Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Billy Taylor tribute honors more than just his music

By Bob Karlovits, PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW

Music is only a part of the Billy Taylor story.
The tribute this weekend to the pianist (1921-2010) will have plenty of jazz with performers such as trumpeter Jimmy Owens and pianist Gerald Clayton. But, they insist, Taylor also needs to be remembered as an educator, an advocate of jazz and a protector of his musicians.
"Billy was very concerned with the plight of musicians who had no pensions or health care," Owens says. "He was very astute at taking care of his musicians."
Clayton says the tribute concert on the North Side naturally will present some of the music Taylor composed, but also will have plenty of comments about Taylor's work and advocacy of the music.
"His playing was really deep," he says "It's inspiring to look at his energy. But he also was an eloquent spokesman for the music."
The tribute concert is an appropriate part of the Guild's 25th season as a concert venue. Taylor was the first featured performer there in 1987. After that show, he became a steady guest at the Guild.
The shows will feature duo piano of Gerald Clayton and Christian Sands in the first half. The second will be a band of Owens. pianist Norman Simmons, saxophonist Houston Person, bassist Paul West, drummer David Gibson and singer Melba Joyce.
Taylor was a remarkable jazz figure who could have shaped a solid career from his performing. But besides that, he was a composer, professor of jazz at East Carolina University, artistic director for jazz at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., and a lecturer who also had a long-running spot on CBS "Sunday Morning."
Robin Bell-Stevens insists Taylor would put his work as an educator at the top of his list of accomplishments. She is the president and CEO Jazzmobile of Harlem, which was co-founded by Taylor in 1964, as a way of taking music and the concert experience to the streets.
He won a Peabody Award for Jazzmobile to go along with his Grammy and Emmy awards.
Jazzmobile performs more than 40 concerts throughout the New York City area, has a jazz-education program in conjunction with City College of New York and presents lectures, workshops and performance opportunities to players of all levels.
Bell-Stevens says Taylor was the first person to observe that "jazz is America's classical music," the phrase that has become a mantra for jazz fans everywhere. He also saw the need to educate performers and listeners.
That led to his Saturday Jazz Workshops, aimed at letting younger players perform with the more experienced, a TV show in New York called "The Subject is Jazz," and his work on CBS.
But while he was acting an educator, he was leading his trio and composing. That music will be in focus during the performances this weekend.
But Owens says his work as a leader took on other roles, too.
Owens recalls how he led the band on TV's "The David Frost Show" in the late '60s and early '70s, taking jazz to a public that wasn't familiar with it.
In that role, he also negotiated a contract for his musicians that provided pay about twice the standard of the American Federation of Musicians.
Owens also says Taylor made sure to make pension payments for bands he led so musicians would get money from the union when they retired.
Clayton, 33, did not perform with Taylor, but has become an admirer of his work.
"I have learned what an important voice of jazz he was," he says.
Read more: Billy Taylor tribute honors more than just his music - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ae/music/s_769712.html#ixzz1fFGQGtjU



12/01 Thu Barbara Rose, Pianist & Vocalist at Molly Pitcher Inn, Red Bank 6:00 pm to 11:00 pm Style: Mixed,Cover: None, Barbara’s style as a vocalist ranges from Judy Garland to Janis Joplin. Her piano style is reminiscent of Thelonius Monk. Learn more Hear samples

