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April 08, 2006

Healdsburg Jazz Festival Just Around the Corner:

Healdsburg_jazz_festival

On June 1 and for the  following ten nights, the stars will be out and the jazz-savvy little town of Healdsburg will once again become the Northern California jazz community’s center of gravity  -  jumpin’ and jivin’ to the beat of some of the greatest jazz players in our universe, all courtesy of the 8th Annual Healdsburg Jazz Festival.

 Any musical event that can showcase - in the same series of performances - headliners and glittering stars with the stature of a McCoy Tyner, a Charlie Haden, a Mark Murphy and the senior statesmen of jazz, the Heath brothers, is sure to be regarded by jazz fans and critics alike as one of THE major music happenings of this or any other year. And deservedly so. McCoy Tyner is possibly the number one innovator and interpreter of modern jazz living today;Charlie Haden has long been recognized by many as jazzdom’s premier bassist and all-around musical genius; Mark Murphy is the artist over whom critic Rex Reed once gushed…..’arguably the best male singer in the business’; and the beloved and incredible Heath Brothers, everybody’s favorite who have been ensconced comfortably atop the jazz hierarchy for over a half century! Talk about an all-star lineup! These are the best of the best!

 Windsor's Furth Center will be the venue for the kick-off fund-raising event to benefit Sonoma County children’s music education with an auction and gala dinner.  The Musicians’ Warehouse BigLouie_bellson_3 Band, a magnificent 20 piece jazz/swing aggregation,  featuring the great Louie Bellson will perform in concert with a dance to follow.                                                                                                                      (Photo right: Louie Bellson)

On Friday, June 2, you may want to drop by the Barndiva restaurant in Healdsburg Bruceforemanand catch the fabulous Bruce Forman trio with his special guest, saxophonist, Noel Jewkes. The perfect musical backdrop for a luscious Barndiva snack and a glass of Geyser Peak wine.

 (Photos top; Bruce Forman;  bottom:Marc Cary)

Marc Cary and his Focus Trio return to Barndiva for an encore performance on Saturday, June 3. Marc_cary_1Having completely knocked out jazz audiences here last year, it’s only natural that we bring him back, and this time he has exciting fresh material to go with his always ‘outside-the-box’ approach.

 

Sunday’s ‘Jazz Night at the Movies’ on June 4 gives jazz fans a chance to see some of their favorite stars, past and present, doing their things in film clips culled from the voluminous archives of jazz historian, Mark Cantor.

 (Photo left: Eddie Duran & Mad)

Mad_and_eddieJazz and wine dinners at the fabulous Dry Creek Kitchen will be on the menu as the
StephanieOzer and Mad and Eddie Duran trios will perform for lucky diners on Monday, June 5 and Wednesday, June 7 respectively. Sandwiched in between .these two events, on Tuesday, June 6, Latin jazz star Rebeca Mauleon and sextet will present a concert and host a party in the Healdsburg Plaza. You bring the picnic andRebeca_mauleon she’ll provide the musical ‘hot sauce’.

 

(Photo left: Shea Breaux Wells)                               (Photo right: Rebeca Mauleon)

Shea_breaux_wellsClassic jazz interpreter, songstress Shea Breaux Wells, in a quintet format will be at the Flying Goat Café on Center Street Here’s a chance for fans to experience some of the real jazz music that real jazz musicians like to play.

In a week of many highlights, the Heath Brothers’ tribute to Percy in Film and Music is certainly one of the more attractive. This presentation on Friday, June 9 at the North Street Raven Theater, willHeath_brothers showcase the brothers’ indelible mark on jazz from bepob’s early years up to and including the present. It’s an absolute ‘must see’ for any serious jazz buff.

 (Photo left: John Heard)    (Photo right: The Heath Brothers)

John_hrardHealdsburg favorite, bassist John Heard and trio will be holding forth in the Hotel Healdsburg Lobby on Friday and Saturday (June 9, 10) with surprise guest artists dropping by to sit in.

