At JazzWax, the late flutist and saxophonist Harold McNair, whose "Flute & Nut" in 1970 is on Spotify... https://t.co/2zCb4HtIG7 pic.twitter.com/QESqDp1QM3— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) 29 de março de 2017
Friday, March 31, 2017
flutist and saxophonist #HaroldMcNair
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 31, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Harold McNair
#StanKenton Legacy Orchestra
The Stan Kenton Legacy Orchestra is made up of musicians who played with Stan Kenton when he was alive, plus musicians who also played with Maynard Ferguson, Woody Herman, Count Basie and other "name" bands. The band comes together every year to tour all over the United States and also record live CD's from our tours. Most of our concerts are done in high schools, colleges and universities, in keeping with Stan Kenton's commitment to jazz education. Any school that books the band for an evening concert gets a FREE clinic in the afternoon.
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 31, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Stan Kenton
#Rakkatak : Small Pieces of an Indian Life in Canada
In the market of Jodhpur, India, among all the overwhelming sights and sounds spread out below Mehrangarh Fort, sellers display textiles with their brilliant colors and designs, often so perfect in their imperfections. They caught the eye of Anita Katakkar, the tabla-playing leader of Rakkatak, as she visited, and the beauty of the fragments of cloth she saw gave her the title of the band’s third album. Small Pieces (released April 14, 2017) is, she says, a collection of the stories they’ve absorbed along the way.
“Like the fabrics, nothing is ever quite perfect when you make an album, and everything is stitched together with different threads,” Katakkar explains. “It felt like it summed up everything we’d been doing so well.”
Based in Toronto, Canada, Rakkatak began as a solo project in 2009 for Katakkar, working with her tabla, a laptop, and a sequencer to create a highly personal mix of classical Indian music and electronica. But with the addition of bassist Oriana Barbato and sitar player Rex Van der Spuy, Rakkatak’s focus shifted a little, making music whose heart remains grounded in the Indian tradition, but whose head is firmly fixed in the 21st century.
“My ancestry is Indian and Scottish,” Katakkar says, “and I heard plenty of Indian music growing up from my grandmother; that’s what started me. I began studying tabla here in Canada, then spent time in India learning more. Then I spent 10 years as a member of the Toronto Tabla Ensemble. But once musicians like Talvin Singh and Tabla Beat Science started changing the way people heard Indian music, I began to explore the possibilities they opened up. I saw where I wanted to take the music. We had stories to tell.”
read more at: http://rakkatak.flipswitchpr.com/dispatch/21609/9NBloqWFV_ud81-exbeu2A?storyamp_track=9784
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 31, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Rakkatak
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
a super-rare and early soul-jazz album ....
At JazzWax, a super-rare and early soul-jazz album on Pacific Jazz from 1963 with two audio tracks... https://t.co/Md1hM7WNVt pic.twitter.com/VIlsBsWinT— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) March 28, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 29, 2017 0 comments
Tampa's Jazz History ....
Tampa’s fabled Central Avenue, the heart of the city’s African-American community, was home to Ernie Calhoun from age 13, in 1938. He went on the road with singer Percy Mayfield (who heard him practicing through his bedroom window) at 18, and worked closely with the young Ray Charles, then living in Tampa. After years on the road, he formed Ernie Cal & The Soul Brothers, the highly popular group who performed with the biggest names in jazz as they came through town. That band eventually became Al Downing & the All-Stars, always featuring Ernie’s big, soulful sound on the tenor.
The documentary that begins the concert showcases Ernie Calhoun’s musical career, as well as his life off-stage. After seeing intense front-line action in Korea, he returned to the Jim Crow south, attended Morehouse College, and became active in the civil rights movement. He would go on to a career as a leader in community service organizations in Tampa, leading outreach efforts to help minority youth, and later senior citizens. He helped the lives of thousands through his day job, all the while making great music until his retirement from playing, just a few years ago. The film is by Arielle Stevenson, from an oral history project prepared by David Brown and Stan Wilkins, with Bob Seymour.
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 29, 2017 0 comments
Monday, March 27, 2017
Jazz in the Park
Jazz in the Park – A four-day celebration of music and crustaceans - Louisiana Weekly https://t.co/so01U3UzUF— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 27, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
Jazz musicians head to ....
Jazz musicians head to the Garfield April 1 - My Eastern Shore https://t.co/VMTUKgMeMb— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 27, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
Expats Looking Forwar ...
Expats Looking Forward to Lombok's First Jazz Festival - Indonesia Expat (registration) (blog) https://t.co/jJPOwTf2vf— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 27, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
JMW Turner - "No Sun in Venice" - Modern Jazz Quartet
Published on Mar 27, 2017
The Modern Jazz Quartet performing "Cortege" from pianist John Lewis' film score to No Sun in Venice with Milt Jackson, vibes, Percy Heath, bass and Connie Kay, drums.
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Connie Kay, Milt Jackson, Modern Jazz Quartet, Percy Heath
Review: When performing, Gershwin is harder than it looks
Howard Reich, Contact Reporter (Chicago Tribune)
March 26, 2017
Danger lurks when great symphony orchestras play programs devoted to music of George Gershwin.
