Tuesday, June 30, 2015

JAZZ at Lincoln Center



We're excited to announce the launch of Jazz at Lincoln Center's newest initiative: Blue Engine Records. 

As today's New York Times article attests, this record label has been a long time coming. It started as an idea way back when Jazz at Lincoln Center came steaming out of the station with our first concerts some 28 years ago.
Blue Engine helps us fulfill an integral part of our mission: entertaining, enriching and expanding a global community for jazz. Blue Engine’s albums will allow jazz fans worldwide to enjoy music—wherever they are and whenever they want—from Jazz at Lincoln Center’s vast archive of live and studio recordings.
You can now preorder Blue Engine’s first album, LIVE IN CUBA. In stores August 21st, the album captures the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis' dazzling first—and only—performances in Havana in 2010. Recorded in front of a clamorous, sold-out crowd at the Mella Theatre, this two-disc package documents the big band’s unforgettable exploration of the connections between American jazz and Afro-Cuban music.
LIVE IN CUBA is the first destination on what will be an adventurous journey through Jazz at Lincoln Center's history and into our future. We're grateful to have you along for the ride.

Ball & Chain


Eumir Deodato ....


"Armed with an electric keyboard, Eumir Deodato's funky tunes made the audience want to get up from their seats and dance." - THE LONDON TIMES

EUMIR DEODATO

Widely regarded as one of the most respected and sought-after musicians in the music world, Brazilian-born Eumir Deodato has racked up 16 platinum records to his credit as artist, arranger or producer with combined sales of well over 25 million records in the USA alone. His discography, including compilations and all his work as arranger, producer and keyboardist, surpasses 450 albums.

He has also had the honor of performing with the St. Louis Symphony (which backed him on his superb Artistry album), the Cincinnati Symphony, the New York Philharmonic and the Orchestra di Musica Leggera dell’Unione Musicisti di Roma. In addition, several artists over the years have covered his songs, including George Benson, Lee Ritenour, Sarah Vaughan and The Emotions to mention just a few.
And yet, in spite of all of his varied triumphs, honors and distinctions over the years, the multi-talented, multi-instrumentalist will probably forever be associated with one song – his innovative re...Labels: CTI

From Garrett Baker

Hey Claudio,

I have a nice collection of current and upcoming releases I wanted to make sure you knew about. 

Check the links below for streams, downloads, and info. Let me know if something looks interesting!
 

Ventanas - Flamenco Meets Sephardic on New Ventanas album
06/05/2015
Though they sprang from the same soil and from closely related languages, flamenco and Sephardic Jewish song could not be more different. Flamenco burns with passion and fury, and performances reach an emotional fever pitch. Sephardic singers let the wry tales in songs speak for themselves, with reserved precision.

Play - Download Album

Iemanjo - On Iemanjo’s Medicina, Rainforest Soul Meets Afro-Latin Groove
06/09/2015
A truly unique fusion of South American shamanic music, Afro-Latin rhythms, soul-tinged vocals and electronic beats, Medicina (June 9th, 2015 Black Swan Records) is the brainchild of singer and multi-instrumentalist Ben Harris, who performs under the name Iemanjo.

Play - Download Album

BOLO - Bolo: Singing to the Divine on Their Debut
06/26/2015
It’s a fresh recipe with ancient ingredients. The sweet music of the soul. It’s the sound of Bolo, who make connections between different cultures and traditions and forge them into something new, still wearing the honor of the past, but also with the ripe taste of the future. What they’ve created shines out on their debut album

Play - Download Album

Bicicletas Por La Paz - Bicicletas Por La Paz: A Latin Funk Circus, Belief on Two Wheels with Musica Por Puppets
06/30/2015
There’s a quiet revolution going on. A very quiet revolution, just pedals and tires on blacktop. A bicycle revolution. And that band up ahead? That’s the soundtrack to it all, made by Bicicletas Por La Paz, a group of musicians and bike activists. And their debut, Musica Por Puppets (released June 30, 2015) is their manifesto.

Play - Download Album

Mem Nahadr - Mem Nahadr Embodies the Essence of Classical Ambience and Contemporary Beats on New Album
07/28/2015
In an era where aesthetic is political, the love for music is the spokesperson for the beauty and brains of Mem Nahadr. A woman who has transcended all boxes with her presence, passion and position in the music world, Mem, also referred to as “M” brings a divine element to jazz orchestra and the world of symphonic sounds.

