that story [laughs]. That’s going to be a regular feature. We have one about Art Blakey for issue two.
Bell: Why did you decide on Blue Mitchell’s Step Lightly as the first re-release in the box set?
Was: We have a number of albums in the catalog that have never had a proper release and were either really overlooked or didn’t come out for reasons that were non-musical. That was supposed to be his debut album, and he did two in a short period of time and they put the other one out. But that didn’t make Step Lightly any less of an album. It had a release in Japan and a very limited release on vinyl here in the ’80s.
Bell: Are you concerned that people will upload or sell these limited records online? 
Was: No. That’s life. Everybody makes music for the music to be heard. If you’re just making stuff for the sake of making it, that’s kind of self-indulgent and selfish. I hope people will subscribe [laughs], but I want the music to be heard and appreciated, too.
Bell: Do you think there will ever be a time when jazz is synonymous with popular music again? 
Was: No. I think that’s part of the fun of listening to jazz. It’s more challenging. Pop music has a function, which is instant gratification. That’s good. I like pop music, but I think there’s something about music that challenges you that gets under your skin and allows you to revisit it 50 years later and still find meaning and value in it. That’s something different than pop music, and that’s a good thing. None of our artists are sleeping in their cars or anything like that. [laughs] It’s still possible to play deeper and more eclectic forms of music and have an audience.
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Listening to Miles Davis and John Coltrane’s Final Tour | Richard Brody The New Yorker

Listening to Miles Davis and John Coltrane’s Final Tour | Richard Brody The New Yorker

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https://www.newyorker.com/culture/richard-brody/listening-to-miles-davis-and-john-coltranes-final-tour
 
Listening to Miles Davis and John Coltrane’s Final Tour
Richard Brody
There’s a great story behind “Miles Davis and John Coltrane—The Final Tour,” the sixth volume in Sony’s “Bootleg Series” of live recordings by Davis (it comes out March 23rd), and that story makes itself heard in the music. In 1960, the trumpeter Miles Davis, along with his regular band, was booked to go on a concert tour in Western Europe as part of the ongoing, and internationally famous, “Jazz at the Philharmonic” concert series. However, at exactly that time, Coltrane, who played tenor saxophone, was preparing to leave Davis’s quintet and form his own working group. Coltrane had been a sideman with Davis on and off since 1955; they were both born in 1926, but their careers took drastically different paths. Davis was already a minor star in 1945, at the age of nineteen, when he recorded with Charlie Parker. Three years later, at twenty-two, he led a nonet, featuring intricate arrangements, that proved vastly influential. (They’re gathered under the title “Birth of the Cool.”) Davis had a huge and significant discography as a leader by the time he hired Coltrane, an unheralded musician best known as a rarely soloing sideman, who’d never yet led a record date. With Davis, Coltrane quickly found his voice, and expanded it during a stint in 1957 with Thelonious Monk. Coltrane had led dates on several labels; recorded the influential “Giant Steps,” in 1959; and was ready to go out on his own.
Davis’s group, featuring the pianist Wynton Kelly, the bassist Paul Chambers, and the drummer Jimmy Cobb—which had been a sextet for several years, featuring Cannonball Adderley’s alto sax alongside Coltrane’s tenor—was now depleted. Adderley left in the fall of 1959, and Coltrane was feeling his oats. On club dates, Cobb said, Coltrane “would play an hour solo himself, and we were only supposed to be on the stand for forty minutes or something.” Prior to the European tour, Coltrane told Davis that he wouldn’t join him there, and even recommended another tenor saxophonist to Davis, Wayne Shorter, who was only twenty-six. (Davis actually hired him—in 1964.) But, because Coltrane was familiar with the band’s material, Davis prevailed upon Coltrane to join him one last time for the European tour. Coltrane agreed, grudgingly; according to Cobb, Coltrane displayed his discontent throughout the tour: “He sat next to me on the bus, looking like he was ready to split at any time. He spent most of the time looking out the window and playing Oriental-sounding scales on soprano.”
In fact, Coltrane made exemplary use of his time on that tour, working out his musical ideas more fully, audaciously, and radically than he had ever done in his previous studio recordings. Davis is in fine fettle throughout the tour; Coltrane plays with fury. As he did in American clubs, he plays longer solos (often much longer) than Davis does (not hour-long, though) and often gets much more applause than Davis does. By bringing Coltrane back into the group for this European tour, one of the band’s most prestigious showcases, Davis in effect relegated himself to the role of a sideman in his own band.
Coltrane’s solos range from the overwhelming to the astonishing to the devastating to the outrageously playful. He developed ideas that he had been working on throughout the late fifties, ideas that took the harmonic complexities of bebop to a new level. What he had been doing in the late fifties was, essentially, playing every note of the chords that provided the tune’s harmonic structure—and when he substituted (in the classic bebop form) new chords for familiar ones he played all of those notes, too. It made for lots of notes that he played very fast, in long breaths, with a vibrato-free, hard-steely tone that led one critic of the era, Ira Gitler, to immortalize Coltrane’s style at that time as “sheets of sound.” In “The Final Tour,” the sound is of Coltrane ripping the sheets to shreds. He played plenty of high-velocity rushes of notes here, too, but also broke off and fragmented those long lines. He wrenched them apart with low-end blasts, mid-range cries, and high-pitched shrieks, moving away from the musical sense of notes and chords toward pure sound—a dramatic tendency that he took to ecstatic extremes with his own groups.
Before this release, the music from the quintet’s European tour was available—exactly as the “Bootleg Series” suggests—through unauthorized releases. (Several of these concert recordings, including the ones in the Sony set, were officially made for radio broadcast.) They’re already familiar—mainly to fanatics trawling used-CD shops. (I’ve collected bootlegs of the tour for decades; there are about eight disks full of them, and they’re among my favorite jazz recordings.) “The Final Tour” offers three of the group’s concerts, including the two crucial ones from the tour. In their Paris performance, on March 21, 1960, the first night of the tour, Davis starts playing full-throated and elbows-out, and Coltrane responds by going wild, throwing down a gantlet, not to Davis or even to his audience but to himself. His performances were received as a succès de scandale. During and after several long and furious solos, members of the audience can be heard whistling (the local equivalent of booing). But there are also plenty of boisterous cheers. (I heard, anecdotally, from a friend who attended the concert, as a teen-ager, that even the passionate cognoscenti—meaning he and his friends—were Davis aficionados who came in knowing little about Coltrane but took him up as a new hero that night.)
The next night, in Stockholm, Davis seems somewhat guarded, not struggling to keep up but wary, as if he were defending some border of musical order. By contrast, Coltrane followed his Paris outburst with some lofty philosophical playfulness, picking a pair of notes from the melody and repeating them, rocking back and forth between them as if examining their gleam in the light, working them out bit by bit, line by line, until they build to an outrageous complexity that seems to astonish even him as it rushes by.
For that matter, the entire band is a delight. Kelly’s solos, following Coltrane’s, have a ripplingly songful, easygoing but intriguingly varied lyricism; Chambers offers a firm melodic and percussive counterpoint, and Cobb displays a rhythmic foundation that’s as foot-tappingly strong as it is polyrhythmically supple. Yet, as great and essential as “The Final Tour” is, its four disks tell only part of the story. I wouldn’t want to be without Coltrane’s furious outbursts from Frankfurt, Germany, the following week, or the concerts from later in the tour, in early April, when Davis seems to come out from Coltrane’s shadow, as in three tracks believed to have been recorded in Munich. By the end of the tour, Coltrane seems somewhat transfigured—his playing seems at times not appeased or tamped down but burned away to a spiritual essence, foreshadowing the mood and the content of much of his music from his own classic quartet, which finally began to coalesce in the summer of that year. As for Davis, he sought bold new musical directions as well; it took a new quintet, which he assembled in 1963-64, for him to find them.
 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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The Making (and Remaking) of Jewish Jazz Masterpiece ‘Hear, O Israel’ – Tablet Magazine

The Making (and Remaking) of Jewish Jazz Masterpiece ‘Hear, O Israel’ – Tablet Magazine

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http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-arts-and-culture/music/257216/making-and-remaking-a-jewish-jazz-masterpiece
 
The Making (and Remaking) of a Jewish Jazz Masterpiece
Fifty years ago this month, a Jewish youth group issued a remarkable ‘concert service in jazz’ album featuring Herbie Hancock and other greats titled ‘Hear, O Israel’—but the composer hated it
During winter break of his sophomore year at Brown in 1967, Jonathan Klein traveled to New York with his French horn, baritone sax, and an unusual score he’d written several years earlier.
An aspiring composer and son of a Reform rabbi from Worcester, Massachusetts, Klein had taken a traditional Jewish prayer service—complete with candle blessing, Kiddush, psalmist meditation and the Sh’ma—and set it to jazz tunes, from snappy to bluesy to bossa nova and even modal. Congregations around New England—including his father’s—enjoyed his adaptation, and now Klein was getting a chance to record the work, as part of a recruiting effort by the National Federation of Temple Youth to attract new members.
A producer and sound engineer rented a recording studio on East 14th Street in Manhattan. Klein had scant rehearsal time and all of six hours to pull the session together with a pickup band of professional musicians, a pair of female opera singers and the NFTY rabbi, David Davis, to read the spoken portions in English and Hebrew. There wasn’t enough money for a second booking or multiple takes, especially since one of the musicians was getting double the usual union scale. Creative differences flared as the day wore on.
Somehow, NFTY got its album—a 38-minute, nine-cut recording titled Hear, O Israel. A few hundred copies were pressed in March 1968 and distributed free to local chapters and shuls as a way of showing Jewish high schoolers that services could be hip—the LP’s blurry cover photograph featured a Torah against a tomato-red backdrop, flanked by a trumpet, sax, and French horn. There was virtually no retail distribution or radio airplay; the record didn’t carry a catalog number, just a NFTY stamp on the label.
Fifty years later, Klein gets testy when reminded of the project. A commercial and TV composer who taught film scoring at Berklee College of Music until his retirement in 2014, he prefers not to discuss the recording, though given a chance he’ll count all the ways it bombed. “The two singers were totally wrong for the job, and whoever transposed the tenor sax part pushed it up an octave too high, which threw the voices off,” Klein said from his home in Framingham, Massachusetts, as if recalling a root canal. Mostly he blames himself. “There were amateurish writing mistakes, and the arrangements were weak—it took me years to compose well for vocals. Plus, I never should have performed—my horn sounded flat and didn’t mesh with the others. It was a harsh lesson to learn as a student not to play on your own project.”
Klein has every right to go hard on his early effort. But for those who’ve had a chance to hear it, the original was no failure. For despite the bloopers and missed assignments, Klein had one amazing stroke of good fortune in the musicians he landed that day, which rescues Hear, O Israel from the scrapheap of jazz vespers.