Not because the ensembles can't dispatch the music brilliantly, but because not all conductors can finesse the merger of classical and jazz idioms that is at the center of Gershwin's art. Worse, not every maestro approaches Gershwin's oeuvre as seriously as it deserves, regarding his work as light classical rather than as American populism at its most urbanely sophisticated.
Which brings us to the fascinating case of Bramwell Tovey, a British-trained conductor-pianist who serves as music director of the Vancouver Symphony and led the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in a "Gershwin Spectacular" program Friday night in Orchestra Hall at Symphony Center. Tovey was deeply persuasive as conductor and thoroughly engaging as raconteur but, alas, musically anemic and often technically unsure as pianist. By taking on multiple roles, he diminished what otherwise could have been an exemplary Gershwin program, the music sounding fresh and alive when he was on the podium but flagging when he sat at the piano.
read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/music/reich/ct-gershwin-cso-review-ent-0327-20170325-column.html
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
Celebrate Jazz Appreciation
Born and raised in Jacksonville, FL, Doc credits his older brother’s love for the piano for driving him to become a musician. Doc has played percussion for over 30 years over a diverse array of genres including Rhythm & Blues, Jazz, and Latin Jazz. Doc has performed globally in Europe, Korea, and Panama. Doc has also been selected as the opening performance for many greats including James Brown, Aaran Neville, Macy Gray, Kool and the Gang, Kirk Whalum, Brian Culbertson, and EL Gran Combo. Doc is most inspired by percussionists Ralph McDonald, Giovanni Hidalgo, and Bill Summers.
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
The Bad Plus brings jazz ....
The Bad Plus brings jazz reimaginings of pop, rock hits to Jefferson Center - Roanoke Times https://t.co/5YztpRuJ3a— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 27 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
Classic, jazz concert series
Classic, jazz concert series hits Zim - NewsDay https://t.co/Ll2vNKadGD— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 27 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
a splendid acoustic jazz album from ....
At JazzWax, a splendid acoustic jazz album from 1977 with plenty of heart and sass... https://t.co/t7uV91FGpj pic.twitter.com/5FBFOUND3s— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) 27 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
'Polish music has a specific kind of lyricism ....
'Polish music has a specific kind of lyricism and beauty' - The Sunday Guardian https://t.co/IF5OFdKtfn— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 25 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
Sheldon's vocal jazz unit aims for 'three-peat'
GALLAGHER: Sheldon's vocal jazz unit aims for 'three-peat' - Sioux City Journal https://t.co/brS1GuDgsV— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 26 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
Kutztown hosts 11 Jazz Bands .....
Kutztown hosts 11 Jazz Bands at Annual Jazz Festival - Boyertown Berk Montgomery Newspapers https://t.co/Ys8LeDj9Xb— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 26 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
Live Music and Entertainment Listings (March 27 – 31)
This Week: Live Music and Entertainment Listings (March 27 – 31) - What'sUpNewp https://t.co/S30oPMyZec— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 27 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 27, 2017 0 comments
Saturday, March 25, 2017
links to my WSJ interviews ....
At JazzWax, links to my WSJ interviews—plus Oscar Dennard, Jackie Paris, Gene Harris and Chinese a go-go... https://t.co/A1qwVYvSia pic.twitter.com/KVzFl0KkLI— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) 25 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, March 25, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Gene Harris, Jackie Paris, Oscar Dennard
'Polish music has a specific kind of ....
'Polish music has a specific kind of lyricism and beauty' - The Sunday Guardian https://t.co/IF5OFdKtfn— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 25 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, March 25, 2017 0 comments
JLCO with Wynton Marsalis ft. Jon Batiste
Published on Mar 23, 2017
Animal Dance
From THE MUSIC OF JOHN LEWIS
Composed by John Lewis
January 19, 2013
Rose Theater
Watch the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis featuring Jon Batiste perform "Animal Dance off their album "The Music of John Lewis."
Personnel:
Sherman Irby - Alto saxophone
Ted Nash - Alto saxophone
Victor Goines - Tenor saxophone
Walter Blanding - Tenor saxophone
Paul Nedzela - Baritone saxophone
Vincent Gardner - Trombone
Chris Crenshaw - Trombone
Elliot Mason - Trombone
Ryan Kisor - Trumpet
Kenny Rampton - Trumpet
Tim Hagans - Trumpet
Wynton Marsalis - Trumpet
Howard Johnson - Tuba
Jon Batiste - Piano
Carlos Henriquez - Bass
Ali Jackson - Drums
Subscribe to our channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCP10...
To learn more about Jazz at Lincoln Center, visit us at http://www.jazz.org
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, March 25, 2017 0 comments
NCCU Vocal Jazz Ensemble
NCCU Vocal Jazz Ensemble releases second album, 'Take Note' - Campus Echo Online https://t.co/iFgyYGZHrh— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 24 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, March 25, 2017 0 comments
Saint Lucia Jazz kicks into high gear
Saint Lucia Jazz kicks into high gear - St. Lucia Times Online News (press release) https://t.co/EME9WMfbRK— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 24 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, March 25, 2017 0 comments
A Jazz Fact Check Of 'La La Land'
A Jazz Fact Check Of 'La La Land'WBGO and Jazz At Lincoln Center - NPR https://t.co/xcUavWKCAI— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 25 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, March 25, 2017 0 comments
Friday, March 24, 2017
Evan Parker - As the Wind album review:
Cormac Larkin
Fri, Mar 24, 2017
Evan Parker is not a man given to hyperbole, so if the great English “free” saxophonist says this is “one of the best records I have ever made”, it is worth taking note. As the Wind is an atmospheric, three-cornered conversation between Parker and two less-than-usual percussionists.