Play - Download Album

Shankar Tucker - Shankar Tucker: Weaving India and the West Together with Filament
07/28/2015
As a child, Shankar Tucker wanted to play the sax. But since his grandfather could teach him, he was pushed toward clarinet, not realizing it would lead him to helping Indian and Western cultures join while also become a YouTube star, on the way to his debut album, Filament (released July 28, 2015 on Shrutibox Music Records)

Play - Download Album

Raging Fyah - The Reggae Destiny of Raging Fyah: The Sound of Soul, Sunshine, and Positive Vibes
08/11/2015
It’s the sound of the sun. Bright and uplifting. Brotherhood in a song, with the kind of melody that generates smiles. The feel reggae had back in the 1970s when politics and a natural groove went hand in hand. That’s the music of Raging Fyah. “That ‘70s vibe is completely natural for us,” says singer and guitarist Kumar Bent.

Play - Download Album

Kuku - KUKU: Building Bridges from Ballads and Blasphemy
09/04/2015
The playwright George Bernard Shaw once wrote that all great truths begin as blasphemies. Those are words that Kuku has taken to heart. For his sixth release the American-born Nigerian has found the sound of his own truth and stepped on to the bridge connecting his Yoruba heritage and his Western life with Ballads & Blasphemy
Play - Download Album


Thank you,

Garrett Baker
Account Manager,
FlipSwitchPR, LLC
www.FlipSwitchPR.com
Garrett@FlipSwitchPR.com

Dheepa Chari "Patchwork"

Dheepa Chari "Patchwork"

Dheepa Chari - Vocals,
Lars Potteiger - Piano,
Rhodes, Mellotron, Celeste, Dan Asher - Upright and Electric Bass,
Mike DiRubbo - Soprano and Alto Sax,
Daniil Davydoff - Violin,
Vin Scialla - Drums, Percussion.

(Self Produced) Street Date August 7, 2015

With Patchwork, the new CD by Dheepa Chari, the outstanding New York City-based vocalist has taken a giant step into the forefront of contemporary jazz singers.  The influences of her personal inspirations are all fully displayed in her singing – the dulcet sultriness of Sarah Vaughan, the impeccable phrasing and effortless control of Ella Fitzgerald, and the emotional depth and sinuous lyricism of Billie Holiday.

But the musical depth and creativity on this remarkable album also call to mind another icon of jazz vocalizing – the unparalleled Betty Carter. Like Betty, Dheepa is a band leader, not simply a vocalist with ensemble support. The musicians create a vivid synergy, weaving a rich tapestry of inspired creative interplay that takes the listener on a fascinating journey with each song. These are not theme-in/development/theme-out excursions, but rather full throttle adventures that conclude in a place far different from the departure point.

Each of the ten pieces on the album is developed entirely on its own terms, embracing various elements of the jazz vocal tradition without ever falling into categorization or succumbing to the expected.  Much of this can be credited to the extraordinary arrangements of Dheepa’s brilliant collaborator and pianist/keyboardist Lars Potteiger, who also co-composed three of the songs with Dheepa. Each arrangement is lovingly crafted to not only provide the perfect setting for the jewel that is Dheepa’s beautiful voice, but also to allow her to paint each song’s story on its own emotional canvas. The exemplary skills of producer Aaron Nevezie capture every nuance of this marvelous recording.

To deliver music of this substance, the musicianship must be at the highest level, and the musicians on Patchwork are flawless in execution and consummate in artistry. Joining Lars in the rhythm section are Dan Asher on both electric and upright bass, and Vin Scialla on drums and percussion.

Together they provide the pulsing fire, sensitive rapport and dynamic flow as demanded by the expressive context of each piece. Violinist Daniil Davydoff and Mike DiRubbo on alto and soprano saxophones are added on a number of pieces. Daniil provides a shimmering, hypnotic radiance sometimes in obbligato and others in harmony, woven delightfully into the arrangements; while Mike’s vigorous, inventive solos and background textures vitally enhance each piece on which he’s featured. Most of the solo space goes to Lars – always imaginative, adventurous and fully integrated into the music without a wasted note or a flash of virtuosity for its own sake.

Of course, the core of the music is Dheepa’s luminous artistry and superb voice – warm, emotionally expressive, full-bodied throughout her extensive range, deeply soulful and richly compelling. The essence of all vocal artistry is to tell a story beyond the lyrics, not just through one’s personal sound and style, but by conveying the essence of the soul within the structure of the musical environment. Dheepa has mastered that thoroughly.


The repertoire is delightful – an excellent balance of originals, Great American Songbook classics and rock pieces.  The Chari/Potteiger originals include the album’s opener Semblance of Truth, a dramatic, moving, anthem-like piece built on emphatic piano chords and colored by violin; the adventurous Questions with a powerfully driving piano solo and buoyant vocal; and the title track Patchwork atmospherically blossoming from its rubato opening, incubated by violin and featuring alto and soprano solos in a context that has an early electric Miles feel.