Out front on trumpet and flugelhorn was Thad Jones, member of a prominent jazz family whose brothers were pianist Hank Jones and drummer Elvin Jones; in 1967 Thad was drawing attention for the sassy big band he had recently formed with drummer Mel Lewis; it would soon become one of the biggest acts in jazz. On alto/tenor saxophones and flute was Jerome Richardson, whose credits included recordings with legends Cannonball Adderley, Charles Mingus, Milt Jackson, and Kenny Burrell, along with top singers Sarah Vaughn, Abby Lincoln, Dinah Washington, Betty Carter, and even Harry Belafonte. The rhythm section was anchored by bassist Ron Carter and drummer Grady Tate, two of the steadiest beats in the business, with hundreds of albums between them and long careers ahead.
But the leader of the date—reflected by his double paycheck and extended playing time—was pianist Herbie Hancock. Still a member of Miles Davis’ seminal quintet and known for breakout tunes like “Watermelon Man” and “Maiden Voyage,” Hancock was a 27-year-old jazz thoroughbred, perhaps the most in-demand pianist in New York. He’d already had a small string of hit albums under his own name on Blue Note, but was busy freelancing as a sideman for other first-tier labels including Atlantic, Columbia, Verve, A&M, RCA, and Cadet. Having Hancock at the keyboard, with his inventive chord choices, harmonies, solos and rhythmic comping, was guaranteed to produce superior recordings—as it already had for such jazz greats as Freddie Hubbard, Stan Getz, Wayne Shorter, Kenny Dorham, and Donald Byrd. That NFTY was able to secure Hancock and his mates for a private-label album of Jewish liturgical verses cooked up by a no-name college sophomore was a major coup.
***
I first became aware of Hear, O Israel around 2002, via Fred Cohen, owner of the Jazz Record Center, an invaluable resource for rare and out-of-print recordings housed in a small office building in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood. Cohen knew I was a Hancock fanatic and mentioned he could obtain a copy through his pipeline of collectors—this was before eBay and Amazon made anything accessible. Although a prolific performer, Hancock has produced far fewer albums as a leader than his peers—including fellow piano icons Keith Jarrett, Chick Corea, and McCoy Tyner. The idea that he’d headlined a never-released 1960s record of Jewish prayers was riveting, which is why I didn’t flinch in coughing up $175 for the pristine LP Cohen sourced. But I no longer owned a turntable, so had to pay another $30 to have the vinyl version converted to CD at Gryphon Used Books on West 72nd Street.
The album did not disappoint—and still doesn’t every time it pops up on my iPod. From the opening dance-like “Candle Blessing” to the final up-tempo “Benediction,” Hear, O Israel is a first-rate modern jazz suite, with inspired source material performed at a high level by some of the finest jazz musicians of the day.
Sure, some of the vocals are garbled and the rabbi’s enunciations grandiose—what rabbi’s aren’t? The pacing is off in a few places, including several abrupt endings. And that French horn solo on “Mi Chamocha”—it sounds distant and sluggish; no wonder Klein winces thinking about it a half-century later. But he’s carried along nicely by Hancock, who lifts the entire group with brilliant solos, intros, and chord voicings that would be more widely referenced today if the recording weren’t so obscure. A few of the cuts are barely a minute long, which is a shame because they start out with promise. If only Herbie had taken a solo after Jerome Richardson’s flute on the spritely “Kiddush.”
It’s not a stretch to say that Hear, O Israel captures a fleeting moment near the end of an era in post-bop jazz, and reveals a small missing link in the career of one of its masters. Within a year after NFTY handed out its scant stash, Hancock would be among the prominent players joining Miles Davis in a Columbia recording studio for the making of In a Silent Way, a beacon for a new type of jazz fused with electrified rock that was morphing into funk, disco, soul, and other pop styles that was pushing jazz into more commercial directions. By 1969, Hancock would leave Blue Note for the bigger Warner Bros., using electric keyboards and trying out a variety of unjazzy sounds and polyrhythms that would propel him to superstar status with his 1973 album, Headhunters.
But in 1967-68, jazz was still mostly sticking to its side of the street, which limited its popular appeal but also gave so many recordings from those years a stylistic purity that some critics feel represented a kind of heyday. Hear, O Israel belongs in that last chapter of the ’60s sound typified by Blue Note—a mostly acoustic, small ensemble playing original compositions powered by crisp, straight-ahead rhythms and simple, if clever, arrangements. That everything was wedded to a set of Hebrew prayers only added to its honesty.
It’s worth noting that in early March 1968, less than three months after recording Hear, O Israel, Hancock went into a Blue Note studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, leading a sextet that included Ron Carter and Thad Jones, to produce one of his greatest albums from that period, Speak Like a Child. It was released that summer and became an instant classic, with amazing piano work driving a set of first-rate tunes, including “Riot,” “The Sorcerer,” Ron Carter’s “First Trip,” “Toys,” and the title track. A side-by-side comparison of the two albums does not diminish Hear, O Israel, despite the obvious production differences. Not only does the style of play place each record from the same peak time frame, but there’s a similar spontaneity and upbeat feeling to both—it could well be that Hancock carried a bit of Klein’s project with him in conceiving the latter album, including an elegiac ensemble piece called “Goodbye to Childhood.”
Israel compares favorably to several other religiously-rooted jazz recordings from that era that likewise hold up decades later. One was a 1963 Blue Note album by trumpeter Donald Byrd called A New Perspective, paying jazzy tribute to old-time spirituals and gospel hymns. It, too, is enhanced by Hancock on piano, as well as a rousing chorus of Pentecostal singers. The other is a live Episcopal church service captured at San Francisco’s Grace Cathedral in 1965—transformed by a trio led by pianist Vince Guaraldi, who shortly thereafter gained lasting fame for scoring the Peanuts TV specials. Complete with sounds of coughing and page-turning, as well as a bishop’s greeting, invocations of “Christ Our Savior” and a 68-voice children’s choir that could have included Linus and Charlie Brown, Grace Cathedral (Fantasy Records), is also an extraordinary merging of jazz and sacred text. Hear, O Israel has a rightful, Jewish place alongside both of these outstanding recordings.
Although the original LP has disappeared even from auction sites, you can buy a CD or even a vinyl version of Hear, O Israel online. Credit an enterprising British DJ and promoter called Jonny Trunk (real name Jonathan Benton-Hughes), who swooped in a decade ago and obtained rights to the original 1968 recording from the union—and no, that’s not the musicians’ union, but the Union of Reform Judaism, NFTY’s nonprofit parent. A recent search on Amazon found used copies for $110, while a mint version was selling for $411, reflecting Trunk’s shrewd move of keeping supplies limited—his label bills it as “The Secret Herbie Hancock Album.” But you can also listen to the whole recording free on YouTube. Trunk switched out the homemade cover for a more modern graphic depicting an illustrated red menorah against a white backdrop because, as he put it kindly, the original sleeve image “is so very terrible.”
Someone sent Jonathan Klein a copy of the Trunk reissue a few years ago, though he swears he hasn’t cracked the cellophane covering the CD. For him, Hear, O Israel wasn’t properly realized until he recorded a 1992 redo for the Milken Archive of Jewish Music, which for various reasons was kept under wraps until 2011. That version can also be sampled free on Spotify or YouTube and includes five minutes of Hancock-Carter-Tate trio work from the original spliced into Klein’s updated reworking of the prayer service. Not only was that the limit of material that could be used without paying royalties, it was all Klein felt worth salvaging from the 1967 session.
***
For Ron Carter, the session may have been just another day in the studio, but that’s not to say he approached it with anything less than his usual sense of purpose.
“Every day, on every recording, it’s a different band, under a different leader, with different concepts, different keys, and instrumentation,” says the 80-year-old Carter, whom Guinness certifies as the world’s “most-recorded jazz bassist.” Thus, when asked which of the more than 2,200 albums he’s made are among his favorites, he answers diplomatically, “Whichever ones they called me to come in for.”
In the end, the scale probably tipped and you had an album that was more jazz than Jewish.
But Carter acknowledges that performing with Hancock has always been special, and in the mid-1960s their bond was especially close as part of the Miles Davis group. “Herbie raises the level of music in an instant—that includes me, but also drummers, singers, whoever he’s working with. He has the desire and ability to listen and anticipate what comes next, or what should come next. He hears the other musicians so that his notes and chord choices and solos are integrated with everyone else. That’s a true leader.”