French lithophonist Toma Gouband coaxes blunt notes from tuned stones, while US drummer Mark Nauseef (better known for rock playing of a different kind, including a brief spell with Thin Lizzy) produces a variety of contrasting metallic sounds. Together, they describe an austere, echoing soundscape, which elicits a thoughtful, even coy response from Parker.
read more at: http://www.irishtimes.com/culture/music/evan-parker-as-the-wind-album-review-echoes-in-a-soundscape-1.3017753
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 24, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Evan Parker
Brent Gallaher
Brent Gallaher to open new jazz club - The News Record https://t.co/mRDJbz91eZ— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 23, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 24, 2017 0 comments
St Edmunds Church, Chingford
Jazz music, dance, delicious food - everyone invited - St Edmunds Church, Chingford - Chingford Times https://t.co/8J9sLQljLA— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 23, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 24, 2017 0 comments
Worlds collide in faculty concert
Worlds collide in faculty concert - The Lafayette (blog) https://t.co/pAlzk3VsrU— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 24, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 24, 2017 0 comments
Bret Primack chats with Basie trombonist .....
At JazzWax, Bret Primack chats with Basie trombonist Al Grey on playing with Frank on Sinatra at the Sands in '66 https://t.co/SCMTrXUasr pic.twitter.com/0ysHG5sSXU— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) March 24, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 24, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Al Grey
Sunny Wilkinson's last show ....
Sunny Wilkinson's last show at Hillsdale to feature the jazz music of Joni Mitchell - Hillsdale Collegian https://t.co/7uP4fk3d6E— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 23, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 24, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Sunny Wilkinson
Thursday, March 23, 2017
UC Jazz's Jazz in the Basement
UC Jazz's Jazz in the Basement energizes with evening of contemporary tunes - Daily Californian https://t.co/fTFsQhPc8X— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 23, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
a new find from Sunnyside Records
At JazzWax, a new find from Sunnyside Records sheds light on jazz pianist Oscar Dennard... https://t.co/OxMDvdRP1u pic.twitter.com/2UXZX7Kr7t— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) March 23, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Sunnyside Records
Piano legend #McCoyTyner
By Tim Campbell
MARCH 21, 2017 — 5:07PM
One of jazz’s all-time greats, pianist McCoy Tyner, will headline this summer’s Twin Cities Jazz Festival.
The powerhouse keyboardist who helped drive John Coltrane to his greatest heights, Tyner (pictured above) remains a commanding presence at age 78, as he proved in gigs last fall at the Dakota Jazz Club. He’ll play the free stage in St. Paul’s Mears Park at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, June 24.
The roster for the 19th annual festival sticks pretty closely to the jazz tradition, after flirting with New Orleans R&B (2015 headliner Dr. John) and pop/hip-hop (2016 act Michael Franti) in the past couple years.
read more at http://www.startribune.com/piano-legend-mccoy-tyner-to-headline-2017-twin-cities-jazz-festival/416765663/
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
Labels: McCoy Tyner
from ron kadish ....
Hi Claudio,
20 years is a good run for a recording no one thought would see the light of day, by musicians everyone thought time had forgotten. It's safe to say that without the Buena Vista Social Club sessions, Cuban music would not be enjoying the attention it's been getting in the US for the past two decades.
Juan de Marcos, one of the masters behind the BVSC, is still firmly dedicated to spreading the joys of Cuban music, and I'm happy to annouce that he's celebrating 20 years with the release of a brand new album, Absolutely Live II. Recorded in Guanajuato, Mexico, the album captures an intensity rarely heard on live recording.
Are you interested in covering it? Please note, I don't have physical! The album is only available through digital download at the link below. Sorry if that's an inconvenience.....
Afro-Cuban All Stars - Two Nights, One Hot Album: Afro-Cuban All-Stars Return with Absolutely Live II
04/07/2017
The band captured everything on a recording, which de Marcos mixed and mastered, clarifying the sound but losing none of the energy. The result, Absolutely Live II (April 7, 2017), shows the 14-piece supergroup at its peak.
Play - Download Album
Best, Ron
ron kadish
publicist
ron@rockpaperscissors.biz
rock paper scissors, inc.