The standards are fully re-imagined and completely refreshing in their approaches. Cole Porter’s Love for Sale is vibrantly up-tempospurred by horns and with Dheepa alternating long languorous tones and rapid fire phrases. Kern& Mercer’s beautiful I’m Old Fashioned is an unexpectedly bouncy jaunt that closes in a delicious soprano sax/vocal pas de deux. Woody Herman’s 1949 hit Early Autumn features Dheepa dancing briskly over the effervescently percussive rhythm section; and Fats Waller’s iconic Ain’t Misbehavin’ is a highly original and modernized version, embellished by violin and with Dheepa’s rhythmic thrust fluctuating boldly.

Dheepa also transforms a trio of popular rock songs and makes them her own. Again and Again – by British rockers Keane – uses very subtle and tasteful vocal overdubs to enhance the lovely melodic delivery over dramatically rhythmic chords. The French rock band Phoenix’s Lasso features Dheepa coiling sinuously around the rhythm section with exceptional percussive flavorings and mesmerizing synthesizer textures. A highly atmospheric, rubato, deeply moving take on Counting Crows’ Black and Blue closes out this captivating album on a most poignant note.

Following up on her excellent previous releases, 4th Street (EP) and Some New Fashion, Patchworkis a triumph.
Dheepa Chari Media Contact
Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services

Ph: 845-986-1677 / jim@jazzpromoservices.com
www.jazzpromoservices.com

Melvin Taylor & the Taylor Made Band

(formerly Chess Records Studio)
2120 South Michigan Avenue - Chicago, IL
 
Wednesday, July 1, 2015 (Concert in the Garden Area)

July 1, 2015 would have been Willie's 100th birthday. To honor this brilliant songwriter, producer, musician, and to celebrate his life and accomplishments,  Blues Heaven Foundation is holding a free concert featuring Chicago's phenomenal blues guitarist, Melvin Taylor & the Taylor Made Band. 
 
 Willie Dixon was one of the most prolific songwriters of all time with over 500 songs to his credit.  He's been referred to as the "father of the modern Chicago blues".  His songs have been recorded by hundreds of artists across all genres - the Rolling Stones, Elvis Presley, Willie Nelson, Eric Clapton, Led Zeppelin, Tina Turner and Fleetwood Mac to name a few. Willie Dixon has been recognized by the Grammy Hall of Fame (2004), his influence in pop music was selected for preservation  by the U.S. Library of Congress National Recording Registry.  Recently, June 2015, Willie Dixon was inducted in to the Songwriters Hall of Fame.  
 
Melvin Taylor is a masterful performer, composer & producer. His extraordinary talent has taken him around the globe many times over the last 20 years. He began touring Europe at age 20 with Pinetop Perkins Legendary Blues Band. He made an immediate impact on the European circuit, and began opening for BB King for a couple of years. Melvin has performed at world class festival, theaters, held master classes at top music school and conservatories. He has 9 CD's to his credit. Please visit Melvin's website for complete history and information: www.melvintaylormusic.com

From: Jazz Promo Services
www.jazzpromoservices.com

NJ JazzList Calendar

Asbury Park Loves Jazz - August 7th-9th

With jazz lovers in mind, the seaside town of Asbury Park is kicking off a new tradition at the shore, ASBURY PARK LOVES JAZZ WEEKEND , a three-day weekend of jazz scheduled for August 7th-9th, 2015 in historic Asbury Park. This weekend promises to bring back the glory days of a music scene that once featured the hippest jazz music played anywhere. Add to that a beach weekend on the Asbury Waterfront and you've got sizzle! 

Montreal Jazz Festival - June 26-July 5th

Crowned the world’s largest jazz fest by Guinness World Records, this Montreal staple takes over the entire city for 10 days each summer, sprawling across multiple venues and stages for a completely immersive experience. The Montreal Jazz Festival has delivered nothing but the best for the last 35 years, including legendary performances by Ella Fitzgerald, Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Paul Simon, and Norah Jones. This year’s lineup includes the whole spectrum of today’s top jazz artists, from Grammy-nominated jazz-pop favorite Jamie Cullum and blues legend Buddy Guy to outstanding instrumentalists like jazz trumpeter Chris Botti.