12/01 Thu Deftet Trio at The Wine Loft Pier Village 8:30 pm to 12:30 am Style: Straight-ahead, Cover: None, Great wine, small plate food and sexy atmosphere make this an excellent venue for Jazz. Also, all night Happy Hour featuring $5 Belvedere cocktails and 1/2 price glasses of wine (4PM-7PM). Learn more
12/01 Thu Jim Jasion at Nighthawk Books 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm Style: Piano, Cover: None, A mix of Non-Copyrighted Originals and Public Domain Selections of traditional Jazz and Ragtime Learn more
12/01 Thu LAUREN HOOKER TRIO at THE CRAB HOUSE 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm Style: Vocal, Cover: None, JAZZ CONTINUES IN EDGEWATER EVERY THURSDAY IN DECEMBER Lauren Hooker with Bob Devos guitar www.bobdevosjazzguitar.com Joris Teepe bass www.joristeepe.com Musicians are welcome to sit in! Just 2 miles south of GWB in Edgewater Commons strip mall on River Road (next to Target) Go to the waters edge on the pier NO COVER Happy Hour Menu Mon-Fri • 12-7pm Learn more Hear samples
12/01 Thu New World Order at La Tavola Cucina Ristorante, South River, NJ 7:00 pm to 10:30 pm Style: Straight-ahead, Cover: None, Open jam for all musicians and singers. Come play your favorite jazz, blues, and funk tunes. All are welcome! Learn more
12/01 Thu The Orrin Evans Quartet at Makeda Ethiopian, 338 George St., New Brunswick 7:30 pm to 10:30 pmStyle: Straight-ahead, Cover: None, The New Brunswick Jazz Project Presents the Orrin Evans Quartet Learn more
12/01 Thu Vance Villastrigo, Keys and Vocals at Firefly American Bistro in Manasquan 6:00 pm to 9:00 pmStyle: Mixed, Cover: None, Vances piano style is a mix of Erroll Garner to Oscar Peterson and his vocal style is mix of Ray Charles to Sinatra. Learn more
12/02 Fri Dr. Dubious and the Agnostics at The Jazzberry Patch 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm Style:Traditional/Dixieland, Cover: $10 or less, Warm up for the Holidays with the hot jazz of this 7 piece traditional jazz band. Full menu and beverages . . . reservations suggested. Learn more Hear samples
12/02 Fri Jane Stuart Trio (w. Jason Teborek-piano ) at Hibiscus Caribbean Restaurant 7:00 pm to 10:00 pmStyle: Vocal, Cover: None, 270 South Street Morristown (Best Western Hotel) 973-359-0200 Res. suggested. Janson Teborek-p, Rick De Kovessey-d We'll perform jazz standards and everything that the traffic will bear. We'll have fun...we always do! Learn more Hear samples
12/02 Fri Pam Purvis & The Blue Skies Band at Cafe Z 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm Style: Straight-ahead, Cover:None, Great restaurant , Pam and Bob with special guests. 2333 Morris Ave., Union,NJ 908-686-4321 Enjoy the holidays! Learn more
12/02 Fri Swingadelic at Swinging With Simone (Montclair Women's Club) 8:00 pm to 11:00 pm Style: Swing/Big Band, Cover: None, Learn more Hear samples
12/02 Fri The Lou Volpe Group at Uproot 8:00 pm to 11:00 pm Style: Cool Jazz, Cover: None, The Lou Volpe Group plays at this strikingly beautiful restaurant in the Watchung foothills in Warren, NJ.. Learn more Hear samples
12/03 Sat Barbara Rose, Pianist & Vocalist at Oyster Point Hotel, Red Bank 7:00 pm to 12:00 am Style: Mixed,Cover: None, Barbara’s style as a vocalist ranges from Judy Garland to Janis Joplin. Her piano style is reminiscent of Thelonius Monk. Learn more Hear samples
12/03 Sat Bob Devos at Candlelight Lounge 3:30 pm to 7:30 pm Style: Bebop/Hard Bop, Cover: None, Featuring Jazz pianist Noriko Kamo Learn more
12/03 Sat Carole Lynne/Pat Pratico Duo at Villa Rosa 41 Scotch Rd Ewing,NJ 609-882-6841 6:00 pm to 9:00 pm Style: Vocal, Cover: None, Carole Lynne Piano/vocals Pat Pratico Guitar playing swing, bossa, ballads and more , Hear samples
12/03 Sat Jane Stuart sings with The Betty Liste Trio at Stony Hill Inn 7:30 am to 11:30 pm Style: Mixed,Cover: None, Gracious dining or at the bar. Dancing and listening to Betty Liste-piano, Rick De Kovessey-drums, bass player tba. Jane Stuart vocals. Dining, dancing and listening. For res. 201-342-4085 , Hear samples
12/03 Sat Jerry Topinka Quartet with vocalist Jackie Jones at The Mill at Spring Lake Heights 8:00 pm to 11:00 pm Style: Vocal, Cover: None, Weekly the "Saturday Night Jazz Sessions" feature different vocal jazz and blues acts! Shows begin at 8:00pm in the bar and lounge. So, join us for dinner or just stop in for a drink while enjoying the smooth sounds of these extraordinary musicians. www.themillnj.com www.facebook.com/themillnjLearn more Hear samples
12/03 Sat John Henry Goldman and the StraightJazz Trio at The Blue Rooster Cafe, Cranbury, New Jersey 6:30 pm to 9:30 pm Style: Straight-ahead, Cover: None, Jazz trumpeter John Henry is joined by pianist Ben Cahill and bassist Tom McMillan in a most intimate and highest quality dinner/jazz setting. Reservations suggested - call 609-235-7539 Ask to sit near where the musicians are located. Learn more Hear samples
12/03 Sat Pam Purvis & The Blue Skies Band at Parker Gardens, Scotchplains, NJ 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm Style:Straight-ahead, Cover: None, Parker Gardens is a Christmas wonderland. Enjoy some hot chocolate, bring the kids to see Santa. Learn more Hear samples
12/03 Sat Rhoda Scott w/All Star Organ Jam at Newark Symphony Hall Terrace Ballroom 8:00 pm to 1:00 amStyle: Jam Session, Cover: Tickets Available, All Star Organ Jam featuring: Rhoda Scott, Mel Davis, Radam Schwartz, Nate Lucas, Reuben Wilson Also Appearing: Leo Johnson, Victor Jones, Taylor Moore, Bill Wurtzel, Earl Grice, Mark Bowers, Marcus Miller, Joe Brown, Jr., Cynthia Holiday, Dwight West and more. Learn more
12/03 Sat Swingadelic at Swing 46 9:00 pm to 1:00 am Style: Swing/Big Band, Cover: None, Learn more Hear samples