511 west 4th street, suite 2
bloomington, indiana 47404 usa
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
Botswana: FCC Revives Music
Botswana: FCC Revives Music Entertainment - https://t.co/sDx9SISUJq https://t.co/B8zfK1B1D3— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 23, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
MOJO melds crime, jazz
MOJO melds crime, jazz - Lagniappe https://t.co/ecxtbgoNwX— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 23, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
a new find from Sunnyside Records
At JazzWax, a new find from Sunnyside Records sheds light on jazz pianist Oscar Dennard... https://t.co/OxMDvdRP1u pic.twitter.com/2UXZX7Kr7t— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) March 23, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Sunnyside Records
Brent Gallaher to open new jazz club
Brent Gallaher to open new jazz club - The News Record https://t.co/mRDJbz91eZ— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) March 23, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
Chuck Berry's electric guitar
At JazzWax, Chuck Berry's electric guitar, story songs and stagecraft all but ended the saxophone's role in rock... https://t.co/wwWy4UlkpT pic.twitter.com/YRZpnQUaBo— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) March 21, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Chuck Berry
a look at the documentary "I Called Him Morgan,"
At JazzWax, a look at the documentary "I Called Him Morgan," which traces the life and tragic death of Lee Morgan https://t.co/CVMEOi8f9l pic.twitter.com/TMRfNC7weU— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) March 22, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 23, 2017 0 comments
Tuesday, March 21, 2017
Top 10 Influential Jazz Musicians
Published on Sep 2, 2014
Jazz: the original art form of the American south. Welcome to WatchMojo.com, and today we’re counting down our picks for the top 10 most influential jazz musicians. Check us out at http://www.Twitter.com/WatchMojo, http://instagram.com/watchmojo and http://www.Facebook.com/WatchMojo
Special thanks to our users jkellis, Kuhn Imthor II, SaxyAndrewTheatre, Aaron Orel, Al Bebak, Alex Johnson, Jaime Enrique Gutierrez Pérez and ThisXGuy for submitting the idea on our Suggest Page at http://www.WatchMojo.com/suggest
Check out the voting page here,
http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top%2010...
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 21, 2017 0 comments
10cc - I'm Not In Love - making of documentary
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 21, 2017 0 comments
Labels: 10cc
organist Joe Bucci's "Wild About Basie!"
At JazzWax, organist Joe Bucci's "Wild About Basie!" on Capitol from 1962, now difficult to find... https://t.co/c8Yeo674yO pic.twitter.com/XOWs2VhFNw— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) March 16, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 21, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Joe Bucci
Tommy LiPuma (1936-2017)
Tommy LiPuma (1936-2017) - JazzWax https://t.co/KBKRd29pus— alan elliott (@alanelliott) March 15, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 21, 2017 0 comments
Summer Youth Jazz Camps
Summer Youth Jazz Camps Open for Registration - University of Arkansas Newswire https://t.co/Gbmn6fForq— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 21 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 21, 2017 0 comments
Zimbabwe: Jazz Trust Embarks .....
Zimbabwe: Jazz Trust Embarks On Jazz Awareness Campaign - https://t.co/sDx9SISUJq https://t.co/eDzJFfuFmW— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 21 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 21, 2017 0 comments
Visiting Rider Professor ....
Visiting Rider Professor Celebrates Jazz with New Album Release - News at Rider https://t.co/y56jgGhaXr— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 21 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 21, 2017 0 comments
17th annual Comerica Java & Jazz music
17th annual Comerica Java & Jazz music series begins March 21 at the Detroit Public Library - WXYZ https://t.co/rLFiwnuNfE— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 21 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 21, 2017 0 comments
Music review: Elliot Galvin Trio at Jazz Bar in Edinburgh
Rob Adams, Folk & Jazz critic
march 20, 2017
You’d never know that Corrie Dick is a recent arrival into pianist Elliot Galvin’s trio. The Glasgow-born, London-based Dick, who won the Young Scottish Jazz Musician of the Year title in 2013, wasn’t the drummer on the album that Galvin is touring to promote, Punch, but he has assimilated himself into the twists, turns and idiosyncrasies of Galvin’s music so well that it seemed as if he’d been involved in its conception.
Galvin presents a deeply involved and thoroughly evolved musical experience. There are pieces that sound as if drawn from the soul of Eastern European folk melodies. Others touch on African folklore and instrumentation in the shape of a thumb piano or completely reinvent items from the standards repertoire. Still others take an original theme and develop it through a multitude of variations, and that’s before we get to the sheer theatre of the trio interacting with a Punch & Judy soundtrack or Galvin’s virtuosic extemporising on a melodica.
A particular favourite involved Galvin literally tearing strips off a roll of gaffer tape into the microphone as Tom McCredie played a muscular bassline and then improvising with jaw-dropping facility on piano keys whose strings were dampened with said strips of tape. Lulu’s Back in Town featured similar keyboard brilliance, sounding like the product of a liaison between Thelonious Monk, Oscar Peterson, Cecil Taylor and Scott Joplin, and Mack the Knife, with its familiar melody whistled over a juddering, reconfigured rhythm, took an engaging walk on the wild side. That all this passes to the listener so easily, and often so entertainingly, is a tribute to Galvin’s wit, wisdom and inclusive musicality.
http://www.heraldscotland.com/arts_ents/15166975.Music_review__Elliot_Galvin_Trio_at_Jazz_Bar_in_Edinburgh/
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 21, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Elliot Galvin
Monday, March 20, 2017
Wayne Shorter is the Detroit Jazz Fest
Wayne Shorter is the Detroit Jazz Fest's artist-in-residence this year - Detroit Metro Times https://t.co/3raxIrpqoo— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 20 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 20, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Wayne Shorter
Procol Harum - A Whiter Shade of Pale, live in Denmark 2006
Uploaded on Apr 20, 2011
Procol Harum performing A Whiter Shade of Pale with the Danish National Concert Orchestra and choir at Ledreborg Castle, Denmark in August 2006
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 20, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Procol Harum
10cc - I'm Not In Love
Published on May 12, 2014
I'm Not in Love (Eric Stewart : Graham Gouldman)
I'm not in love
So don't forget it
It's just a silly phase I'm going through
And just because
I call you up
Don't get me wrong, don't think you've got it made
I'm not in love, no no, it's because..