 

 

Mark_murphy

Also on June 10, magnificent jazz vocalist, Mark Murphy performs at Quivira Vineyards. Whether singing ballads, blues or bebop, Murphy possesses one of the most incredible jazz voices ever to hold a microphone. This show is simply not to be missed.

     (Photo left: Mark Murphy)

Co-headlining this year’s Festival, also on Saturday, June 10, the Charlie Haden Quartet West, comes in with world renown bassist and all-around maestro, CharlieCharlie_haden_1 Haden with an all-star trio which includes Alan Broadbent, Ernie Watts and Billy Hart.

 (Photo left: McCoy Tyner)                                         (Photo right: Charlie Haden)

Mccoy_tyner_portraitAs Grand Finale, Sunday, June 11, the outdoor amphitheater at the Rodney Strong Vineyards will fairly rock to the sounds and rhythms of the universally acclaimed McCoy Tyner Trio. The opening act of this curtain-raiser will be the fabulous Billy Hart Trio, featuring Santi Debriano and Santa Rosa’s own Julian Lage

More information can be found on the Healdsburg Jazz Festival's website or you can just keep checking in here, because we'll be posting more on it during the month of May.

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April 02, 2006

The humor of Zoot Sims

This is a verbatim steal from a blog that I haven't been able to identify, but deserves I think, all the readership we can give it. Even if you've never heard of Zoot Sims, this stuff should give you a good chuckle:

Zoot'One of the most innovative, lyrical and swinging jazz musicians of any time was none other than John Haley Zoot Sims. I feel blessed and among the few fortunate having had the privilege and joy to have seen him play on countless occasions and in a variety of contexts. From Jazz at the Philharmonic, Stan Kenton and more relaxed and lyrical with his long time compadre, Al Cohn, seeing Zoot perform was never a disappointment. No matter what, I'd always go home after a club set or concert with something wonderful passed to me by this warm and exquisite Jazz Musician.

Zoot, coming off of the Lester Young branch soon came into his own with a wonderful identifiable sound that didn't take a classically trained ear to quickly identify. On a Gershwin lyric he had the poise and respect for that line with his tenor or soprano sax as much as Frank Sinatra would using his voice. If it was time to swing hard, Zoot did it easily without having to push any envelope to prove something. He just did it and it went down.

In every respect when we lost Zoot we truly lost an original jazz icon. Someone that won't be easily replaced by the clean cut crop of technical wizards coming out of jazz universities by the barrel loads today. Zoot was jazz and his attitude, demeanor and style were jazz you could dance to, close your eyes to or just tap your feet to. He was one hell of an original.

While The Jazz Zine cannot replicate any of Zoot's wonderful music short of having our readers download hours of Quicktime or .WAV files, there is something we all can share that was truly Zoot's: His incomparable sense of humor. I went and did some rummaging on the web and have come up with a bunch of quips and remarks of his gathered from published works by Bill Crow, Ira Gitler, Jeff Hamilton and Whitney Balliett. So without any further introductions read on and enjoy an original and irreplaceable sense of humor that helped shape the Zoot Sims many jazz fans have come to love and revere.


Zoot Sims did his first tour of duty with Benny Goodman in 1943. It was during that year, at a recording session, that Zoot, age seventeen, brought an apple with him which he placed on his music stand. As Sims began his solo, Goodman picked up the apple and started eating it. Goodman signaled him to take another chorus and then another and another. It turned out to be the longest solo Goodman ever gave Sims; long enough. at least, for Benny to finish the apple.