Guest trombonist Michael Dease with JCL

New York trombonist Michael Dease will be the guest artist when the Johnson County Landmark (JCL), the top big band of the University of Iowa School of Music's jazz studies program, performs at 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 1, in the Mill Restaurant. The Dan Padley/Ryan Smith Quintet will open at 6 p.m.

In just seven years on the New York jazz scene, Dease has appeared on more than 50 albums, including four as a leader.

Admission for the all-ages performance is $5 for nonstudents and $3 for students.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Jazz pianist Jason Moran to help develop music programs at Kennedy Center in DC


By Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Kennedy Center has chosen 36-year-old pianist Jason Moran as its artistic adviser for jazz, a post long held by acclaimed musician Billy Taylor until he died last year at 89.

Kennedy Center music directors say the generational handoff wasn’t planned in advance but makes sense as jazz evolves. Moran’s appointment was announced Tuesday.

As artistic adviser, Moran will help select artists and develop one of the nation’s largest jazz programs. It includes more than 30 performances annually and concerts broadcast on NPR.

New York-based Moran says it’s time for his generation to pass along traditions from the jazz greats. He began learning from Taylor at age 16.

Taylor, who played with Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis, became an ardent jazz advocate through radio, TV and his Jazzmobile venue.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Michelle Samuels

Michelle Samuels Appearing  November 29th 7pm  at the Metropolitan Room

Michelle Samuels is a New York based jazz vocalist. She most recently recorded with legendary jazz pianist Mike Renzi. In "Reaching For The Moon" she sings standards she loves. With this, her debut solo show at the Metropolitan Room, she wishes to move you and thrill you with unique interpretations she has dreamed of sharing.