I like to see you
But then again
That doesn't mean you mean that much to me
So if I call you
Don't make a fuss
Don't tell your friends about the two of us
I'm not in love, no no, it's because..
I keep your picture
Upon the wall
It hides a nasty stain that's lying there
So don't you ask me
To give it back
I know you know it doesn't mean that much to me
I'm not in love, no no, it's because..
Ooh you'll wait a long time for me
Ooh you'll wait a long time
Ooh you'll wait a long time for me
Ooh you'll wait a long time
I'm not in love
So don't forget it
It's just a silly phase I'm going through
And just because I call you up
Don't get me wrong, don't think you've got it made
I'm not in love
I'm not in love
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 20, 2017 0 comments
Expand Your Idea of Jazz Music .....
Expand Your Idea of Jazz Music at Concert Series - Free Times https://t.co/nlP9cqKD3W— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 20 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 20, 2017 0 comments
Where To Find Live Music ....
Where To Find Live Music and Entertainment This Week in Newport (March 20 – 24) - What'sUpNewp https://t.co/0bWb9G0B4o— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 20 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 20, 2017 0 comments
Chuck Berry, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards jam
Uploaded on Aug 7, 2011
Chuck Berry - Guitar, vocals
Eric Clapton - Guitar
Keith Richards - Guitar
Steve Jordan - Drums
Johnnie Johnson - Piano
Chuck Leavell - Organ
Joey Spampinato - Bass
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 20, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Chuck Berry, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards
Flashback: #ChuckBerry Performs at 1958 Newport Jazz Festival
By Patrick Doyle
read more at: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/videos/see-chuck-berry-perform-at-1958-newport-jazz-festival-w472742
Posted by jazzofilo at Monday, March 20, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Chuck Berry
Saturday, March 18, 2017
The Congregation band fuses music
The Congregation band fuses music, theater at Odyssey - Jewish Journal https://t.co/0oLelkbhb4— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 18 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, March 18, 2017 0 comments
Norwich new jazz pioneers ....
Norwich new jazz pioneers Mammal Hands return to city on latest tour - Norfolk Eastern Daily Press https://t.co/73Ho5772vv— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 18 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, March 18, 2017 0 comments
The latest Bass Guitar Twitter News!
— Steve Barr (@SteveBarr) 5 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, March 18, 2017 0 comments
Friday, March 17, 2017
MP - trio
— Афиша Черногории (@afisa_mne) 16 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 17, 2017 0 comments
Listen to this extra cool jazz mix
Listen to this extra cool jazz mix @mancusojazz turned me on to --you won't be sorry! #GatewayJazz #hip #jazz #music https://t.co/c5oiHrv8zV pic.twitter.com/sCBFA6r28m— Dawn DeBlaze (@JazzNews) 16 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 17, 2017 0 comments
Sweet Sacred Spring
Sweet Sacred Spring ✨https://t.co/LeeyRZHwef #spring #news #jazz #music #sacredground #tierrasagrada #leahsuarez— Leah María Suárez (@leahsuarez) 17 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 17, 2017 0 comments
James Cotton - Slow Blues
The great James Cotton!
check: http://www.jamescottonsuperharp.com/
Blues in My Sleep - Key of E, on A harmonica.
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 17, 2017 0 comments
Labels: James Cotton
Wayne Shorter Quartet Highlights
Wayne Shorter is one of the most influential saxophonists and composers in the pantheon of modern music, let alone jazz. Regarded as a pioneer since his emergence in the 1950s, Shorter’s trajectory has restlessly embodied continual exploration and unencumbered momentum. A generation of musicians and fans see and hear him as a humble master who created a timeless vocabulary as vital as it is unbound.
"The Unfolding" is a contemporary work commissioned by Opening Nights Performing Arts, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the Monterey Jazz Festival, and the Jazztopad Festival/National Forum of Music (Wroclaw, Poland). This new piece is inspired by recent scientific interpretations of the Big Bang theory that describe the expansion of the universe as an “unfolding” of matter in the time and space continuum.
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 17, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Wayne Shorter Quartet
The New Vanguard ....
NYT Music: The New Vanguard: For Mara Rosenbloom, Piano as a Remedy and a Force in Jazz https://t.co/ngaQRPiJKj #music #news— Jukka Heinovirta (@k009034) January 20, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 17, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Mara Rosenbloom
From The Critic's Desk
— Mundo (@gdledsan) January 31, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Friday, March 17, 2017 0 comments
Thursday, March 16, 2017
Nate Smith's 'Kinfolk'
— ShadowLines (@ShadowLinesDoc) March 6, 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 16, 2017 0 comments
Songs We Love: Daymé Arocena, 'Mambo Na' Mà'
by MARISA ARBONA-RUIZ
March 16, 20179:00 AM ET
Daymé Arocena must be an old soul. She's a bright, young singer with a surprisingly mature voice that's deep and dynamic. Her spirit is exuberant and her style is rich, steeped in Cuba's African rhythms and Santería culture and influenced by Whitney Houston, North American pop and jazz.