While still in his young teens, he worked in Ken Baker's Los Angeles area band. Baker would put nicknames on the front of his music stands. John Haley Sims ended up behind the "Zoot" stand, and as Zoot put it, "It stuck." The name became a household word to all except one musician, or so it seems. One morning, probably a bit too early, Zoot called trumpet player Nick Travis and identified himself to his sleepy voiced colleague. "Zoot who?" was the befuddled reply. .
Zoot was drafted into the air force in World War II. The year was 1944. Having served in places like Huntsville, Alabama; Valdosta, Georgia and Biloxi, Mississippi, Zoot proudly affirmed that he fought in the famous Battle Of The South.
Stan Getz, through much of his career, was known to be one of the more unpredictable personalities in the jazz world. Asked to describe his sometime rival, Zoot remarked, "Stan Getz is a nice bunch of guys
Al Cohn and Zoot shared a more than casual interest in alcohol consumption on the bandstand. During one of their long stays at New York's Half Note. it became evident that the two tenor men handled their drinking very differently. Zoot would be in a partying mood and Al would continue standing like a statue and playing as wonderfully as ever. At the end of a set one night, Zoot hopped off the bandstand, caromed from one table to the next, carrying on with the customers. He nearly lost his balance a couple of times, but regained it in the nick of time. He tried to negotiate two steps to the next table level but didn't quite make it. He tripped, and as a result, turned what should have been a fall into a nearly graceful vaudeville time step. A customer, noting Zoot's tour of the room said, "Boy, that Zoot can really drink a lot of booze." Al Cohn turned to bassist Bill Crow, and in his typical dry manner, said "Yes, but he doesn't drink WELL.
Zoot was rarely at a loss for words. When asked by a fan how he could play so well when he was loaded, he replied, "I practice when I'm loaded.
Zoot was standing out in the alley back of a club between sets where he was playing when a bum came up and  said, " I only need seventy five cents more to buy a drink." Zoot reached in his pocket and gave him the money. After the bum walked away up the alley, Zoot ran after him, stopped him and said,"Wait a minute. How do I know you're not going to go around the corner and buy a bowl of soup?"


Early one evening Zoot had just finished a recording session and was joined by guitarist Jim Hall and his wife Jane. Zoot complained of his tiring schedule -- recording all day followed by an appearance at The Half Note that night. Jane mentioned that if Zoot wanted, she had a Dexedrine. "I don't think they're good for you, they're pretty strong. I usually open one up and pour some out." "Pour some out?" said Zoot. "Are you crazy? Don't you know there are people SLEEPING in Europe?
On a tour of Europe with Chet Baker, Chet wanted Zoot to meet the son of Benito Mussolini, who happened to be Italy’s best jazz artist. Chet prompted Zoot to please say something nice when being introduced to him. While shaking the hand of the infamous leader's son Zoot said, "Sorry to hear about your Dad."

April 01, 2006

Zoot Sims: One of the Four Brothers

Album Title: Zoot Suite
Artist(s) 
Zoot Sims, Stan Getz, Roy Eldridge, Woody Herman Orchestra (1947-50)
Release Label: Jazz Archives No. 191
Recording Dates:  1947 - 1950

Woody Herman's various 'Herd' ensembles are probably best remembered, even within casual jazz circles, for his amazing reed sections during the late forties and early fifties. With each succeeding  re-assembling of these great bands, and there were several, the personnel changed as did the reeds, which had come to be known as the 'Four Brothers'. What fantastic aggregations these Woody Herman bands were! 

Woody began to shape the 'Woody Herman Orchestra' sound in 1943, pre-dating the bebop era, at least by a couple of years. Up to that time, his bands had gotten the rep as 'The band that plays the blues', but  with early modern jazz vocalist, Mary Ann McCall, and some of the others listed below, what had been a  distinctively Dixieland inflected sound gradually evolved into something suspiciously similar to the new music that  Diz, Bird and Monk had begun to toy around with in the mid to late forties. Herman rarely gets credit for being one of the first - if not THE first - big band leaders to pioneer the revolutionary genre in jazz that we know today as bepop.