Calling Serious Singers: Sarah Vaughan Competition

You could be one of five finalists who will perform in NJPAC’s Victoria Theater on Sunday November 15th before a panel of judges that includes American jazz bassist and 4-time Grammy-award winner, Christian McBride along with other celebrity judges. Submissions start in April

Jazz Festivals 2015

July 18 Summer Fusion Fest (Kenilworth, NJ)
July & August Sweet Sounds of Downtown (Westfield, NJ) Every Tuesday night 7-9pm jazz on the street and in the clubs.
August 7-9th Asbury Park Loves Jazz Weekend (Asbury Park, NJ)

Top NYC Jazz Venues: We You Get There

This week, JazzList has a link to a nice article on NYC jazz venues you should know about (if you don't already). Also, the venues page at JazzList sorts venues by area code so you can find venues close to you or close to your destination. We've also reinstalled driving directions  compliments of Google. Put in your starting address and we'll get you there.   

» Read more

Fluter's Ball: Flutes Revealed

Reprinted from http://jazzwax.com

Screen Shot 2015-06-28 at 5.45.49 PM
Last November, I posted on Henry Mancini's Fluter's Ball, a wistful song with four flutes from his score for the suspense-thriller Experiment in Terror (1962). The problem at the time of my post is that the personnel on the session was never captured, so there was no way of knowing who the flutes were.  Soon after my post, Los Angeles composer and arranger Roy Phillippe wrote and offered to track down at least the four flutists. Here's Roy's note:
Screen Shot 2015-06-28 at 5.55.54 PM
"I recently had a chance to speak with guitarist Bob Bain, who recorded often with Henry Mancini. He played one of two autoharps on Experiment In Terror. He said Jack Marshall played the other, which was de-tuned a quarter step. Bob also played rhythm guitar on the source cues and remembered playing on Fluter's Ball. He said the four alto flutists were Ethmer Roten, who worked with Hank at Universal in the early days, Ted Nash, Ronny Lang and Gene Cipriano." [Photo above of Roy Phillippe and the late Henry Mancini; for more on Roy, go here]
Screen_shot_2012-08-03_at_4.36.53_pm
Mystery solved! A big thanks to Roy Phillippe. [Photo above of Bob Bain]
Here's Fluter's Ball...
Bob Bain also was the guitarist behind Audry Hepburn when she sang Moon River in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961). To read about the making of the track, go here. Here's Bob illustrating how he played Moon River...
And here's Audry Hepburn singing in the film with Bob's guitar, followed by one of the finest "hi's" in movie history...

Used with permission by Marc Myers

Monday, June 29, 2015

Vadim Neselovskyi Trio ft Gary Burton and the Pletenitsa Balkan Choir


Vadim Neselovskyi Trio featuring Gary Burton and the Pletenitsa Balkan Choir in the Berklee Performance Center. Vadim's "Get Up and Go" was performed as part of the Concert for the Ukrainian People at the Berklee Performance Center on June 10, 2015.

The concert was presented in partnership with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR). Please make a gift in support of Ukrainian refugees at:

https://donate.unrefugees.org/ea-acti...
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Vadim-...
https://www.facebook.com/PletenitsaBa...

Gary Burton: vibes

Pletenitsa Balkan Choir
Christiane Karam: soprano/director
Inna Dudukina: tenor/student assistant
Harshitha Krishnan: soprano
Ana Maria Villa: soprano
Belyana Hristova: soprano
Lyusi Simon: soprano
Annalisa Lombardo: mezzo
Gina Michelle Buckner: mezzo
Dana Prtotsenko: alto
Ekaterina Tolkishevskaya: alto
Nadia Chechet: alto
Ernest Deriabin: tenor
Joakim Molander: bass
Kia Eshghi: bass

Vadim Neselovskyi Trio
Vadim Neselovskyi: piano
Dan Loomis: bass
Ronen Itzik: drums

Rob Rose: executive producer
Ed Liberatore: house sound
Mauricio Bernal: lighting
Santiago Banuelos: spot
Chris Higgins: spot
Yunyun Huang: stage crew

Filmed by Berklee Video Services
Reggie Lofton: video producer
Eli Chess: director/switcher
Ulises Estrada: video engineer
Simon Benegas: camera
Nicole Dillman: camera
Bailey Gordon: camera
Julie Almer: camera
Sara Pagiaro: editor

Diane Hubka

Hi Everyone,
Hope you're having a great summer. Here's my schedule for the next couple months, including a performance at Kitano Jazz Club in New York on 8/13! - I'll be singing & playing with a great band - please come if you're in the area, and tell your friends!
 
Saturday, July 4
@ 6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
Guest Vocalist! 