Arocena exploded onto the music scene with her debut album, Nueva Era, in 2015. Now, she lifts off with the danceable "Mambo Na' Mà," the lead track from her just-released follow-up, Cubafonía.
The track opens with simple electronic beats based on an Afro-Cuban clave rhythm. It then launches into what sounds like a cultural explosion born of an Afro-Cuban soul's journey into New Orleans — which is exactly how this track came to be. Arocena was captivated by a New Orleans brass band's "second line," with its dancers and singers, and heard similarities to the '50s mambo sounds of Pérez Prado — Afro-Latino rhythms with congas, bass, timbales, cowbells, trumpets and vocals. (Indeed, New Orleans has a unique Cuban connection dating back at least to the 19th century, when Cuban immigrants embedded the sounds of the island in the local culture.)
read more: http://www.npr.org/sections/altlatino/2017/03/16/520165592/songs-we-love-daym-arocena-mambo-na-m
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 16, 2017 0 comments
organist Joe Bucci's "Wild About Basie!"
At JazzWax, organist Joe Bucci's "Wild About Basie!" on Capitol from 1962, now difficult to find... https://t.co/c8Yeo674yO pic.twitter.com/XOWs2VhFNw— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) 16 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 16, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Joe Bucci
Sunshine Jazz Presents
SJO's monthly Sunshine Jazz Concert Series continues with an evening of “Alto Madness” featuring alto sax ace, RichieCole! He’s stood with legends—the world’s been his stage—Richie Cole is the ultimate quixotic cacophony of cool! The super stellar musicians joining Richie for this special SJO concert appearance will be Jorge Garcia - guitar, Danny Burger - drums and Don Coffman - bass!
Richie Cole started on sax at 10 years old and has played with many iconic Jazz legends starting with the Buddy Rich Big Band, Lionel Hampton’s Big Band, and Doc Severinsen’s Tonight Show Band. He toured the world with his own quintet — popularizing bebop in his own “Alto Madness” style, and performed with legendary vocalists including Ella Fitzgerald, Tony Bennett, Sarah Vaughn and Nancy Wilson. Cole has graced the stage at the Village Vanguard and Carnegie Hall, and even gave a command performance for the Queen of England! His recent CD, “Richie Cole Plays Ballads and Love Songs” garnered 4 stars in Down Beat Magazine, while his newest release “The Many Minds of Richie Cole” (cover art by S. Florida artist Daniel Pontet) is sure to become an instant classic!
Don't miss this very special evening with the legendary Richie Cole! Sunday, March 26th from 6:00pm-9:00pm at Miami Shores Country Club, 10000 Biscayne Blvd., Miami Shores, FL 33138. Admission is $20/SJO Members $15. Become an SJO member at the door and admission is FREE! MSCC features a retro lounge overlooking the links with cash bar, a full menu and free parking. Reserve your seats at SunJazzOrg@aol.com, (954)554-1800; MSCC info at (305)795-2360. Many thanks to our SJO members and sponsors for helping us keep Jazz alive & thriving in South Florida for more than 30 years!
Posted by jazzofilo at Thursday, March 16, 2017 0 comments
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Jazz 'n Art festival
Jazz 'n Art festival returns to Woodbine - The News (subscription) https://t.co/9yHe8nuM9o— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 13 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
#NP Bumpin' on the ....
#NP Bumpin' on the sunset Wes Montgomery -- Smooth Jazz music for the writer, much needed.— Molly Flynn (@PimpNews) 13 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
Bill Evans Trio | Up With the Lark
Published on Feb 22, 2017
Order "On A Monday Evening" on CD or 180-gram vinyl: http://smarturl.it/OnAMondayEvening
This previously-unreleased concert finds the Bill Evans Trio at the top of their game! The 1976 recording has been meticulously restored, while the album includes new liner notes by Ashley Kahn, featuring insight from trio members Eddie Gomez and Eliot Zigmund.
For more information on Bill Evans, visit: billevansofficial.com or facebook.com/BillEvansOfficial
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Bill Evans Trio
@huahinjazz - The latest news on jazz music and festivals
@huahinjazz - The latest news on jazz music and festivals. #huahinjazz #ezybooking Joe Bourne: Upbeat And Sweet https://t.co/HBeyKzr4Qg— HuaHinJazzFestival (@HuaHinJazz) 13 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
In other news, @jeffsessions
In other news, @jeffsessions is really a time traveler from 1936 and after he destroys weed, he's going after that evil JAZZ music. https://t.co/i7miR6RuaV— F. Grey Parker (@greyparker) 15 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
RIP Tommy LiPuma
RIP Tommy LiPuma, a legendary producer and dear friend who had just finished Diana Krall's new album due May 5... https://t.co/f0jjlueQVe pic.twitter.com/VDs5Igbw7s— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) 15 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Tommy LiPuma
Thelonious Monk - Brilliant Corners
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Thelonious Monk
From jazz to Spain to New Orleans
BY ELIZABETH HANLY
Artburstmiami.com
In a combined concert that promises to be both sublime and rip-roaring, three generations of Cuban and Cuban diaspora musicians come together on Saturday at Miami-Dade County Auditorium to celebrate the 10th anniversary of FUNDarte’s Global Cuba Fest.