Woody_herman_4_brothers(Photo: Woody Herman Orchestra of today) 


If anyone ever tries to stump you by asking you to name the original Four Brothers of jazz music, here's your answer, and it's readily apparent on the second track of this album, 'Four Brothers'. The makeup of the sax section on this, the first recording of the piece that's now a jazz classic, was: Woody Herman who played both clarinet and alto sax, but, for purposes of this trivia answer, was not considered to be one of the 'Brothers'. The original 'Four Brothers' were all saxophones: Herbie Steward on alto and tenor, Stan Getz, tenor, Zoot Sims, tenor and Serge Chaloff on bari. Getz later characterized the group as 'four drug addicts and a clean man', leaving future generations to sort them out.

As an added  trivia bonus, you can throw in the tid-bit that alto player, Sam Marowitz  was also in that section but, for whatever reason, also was not included in the 'Brothers' group. It's possible that he was the 'clean' one to whom Getz referred, and therefore, an 'outcast'.

And if they're not completely stunned by now, you can add  one more: Neither Ralph Burns , piano player, writer and Herman arranger, nor Neal Hefti, as is commonly assumed, wrote Four Brothers'  That distinction belongs to jazz clarinetist, Jimmy Giuffre.

There were many other notables playing in that band as well as the bands that followed- too many to name them all - but to list a few: Trumpet player, writer and arranger extraordinaire, Neal Hefti, Ernie Royal, Shorty Rogers, Al Cohn,  Brew Moore, Roy Eldridge, Conte Condoli, Bill Harris, Walter Bishop, Gerry Mulligan,  Allen Eager, and one of my all-time favorite drummers, Don Lamond. On this Zoot Suite album there are cuts from all of them and more.
(Photo, Left: Zoot Sims)

Zoot_sims_1Of course there are other re-mastered tracks on this historic collection, with Zoot Sims starring in all of them. By listening to them, any jazz fan can immediately understand why Sims, even at the age of 15 when he 'turned pro'  right up to the time of his untimely death in 1985, John Haley 'Zoot' Sims was considered by his peers and his fans alike to be something very special.

Since all of the tenor saxophone players showcased on this album are from the Lester Young 'School
Al_cohn_stan_getz_1 of Cool', it might be a bit of a challenge to distinguish in their solo work, exactly where one leaves off and the other begins. Zoot Sims, Stan Getz, Al Cohn, Allen Eager, Herbie Steward and Brew Moore - such great players. The best listening approach might be to just kick back and enjoy the music, whomever is playing it, because it's all wonderful.

Stan_getz_1For those whose interest in modern jazz music places a high regard on being in at the very beginnings -  those who feel an urge to hear those true artists who helped get us to where we are today, this album is an essential part in the progression of its history during what are probably the most important years in its nearly three-quarters of a century of evolution. This album is an absolute 'must have'.       (Photos Left: Stan Getz, Right, Al Cohn)

March 17, 2006

MEALS takes a giant first step

Well. the first meeting of the Music, Epicurean And Libation Society (MEALS) in the form of a jazz and wine brunch has come and gone now, and while we can't say that the thing went off without a hitch, I'd have to say, on balance, it was a pretty dandy affair.

A crowded venue (Bistro-V Restaurant in Sebastopol) added to the overall buzz, proprietor Rick Vargas'  food was fantastic and the music, provided by Greg's trio (Rick Webber and Kendrick Freeman) was as we expected, first-rate, besides all of which,  we had a great mix of people. One guest (I think it was John Westley) remarked that 'next time we do this, we should pick a place where the food is not so good so it won't be so crowded'.

Here's how  Steve Russell, saw it:

Sonoma County’s elite organization devoted to food, wine, music and fun (not necessarily in that order), MEALS, (Music, Epicurean and Libation Society) kicked off the 2006 season with a brunch at Bistro V in Sebastopol. A trio led by the internationally acclaimed Greg Hester provided the music.

 Located at 2295 Gravenstein Highway in Sebastopol Bistro V provided a warm, comfortable setting, good food and an intriguing wine list. One nice touch, for those to whom this is an issue, was the inclusion of vegetarian items on the menu. Another bonus was provided by chef/owner Rick Vargas when he sat in on the drums for one tune proving he can “cook” in more than one medium.