That Carter never got to solo on Israel doesn’t bother him a wit. “I’ve never been one of those players hanging back behind the palm tree waiting for my spotlight,” he told me in a velvety soft voice from his apartment on New York’s Upper West Side. “My role has always been to bring a dynamic to the band and to help make the whole group sound like it should and also have fun. I take whatever solos I want in my living room and I always sound great!”
Hearing that the composer has less than a four-star regard for this off-label recording, Carter responded, “That’s his honest opinion, but from what I remember the music was well-written and had a lot of movement and changes, which I always appreciate. The singers may not have been jazz-trained but they were right there and added a serious, reverential quality to our work. I remember heading home that day not only feeling that we’d done the job, but we were adding something new to the normal jazz library. In fact, I’ve given a copy of the recording to some cantors and rabbis I’ve met to see how they react. They were astonished by the quality of the tunes and the force of the music. So I don’t think you can say it wasn’t a success.”
***
There was another key hand at work helping shape Hear, O Israel—thanks to composer Charlie Morrow, who was called on to pull the album together. The album’s official producer was an Italian-born music publisher named Raoul Ronson, whose company, Seesaw Music Corp., licensed the vocal parts, paid for the studio and contracted with the musicians. But in addition to hiring Ronson and bringing in all the players, Morrow called on another of his contacts to run the soundboard as recording engineer—Jerome Newman.
“Jerry was a legend,” said Morrow, speaking recently from the Netherlands between performance projects throughout Europe. No disputing that: While still an undergraduate at Columbia in the 1940s, Newman was known for lugging a portable disk-cutting recorder to Minton’s Playhouse in Harlem, where he captured early bebop sets by Charlie Christian, Thelonious Monk, and Charlie Parker. Although he later mastered recordings of flamenco guitarists, ethnic Greek and Arabic folk tunes, Beethoven symphonies, and Flemish chamber works, Newman, who died in 1970, is best remembered for his jazz output, including studio albums by Ornette Coleman, Eric Dolphy, Pharaoh Sanders, Oscar Pettiford, and others.
“It was Jerry who ensured that the session was ‘on brand,’ ” Morrow said. “A quality recording depends on the lineage and legacy of those at the engineering controls—that’s what made all those Blue Note albums so distinctive under the care of Rudy Van Gelder. Jerry likewise knew all the technical aspects within the studio setting needed to create a strong jazz sound.
“Keep in mind,” he continued, “because of the cost constraints, this was a straight live-to-stereo recording. There was no multitrack machine, where you could balance the constituent parts in post-production. Every take was the way it was—what you got is what you got. Having Jerry engineer the work was further proof that I always wanted to be the least talented person on set. There are some collectors who would cherish this recording solely on the basis that it was one of Jerry’s works.”
Still, Morrow considers the session with mixed feelings today. In a musical career loaded with highlights—critically acclaimed rock operas, sound installations, and symphonic works, plus a thriving commercial business that includes film scores (Ken Russell’s Altered States) and ad jingles for Coke, Hefty Bags, and the famous rat-a-tat-tat percussion track behind WINS radio slogan, “You give us 22 minutes, we’ll give you the world”—his total absence from any association with Hear, O Israel feels a bit of a slight.
“I never got paid, for one thing,” he said. “And you could say there were a few bad feelings that day. Jonathan wanted more creative control and probably felt patronized when Herbie took over his tunes. He wasn’t exactly receptive to my ideas and recommendations—we had some dicey moments with the arrangements, and he was struggling, especially with the time limitations we had to work with, so he may have blamed me for any rough patches. I’m certain he faulted me for the singers, who happened to be world-class vocalists—Antonia Lavanne and Phyllis Bryn-Julson. The fact is, as soon as Jerry put Jonathan into the mix, he was going to be dialed back to let the other players do their thing.
“For whatever reason, no one ever reached out to me afterward, not even to share a copy of the album,” Morrow added. “I knew it was a unique undertaking based on Jonathan’s remarkable idea and this exceptional coming together of talent—but it just never blossomed in my life or became something to add to my CV, even though I was the actual producer.”
Prominent Hollywood composer Michael Isaacson, a former NFTY counselor who was present at the original 1967 date, remembers the tension at play in the Stereo Sound studio that day. “Jonathan was definitely in a post-adolescent state,” he recalled. “He had his French horn and his baritone sax and wanted to contribute, but frankly, his playing got in the way of some really great jazz.
“I can understand his frustration,” Isaacson continued. “Charlie hired two singers who were terrific at opera and new music, and could sight-read any score, but they didn’t have a feel for jazz or what Jonathan had in mind for the piece—they were basically singing Hebrew phonetics. Meanwhile, you had these killer musicians who came together for one six-hour project. They’d never seen the material before and were tolerating the prayer verses and the first eight or 16 bars up front so they could get to what they did best. Essentially, Herbie and the others were playing jazz on changes—and that bothered Jonathan. He felt Charlie was mollifying him and there wasn’t a proper alignment between one text and another, or with the music. Without question, it’s a landmark recording and a noble experiment deserving of a wider audience. But in the end, the scale probably tipped, and you had an album that was more jazz than Jewish, which is OK, but it’s not how it was supposed to go.”
Rabbi Davis, the former NFTY director who commissioned the album, doesn’t see it that way. “Was it a perfect recording?” he asked. “Maybe not. Jonathan zeroed in on the negativity, but he may not have realized what we accomplished. It made a real stir in our community. It got people talking around the country, and it had a lasting impact on many young people and artists.” One of those he remembers was the late Debbie Friedman, whose folky reworking of conventional prayers and songs became a staple of many Reform services. “Debbie was a folkie, but she loved our jazz album and said it helped her realize how open the prayer service was to different musical styles and voices,” Davis said.
***
Klein may have tried to bury any memory of the original recording, but he had continued to tweak his concert piece, at least for a while. In 1969, having graduated from Brown and readying to begin teaching at Berklee, he performed what he calls “Version 2” of the service at Boston’s Temple Emanuel.
His group included two Berklee scholarship students who had recently emigrated to the U.S. from the Czech Republic—Jan Hammer on piano and George Mraz on bass, along with young Berklee alum, drummer Harvey Mason. All three would go on to achieve true jazz stardom. Klein felt he’d improved the work considerably, based on his own further study of arranging and harmony. “That’s one I wish we’d recorded,” he said wistfully.
Then the demands of a career took over. After a stint at Berklee (where his students included the guitarist John Scofield), he left in 1975, initially to score animated films, among them a popular children’s series called Captain Silas used in schools and libraries. He had jobs with PBS and joined a cover band, playing keyboards in clubs and at functions around Boston six nights a week, and even appeared on several disco albums. He wrote jingles and incidental music for TV ads selling Raleigh bicycles and Girl Scout cookies, and performed with a fellow Brown alum named Susan Bennett, a sometime jazz singer and commercial voice-over artist who later secured her place in popular culture as the comforting voice of Apple’s Siri.
That’s the secret success of the rerecord—the vocals have real heart and soul, and weren’t going through the motions from a score sheet.
He also produced several other Jewish scores, including a piece called “Sacred Times and Seasons” commissioned by a synagogue in Brooklyn, with a woman cantor—not a common fixture at a 1970s shul. (Klein maintains a modest personal website with a sampling of some of his work.)
In 1989, Klein returned to Berklee as an associate professor in film scoring, confident in his chops and starting to think about revisiting the Israel service. “I’d learned so much about arranging during those years, even if the basic structure and melodic core of the work was the same,” he said. “When Michael Isaacson called me out of the blue in 1992 offering to make a new recording for this new Milken Archive, I felt ready to give it another try. Michael had become a big-deal Hollywood composer. I was excited to take a fresh pass at the work for his new archival project. He’d been present for the earlier record and knew it had defects, so I trusted he’d let me get it right.”
This time, Klein would get to call his own shots. He began by creating a Version 3 of the service, with four Berklee-trained singers (two males, two females), double woodwinds and a trombone added for a deeper sound. He reharmonized the vocal parts, adjusted the keys and recruited a full Berklee lineup of musicians, including Michael Rendish, a fellow pianist from the film department, and trumpeter Herb Pomeroy, one of the school’s most revered instructors, whom Klein called “the greatest musical influence in my life.” And despite being a more polished player, “I definitely wasn’t going to perform on this one,” he said.
Taking several months to put the new elements in place—including ample rehearsal time—Klein booked a studio on Boylston Street near Fenway Park in late April to record the group’s effort, with Isaacson on hand to gently guide the session.
“I sat in the booth and made some suggestions, but this was basically Jon’s baby,” Isaacson recalled. “He was mature enough to put his ego aside and place the piece first. And he did an absolutely wonderful job, with people who were well prepared and who worked well together.
“I remember on break saying this was pretty different from Herbie and Thad Jones, but that was the point,” he continued. “It was a more coherent, unified work now—the singers had gorgeous diction and knew the Hebrew. To me, that’s the secret success of the rerecord—the vocals have real heart and soul, and weren’t going through the motions from a score sheet. The whole piece seemed more considered and truer to Jon’s original conception of a jazz service that was devout and yet had an improvisational feel. I was proud to have been part of it.” (In a side note, Isaacson mentions he forfeited his original copy of Hear, O Israel:“I lent it to Jerry Richardson when he was playing on one of my soundtrack recordings in the mid-1970s, and he never gave it back to me!”)
The studio do-over could have stood on its own, but sometime later Klein felt a few bits of the original would fit well as segues and intros for the reprise recording. “The Union of Reformed Judaism said we could use about five minutes from the 1968 album without paying licensing fees,” he said. “That was plenty to work with, since the parts I thought worth preserving were some of the trio portions with Herbie, Ron, and Grady Tate. We selected four excerpts and wove them in to complete the recording.” Even for the untrained ear, it’s not hard to detect just where those parts come in—check out opening bars of the “Sh’Ma,” “Mi Khamokha,” and the finger-popping “Torah Service,” as well as the piano solo in “Adoration” to hear Hancock’s unmistakable contributions to the Milken Archive, alongside the Jonathan Klein Jazz Ensemble.
Klein never doubted the superiority of the new version. “Everything clicked—the caliber of the players and their interplay with the singers, the pacing, even the keys we chose. And Herb Pomeroy’s performance—every note was perfect,” he said. “I could finally stand to listen to it.”
***
I knew from previous attempts to speak with Herbie Hancock about the Israel recording that he had limited memory of the project. Or did he? I began to wonder after receiving a photo Rabbi Davis sent me—a copy of the reissued Trunk CD with a bold greeting autographed across the plastic cover: “Happy Birthday Rab!! Herbie Hancock.” It seemed that Herbie’s “secret album” may not have been so forgotten after all.
Thus, after many weeks of trying to make contact, I was happily surprised to get a call one afternoon in mid-February from Herbie’s daughter Jessica, asking if I still wanted to speak with her dad. Of course, I do! She cautioned he might not have much to share about the recording—it’s been so long, and other people have asked, to no avail.
“Well, I never forgot I did the album—even if I don’t recall a lot about the session itself,” Hancock explained from his office in Hollywood. “I was just doing so much during that period, living in New York, working every day, every week. It was a very important time for me because I was still associated with Miles but also exposed to so many new influences and getting ready to go off on my own. I know the record was for a limited audience, so I never really had a chance to take it in after we made it.” As he talked, more lights began to turn on.
“I remember the composer was a young guy, and this was his first time in the studio—and he was very sincere about his work, which included these wonderful opera singers and speaking parts in Hebrew. It was definitely the first and probably only time I ever did a record with a rabbi!” He laughed at the thought. In a few years Hancock would form a lifelong connection to Buddhist chanting, but even at 27, he said, “I felt I was already becoming a spiritual person, and here was this music that was connected to the Jewish faith, and I hadn’t experienced anything like that before.
“So even though it may have seemed like a one-off job, I could tell that the work was coming from this young composer’s heart and wasn’t just another thing to do like many other albums we had lined up back then,” he continued. “And I felt it would be a good thing to expose myself to something I wasn’t familiar with—that’s the only way you can grow as a musician and as a person. I know we were squeezed for time, but I was happy to accommodate this project because it was so different and had a spiritual component. Exploring his music, even for just that one day, I’m sure gave me a slight leg up for the next thing.” Indeed, he agreed it could well have carried over to what he was about to do so soon afterward on Speak Like a Child. Hancock figures he made a couple of hundred dollars from his effort that December day, unaware of the dividends his performance created for others in years to come.
When I told him that Klein was displeased with the record and its mistakes, Herbie asked how old Klein is now. “Wow, he’s almost 70?” asked the pianist, who himself will turn 78 in April and is wrapping a new album, his first in eight years. “Tell Jonathan I said hi, and that maybe he’d want to go back and listen to it once more, with old ears. Sometimes the best parts are in the mistakes. He may feel better about it now.”
***
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Allan Ripp runs Ripp Media, a press relations firm in New York City.

 

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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Nantucket Light Ship Listed for Sale

Nantucket Light Ship Listed for Sale

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For those of you who don’t know our dad (USCG Chief Warrant Officer J.V.Eigo)  was the skipper of the Nantucket Light Ship back in the early 1960s:
 

Maybe we start a Kickstarter Campaign to Purchase.

Listed for Sale 

One of maritime history’s most iconic vessels has been listed for sale by Nicholson Yachts for an asking price of $5.2 million.

Nantucket Lightship (WLV-612), built for the Coast Guard, was a beacon to all who entered the United States. She was meticulously restored by a New England couple and has been successfully utilized as a luxury charter vessel for groups of 12 guests (sleeping) and for corporate entertaining. Docked in New York City, she represents one of the only remaining lightships in the country that were replaced by 40 ft unmanned buoys in the 1960s.
Her unique commercial appearance serves as a symbol of her staunch seaworthiness while her interior reflects comfort, luxury, and a taste of what life was like for those who served onboard.
Nantucket Lightship’s present day use has been extended to the commercial sector. She has been chartered as a secondary working vessel for film crews documenting underwater sea life and ship wrecks, as well as a living platform for visits to offshore drilling sites.
“We are thrilled and honored to represent the sale of this legendary light ship! This vessel carries an illustrious background for prospective owners who are seeking something with historical value and amazing amenities,”  said Georgia Byrd, the listing agent for Nicholson’s

The Nantucket is also available for charter. Please contact us for info regarding charting this magnificent vessel for a yacht charter vacation holiday.
Enjoy a pictorial tour of Nantucket Lightship by clicking on the link below and contact Georgia Byrd, at georgia@nicholsonyachts.com , for further details.
 