L.A. Symnphonic Winds Orchestra 
Concerts on the Green
Valley Cultural Center
Woodland Hills, CA
       
I'm excited to sing with this spectacular 40-piece Wind Symphony! With one of the greatest fireworks display in Southern California, VCC's July 4th Fireworks Extravaganza delights over 40,000 people with a free concert and over 15 local restaurants on hand, along with arts and crafts vendors.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Friday, July 17
@ 6:00 PM - 9:00 PM

Café Aroma 
54750 N Circle Drive
Idyllwild, CA 92549
(951) 659-5212
        Diane Hubka - guitar & voice
        with surprise guests
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 

Thursday, August 13
Two Shows: @ 8 PM & 10 PM

Jazz at Kitano 
66 Park Avenue (@ 38th St.)
New York NY 10016
Reservations a MUST! 212-885-7119
$15 cover, $20 minimum drink & food per person, per set
        Diane Hubka - guitar & voice
        Mark Soskin - piano
        Dean Johnson - bass
        Tim Horner - drums
New York City's most intimate Jazz Lounge offers the best in world class Jazz entertainment. Located on the lobby level of The Kitano New York Hotel.
Her interpretations were precisely right for a program that moved easily from whimsical tunes to standards and bossa novas.” – Don Heckman, LOS ANGELES TIMES
As eclectically entertaining a collection of non-standard material 
as one could wish for.” – Will Friedwald, THE VILLAGE VOICE

Whether heading an ensemble of world class musicians, or accompanying herself on 7-string guitar, Diane Hubka gets straight to the heart of a song with “delightful crystal clear vocals and a jazz-attitude presentation.” (LA JAZZ SCENE) She is “one of the indisputable divas of jazz & bossa nova vocal. 

Simply Superb.” (Joao da Penha, JAZZ AND BOSSA NOVA RADIO)
With six internationally acclaimed CDs, she has headlined throughout the US as well as Turkey and Japan.  Sponsored by The Sinatra Society of Japan, she appeared in Tokyo, Osaka and Yokohama, where she “dazzled the Japanese audiences with her intelligent improvisations… and energy.” (EASTWIND IMPORT) Her “I Like It Here/Live in Tokyo” received a nomination for the prestigious Jazz Disc award by Japan’s SWING JOURNAL.

The award-winning vocalist was a vital member of the New York and Washington D.C. jazz scenes for over two decades before relocating to Los Angeles in 2005. She has headlined at Blue Note, Birdland and Knitting Factory. Working and studying with such jazz luminaries as Lee Konitz, Bucky Pizzarelli, Harold Danko, Sheila Jordan and Howard Alden, Diane continued to hone her skills as both a vocalist and guitarist, appearing in jazz venues throughout the Eastern United States.

In 2005 she relocated to Los Angeles, where she quickly became one of the top performers in Southern California's jazz scene, playing in such iconic venues as the Jazz Bakery, Vitello’s and Charlie O’s and recording with Anthony Wilson, Joe La Barbera, Christian Jacob and Peter Sprague.

Whether as an engaging song stylist or gifted guitarist, Diane has “made her way into a  select group of jazz vocalists/instrumentalists where she rightly assumes a place of honor” ALL ABOUT JAZZ

WEBSITE: dianehubka.com 
TWITTER: twitter.com/dianehubka

Terence Blanchard's 2013 return to Blue Note ....

Terence Blanchard's 2013 return to Blue Note, Magnetic, built upon his decades-long history of post-bop dynamism with a forward-thinking approach that blended edgy, modal improvisation with a sophisticated, genre-crossing compositional style. It was a concept he had been investigating on his previous efforts Bounce (2003), Flow (2005), and Choices (2009), and, though it had been years sinceBlanchard was considered a young lion, the eclecticism of the album matched the work of many of his younger contemporaries like trumpeter Christian Scott and pianist Robert Glasper, the latter of whom even played on Bounce.

In keeping with this boundary-pushing trajectory, Blanchard's follow-up, 2015's Breathless, finds the New Orleans native jumping wholeheartedly into a funky stew of R&B, hip-hop, and fusion-influenced jazz. Blanchard is joined here by his band the E-Collective, an adroit group of young players centered around gifted keyboardist Fabian Almazan, the only carry-over from the Magnetic sessions. Along with Almazan, the E-Collective features Charles Altura (guitar), Donald Ramsey (bass), and Oscar Seaton (drums). Also showcased throughout is vocalist PJ Morton, who has released his own R&B- and contemporary gospel-infused albums and toured as a keyboardist with the pop group Maroon 5.