As Greg’s 54th birthday loomed a mere five days in the future MEALS took the opportunity to celebrate the coming milestone event. Balloons on the piano added a festive touch and the Family Hester generously provided a delicious carrot cake for dessert.Picture_0761

Before the music began there was some concern at my table regarding the sound quality, as Bistro V is a long, low ceilinged room. When the trio started – with Greg on piano, Steve Webber on bass and Kendrick Freeman on drums –all worries were laid to rest. The sound was just fine and the trio was too. All three musicians were in fine form and played off each other beautifully.

Elena_no1The group played two excellent sets that delighted MEALS regulars, MEALS newbies and those diners for whom the music came as a pleasant surprise.

This was an auspicious beginning for MEALS in the still young year and Loren Abbey is to be thanked for his vision and his tireless efforts to make it a reality. The Russell household looks forward to enjoying many other such get togethers. Hopefully those of you who could not attend this event will be fortunate enough to make the next one. Trite as it may be, the more the merrier. - SteveRussell

March 14, 2006

Jazz in March

Greg_edited_croppedGreg finally sent his schedule over, so I'll post it. Better late that never, I guess:



Tuesday, March 14: Mainstreet Station, Guerneville; Greg Hester, Solo Piano; 7-9PM

Friday, March 17: Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Trio, Greg Hester, Piano, with Vernelle Anders, Vocals; Jim Passarell, Bass; 7-10PM

Saturday, March 18: Mainstreet Station, Guerneville; Jazz Trio, Greg Hester, Piano, with Robin White, Vocalist and Jim Passarell, Bass; 7-10PM

Tuesday, March 28: Mainstreet Station, Guerneville; Greg Hester Jazz Piano Solo; 7-9PM

Friday, March 31: Mainstreet Station, Guerneville; Jazz Trio, Greg Hester, Piano, with Elena Welch, Vocals; Adam Thompson, Bass; 7-10PM


February 22, 2006

Julian Lage Concert

Wunderkind Julian Lage (rhymes with 'mirage') returned to his roots and his home town of Santa Rosa last week for a three hour concert at the Last Day Saloon. Julian, as most folks know, is the current guitarist in Gary Burton's Next Generation Band, and as such, spends the better part of every year on the road, so it was something of a special treat for his homies to have him to show up here to strut his considerable stuff.

Steve_nancy_russell_hostsI sat with jazz fans Steve Russell, his lovely wife, Nancy and their friends Mark and Becky Wells, and since Steve will occassionally contribute to this blog, I asked him if he would write a review of this show. He said he would, and he did. Here it is: (My own comments will follow)


(Steve and Nancy Russell, Good Jazz Fans)

One of the unique pleasures available in Sonoma County for the last few years has been the emergence of homeboy Julian Lage as a mature musician. I first saw young Mr. Lage when he was, I believe, about 14 years old at the 2000 San Francisco Jazz Festival where he opened with Russell Malone. A year or two later I caught him again at the Healdsburg Jazz Festival. Two years ago it was a Valentine's Day show at the Sonoma Community Center.

Malone's graciousness and Lage's emerging talent are what stands out in my memory of the San Francisco show. By Healdsburg one could see the youngster starting to come into his own. The Sonoma show, a guitar trio rather than a band, per se, highlighted Lage's lack of ego and an ability to find his place in the mix.

The recent show at the Last Day Saloon featured what is now a young man ('He has facial hair', my wife, Nancy noted) who has firmly established himself in the musical firmament. It is difficult to convey feelings about music but if I had to choose two words that capture for me the difference between the Julian Lage as a boy and the Julian Lage I saw Sunday, those two words would be 'authoritative' and 'distinctive'.

Authoritative meaning where the Julian Lage I saw in the past offered you his music, this Julian Lage presents it to you. Distinctive because he appears to have absorbed and internalized various influences and now has a style all his own.