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

 

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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A Peculiar Composition: The Oxford American

A Peculiar Composition: The Oxford American

https://www.oxfordamerican.org/magazine/item/1348-a-peculiar-composition
 
A Peculiar Composition
Michael L. Jones

Cave Hill Cemetery is where Louisville, Kentucky, buries its legends. Its 296 acres are dotted with monuments and historical markers honoring notable figures. Among them are George Rogers Clark, the Revolutionary War general who settled Louisville in the 1770s; former heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali, known early in his career as the “Louisville Lip”; and Colonel Harland Sanders, who gave the world Kentucky Fried Chicken. But there are no historical markers in Cave Hill for Mildred Jane Hill and Patty Smith Hill, the sisters responsible for the most popular song in the English language—“Happy Birthday to You.” Mildred and Patty, born in 1859 and 1868, are interred in a small family plot with headstones bearing only their names and the year each was born and died.
Growing up in Louisville, I was taught that “Happy Birthday” was written by two local white kindergarten teachers—that’s it. But then I learned more about the Hill sisters’ unlikely story in the early nineties, when I was researching my book about Louisville jug band music, and in 2011, when my wife and I bought a house one street away from Kenwood Hill Road, where the sisters had a summer cabin. My wife is the president of the Little Loomhouse, the nonprofit that currently owns the property. The Hill sisters’ cabin fell down decades ago due to neglect, but three other similar board-and-batten cabins—called Esta, Tophouse, and Wisteria—are still there. I’ve sung “Happy Birthday” at parties in Esta, where local legend says the song was performed for the first time. 
Today, when the Hill sisters are remembered by name, the focus is usually on Patty, a nationally renowned pioneer in early childhood education. Patty lived until 1946, long enough to see the success of the song she wrote with her sister. But Mildred has always interested me more. In addition to being a composer, she was an early ethnomusicologist, documenting the African-American music that permeated the streets, riverboats, and churches of Louisville in the late 1800s. She also incorporated these sounds into her most famous composition.
I discovered the connection between “Happy Birthday” and black music after reading “History of Music in Louisville,” a piece Mildred wrote for a book commemorating Louisville’s first one hundred years. In it, she wrote, “If a history of music in Kentucky were being written, a large portion should be devoted to the music of the Negro in our State . . . The old Negroes, who alone know this music, are fast dying out, and it is sad that some effort is not made to secure it before it is too late.”
Mildred did all she could to preserve this music. In 1898, the Louisville Commercial reported, “Miss Hill is an authority on this subject, having given much time to the collection of old Negro songs, which if not collected and preserved will soon be lost to us forever.” It was unusual for a woman of Mildred’s status to be championing black culture in nineteenth-century Louisville. After the Civil War, the city was a magnet for ex-Confederates because it was the headquarters of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, which controlled all the intact Southern rail lines to the Deep South, and was a major hub for riverboat traffic to New Orleans. The ex-Confederates took control of Louisville’s social, business, and political life. In doing so, they instituted some Southern norms which had not previously existed in Louisville. After the war, most entertainment and social interactions became segregated. This was the atmosphere during the time Mildred was spending her Sundays in African-American churches transcribing spirituals.
Mildred was raised to be a free thinker. Her father, the Reverend William Wallace Hill, was criticized for allowing the teaching of geology at the Bellewood Female Seminary, a girls’ school he founded in Anchorage, Kentucky, just outside of Louisville. Mildred began her musical training at Bellewood. Shaken by the memory of widows left destitute after the war, Rev. Hill treated his four daughters and two sons equally, encouraging them all to develop careers. After his death, when Mildred was nineteen, the Hill sisters were determined to find work to support the family and put their two brothers through college. 
Patty became principal of a demonstration kindergarten at the Louisville Free Kindergarten Association. She found the songs being used in class to be of poor quality and too hard for the children to sing. Between 1889 and 1893, she and Mildred collaborated on a number of songs more appropriate for the classroom. The Hill sisters used the street cries of black vendors for inspiration. These vendors usually had one line that they would repeat with variations. Patty’s lyrics were short and repetitive, making them easy for children to remember after hearing them only once or twice. Likewise, Mildred’s melodies were simple enough for small children to sing. In an 1895 letter, Mildred wrote, “I collected [the street cries] just for the interest I took in them never expecting to make any use of them but since I began the study of composition I have found them very useful.” 
One of the first tunes the Hill sisters wrote was called “Good Morning to All”: 
Good Morning to You
Good Morning to You
Good Morning, dear children
Good Morning to All! 
Although their compositions seem simple, the songs were developed through an exacting process. After a song was written, Patty—sometimes accompanied by Mildred—taught it to her class. If the students had trouble with any part of it, the sisters would revise the song and then present a new version. After they had a final version, Patty would sometimes write new verses to the melody for other occasions. “Good Morning to All” became “Good-bye to You,” “Happy Journey to You,” “Happy Christmas to You,” and “Happy Birthday to You.” 
The recent discovery of Mildred Hill’s notebooks and compositions in the holdings of the Dwight Anderson Memorial Music Library at the University of Louisville confirms the influence of African-American music on the development of the famous song. “It is very clear that she was interested in all types of folk music, but particularly slave songs, hymns, and street cries,” said library director James Porcell. “There is a sort of scrapbook where she clipped and pasted all sorts of articles related to them, including her own.”  
The Hill sisters’ publications and speeches on African-American music reveal that they accepted some racist concepts that were originally used to justify the institution of slavery and continued to be popular in educated circles in the decades following Emancipation. Chief among them was the cultural theory that African Americans were considered to be in a primitive state equivalent to a child in civilized society. This is one reason the Hill sisters thought black music would connect with young students. In an 1895 article concerning her field work on African-American street cries, Mildred wrote, “After all, for the negro is like a child, in that his tears and mirth follow each other so closely that it is difficult to keep pace with his moods.” She continued, “Evade it as we may, the fact remains that the genuine negro music is the most characteristic we have in this country.” Thus was the irony of the Hill sisters: they perpetuated ideas about racial inferiority while also recognizing the importance of black music to the future of American culture.
In 1892, Mildred wrote an article titled “Negro Music” for Music, a Chicago journal. She used the pseudonym Johann Tonsor because she was worried that her ideas wouldn’t be taken seriously if readers knew she was a woman. Two decades before the appearance of jazz, she claimed that the African-American sound would be the basis of American music in the next century. Mildred, who died in 1916, had no idea that one of her own African-American-influenced tunes would become an enduring part of popular culture. 
In 1934, Patty Smith Hill attended a matinee performance of As Thousands Cheer, a musical revue by playwright Moss Hart and composer Irving Berlin. By then, she was in her mid-sixties and a professor at Columbia University’s Teachers College. During a scene depicting a birthday celebration for John D. Rockefeller, Hill watched in dismay as the cast sang “Happy Birthday to You.” The use of the song in a commercial environment shocked her. “I don’t think I ever heard it sung myself except when I heard it sung in As Thousands Cheer,” she said in a deposition for a lawsuit against producer Sam Harris. “I would read in the newspaper that on President Roosevelt’s birthday it was sung, and I know that it has been sung at dinners for adults, but I never heard it personally sung that I can remember for anything except educational conferences.”
The Harris case was the first of a series of lawsuits that established the Hill family’s stake in the ownership of the lyrics and the melody of the song. In 2016, U.S. District Judge George King ruled that “Happy Birthday to You” is now in the public domain based on the 1893 copyright for “Good Morning to All.” The decision reminded the public that “Happy Birthday,” one of the few songs that is still orally transmitted, is not in fact a folksong. It was written by two women from Kentucky, and now we also know that it was influenced by black culture. (ASCAP, or the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, has called “Happy Birthday to You” the most popular song of the twentieth century.) 
In a 2015 lecture on Mildred Hill, New York University professor Michael Beckerman said, “There is some sense that people probably have that ‘Happy Birthday’ is a white song or a product of white America. . . . I believe certainly now that the world’s most popular song has deep black roots, deep Louisville roots reflecting Mildred Hill’s lifetime commitment to African-American sound, which she believed . . . should be the future.” 
 
 
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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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A Cut Above: In Conversation with Beatles’ Hairdresser Leslie Cavendish

A Cut Above: In Conversation with Beatles’ Hairdresser Leslie Cavendish

 

A Cut Above: In Conversation with Beatles’ Hairdresser Leslie Cavendish

 

 

A Cut Above: In Conversation with Beatles’ Hairdresser Leslie Cavendish
Posted: 09 Mar 2018 10:46 AM PST

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Leslie Cavendish outside a barbershop in Penny Lane, Liverpool.
 

Leslie Cavendish has never forgotten the day, just over 50 years ago, when as an employee of Vidal Sassoon’s revolutionary London hair salon, he styled Jane Asher’s strawberry-blonde mane and became entangled with the Beatles. The British actress had been a regular at Sassoon’s Bond Street location, a celebrity magnet attracting all the fashionable women of the day. But on that particular Saturday, September 3, 1966, to be exact, Asher’s regular stylist, Roger Thompson, later Sassoon’s first ever international creative director in New York, had fussed too much with an earlier client’s hair and had fallen behind. He asked young Cavendish to do the wash and blow-dry, and absolutely lived to regret it when that little twist of destiny ended up catapulting his trainee – and not him — into the orbit of the Beatles’ fame. After taking extra care, and ensuring that she liked what she saw looking back at her in the mirror, he listened in astonishment as Asher asked him would he mind doing a house call to cut her boyfriend’s hair. Her boyfriend happened to be Paul McCartney. Asher scribbled his address on a piece of paper pulled from a notepad in her handbag. He recalls the moment vividly in The Cutting Edge, his scissors-sharp 2017 memoir whose North American edition comes out today at The Fest for Beatles Fans in New York.
“When she passed it over and I saw the address, 7 Cavendish Avenue, I said:
‘What a coincidence. My surname is Cavendish.’
‘It must be fate, then, Leslie,’ she said with a smile. ‘Don’t you think? I’ll tell him you’ll be over at about six.’
It certainly was fate.
My life would never be the same again.”
How much it changed forms the focus of the more than 200 pages which follow in this book, a rollicking and often amusing read that travels the drugs-enhanced breadth and sex-saturated depths of Swinging London before burrowing deep inside the Beatles’ inner circle. This is where Cavendish quickly found himself after expertly snipping the locks off one of the Fabs – and inside a large ensuite Beatle bathroom. McCartney not only liked what the house-calling barber did with his hair (including when he later cut it almost all off to allow the Beatle to travel incognito on a much needed vacation to Africa with Asher and Fabs fixer Mal Evans in tow), he genuinely liked Cavendish, an amiable bloke from the rather undistinguished North London neighbourhood of Burnt Oak who spoke East End slang and football in just about equal measure.