"Her voice, her dramatic skills, the arrangements, the musicians backing her -- all world class"  - Alan Bargebur, Cadence, The Review of Jazz and Blues


Monday, November 28, 2011

Sunday Wax Bits

Reprinted from http://jazzwax.com 

Bill-evans-scott-lafaro-paul-motian-2
Drummer Paul Motian (1931-2011)
, perhaps best known for his perceptive, shimmering cymbals and hit-and-run snare work in Bill Evans' monumental first trio, died on Nov. 22. He was 80. [Pictured from left at the Vanguard in '61: Bassist Scott LaFaro, pianist Bill Evans and drummer Paul Motian]
Among the trio's best-known recordings are the Riverside Bill-evans-trio-sunday-at-the-village-vanguardalbumsSunday at the Village Vanguard and Waltz for Debby, both recorded live at New York's Village Vanguard in June 1961.
Here's Motian quoted by Adam Gopnik in the August 2001 New Yorker on the 40th anniversary of the trio's famed Vanguard sessions: 
"We were great. But look at this—I got $136 for the famous legendary record, $110 for the gig, and $107 for the secondBill_evans_waltz_for_debbyrecord. Look at my gig book: here we are at the D.C. Showplace. That's where Bill said, first night, second night, 'Ladies and gentlemen—I don't feel like playing tonight. Can you understand that?'
"And they kind of did. Bill was sincere, and he had a great sense of humor. He was good, but I was good with him, you know, because I listened. We listened to each other, and you can still hear us listening when we play.
"[Bassist] Scott [LaFaro] was tough on Bill. He was the one Birdlandman who could be tough on Bill. Like if he didn't think the music sounded right—if it was great but not perfect—he'd say to Bill, 'Man, you're just fucking up the music. Go back and look at yourself in the mirror!'
"He'd even say it to me, when he didn't think I was playing right. And he had only been playing the bass for a few years...
"You know what I like best on that record? The sounds of allBill-evans-portrait-in-jazzthose people, glasses and chatter—I mean, I know you're supposed to be very offended and all, but I like it. They're just there and all."
Here's the Bill Evans Trio in 1959, playing When I Fall in Love, with Paul Motian on drums and Scott LaFaro on bass...



Andrea True (1943-2011), an adult-movie actress whose 41N39HDPKQL._SL500_AA300_moment of stardom didn't come in film but in a single disco record, died Nov. 7. She was 68.
The hit was More, More, More, which reached No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and No. 2 on the dance chart in 220px-More,_More,_More1976—a particularly potent year for disco. In the years prior to the release ofSaturday Night Feverin December 1977, disco was largely a hip, cult genre fueled largely by independent record labels, low-key urban clubs and adventurous disc jockeys. In disco's early years, soul-dance vocalists such as Vicki Sue Robinson, Gloria Gaynor and Donna Summer dominated the solo female vocalist niche.
But despite the formidable competition, there still was room for Imagesone-hit wonders like Penny McLean (Lady Bump), Tina Charles (You Set My Heart on Fire), Retta Young (Sending Out an SOS) and others. Into this mix came Andrea True at the end of January 1976 with More, More, More, a bouncy tune with an addictive, chunky beat.
Recorded at Federal Records in Jamaica in late '75 using a studio band hastily assembled locally and named the Images-1Andrea True Connection, the12-inch single was released at first only in clubs like Chameleon and 12 West in New York, the DCA Club in Philadelphia and 15 Lansdowne St. in Boston. Interestingly, buzz for the single began not on the radio but on the dance floors, where record company executives measured a song's potential by the number of people rushing out to do the hustle.
What's perhaps most interesting about Andrea True Connection is that all of the tracks on the More, More, More album—produced, arranged and mostly written by drummer Gregg Diamond—turned out to be equally as good as the hit, a rarity for disco albums at the time.
Here's the original Tom Moulton mix of More, More, More...