The Julian Lage Group is a quartet of talented Bay Area musicians who demonstrate a total feel for the Jazz idiom and seem to genuinely enjoy performing together.

Julian_lageLage has an impressive history for one so young. He has most recently toured and recorded with well-known vibraphonist Gary Burton.

(Photo: Julian Lage)

Dayna Stephens, featured on tenor sax, attended the Berklee School of Music and the Thelonious Monk Jazz Institute in Los Angeles. He has performed with a number of well-know musicians, including Herbie Hancock.

Scott Amendola on drums is a band leader in his own right and has toured and/or recorded with a diverse group that includes Charlie Hunter, Phil Lesh, Peter Apfelbaum and Jim Campilongo.

David Hoff on base is from Colorado and has been a professional musician since the age of 15. He is currently a member of a number of working Bay Area bands.

All band members are also composers and the show Sunday consisted largely of their original numbers. The group did, however, offer some inventive takes on old chestnuts such as 'Autumb Leaves'. Old or new, the execution was crisp and spirited throughout.

The show was well attended by an enthusiastic crowd and deservedly so. As he has played events recently as far-flung as the Tokyo Jazz Festival, having the opportunity of seeing Lage in such an intimate local setting was a treat that may be all too rare in the future.
S.R.

There is simply no denying that this boy is truly something special. While he is certainly not to be confused with Charlie Christian, at least not yet, for someone of his tender years, he comes with a train-load of talent and promise.

But take it from someone who's been around this scene for a lot longer than I care to admit, there is some tweaking that needs to be done. Someone's got to tell him - when he's playing as a side man - say, with Gary Burton - he doesn't have to concern himself with song selection. The boss does that. All he has to do is play. But when he's the leader of the group, music selection becomes another responsibility, and therein - as I see it - lies the problem.

When his entire song list is comprised of original music, pieces written by all the various band members - and unless you happen to be Duke Ellington or Thelonious Monk - that's a bad idea. Of course you want to reward your players by playing music which they have written, but you must be honest with them and yourself, and face the fact that these are not all jazz masterpieces.

The program would have benefited by featuring a more generous offering of familiar tunes - classics, to use a cliche' -  sprinkled with an occasional original - but for the most part, tunes to which the audience can relate. In my humble opinion, that's the best recipe for capturing and holding an audience. Rarely will you see the seasoned professional do otherwise.

Pick up any jazz CD, and you'll find the same formula. But Not For Me, There Will Never Be Another You, The Boy Next Door   and an original by the artist, BeBop Jam. It may be old, but it works.

One other thing: I kinda got the feeling that this was a very young audience, and so that shrill, upper register,twangy electric guitar that Julian seems to prefer over his acoustic, probably didn't have the same 'fingernail on the blackboard' effect on them that it had on someone with my old (and therefore, super sensitive) ears. If he was trying to achieve some sort of a hard-rock nuance with his electric axe, I'm afraid that as far as I could tell, he was immensly successful.

All in all, I guess you could say there was a little someting for everyone. Some, more than others, but like they say, that's why there's chocolate and vanilla.

L.A.

February 11, 2006

Jazz Masters: Bud Powell

Album: Tempus Fugue-It (4 Disc Box Set; 86 Tracks)
Artist(s): Bud Powell with Cootie Williams,  Frankie Socolow, Dexter Gordon, Sarah Vaughan, JJ Johnson, Eddie Vinson, Mary Lou Williams, Sam Taylor, Ed Glover, Leonard Gaskin, Max Roach, Cecil Payne, Sylvester Payne, Kenny Dorham, Sonny Stitt, Al Hall, Wallace Bishop, Fats Navarro, Kenny Clarke, Morris Lane, Eddie De Verteuil, Curley Russell, Charlie Parker, Ray Brown, Art Blakey, Buddy Rich, Freddie Webster, Leo Parker, Norman Keenan, et al.

Release Label: Proper Records Ltd.