Macca, as the British press had anointed him, enjoyed Cavendish’s company so much that following what soon became their regular haircutting sessions, he invited the hairdresser downstairs to his music room for a spliff and a work in progress. The first song McCartney played for him was “When I’m Sixty-Four,” which he was then preparing for the as-yet-to-be-released Sgt. Pepper’s album. “That first private, post-haircut concert was a surreal experience,” writes Cavendish, an early Beatles fan. “There I was, hanging out with Paul McCartney as I might do with [my friend] Lawrence in front of my Decca record player, enjoying a preview of Beatles songs that hadn’t even been released. As I listened to a few other bits of music, sipping on my tea, it dawned on me that this incredible hairdressing gig might not be a one-off. I might have actually gained a new client. Perhaps even four.” Which is exactly what happened.

As anyone who knows anything about the Beatles can attest, when one did something the others quickly followed. The four-headed monster, as Mick Jagger took to calling them, played, worked, sang and groomed in unison. So, it wasn’t long before Cavendish began cutting George Harrison’s hair, and then John Lennon’s, whenever he could get the most erratic of the Beatles to sit still. Ringo was married at the time to a hairdresser, Maureen (née Cox) Starkey, and so his head tended to be off-limits – though Cavendish did trim it on occasion. But like the others, Ringo welcomed his presence, and accepted him being around.

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Leslie Cavendish cutting George Harrison’s hair.
 

The Beatles allowed Cavendish to sit inside the booth at Abbey Road Studios during recording sessions. Which they rarely let anyone outside their group do. They also invited him to be part of their new movie, Magical Mystery Tour, which immediately followed their groundbreaking Sgt. Pepper’s album in the summer of 1967. Filming began in September of that year, and Cavendish played hooky from the salon where he was then still employed, claiming to be sick, in order to ride the painted bus with them, from London to Newquay in Devon.

He hadn’t counted on the mobs of photographers who followed the Beatles’ every move to capture his image, along with theirs, for the British papers. When his bosses at Vidal Sassoon saw what he was up to, and realized that he had lied to them, they promptly sacked him – and over the phone. “My nightmare had come true,” Cavendish says in his book. “I was out of a job. I mentally waved good bye to my swinging Chelsea life, my professional standing, most of my celebrity clients, perhaps even the Beatles.”

But charmingly wily and quick on his feet, Cavendish thought of a way to save face. He asked to see Vidal Sassoon in person, a fellow Jew, also from working class London, who had once risked all to fight for the Zionists – a cause also dear to Cavendish who had spent the Summer of Love in Israel as a volunteer reservist during the Six-Day War. Sassoon had given his blessing to Cavendish then; perhaps he would excuse him now. Contrite, Cavendish said the obvious, that by cutting Paul McCartney’s hair, which the media had loudly bruited, he had brought great exposure to the Vidal Sassoon brand, which had resulted in the salon attracting even more high profile clients, including pop stars and actors. He acknowledged he had made a mistake, and begged for a second chance. Sassoon relented. Cavendish got his job back. But he wouldn’t stay long.

To his surprise, Paul and George wanted to make their relationship with him official. In the spring of 1968, Cavendish walked into a meeting arranged with them at their Apple offices on Savile Row at which he learned that the Beatles had determined to go into business with him. They wanted to set Cavendish up in his own shop which they – and they alone – decided would be located on the ground floor of what at the time was known as Dandie Fashions, the hip men’s clothing boutique on the King’s Road in South Kensington. A legendary store epitomizing Swinging Sixties chic, it had been founded in 1966 by the bona fide British dandies Neil Winterbottom, Freddie Hornick and Alan Holston with the aristocrat Tara Browne (the Guinness heir immortalized in “A Day in the Life”) and the Australian-born designer John Crittle, later father of the celebrated British ballerina, Darcey Bussell.

Soon after Browne (the man who blew his mind out in a car) died in a fatal motor accident in December, 1966, the stylish entourage disbanded and Crittle joined forces with the Beatles. The group, with their heaps of cash, had bought out Dandie Fashions and, with Crittle’s help, evolved it into Apple Tailoring (Civil and Theatrical), an adjunct to the larger Apple Boutique which the Beatles were then operating on Baker Street. Their new fashion store opened on May 26,1968, and this is where Cavendish next found himself ensconced. Without much persuasion he now easily said good-bye to his career at Vidal Sassoon and hello to his new gilded life as the Beatles’ full-time hairdresser.

https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-pg3rwQAGjjM/WqK7ELBJq7I/AAAAAAAAoLM/9x3t0XojWOYcDMnco3DL94cCOjZ16R2KQCK4BGAYYCw/s640/magical%2Bm%2Bt.george.jpg
Cavendish is sitting in the front row, with a cigarette in his mouth.
 

He settled right in, decorating his basement salon with an antique Victorian barber’s chair, which he had reupholstered in crushed blue velvet, and swinging saloon-style doors. He was the new fashionable man about town, quoted in the papers, photographed in the magazines. George came frequently to bliss out while Cavendish ran a comb through his thick hair. Other rock stars followed. Keith Moon and Dave Clark soon became regulars. Jimi Hendrix, who shopped upstairs, would pop his head in and, through the purple haze of smoke, ask for fashion advice. Cavendish had a very good thing going. But good things rarely last.

For starters, Cavendish and Crittle didn’t get along. But their differences paled in comparison to those of the Beatles who, in 1968, had started slowly but irrevocably to drift apart. If that weren’t grief enough, the Beatles had operated their fashion businesses as they had run Apple, as the embodiment of a hippy ideal – which basically meant no one was minding the till. The boutiques hemorrhaged money, leading the Beatles eventually to abandon them, They allowed Cavendish and Crittle to keep their respective businesses, however, which both men did for another two years. But by 1970, the Beatles had broken up. The 1960s dream was over. Cavendish was forced to move on.

In 1972, he turned away from hairdressing altogether, and devoted himself to fashion, which had been his family’s business back in Burnt Oak. It wasn’t a bad move. He made a killing, so to speak, with the rise of punk, selling Doc Martens boots to fledgling skinheads before the footwear became fashionable. Eventually, he moved away from London, resettling in Spain where he married and became the father of two. Now that his children are grown, he has returned to the city of his birth where today he leads VIP Beatles tours, elucidating through lively anecdotes and intimate first-person accounts how the Beatles rocked the world – and he shaped their look. It’s where I meet him, over a coffee in a Paddington hotel bar that stretches for hours, and over two days. The time flies.

In person, Cavendish, who wears his hair clipped shorter than during his Mini-driving Chelsea days, is a natural raconteur, a true mensch. No wonder the Beatles fell for him. Both in his writing and in conversation he comes across as genuine, a guy who cuts incisively to the heart of the matter in counting himself lucky. “I am honoured I ended up cutting their hair,” he says after a long and winding road of reminiscing. He smoked a lot of weed in the 1960s, but he remembers it all. He really was there. “The Beatles were history,” he continues, his voice strong and proud, “and to have been part of their fantastic era was incredible. Thank-you, Paul. And thank-you, Jane Asher, for allowing me into your hair.” 

Leslie Cavendish will be signing copies of The Cutting Edge this weekend at The Fest for Beatles Fans taking place at the Hyatt Regency Jersey City in New York, March 9-11. Other guest speakers include Randy Bachman and Jane’s brother, Peter Asher. Visit thefest.com for more details. 

https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-4rb4ra8tiv8/WnSmjK1GiwI/AAAAAAAAn2k/BaJu7Xj3JxELRilwIegYpKlrv9tL-gHJQCLcBGAs/s320/Deirdre-Kelly.jpg– Deirdre Kelly is a Toronto-based journalist, author and internationally recognized dance critic and style writer. She writes for Dance Magazine in New York, the Dance Gazette in London, and NUVO in Vancouver, and is a contributor to the International Dictionary of Ballet (St. James Press) and AWOL: Tales for Travel-Inspired Minds (Vintage Books). A staff writer at The Globe and Mailfor the last 32 years, she was her newspaper’s award-winning dance critic, from 1985 until 2001, before transitioning to the Style section as its senior fashion reporter in Milan, Paris, New York and cities across Canada. Her other accomplishments at Canada’s paper of record include stints as an investigative reporter in the visual arts with a focus on art crime, a weekly lifestyle columnist covering the Toronto International Film Festival and celebrities, rock critic, business writer and cultural bureau chief in Montreal covering the arts in Quebec and Eastern Canada. The best-selling author of Paris Times Eight and Ballerina: Sex, Scandal and Suffering Behind the Symbol of Perfection, she has also written for a wide range of international titles, including Marie Claire in London, Elle in New York and Vogue Australia. Recipient of the 2014 Nathan Cohen Award for Excellence in Theatre Criticism (Long Form Category), Canada’s most important arts writing prize, she is presently at work on her next book, an examination of The Beatles and their style. In 2017, she joined Toronto’s York University as Editor of the award-winning York University Magazine
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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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There’s a Tuba Crime Wave Sweeping America – WSJ

There’s a Tuba Crime Wave Sweeping America – WSJ

https://www.wsj.com/articles/people-are-stealing-tubasno-one-knows-why-1520439297?mc_cid=4a6cba29a3
 
There’s a Tuba Crime Wave Sweeping America
The only thing stranger than swiping one of the largest brass instruments around is how often it happens
Jennifer LevitzMarch 7, 2018 11:14 a.m. ET
It is roughly 4 feet long and weighs 38.5 pounds, which makes what happened last month sound like someone blowing hot air. A thief ran off with it, presumably slowly.
“What were they thinking?” says Ben Jaffe, the band’s creative director, who owned and played the sousaphone, a deep-pitched marching-band-style tuba. “What are they going to do with it?”
The horn heist unfolded while the band was loading equipment into a van, which at some point was unattended, after a Feb. 24 New Orleans performance. There were no apparent witnesses. “It just never really occurs to you,” he says, “that someone is going to walk off with your tuba.”
About the only thing stranger than tuba thefts is how often they happen.

Ben Jaffe in happier times with his Mario Corso sousaphone, now missing, during a Preservation Hall Jazz Band tour last year. Photo: Patrick Melon
There was a rash of tuba burglaries in Los Angeles-area high schools around 2012 that music teachers suspected stemmed from the growing popularity of banda, a Mexican style of music that showcases the tuba.
“Then they just kind of quietly stopped,” says Ruben Gonzalez, music teacher at the county’s South Gate High School, which suffered several stolen tubas that have never been retrieved.
In Greensboro, N.C., Walter Hines Page High School music instructor Eddie Deaton says he arrived one May morning in 2016 to find police tape across the band room.
Someone had broken into the school at 2:30 a.m., according to surveillance video he viewed. Leaving other instruments untouched, the burglar wheeled out carrying cases holding two marching-style tubas, he says.
“Whoever stole them knew what they were coming for,” he says, noting that the snatched sousaphones remain at large.
The tuba, the biggest and lowest-pitched among the brass family, can run from around $2,000 for beginner band models to more than $20,000 for specialized professional versions, says Martin Erickson, a past president of the International Tuba Euphonium Association.
People with “nefarious” intentions, he says, probably try to resell tubas or use them in other bands. “You don’t expect tubas to fall into that sort of thing.”
Kenneth Amis, assistant professor of tuba at the Boston Conservatory at Berklee, imagines thieves assuming something so big would be valuable, not realizing how tough it is to unload one. “Few people are looking to buy tubas from a pawnshop.”