Russ Garcia. As JazzWax reader John Guerrasio in London51gQNuT2cML._SL500_AA280_reminded me last week, fans of the late Russ Garcia should not overlook his string arrangements onMargaret Whiting Sings Jerome Kern, Vols. 1 and 2. You'll find both on one CD at Amazon. Whiting is superb on the session.
Wrecking Crew. If you're in Boston on Dec. 17, Denny Wreckingcrew_posterTedesco will be screening The Wrecking Crew—his documentary on the group of Los Angeles studio musicians who played on hundreds of pop-rock hits in the 1960s. Denny is the son of guitarist Tommy Tedesco. I've seen this documentary, and it's fabulous.Where: Regent Theater, 7 Medford St., Arlington, Mass. (781-646-4849). When: 7 p.m.Tickets: $8 to $15. More information.
CD discoveries of the week.Ilhan Ersahin's Istanbul Sessions: Night Rider (Nublu) is riff-jazz electronica at its best. Ersahin's tenor saxophone joins the big41-z7iWQoIL._SL500_AA280_electric bass of Alp Ersonmez, exotic percussion of Izzet Kizil and fusion drums of Turgut Alp Bekoglu. Each track sets up a funky mood that reverberates with Eastern and Western global touches. This is another one of those experimental jazz albums that takes risks and works. Dig Etnik, Birds and Black Sea. You'll find this one at iTunes and Amazon. More on Ilhan Ersahin at his site.
Composer Ralph Rainger was active between 1930 and 1942, when he died aboard a passenger plane that collided with an Army Air Corps bomber. Among Rainger's many hit songs are Moanin' Low, 51kS2AoPhyL._SL500_AA300_Easy Living, Thanks for the Memory, I Wished on the Moon and June in January. Many of his finest songs are given the jazz treatment by the Chuck Berghofer Trio on Thanks for the Memory: The Film Music of Ralph Rainger (Fresh Sound). Joining bassist Berghofer are Jan Lundgren on piano and Joe La Barbera on drums. Singer Sue Raney appears on two tracks, including the title tune. This trio allows you to appreciate how truly relaxed and coaxing Rainger's melody lines were. You'll find this one at iTunes andAmazon.
Oddball album covers of the week. Many jazz purists VidoMussoTADPlike to think of rock and roll as the genre that wiped out recording opportunities for jazz musicians on both coasts. But it's important to remember that before rock took over completely, jazz musicians did try to scramble onto the teenage bandwagon, if only to earn a few bucks to pay the rent. Here are two Teenage Dance Partyexamples of jazz musicians' early attempts to hang with the kids and deliver a bigger beat. One LP is by Stan Kenton's sassy saxophonist Vido Musso. Could the other be by Lydian Chromatic Concept pioneer George Russell? Or British guitarist George Russell? A careful look at the cover tells us that the hep track lineup includes the Hokey Pokey, which would soon become a crowd-pleaser at wedding parties everywhere. - Used with permission by Marc Myers

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Taylor Ho Bynum Sextet: Apparent Distance


By CHRIS RICH
Taylor Ho Bynum cuts to a cornet's chase with his declaration of intent, in the liner notes to Apparent Distance, a 2010 New Jazz Works commission grant from Chamber Music America and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation:
"My goal," he writes, "is not just to blur the lines between composition and improvisation (a long-time pursuit), but to try to upend the listeners' expectations in other ways: circular melodies without beginnings or ends, disguised unisons and non- repetitive vamps, transitions that are simultaneously jarring and organic. Most importantly, I want to spotlight the striking individuality and virtuosity of all the players, albeit in a context where the needs of the ensemble reign supreme—a concerto for sextet, if you will."
The best description of how sound is wrung from these instruments might be "thrushing,"' with sound flowing like a Hermit Thrush song.
It makes an aesthetic of blurring—not merely at the philosophical level to which Bynum alludes, but in the very sinews of the work. It's embedded and all the participants rise to the occasion with their applications of it.
It's one of the more exciting and possibly defining features of what this artist cohort aspires to, free to be free as birds, literally. Notation attempts would probably induce migraines and personality disintegration.
"Part I: Shift" is the shortest segment, opening with solo cornet followed by a lung- driven union with alto saxophonist Jim Hobbs and bass trombonist Bill Lowe for the second roughly equal part. It suggests the shadow of a fanfare that a trumpeter swan might castforth. A focused frenzy, redolent of spring peepers on overdrive, also rises. At midpoint, Hobbs and Lowe join in and asymmetric polyphony ensues; a vining twining that converges with a closing unison.
"Part II: Strike" is a different kind of striking. The transition opens with the other end of the ensemble, the plucky element, and in the topsy-turviness of it all, the piece conjures aspects of wind and rain as bassist Ken Filiano makes a punctuating turbine propulsion of this motion.