(The festival concludes March 24 to 26 with “Ten Million,” a play from Havana that portrays the tumultuous aftermath of the Revolution during the 1970’s and 1980’s.)
The elder statesman of the group is Cuban pianist and composer Ernán López Nussa, who's been compared by the Jazz Times to none less than Grammy-award winning Irakere founder Chucho Valdes, the godfather of Cuban jazz piano. “Like Chucho before him, Nussa is an insatiable musical omnivore with an intellect to match his giddy enthusiasm," Peter Margasak wrote in the magazine in 2001.
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/article138313733.html#storylink=cpy
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
#TonyBennett, #PatMetheny top Ravinia's jazz lineup
by Howard Reich
march 15, 2017
Jazz tends to come and go at the Ravinia Festival, some seasons more active than others.
This summer a few bookings stand out, most notably Tony Bennett returning to celebrate his 91st birthday (yes, he still can sing, and quite effectively, at that); evening-length tributes to Henry Mancini and Ira Gershwin (both backed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra); and an homage to Peggy Lee by Chicago singer Spider Saloff.
Still, any jazz devotee yearns to see Ravinia reclaim the glory it achieved in the 1990s, when the festival's past executive director, Zarin Mehta, gave jazz the attention it deserved.
Following are highlights of the upcoming season. Ravinia is located near Lake Cook and Green Bay roads in Highland Park; for tickets and other information, visit www.ravinia.org
read more at: http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/music/reich/ct-jazz-ravinia-ent-0315-20170314-column.html
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
Labels: Pat Metheny, Tony Bennett
NJ Jazz News
Sad News: Passing of Paul Abler
News: Grammy Recognition
Photo credit: NPR.org
Sad News: Dave Valentin dead at 64
News: Dylan Does Standards
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
from jazz@jazzinstitut.de
15 March 2016
... what else ...
--- James Karst remembers the "first" jazz recordings of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band 100 years ago by focusing on the trumpeter Freddie Keppard who had been offered a record contract prior to the ODJB but turned it down because he feared that his music might be plagiarized ( New Orleans Times Picayune).
--- Tiffany Benedict Browne reports about the guitarist Wes Montgomery who started his career on Indiana Avenue in Indianapolis in the early 1950s ( Indianapolis Monthly).
--- Amy Dickinson gives relationship tips to a jazz musician who has problems aligning his work with his wife's ( Press Connects).
--- Lynnette Hintze remembers the Montana-based pianist and singer Nina Russell ( Daily Interlake).
--- Tori Mann reports about the drummer Quentin Baxter from Charleston, South Carolina, who was awarded the state's highest arts award, the Elizabeth O'Neill Verner Governor's Award for the Arts ( Charleston City Paper).
--- Ethan Iverson visits the Louis Armstrong House Museum and writes a fabulous blog entry about it, complete with pictures ( Do the Math).
--- Hardeep Phull reports about how the guitarist Django Reinhardt influenced musicians far beyond jazz, citing the Black Sabbath member Tony Iommy as a case in point ( New York Post).
--- Christiane Büchli talks to the Swiss saxophonist Co Streiff ( SRF).
--- Hans Hielscher reports about the Spanish trumpeter Andrea Moris ( Spiegel Online).
--- Lous Dassen will not establish a new "Dr. Jazz" club in the city hall of Düsseldorf, Germany ( Rheinische Post).
--- Chris Foran remembers a Gene Krupa concert in Milwaukee in March 1957 and has some photos to document it, too ( Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel).
--- Heinrich Oehmsen hears the Austrian guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel at Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg, Germany ( Hamburger Abendblatt).
--- Holger True talks to the current artistic directors of the Elbjazz festival in Hamburg, Germany, Karsten Jahnke and Alex Schulz ( Hamburger Abendblatt).
--- Michael Steinman published three videos of jazz historian Dan Morgenstern remembering Tommy Benford, Frankie Newton, Al Hall, Mary Lou Williams, Donald Lambert, Eubie Blake, Willie The Lion Smith, Nat Lorber and Buddy Tate ( Jazzlives).
--- Ralph A. Miriello talks to the singer José James ( Huffington Post).
--- For whatever reason, the British journalist Tim Cooper was invited to the Java Jazz Festival in Indonesia, travel and hotel paid for, even though he professes not to even like jazz, and thus his report doesn't mention music until the last sentence ( Standard).
--- John Leland presents rare backstage photos of Billie Holiday by the photographer Jerry Dantzic ( New York Times).
--- Martina Zimmermann talks to the organist Rhoda Scott ( Deutschlandradio Kultur).
--- Mike Hobart talks to the ACT label founder Siggi Loch ( Financial Times).
--- Howard Reich hears saxophonist Ernest Dawkins and pianist Vijay Iyer in concert ( Chicago Tribune).
--- Barry Lytton reports about the film "Who's Crazy" from 1965 with music by Ornette Coleman ( News Times).
--- The guitarist Al DiMeola was booked into the Pascha nightclub in Cologne, Germany, but has canceled that concert because the Pascha is one of Europe's largest brothels which he didn't know when the contract was signed ( Emma).