Robert Cooley got his silver-plated marching tuba back after someone tried to unload the stolen horn at a music shop. Photo: Bob Bach
The man who swiped Robert Cooley’s horn found out just how hard a tuba is to fence. Mr. Cooley, 24, who plays with the Minnesota Brass Drum & Bugle Corps, says he returned to his Minneapolis home after Fourth of July performances in 2016 and left his encased System Blue tuba in his car. A bandit smashed a window and carried off his 30-plus pound horn, which he values at $12,000.
The next day, 20 minutes away in Woodbury, Minn., a man entered Schmitt Music, an instrument store that does some consignment sales, and plopped a tuba on the counter.
Store manager Dave Strong says he found it off-tune that the customer seemed to know nothing about the silver-plated marching tuba.
He turned the man away, then hit Google. “Oh crap,” he says he muttered. It matched a report of Mr. Cooley’s poached treasure.
Mr. Strong alerted police and a nearby music store where the man had headed. Police later nabbed him and he confessed to the heist, says Woodbury Police Chief Lee Vague. Mr. Cooley reclaimed his horn.
“Musical instruments are certainly stolen from time to time,” says Mr. Vague, but “they are not giant marching tubas.”
In Tacoma, Wash., Pat Van Haren returned from vacation last summer to find a burglar had lifted his 1928 King tuba from his garage, ignoring power tools and audio equipment.
“I was crushed,” says Mr. Van Haren, who plays in the Tacoma Concert Band, drives a van with tuba-themed vanity plates and works for a musical-instrument company. He had refinished his tuba after acquiring it about five years ago.
“How did they walk down the street with this thing without anyone noticing?” says Mr. Van Haren, 60.
He blanketed the city with missing-tuba posters, asking for tips. About seven weeks later, he says, he got a text from a “guy named Bill.” The tipster refurbished old instruments and believed someone had dropped off the hot tuba.
It was Mr. Van Haren’s, with a few new scratches. When he got home with it that night, he paraded through the neighborhood playing “When the Saints Go Marching In.”
His wife, Barb, says she stepped in: “I said, ‘People are trying to sleep, Sweetie.’ ”

After Pat Van Haren recovered his stolen sousaphone, he paraded through the neighborhood playing ‘When the Saints Go Marching In.’ Photo: Barb Van Haren
In New Orleans, Mr. Jaffe, 47, bought his tuba to replace one damaged in Hurricane Katrina. He likens it to “an extension of your soul.”
“Every little scratch, every little ding and every little bump on it, there is a story.”
That night, the band had finished a thrilling guest performance with legendary drummer Tony Allen. “Needless to say,” Mr. Jaffe says, “my head was kind of in the clouds.”
Between the hubbub of backstage photos and packing up, he didn’t realize until later the tuba had disappeared. A New Orleans police spokesman declines to offer theories for the filcher’s motivation.
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band, formed in the early ‘60s and named after the legendary French Quarter music venue, opened a tuba tip line and is offering an undisclosed reward.
New Orleans detectives are on the tuba beat. Musicians in New Orleans and beyond are mobilizing on social media to recover the hot horn, which has the band’s name hand-lettered in black on the bell.
Mr. Jaffe is confident, given the police investigation and an outpouring of support, “that the tuba is going to come back to me.”
Write to Jennifer Levitz at jennifer.levitz@wsj.com

Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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The Scruffy Charm of the Audience Tape | Pitchfork

The Scruffy Charm of the Audience Tape | Pitchfork

https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/the-scruffy-charm-of-the-audience-tape/
 
The Scruffy Charm of the Audience Tape
Tyler WilcoxMarch 6 2018
Invisible Hits is a column in which Tyler Wilcox scours the internet for the best (and strangest) bootlegs, rarities, outtakes, and live clips.


These days, virtually anyone armed with a smartphone can come home with a halfway decent souvenir recording of the night’s gig. But the audience taper tradition stretches much further back than the advent of the iPhone—well past the rock’n’roll era, in fact. Until the technology became commonplace and affordable in the 1970s, tapers were a tiny subset of gearheads and obsessives who took the trouble to lug expensive, cumbersome equipment out to concert halls and clubs. The lo-fi documents they left behind may try the patience of those who are accustomed to crystal clear listening experiences, but beyond the hiss and the crackle, there are untold treasures in store.


Albert Alvarez at the Metropolitan Opera House, NYC // 1902
The godfather of all tapers is Lionel Mapleson, who recorded several fragments of operatic performances from the audience of the Metropolitan Opera House in the early 1900s. His tech was state of the art for the time: an Edison home phonograph, which could produce wax cylinders as well as play them. Mapleson’s Met recordings are fascinating not only for their spectral, otherworldly qualities, but also because they capture some of the era’s most famous performers in the type of setting in which they thrived: a world-class opera house, as opposed to the stilted atmosphere offered in early recording situations. The above clip gives us a glimpse of French tenor Albert Alvarez, one of the era’s most beloved, if rarely recorded, singers. While the standard defects of cylinder sound technology are prevalent (snaps, crackles, and pops galore), these aural artifacts remain a heady form of time travel. The distance between past and present suddenly, briefly, feels much shorter.


Duke Ellington Orchestra at the Crystal Ballroom, Fargo // November 7, 1940
The near-miraculous nature of early amateur recordings is never more evident than on this remarkably clear Duke Ellington Orchestra set in Fargo from the fall of 1940. Made by two South Dakota State College students with a Presto portable recording turntable, the recording is a stunning listen, featuring one of Ellington’s greatest bands in full flight. The personnel includes such iconic musicians as bassist Jimmy Blanton, saxophonists Johnny Hodges and Ben Webster, and drummer Sonny Greer, all swinging mercilessly on then-new tunes including “Ko-Ko,” “Harlem Airshaft,” and “Never No Lament.” It might have been just another night on the road for the hard-touring Ellington ensemble, but thanks to this recording (which has been released in various formats over the past 40 years), it’s one that has been relived over and over again.


Charlie Parker at Three Deuces, NYC // March 31, 1948
It’s safe to say that Dean Benedetti was obsessed with Charlie Parker. This wasn’t an entirely uncommon affliction among a certain subset of jazz aficionados and musicians in the 1940s, but Benedetti took this love to a whole new level when he began bringing a weighty, straight-to-disc recorder to Parker’s gigs. He doggedly trailed the saxophonist from L.A. to New York, capturing almost nine hours of Parker’s quicksilver brilliance in a variety of settings, including this thrilling nightclub set at Three Deuces in Manhattan. Benedetti was an amateur saxophonist himself and was mainly interested in the solos, often shutting off his recorder when Parker wasn’t playing. As a result, the Benedetti recordings (released in 1990 by Mosaic Records) can be rough, fragmentary listening even beyond their lo-fi origins. As one-of-a-kind transmissions of Parker’s nightly improvisational genius, though, they’re priceless—like bebop’s own Rosetta Stone.


Hank Williams at Sunset Park, West Grove, Pennsylvania // July 13, 1952
Hank Williams toured constantly during his professional life, playing all manner of venues, to all kinds of crowds. Just a few months before his untimely death at the age of 29, the country troubadour rolled into a small town in eastern Pennsylvania for an outdoor show, where local musician Melvin Price turned up with his primitive tape machine. Price recorded a little under a half-hour of Williams and his band cruising through a selection of the songwriter’s best-known hits, including “Hey Good Looking,” “Jambalaya,” and “Lovesick Blues.” While Hank’s drinking and drugging habits were the stuff of legend, he sounds fit as a fiddle here, joking amiably with the crowd in between songs and delivering vocal performances that easily cut through the fog of the decades.


Thelonious Monk + John Coltrane at the Five Spot, NYC // 1957
Even though John Coltrane’s stint in Thelonious Monk’s band was brief, the saxophonist later credited the collaboration with taking his art to a higher plane. Feeling himself on the verge of a musical breakthrough, Coltrane wanted to study the music he and Monk were making in the summer of ’57, so he had an audience member (likely either his wife Naima or Monk’s wife Nellie) record a handful of performances during a residency at NYC’s tiny Five Spot club. While far from high fidelity, these single-mic tapes are rich in ambiance, preserving not only the casually revolutionary interplay of these two jazz titans, but also the Five Spot’s smoky, after-hours vibe. Listening all these years later feels like eavesdropping on history being made, one note at a time.


Bob Dylan at the Masonic Memorial Temple Hall, San Francisco // December 11, 1965
While most audience tapers are obscure figures, that’s not the case here. The man responsible for this recently surfaced tape of Bob Dylan with the Hawks in San Francisco was none other than beat-poetry icon Allen Ginsberg. He picked a great time to hit “record”: The opening acoustic set includes the live premiere of Dylan’s Blonde on Blonde magnum opus “Visions of Johanna” (introduced as “Alcatraz to the 9th Power Revisited”), while the electric set is filled with Bob’s famously fiery vocals and stellar playing from the Hawks (who would soon morph into The Band). Dylan shows during this era were often confrontational affairs where betrayed folkies would boo his new folk-rock material, but this San Francisco set is a total love fest, with the crowd hanging on every syllable. You almost can imagine Ginsberg’s rare but radiant smile, as he watched Dylan kickstart the 1960s into high gear.


The Velvet Underground at the Boston Tea Party, Boston // March 15, 1969
The Velvet Underground never quite broke through to the mainstream during their lifespan, but they attracted plenty of die-hards who, as the Brian Eno quote goes, started their own bands; many of the rest instead recorded the Velvets. This particular tape is one of the wildest VU artifacts, and a total delight for listeners who love a good guitar freakout. Looking to preserve Lou Reed’s feedback-laced improvisations, the taper (known only as “The Professor”) placed his mic as close to the guitarist’s amplifier as possible. As a result, Reed’s insanely blown-out solos and the relentless pulse of drummer Maureen Tucker dominate the recording, later dubbed by bootleggers The Legendary Guitar Amp Tapes. Even though some of the many muddied Velvets audience recordings have been officially released over the years, Lou’s almost inaudible vocals here suggest that this one is likely to remain in collectors’ hands. But it’s a must-hear for fanatics.


The Grateful Dead at the Capitol Theater, Port Chester, New York // June 24, 1970
The Grateful Dead are, of course, the band most closely associated with taper culture (a close second is Phish). While Heads are blessed with innumerable soundboard recordings from over the Dead’s 30-year run, there are countless prized audience tapes to dig into. This murky, mystical 1970 tape is particularly beloved—see the rhapsodic reviews from gobsmacked listeners over the years. The centerpiece is the lengthy “Dark Star” suite, with the Dead finding weird and wonderful zones to trip through. Someone near the mic is appropriately impressed: “Oh, my GOD,” he exclaims, in the grip of some kind of quiet ecstasy. Thanks to the taper, you too may have the same reaction.
 