Ambitious, adventurous, and steeped in the kind of sticky, psychedelic jazz-funk pioneered by trumpeter Miles Davis in the '70s, Breathless is Blanchard's most electrified album to date. While Blanchard has long drawn comparisons to Davis, they've mostly referenced the iconic trumpeter's classic quintet sides from the late '60s and not his effects-drenched fusion period. Similarly, while on previous efforts Blanchard has flirted with an electronic sound, he's never gone this far in a contemporary jazz direction. Here we get a very '90s hip-hop/jazz-infused reworking of Les McCann's classic 1969 socio-political anthem "Compared to What," several languid, new agey spoken word pieces with Morton, and some expansive, groove-oriented cuts like the bluesy midtempo "See Me as I Am" that allow for plenty of spaced-out solos.

Also intriguing are Morton's several slow jam vocal numbers, including an inspired cover of Hank Williams' "I Ain't Got Nothin' But Time,' which replaces the country legend's cowboy twang and fiddles with sweeping, Stevie Wonder-esque orchestral synth backgrounds. Also compelling is the languid, dreamy ballad "Everglades," which impossibly balancesDebussy-influenced impressionism with angular, synthy, '80s electro-funk. Ultimately, whileBreathless is a break from the aggressive, acoustic swing that has marked much of Blanchard's career, it nonetheless retains all the jaw-dropping artistry and soulful creativity we have come to expect, albeit delivered in a vibrant, electric style.

read more: http://www.bluenote.com/artists/terence-blanchard/breathless

Jazz Blues Florida ....

Jazz and blues news with a Florida focus, provided by www.JazzBluesFlorida.com - Florida's FREE online guide to live jazz & blues music with comprehensive club, festival & concert listings, news blog, online monthly magazine and a lot more!

LINKS
• LISTEN SAMPLES :   http://www.blakeaaron.com/soul-stories
• DOWNLOAD :  http://bit.ly/BlakeAaronSoulStoriesiTunes
• ARTIST WEBSITE LINK :  http://www.blakeaaron.com
• ARTIST FACEBOOK PAGE: https://www.facebook.com/BlakeAaronArtist

Asa Branca


Original music of northeastern Brazil, composed of Luiz Gonzaga.
Jorge Carvalheira collaboration.

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Keith Jarrett Trio - Bye Bye Blackbird


Published on Feb 9, 2013
Recorded live in Tokyo, July 25, 1993 at Open Theater East.
Keith Jarrett - piano
Gary Peacock - double-bass
Jack DeJohnette - drums

"Bye Bye Blackbird" (Ray Henderson/Mort Dixon)

Guitarist/composer Pascal Bokar ....

Guitarist/composer Pascal Bokar is the embodiment of the deep cultural connection between American Jazz and its African musical and spiritual roots.  Born in Paris, raised in Segou, Mali and Dakar, Senegal, and longtime resident of San Francisco, Dr. Bokar has cultivated an impressive array of disciplines that reflect his unique experience: composer, guitarist, vocalist, bandleader, educator and curator of jazz history.

While studying in France in 1981, Pascal connected with the esteemed French saxophonist, Barney Wilen, and for the next two years performed with him in festivals throughout Europe. Moving to the U.S. in 1983, Pascal was blessed to perform with a dazzling array of outstanding musicians, including Dizzy Gillespie, Roy Haynes, Donald Byrd, and for several years, Donald ‘Duck’ Bailey. His conversations with Diz about re-introducing African rhythms and textures into American jazz and popular music profoundly affected Pascal in his ongoing musical quest.

A professor of Jazz and World Music at the University of San Francisco for nearly a decade, Dr. Bokar began his formal studies at the National Conservatory of Region in Nice, France in 1980. In 1983, he moved to Boston to study at the renowned Berklee College of Music. After performing for many years, he returned to school, earning a Master’s Degree from Cambridge College in 1998. In 2006 he earned his Doctorate Degree in Education from the University of San Francisco and joined the faculty soon after.

Dr. Bokar currently leads two ensembles: The AfroJazz Sextet (guitar, Kora, piano, upright bass, drums and West African percussion) and World Band (guitar, fiddle, banjo and two West African percussionists). Traditional African dancers are available to perform with both ensembles.

He is the author of From Timbuktu to the Mississippi Delta: How West African Standards of Aesthetics Shaped the Music of the Delta Blues.

For more information about Pascal Bokar, please visit http://www.pascalbokar.com

Elisha Abas....

Elisha Abas, Acclaimed Pianist and Great-Great Grandson of Legendary Russian Composer Alexander Scriabin, Set to Tour in 2015

Elisha Abas a native of Israel has been performing as a concert pianist since the age of five with luminaries such as ZubinMehta, Isaac Stern and Leonard Bernstein. He was the protégé of Artur Rubinstein and life-long student of Pnina Salzman, Israel’s First Lady of Piano (herself a student of Alfred Cortot). Elisha Abas has performed throughout the world and most recently in the US, Israel, Italy, China, Russia, Cuba and Germany.