--- Sebastian Scotney talks to Christine Stephan, the editor of Jazzthetik, the German magazine which celebrates its 30th anniversary these days ( London Jazz News).
--- Luckily, Germany has a system of funding the arts, and jazz has always been among the musical genres deemed worthy of funding. To get a glimpse into the funding structure we recommend a look into the decisions made in Germany's capital Berlin over the years, funding artists, venues and residencies of different sorts ( Senatsverwaltung Berlin ).
--- And finally, Riane Konc has a number of new definitions for "jazz" ( The New Yorker).
Obituaries
--- We read further obituaries about the pianist Horace Parlan who had died at the age of 86 ( New York Times, Wallace Bass ).
--- We learned of the passing of the Dutch pianist and composer Misha Mengelberg at the age of 81 ( Do the Math, De Volkskrant, WBGO, Bayerischer Rundfunk, NPR, The Guardian), the singer and producer Leon Ware at the age of 77 ( New York Times), the cook and jazz club owner Charlie Sims (Donna's Bar and Grill) at the age of 81 ( The New Orleans Advocate ), the German clarinetist Karl Petri at the age of 95 ( Frankfurter Rundschau), the flutist Dave Valentin at the age of 64 ( New York Times, New York Daily News), the guitarist Paul Abler at the age of 59 ( Star-Ledger), the impresario Fred Weintraub (The Bitter End) at the age of 88 ( New York Times), the bassist Lyle Ritz at the age of 87 ( Ultimate Classic Rock), the clarinetist Paul Nossiter at the age of 86 ( Cape Cod Times), as well as the German producer Walter Quintus at the age of 67.
Posted by jazzofilo at Wednesday, March 15, 2017 0 comments
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
@neilperez15 @RitaOra
@neilperez15 @RitaOra Me too, It sounds so good and it has a Classic Vibe, That takes me to the 60s, when the womans sings Jazz Music— RITA ORA NEWS😉 (@RBot1999) 13 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 14, 2017 0 comments
@huahinjazz
@huahinjazz - The latest news on jazz music and festivals. #huahinjazz #ezybooking Bill Brovold and Jamie Saft:... https://t.co/kkluv5wmKN— HuaHinJazzFestival (@HuaHinJazz) 14 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 14, 2017 0 comments
Talent and drive lead to breakthroughs for ...
Talent and drive lead to breakthroughs for Blair piano phenom - Vanderbilt University News https://t.co/LLjjSnHDzZ— Jazz music view (@Jazzmusicview) 14 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 14, 2017 0 comments
Patti Smith’s New Year’s Eve vow
Patti Smith’s New Year’s Eve vow: “We must not behave!” https://t.co/gTKY4Gprku #jazz— Jazz Beyond Jazz (@jazzbeyondjazz) 2 de janeiro de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 14, 2017 0 comments
Is NYC (still) capital of jazz?
Is NYC (still) capital of jazz? https://t.co/h1cvOkDzix #jazz— Jazz Beyond Jazz (@jazzbeyondjazz) 18 de janeiro de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 14, 2017 0 comments
"Jackie Paris and Anne Marie Moss Live at the Maisonette,"
At JazzWax, "Jackie Paris and Anne Marie Moss Live at the Maisonette," a super-rare jazz vocal album from '74... https://t.co/I82EcbJYbW pic.twitter.com/HeWEpt2vsY— Marc Myers (@JazzWax) 14 de março de 2017
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 14, 2017 0 comments
SFJazz announces lineup
By Aidin Vaziri
Updated 10:54 am, Friday, March 10, 2017
Quincy Jones’ protege Jacob Collier, Jamaica-born pianist Monty Alexander, vocalist Lizz Wright, Southern rock band the Suffers and ukulele maestro Jake Shimabukuro are among the eclectic artists who will perform as part of the 35th annual San Francisco Jazz Festival, set for June 6-19.
The lineup for the season will include 43 concerts over 13 days, according to a festival announcement Thursday, March 9.
Performances will take place at the SFJazz Center’s Robert N. Miner Auditorium, Joe Henderson Lab, Davies Symphony Hall and Herbst Theatre.
The festival will also include shows by Herb Alpert, Nicolas Bearde, Martin Luther, Cory Henry & the Funk Apostles, Chris Potter, Melissa Aldana, Stanley Clarke, Con Brio and others.
SFJazz also announced the lineup for the Summer Sessions concert series, which is scheduled for July 13 through Aug. 20, featuring Sun Ra Arkestra, Kid Koala, Ranky Tanky, Barbara Dane, T Sisters, Catherine Russell and Jane Monheit, among others.
The San Francisco Jazz Festival will kick off with a free party at the outdoor Proxy space in Hayes Valley, along Octavia Street, on June 6, featuring live music from John Brothers Piano Company and the North Beach Brass Band. There will also be a beer garden, videos and food trucks.
Tickets for both the festival and the Summer Sessions concerts are on sale now.
For the complete lineup, visit www.sfjazz.org.
read more at: http://www.sfgate.com/music/article/SFJAZZ-announces-lineup-for-summer-festival-and-10990926.php#photo-12056509
Posted by jazzofilo at Tuesday, March 14, 2017 0 comments