Guitarist Mary Halvorson covers the gusting as Hobbs handles eddies and wayward wind curls. Both deftly wrest the improbable from their instruments and vie to see which can more readily mimic or reflect the timbral capacities of the other. It's that blurring thing. Meanwhile, drummer Tomas Fujiwara is all manner of rain, from sprinkles to downpours and the crackling of every kind of fire, while Lowe indicates a shift after the ensemble pause with a summoning sort of tuba solo; no one does elephantine quite like Lowe. The elephant invocation has been around for awhile, and Lowe keeps it intrinsic (he has whales covered too). - http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=40839

Famous Czech jazz flutist Jiří Stivín

This week’s Sunday Music Show is devoted to one of the country’s most prominent jazz artists –flutist Jiří Stivín. The 68-year-old musician, who is reputed to be able to play on a blade of grass, says the feel for jazz is something you are born with and some of the best renditions come from children who are as yet unspoiled by the constraints of a music education. - http://www.radio.cz/en/section/sunday-music-show/famous-czech-jazz-flutist-jiri-stivin

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Music Review: Oscar Perez/Nuevo Comienzo - Afropean Afffair

By Jordan Richardson,
Oscar Perez, with his band Nuevo Comienzo, blurs genre lines with his Afropean Affair. The album is the pianist's second.


Perez throws a bit of everything into the basket with this recording, tossing post-bop with Afro-Caribbean and Latin jazz. This is an interesting distinction given the constant incidental blurring of the lines taking place in pop culture, a process that isn't particularly helpful in preserving certain strands of art but can be benefitted from nonetheless.
Everybody knows about the Recording Academy's decision to eliminate the Best Latin Jazz Album, for instance. While this development could easily be taken with the rage it richly deserves, the other side of the coin is that genre meanings are becoming more fluid. Besides, we should probably count our lucky stars that they're recognizing jazz at all.

In that context, then, sits Afropean Affair.

Along with Perez (piano/Fender Rhodes), Nuevo Comienzo includes Greg Glassman(trumpet/flugelhorn), Stacy Dillard (tenor and soprano saxophones), Anthony Perez (bass),Jerome Jennings (drums), Emiliano Valerio (percussion), and the occasional vocal services of one Charenee Wade.

Perez says assembling Nuevo Comienzo was a process of finding players who could bring their own dishes to the table. "The concept I'm going for filters everything through the writing," he says. "In picking the members of the band, they needed to have their own sounds."
Throughout the record, each individual player really does provide a distinct flavour. Jennings, for instance, plays with fierce grooves, no matter the convention. His drive on "The Illusive Number" sets the balance for the other players, letting Valerio slide into percussive bliss and giving Perez's sharp piano spots a place to land.
Or there's "Paths and Streams," a suitably sinuous piece that finds the whole company rising and falling to the composition's 7/8 tempo.
At the core of the album is the three-piece "Afropean Suite." The suite was commissioned by Chamber Music America and features Charenee Wade's work in the form of lovely wordless lines. The movements work through some wondrously naturalistic arcs and tones, packing a vibe that, at times, calls to mind the work of Chick Corea.
Thanks to complete, organic movements and lively jaunts, Perez's Afropean Affair really does blur genre lines. It does with boldness, not out of some form of sorrow, and stands as a sumptuous reminder of how beautiful any form of music can be when it doesn't confine itself behind senseless borders.