He recently recorded the First Piano Concerto of Johannes Brahms in Havana, Cuba with The National Symphony Orchestra of Cuba and Yoel Gamzou. In late 2010, he was featured as a soloist in the highly acclaimed and publicized concert in Berlin with the International Mahler Orchestra. This sold out concert attracted enormous press and public attention world-wide and resulted in two imminent recording contracts with German labels.

Nancy Harms at ....

July 4, 2015

Copenhagen Jazz Festival!

Thrilled to be a part of the great Copenhagen Jazz Festival
with Peter Rosendal, Graig Earle, and Janus Templeton!
July 4th on the Balders Plads Stage.
See you soon, fair Copenhagen!

July 10, 11, 2015

London Premiere for Nancy!

Heading to Londontown to be a part of the
Diva Showcase at the Hideaway on July 10 and 11!


Thursday, June 25, 2015

Joey Alexander / Chelsea Bridge - Billy Strayhorn


Published on Aug 3, 2014
"Chelsea Bridge" (1941) is a jazz standard written by Billy Strayhorn. The song has been recorded by Duke Ellington, Ben Webster, Wynton Marsalis, Keith Jarrett, Lew Tabackin, Vince Guaraldi, Joe Henderson and Tony Bennett, among many others. Ella Fitzgerald recorded it with Ellington on her albums Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Songbook (1957) and Ella and Duke at the Cote D'Azur (1967).

In 1958, lyrics were written for the song by Bill Comstock, a member of the The Four Freshmen for their album Voices In Latin. According to Ellington biographer James Lincoln Collier, during a trip to Europe, Strayhorn actually saw a J. M. W. Turner or James McNeill Whistler painting of Battersea Bridge and mistakenly named the song after Chelsea Bridge.

The McGuire Sisters - Moonglow

Battle of Swing - Benny Goodman Vs Glenn Miller - John Packer Events


Published on Jan 13, 2015
Take a look at the next concert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyXcz...

For future events see: http://www.johnpacker.co.uk/Catalogue...

Contact Pete Long: http://www.plong.co.uk

On Friday 7 November 2014, Pete Long and his Goodmen gave Taunton a night to remember. Recreating an iconic Carnegie Hall swing concert from 1938, first Benny Goodman and then Glenn Miller were bought to life. Some of the UK's finest session musicians were on hand to deliver an unforgettable evening. For further details about the band see http://www.plong.co.uk/. 

Line up:
Clarinet & band leader: Pete Long
Saxophones: Nigel Hailwood, Pete Ripper, Robert Fowler, John Shenoy
Trumpet: Nathan Bray, James Copus, Tom Dennis
Cornet: Alan Berlyn
Trombone: Andy Flaxman, Ross Anderson, Ian Bateman
Piano: Bunny Thompson
Bass: Calum Gourlay
Drums: Ed Richardson
Guitar: Ian Lewis
Vocals: Iain Mackenzie

Set list:
Benny Goodman
1. Don't Be That Way (1:04)
2. Bach Goes to Town (5:15)
3. One O Clock Jump (10:02)
4. When Buddha Smiles (19:28)
5. Big John Special (25:03)
6. Sheik Of Araby (27:45)
7. T'aint What you Do (32:39)
8. King Porter Stomp (36:08)
9. Dear Old Southland (40:05)
10. Down South Camp Meeting (43:36)
11. Sing Sing Sing (48:04)

INTERVAL

Glenn Miller
Moonlight Serenade (58:48)
Sunrise Serenade (1:04:00)
Little Brown Jug (1:08:00)
Stairway To The Stars (1:12:15)
It Must Be Jelly (Cause Jam don't shake like that) (1:15:54)
Danny Boy (1:18:55)
Boulder Buff (1:23:00)
My Prayer (1:28:55)
In The Mood (1:37:05)

Battle of the Bugle Calls (1:42:20)
Take The A Train (1:50:00)

This event was sponsored by: D'Addario, Denis Wick, Yanagisawa, Yamaha with special thanks to Queen's College, Taunton.
Filming & editing: by Dave Adams davemcadams@hotmail.co.uk

Jimmy Scott - Moonglow

Plays the Best of Lerner & Loewe

Editorial Reviews
This project took its cue from two earlier albums Shelly Manne & Friends My Fair Lady (CCD-7527-2) the 1956 session that started the jazz-swings-Broadway trend, and Chet (RCD-30183), trumpeter Chet Baker s poetic ballad collection recorded at the turn of 1958-59.