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Barbara Alston, Who Sang With the Crystals, Dies at 74 – The New York Times

Barbara Alston, Who Sang With the Crystals, Dies at 74 – The New York Times

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/06/obituaries/barbara-alston-founding-member-of-the-crystals-dies-at-74.html?action=click
 
Barbara Alston, Who Sang With the Crystals, Dies at 74
By DANIEL E. SLOTNIKMARCH 6, 2018


The Crystals, from left, Barbara Alston, Dolores Kenniebrew, Frances Collins and Dolores Brooks, at London Airport in 1964, when Ms. Alston and Ms. Kenniebrew were the only remaining original members of the group. Keystone/Getty Images
Barbara Alston, a founding member of the 1960s girl group the Crystals, who sang lead on the band’s first two hits, “There’s No Other Like My Baby” and “Uptown,” died on Feb. 16 in Charlotte, N.C. She was 74.
The cause was complications of the flu, her daughter Donielle Prophete said.
Ms. Alston was a choir-trained teenager in Brooklyn when she formed the Crystals with her high school friends Mary Thomas, Dolores Kenniebrew (who is known as Dee Dee), Myrna Giraud and Patsy Wright. Their harmonious songs, often about young romance, were like those of many other popular all-female R&B vocal groups in the early 1960s, like the Shirelles and the Ronettes.
The producer Phil Spector signed the Crystals in 1961, and they became an early example of his dense, layered “wall of sound” production style. Ms. Alston’s clear, bright voice made her a natural lead for the wistful “There’s No Other Like My Baby,” written by Mr. Spector and Leroy Bates. It reached No. 20 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in 1961.
The group’s second single, “Uptown” (1962), an upbeat number about the consolations of tenement life, written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weill, featured playful Spanish guitars and castanets and reached No. 13 on the chart.
 
 
Uptown – The Crystals (Original Quintet) 1962
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Uptown – The Crystals (Original Quintet) 1962 Video by 60s70sTheBest
But the band’s next single, “He Hit Me (and It Felt Like a Kiss),” an unsettling song about infidelity and domestic violence written by Carole King and Gerry Goffin, flopped.
“ ‘He Hit Me’ was absolutely, positively the one record that none of us liked,” Ms. Alston was quoted as saying in “Tearing Down the Wall of Sound: The Rise and Fall of Phil Spector” (2008), by Mick Brown.
The group, which quarreled with Mr. Spector for years over royalties and other issues, went through several lineup changes and eventually shrank to four members. Their only chart-topping hit, “He’s a Rebel” (1962), was actually sung by another group, the Blossoms, whose lead singer was Darlene Love; Mr. Spector released it as a Crystals record because he thought the song would be more successful if it came from an established group.
Ms. Alston moved into the background when Dolores Brooks, known as Lala, became the lead singer for the Crystals’ later hits, including “Da Doo Ron Ron (When He Walked Me Home),” which reached No. 3, and “Then He Kissed Me,” which reached No. 6, both in 1963.
Ms. Alston, who was shy and suffered from stage fright, was relieved to step out of the spotlight, her daughter said. She left the Crystals in 1965 to raise her first son, Tony, and the group broke up in 1967.
Barbara Ann Alston was born in Baltimore on Dec. 29, 1943, to Ethel Banks Alston and John Westry. She moved to Brooklyn with her mother and graduated from what is now the W. H. Maxwell Career and Technical Education High School there in 1961, shortly before the Crystals were signed.
Her two marriages, to Daniel Prophete and Kenneth Pitter, ended in divorce. She is survived by a sister, Jacqueline Dixon; two daughters, Donielle Prophete and Kemberly Pitter; another son, Kenneth Pitter Jr.; five grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren.
Her son Tony, who was transgender and also went by Toni, was shot and killed in 2010 in a case that has not been solved.

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Alan Gershwin, Who Claimed a Famous Father, Is Dead at 91 – The New York Times

Alan Gershwin, Who Claimed a Famous Father, Is Dead at 91 – The New York Times

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/06/obituaries/alan-gershwin-who-claimed-a-famous-father-is-dead-at-91.html?ribbon-ad-idx=4
 
Alan Gershwin, Who Claimed a Famous Father, Is Dead at 91
By DAVID MARGOLICKMARCH 6, 2018
 

 
Alan Gershwin in Manhattan in 2015. Legions of George Gershwin fans were heartened by the thought that the composer, who never married, had left something behind besides his music, and hoped that Alan was who he claimed to be. Fred R. Conrad
As Alan Gershwin told the story — often — he was hidden away at his Uncle Ira and Aunt Leonore’s house on North Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills in late 1945, right after his discharge from the Navy. Ignoring the orders of his hosts, he headed downstairs to join one of the parties the Gershwins regularly gave. When a guest spotted him on the landing, he dropped his glass of Scotch in shock. Or maybe two guests did.
By then, seven years had passed since the man Alan Gershwin called his father had died. But all anyone eyeing 19-year-old Alan that night saw was George Gershwin, reincarnated.
For 70 years or so, Alan Gershwin insisted he was George Gershwin’s long-lost son. And with his death on Feb. 27 at 91 in a Bronx hospital, the curtain came down on what was surely the Gershwins’ most bizarre show ever, revolving around whether this affable but monomaniacal man was one of the greatest victims in American musical history, or a grifter running a long-term con, or someone suffering decades of delusion.
Mr. Gershwin contended that sometime in the mid-1920s — the year and place varied in the telling, but once it was tracked down his birth certificate stated May 18, 1926, and the Brooklyn Hebrew Maternity Hospital, respectively — he was born Albert Schneider to a sultry dancer named Mollie Charleston, who went by the stage name Margaret Manners. His mother, by his account, was his father’s longtime paramour, whom he had met through his songwriter friend Buddy DeSylva.
Through the machinations of Ira Gershwin, George’s brother and principal lyricist, he said, he had been fobbed off on Mollie’s sister and her husband, Fanny and Ben Schneider of Brownsville, Brooklyn, who had pretended he was theirs. (By Alan Gershwin’s account, Mollie had masqueraded as her sister when she gave birth, so Fanny’s surname went on the certificate.)
Fortifying his sensational story were purported shards of memory, some happy — hammering out joint compositions on a piano with his father, visiting Ethel Merman with him backstage — and some not, like grim men in black limousines bringing crisp hundred-dollar bills to Brownsville to pay for his upkeep but warning him to say nothing about it, or else.
After considerable consternation, genetically certified Gershwins and their loyalists came to see Mr. Gershwin less as a threat to their millions than as a crank and an annoyance. Occasionally, they’d reach out to squelch his periodic public appearances. Whenever scrutinized, Alan’s claim wobbled; the faith of even his girlfriend for the past 20 years, Blossom Tracy, sometimes wavered.
A Striking Resemblance
But many continued to credit a story that, while improbable, was also strangely plausible, and appealing. Though occasionally stuck up about his claimed lineage, Mr. Gershwin was, despite living in meager circumstances, good-natured and optimistic — a modern Micawber. He was also the ultimate underdog, taking on the mighty, unfeeling and — in some music circles, at least — arrogant Gershwin establishment. And legions of fans were heartened by the thought that George Gershwin, who never married, had left something behind besides his music. People hoped Alan was who he claimed to be.
How, they asked, could the handsome and debonair George, who died in 1937 at the age of 38, not have impregnated someone along his gilded way? How else to explain Alan Gershwin’s encyclopedic knowledge of Gershwin lore and esoterica and a Manhattan apartment made uninhabitable by heaps of Gershwin detritus? And the 500, or 800, or 1,200 songs that he said he had written? And his single-minded pursuit of his claim?
“Very few people are that emphatic about anything,” the radio and television host Joe Franklin once said of him.

 
Mr. Gershwin’s claim that he was the son of George Gershwin first gained wide attention in early 1959 with this article in Confidential magazine. On the first page his profile was placed behind that of the composer.
Asked whether he’d put money on Alan Gershwin’s assertion, Mr. Franklin said he probably would. A lot? “Good question,” he replied. “No.”
More persuasive than anything else, though, was the jaw-dropping resemblance between George and Alan Gershwin. It explained why, according to Mr. Gershwin, an aged black man once approached him in Charleston, S.C. — where he had been stationed during World War II, and where George Gershwin had written “Porgy and Bess” — and declared, “Mr. Gershwin, we always knew you’d come back!”
And why the actor Robert Alda told him that he, rather than Alda himself, should be playing George Gershwin in the film “Rhapsody in Blue.” And why — again, strictly on his say-so — Rose Gershwin, mother of George and Ira, had melted at the sight of him shortly before her death.
“I heard his story, frankly didn’t believe it, and then he walked into my office,” recalled the Lincoln scholar Harold Holzer, who consulted on one of Alan Gershwin’s few successes, a musical setting of the Gettysburg Address performed at the Kennedy Center in 2009 (and at Lincoln Center in 2015). “And, my God, it was George Gershwin as an old man. That protruding lower lip — no one has that face but George Gershwin.”
Dining with him at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Mr. Holzer recalled, he half expected one of the elderly women nearby to stand up and exclaim: “George? Is it you?” One Gershwin family loyalist insisted that Alan had plastic surgery to look even more like George.
For decades, Robert Kimball, a Gershwin expert and adviser to the Ira and Leonore Gershwin Trust, dealt with Mr. Gershwin and his claims. Despite repeated prodding, he said, Mr. Gershwin had never furnished him with anything — like the manuscripts he said his father had given him — to back his story.
“His idea of ‘proof’ is picking up awards in Kankakee or Sheboygan and using these plaques he got as evidence,” Mr. Kimball said.
Nor was he at all impressed that they were doppelgängers.
“There are a lot of Jewish guys in Brooklyn today who look like that,” he said.
Cruises and Autographs
Mr. Gershwin never took his case to court. And while family members were not about to fork over any of their DNA, neither did he push them for it, fearful perhaps of what it might prove. His long Gershwin gig — signing autographs, reminiscing and lecturing on cruise ships and at concerts, cadging freebies and attention at jazz clubs and cabarets — was too enjoyable and, occasionally, lucrative. He’d tease people with all of the Gershwin gore he knew — claiming, for instance, that Uncle Ira had killed three people to secure his brother’s secret, and that only he, Alan, knew where the bodies were buried.
The farther he got from home, the more respect he got. There were reverential interviews in Russia, Israel, Australia, Germany and Italy and, for several years, red carpets at Cannes. Once, he recalled, as 15 million people watched on French television, he got to descend a spiral staircase to “Rhapsody in Blue.”
“Though this was a grand hoax from the very beginning, I still feel kind of sad at his passing,” said Steve Charleston, 82, a second cousin of Mollie Charleston’s and the unofficial family historian. Though Mollie was flamboyant — the kind of woman, he said, who “dressed up to take out the garbage” — Mr. Charleston said he had found no evidence that she was ever on the stage, let alone that she was Margaret Manners. She died in 1975.

 
Mr. Gershwin said his mother, Mollie Charleston, was a dancer who went by the stage name Margaret Manners. Ms. Manners appeared in the Broadway musical “Fioretta” in 1929, when this photograph of her was taken. The New York Times
Mr. Charleston, a retired electrical engineer in Melbourne, Fla., said that while no one in his family knew of any Gershwin connection, many recalled Alan Gershwin’s eccentricity, beginning with boyhood. He speculated that his seeing action on Iwo Jima and Okinawa during World War II — doctors later diagnosed “psychoneurosis, anxiety” unrelated to combat, and subsequently added “schizophrenic reaction” — turned weirdness into delusion, and “Alan Gershwin” was born.
“The fact that he kept this thing going for so many years with such obvious falsehoods is, in a strange way, an accomplishment,” Mr. Charleston said.
But always there were hints of corroboration, heavily laden with hearsay. George Gershwin’s longtime friend and lover, the composer Kay Swift, once described to her granddaughter a poignant and seemingly prearranged encounter that she had witnessed between Gershwin and a woman with a young boy in Central Park. And sometime in the 1950s, Oscar Levant, the pianist, actor and comedian and another Gershwin confidant, told one of his daughters that Alan was visiting Ira and Leonore Gershwin, and how unhappy they were about it.
Alan Gershwin made his debut, anonymously, in Walter Winchell’s column of June 17, 1957. “July 11th will mark the 20th ann’y of Gershwin’s passing,” he wrote. “The date when a lawsuit will break alleging he was the father of an interpretive dancer’s son. The chap seeks control of Gershwin’s 15 million $ estate.”
“All kinds of mashuganas including columnists,” Ira Gershwin’s lawyer in New York, Leonard Saxe, wrote when he sent him the piece.
Ira Gershwin replied, “Ordinarily I would pay no mind to such crazy items and claims, but it leaves a bad taste.”
He put a detective on the case and opened what he labeled the “Impostor File,” in which Mr. Gershwin is variously referred to as “the idiot,” “this jerk,” “this imbecile,” the “phony,” “this Schneider guy,” “the rogue” and “that mental case.”
But his real coming out came in early 1959, when Confidential magazine published a first-person plea. “I AM GEORGE GERSHWIN’S ILLEGITIMATE SON,” it shouted, over superimposed profiles of George and Alan in which their respective hairlines, foreheads, noses, lips and chins ran along perfectly parallel paths.
“Everybody who knew my father jumps at the sight of me,” wrote Mr. Gershwin, who in this telling had been born in California in 1928. “But none acknowledge ever having seen me before. … I wonder if I am a real person at all.” He pleaded for help; none ever came.
In October 1960 he married Edith Sadoyama, a graduate student at Columbia University. Their three children, Daniel, Maile and Emily, survive him, as does another son, Adrian, from another relationship, along with three grandchildren. At his death he lived in Midtown on the West Side.
A Biographer Steps In
For years Mr. Gershwin plugged his songs — with titles like “The Loneliest Heart in Town” and “I Want a Humdinging, Bell-Ringing, Singing and Swinging Love” — around the Brill Building; Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett and others flirted with them, he claimed, but either never recorded them or failed to release them.

 
A postcard that George Gershwin sent from Atlantic City in 1918. An investigator paid nearly $3,000 for it in the hope of extracting his DNA from the stamp Gershwin presumably licked.
He said he had helped write hits like “I Want You, I Need You, I Love You,” which Elvis Presley immortalized, but had sold off his rights before getting proper credit. He worked as an agent, sometimes pushing Gershwin-related acts abroad.
“Embassy should avoid taking any official position on validity of Alan’s claim to be son of George Gershwin,” said a State Department memo from 1973 signed by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger.
But he held no full-time job and lived largely off disability payments from the military.
In 1988, George Gershwin’s former valet, Paul Mueller, asserted that Mr. Gershwin was indeed his boss’s son — but only, an eyewitness recalled, after Mr. Gershwin had badgered the old man unrelentingly.
That nonetheless helped persuade the New York-based musicologist Joan Peyser, looking to recover from a critical drubbing she had taken over her salacious biography of Leonard Bernstein, to tackle George (and Alan) Gershwin next. The stress of concealing his son, she argued, had fed the brain tumor that had killed the other.
Her book, “The Memory of All That,” came out in May 1993 and was heralded by the gossip columnist Cindy Adams in The New York Post. “SECRET SON OF GERSHWIN EYES HIS BIG $CORE,” the Post headline declared.
Ms. Peyser’s case for Mr. Gershwin was also skewered, and with a redemptive paperback edition in mind, she set out to buttress it with irrefutable DNA.
There were setbacks: Blood tests revealed that the cousin with whom Mr. Gershwin claimed to have been reared was his brother after all. (He then argued that George Gershwin must have fathered the brother, too.) Meantime, assisted by a Yale medical school professor, Ms. Peyser tried procuring slides of George Gershwin’s brain, from which genetic material might be extracted. An investigator paid nearly $3,000 for a postcard that George Gershwin had sent from Atlantic City in 1918, propelled by a stamp he had presumably licked.
Most dramatically, in January 1999, moments before the place closed for the day and her body was removed, a former F.B.I. agent who had been enlisted in the cause yanked a small tuft of hair from the head of George Gershwin’s sister, Frances Gershwin Godowsky, as she lay at the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel on Madison Avenue. The hair, paired with a swab taken from the reluctant Mr. Gershwin’s mouth, was sent to a lab in Boston.
Mr. Gershwin’s lawyer had devised a sliding scale to calculate his take once he had proved Mr. Gershwin’s case, running from 40 percent of the first $5 million Mr. Gershwin collected to 35 percent of the next $5 million, down to a quarter of anything over $25 million. But the lab dashed all such dreams: Ms. Godowsky and Alan Gershwin, it found, were not related.
At that point, an embittered Ms. Peyser gave up on Alan. She died in 2011, and, to the astonishment of those who knew her, her files on him, which she told Mr. Gershwin he could consult in his own defense, had mysteriously vanished (as had materials on all of her other books). Her efforts nonetheless proved a boon for him, bringing him new visibility, and credibility, and adulation.
There was, for instance, the “Gershwin Celebration” presented by the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra in June 2003, at which Mr. Gershwin — for $1,000, round-trip airfare and two nights in a nice hotel — introduced “An American in Paris,” “Rhapsody in Blue” and selections from “Porgy and Bess.” The program, The Cincinnati Post reported, “even had DNA in the person of Alan Gershwin, who shared recollections of his famous father.”
“It seemed a little bizarre,” Peter Throm, the orchestra’s general manager at the time, later recalled. “We were all a bit skeptical.”

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With New Venue Sony Hall, Blue Note Entertainment Group Enters a New Era | Billboard

With New Venue Sony Hall, Blue Note Entertainment Group Enters a New Era | Billboard

https://www.billboard.com/articles/business/8224741/blue-note-entertainment-group-sony-hall-new-era
 
With New Venue Sony Hall, Blue Note Entertainment Group Enters a New Era

 Christopher Bierlein/Redferns
Blue Note Club
In 1981, Danny Bensusan opened a small club in Greenwich Village, decided to champion jazz musicians. In the process, he named his quaint 250-seat venue after the classic jazz recording label, Blue Note — a name equated with quality music from the likes of Herbie Hancock, John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley — that had been founded in 1939, but at the time lay dormant. The Blue Note Jazz Club stumbled for a few years businesswise before the programming took hold, with the booking of big name talents like bassist Ray Brown, the chamber jazz ensemble Modern Jazz Quartet, pianist Oscar Peterson, trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and vocalist Sarah Vaughan beginning to attract locals and tourists to see stars in an intimate, though cramped space. 
Since that time, Bensusan and his son, Steve — who now serves as the president of the Blue Note Entertainment Group — began to think bigger and wider, using the Blue Note brand as a magnet for providing elevated business opportunities that stretched beyond the confines of jazz. The Blue Note portfolio today includes 12 owned or operated jazz clubs worldwide — from Japan and China to Brazil and Italy — including two additional venues in New York City: B.B. King’s Club and Lucille’s Grill in New York’s Times Square, with groups that range from blues to classic soul, which opened in 2000; and the Highline Ballroom, which presents pop and rock with a hint of jazz, which opened in 2007.
Now, the company will be adding a fourth venue to its hometown collection: Sony Hall, a joint partnership with the Sony Corporation designed with capacities of 1,000 (standing) and 500 (seated) that is slated to open this spring in New York City’s Theater District. If all goes well, the new concert space could also become a milestone in sponsorship convergence, with the latest of Sony’s technological advances on display in the 6,000 square-foot event space that enhance the listening experience with sound, video and lighting integrations. Sony Hall will also serve as ground zero for the annual month-long, genre-agnostic Blue Note Jazz Festival that will celebrate its seventh anniversary this year from June 1-30 with close to 100 musicians performing throughout the city in some 15 venues.

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With the Sony Hall announcement, Blue Note has upped the ante on its already-impressive dominance as a presenter. “Please don’t call it an empire,” says Steve Bensusan, speaking to Billboard from his command post at BNEG. “I prefer to refer to it as another piece of a collection. We’ve expanded a lot in the past five years, and hopefully we’re going to start up more new clubs this year.” And he added, please don’t call Sony Hall just a jazz space. “We’re looking at all kinds of different styles of music,” he says. “We aim to hit diverse demos.”
The booking emphasis will skew towards a younger generation, says BNEG’s vp strategic marketing and business development Jordy Freed. “That’s an important note for people to be aware of,” he says. “Sure, there will probably be legacy sets of jazz musicians, but most of the shows will focus on all genres and be geared toward a younger audience.”
Freed also bristles at the notion of a “Blue Note empire,” but embraces the mindset of the brand’s appeal as a universe of possibilities. “The Blue Note club is a destination for jazz fans throughout the world,” he says. “But its brand awareness can also leverage an opportunity to reach new audiences and new partnerships.”

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As an example, Freed cites the Blue Note’s 2016 brand partnership with the Intel Corporation, which experimented with 360-degree video, 3D audio content and live-streaming music in virtual reality from the New York club. Blue Note worked with startup Rivet Music’s mobile app in linking up with the then-new Intel Xeon processor E3v5 family, which powered the experience. The club provided the act — Living Colour, which delivered their fusion of rock, funk and jazz — and Intel did the livestreaming. “That was an eye-opener on the power of branded corporate partnerships,” Freed says. “Since then, we have become more aggressive with building these kinds of partnerships.”
Freed says that one of the most successful of these partnerships has been with the worldwide distilled beverages company Pernod Ricard, which was rebranding its Seagram’s Gin in Europe in 2016. Blue Note took over a hotel in Madrid, created a mini club and produced pop-up shows with different artists, which all sold out. “It was so successful that we have become long-term partners,” Freed says. “It’s all about what our brand brings to the market and their push to reach new audiences.”
Also in 2016, Blue Note worked with the Japanese national broadcasting company NHK to create high-resolution 8K video events to be broadcast in Japan, including a duo piano show featuring Herbie Hancock and Chick Corea.

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As for the Sony-branded partnership with the Blue Note Media Group (the sponsorship arm of BNEG) for Sony Hall, Freed says that after initial conversations, the idea to integrate tech and entertainment developed. Key to the agreement is the space itself on West 46th St. in Manhattan, at the Paramount Hotel’s downstairs supper club Diamond Horseshoe. The Horseshoe opened in 1938, featuring vaudeville-style revues, and shuttered in 1951, laying dormant until 2013 when the venue was refurbished to host the off-Broadway immersive theater show Queen of the Night, which ran for two years from New Year’s Eve 2013 through New Year’s Eve 2015. Since that time, the ballroom had been rented out for special events, but was largely dark.
“The live music community doesn’t know this space,” says Bensusan, who notes that Sony Hall has a long-term lease, without going into detail. “We’re going to make a few cosmetic changes but keep the interior intact. Sony liked the space and the idea of having naming rights. Like other venues, we’re following the classic jazz club model — good food, good drink, world-class music.”
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Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services T: 845-986-1677 E-Mail: jim@jazzpromoservices.com
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