As on the former album, the music here comes from the then-reigning theatrical team of Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe; while, as on the latter, Baker s intimate inventions benefit from the uncommon septet arrangements of Herbie Mann and the supporting presence of Mann, Pepper Adams, and (on four tracks) Bill Evans. Adding to the winning approach here is the presence of Zoot Sims, who blows alto sax as well as tenor, and the recording debut of the estimable drummer Clifford Jarvis.


http://www.amazon.com/Plays-Best-Lerner-Loewe-Baker/dp/B00CU9LE5Y/?tag=concordreco0c-20

In Praise of Mood Music

Reprinted from http://jazzwax.com

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In yesterday's Wall Street Journal, I wrote an essay on the history of easy-listening music and its 70th anniversary, which as you'd expect was completely  overlooked (go here). Easy listening was meant to be overlooked. It's whole reason for being was to be there but never get in your way, engaging your emotions but not your brain.
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The father of easy listening is arranger Paul Weston, who at the end of May 1945 released what's considered the first easy listening album—Music for Dreaming, on Capitol. The album comprised of four 78s—or eight songs (two per side). As I wrote in my essay, sales were strong from the outset, largely because the music had a way of detaching returning veterans from the stress of war and allowing them to relax and sleep.
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Gentle pop music pre-dated Weston, of course. Sweet bands were popular in the 1930s, and Claude Thornhill and Glenn Miller (among others) favored a chilled out, inhale-exhale sound for their dance bands. But Weston was first to conceive of music that was designed to alter your mood, treating sound as soothing color.
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Though Weston's first album did well, the format stood in his way, since 78s worked against the music's purpose. You really couldn't be fully transported by the music if you had to spring up every three minutes when the needle reached the end of a disc.
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But with the introduction and rise of the LP in the late 1940s and early '50s, Weston resumed his easy pop crusade with a wave of albums. The genre came to be known as "mood music." Columbia and RCA picked up on the trend, as did most pop divisions of record companies seeking to reach suburban homes. The music was singer-less, preventing words and personalities from distracting the ear. Instead, recordings featured only instrumentals—the kind that appeared behind Frank Sinatra at Columbia in the late 1940s. 
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By the 1960s, with the advent of stereo and the proliferation of FM stations, mood music took on a wider sound and became "easy listening." Back then, though, easy listening was an easy target for the youth culture. It was a punch line, the squarest of the square music, and mocked as "elevator music." It was the anti-rock, the stuff parents listened to clear their heads and teens despised.
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The funny thing is that today, as baby boomers inch into retirement, more of them find contemporary music oddly unintelligible, numbingly similar in tone and just plain noisy. Many now are looking for music that will let them clear their heads and read, rest and relax. The problem, of course, is that easy listening was chided and purged decades ago. The music no longer exists. In addition, easy-listening arrangers and orchestras are simply too costly to revive.
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So boomers are turning to satellite radio for easy listening. Which is sort of funny, since the music was once excoriated when our hair was longer, parents were uptight and teachers didn't get where we were coming from. Which only proves that the older we get, the more our parents' lives make sense. Like all music, there's good and bad easy listening. The good stuff tended to feature better artists while the lousy music lacked any sense of sass and charm.
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With that said, I tend to be a fan of mood music from the 1950s and easy listening renditions of '60s hits, particularly by British orchestras (it's a quirk, I know). Here are a bunch of albums that will steer you to the genre's better neighborhoods...
Paul Weston—Music for Easy Listening, Music for Memories, Mood for 12 and Solo MoodHere's You Go to My Head from Weston's Music for Memories...
Bobby Hackett—Complete Capitol Bobby Hackett Sessions(Mosaic), That Midnight Touch and A Time for LoveHere'sMy Foolish Heart from That Midnight Touch...
Johnny Smith—Moonlight in Vermont. Here's the recording, with Stan Getz...
Axel Stordahl—Dreamtime. Here's Imagination... 
George Shearing—Black Satin, Satin Affair and White Satin. Here's Early Autumn from Satin Affair (ignore the album pictured at YouTube...
And then there was this subgenre—'60s pop hits given a tender touch by British orchestras. Two from my collection:
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Here's Tony Hatch and His Orchestra with Burt Bacharach and Hal David's Do You Know the Way to San Jose?...
And here's the George Martin Orchestra with the Beatles' It's Only Love from his Help! album...
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JazzWax reader, saxophonist and jazz educator Bill Kirchner rightfully notes that Canadian arranger-conductor Robert Farnon deserves credit for advancing the easy strings sound. Here are a few examples Bill sent along:
Here's Laura...
Here's Pictures in the Fire...
Here's I'm a Dreamer (Aren't We All)...
And here's Birth of the Blues, which is a bit outside the scope of this post but smart band and orchestral writing just the same...
Used with permission by Marc Myers