Recording Dates: 1944-1950

This album box set is arguably the definitive exemplar of Bud Powell's immense body of work during the heady days of the be-bop revolution, starting, most probably, in the early '40s on New York's 52nd Street. The New York night club scene, which, at that time, was the undeniable epicenter of modern jazz, aka: be-bop, re-bop or just plain 'bop', jazz clubs such as Minton's, Birdland, Lenox Lounge, Robin's Nest and the Savoy Ballroom were starting to feature this new music, which was rapidly replacing swing as the dominant genre for the hipper New York jazz intelligentsia.

Scan0003_1In 1943, at the callow age of 19, Bud Powell had already impressed seasoned veterans like Cootie Williams, Benny Goodman's lead trumpeter, who, after leaving Goodman, had been drawn by the new be-bop sound and had formed his own band. The Cootie Wiliiams band was already making a splash on the Harlem night club circuit when Cootie decided to take a chance on this shy, young and inexperienced wunderkind. Williams brought him in to replace pianist Kenny Kersey, who had been called into the military, and the rest, as they say, is history.

This 4 disc box set traces Bud's professional career from its early beginnings and his first recordings in 1944, disc 1, Blue Garden Blues, through his development in the '40s, and culminates with disc 4, So Sorry Please; 17 tracks recorded in 1950, at the very height of a meteoric career that peaked in the early '50s and was to end so sadly in 1966 when he would succumb to acute cirrhosis of the liver. He was only 41.Scan0001_2

Technically speaking, there have been precious few jazz pianists - in the entire history of the idiom - who could equal the sheer brilliance of Earl Rudolph 'Bud' Powell. Maybe the great Art Tatum, the man who Powell claimed had the most powerful influence on his own playing, notwithstanding the fact that  Powell had come under the tutelage of Thelonious Monk in the embryonic stage of his professional career. The two of them went on to develop a deep admiration and respect for each other and Monk was the first of his contemporaies to notice and concede that Bud was, indeed something very special.

Scan0002_2These discs are loaded with jazz classics(Honeysuckle Rose, Dexter Rides Again, Jay Bird, I'll Remember April, I Should Care, Bud's Bubble, Fine and Dandy, Cheryl, Cherokee, Bud's Blues) and serious listeners will be stunned by the command that Powell exhibits, even at the tender age of 20. The first eleven tracks on Disc 1, Blue Garden Blues, represent Bud's recording debut, the first in an extensive discography stretching back over nearly 3 decades. Here he was working with leader and trumpeter, Cootie Williams, sax player, Eddie 'Cleanhead' Vinson, bassist Norman Keenan and drummer, Sylvester Payne. 

On Disc 3, I'll Keep Loving You there are two tracks titled All God's Chillun Got Rhythm, an old Kahn/Kaper/Jurmann blues classic which, on the first track (no. 12), is a perfect example of Powell's amazing right hand virtuosity. It's been said by peer and fan alike that Bud Powell had the fastest right hand of any jazz piano player who ever lived, with the possible exception of the great Art Tatum. On this track he leaves no doubt. The second version of this song is on track 19, and while the liner notes tell us that they were both recorded in 1949, I suspect they were from two different sessions. Here, most of the solo work is performed by tenorman Eddie 'Lockjaw' Davis. Both cuts are done at breakneck be-bop speed, showcasing the brilliance of this man in both thinking and executing. 

Scan_1Many of the songs on these discs are Powell originals, and one in particular caught my attention.  Strictly Confidential, (number 3 Disc, track 11) has been recorded several times over the years - it's even the title song of an album released in 1963 - but this cut, recorded during what many consider to have been his best years, would be very, very hard to improve on.

Listen carefully to his block chord voicings and progressions on this track and you'll  discover they are note for note identical to those in Diana Krall's famous rendition of Let's Fall in Love out of her Grammy winning album, When I Look In Your Eyes. And why not? These are some of the most gorgeous block chords any of us are ever likely to hear. And it's certainly no disgrace to borrow phrases from the greatest jazz piano player of all time. On the contrary, it's the ultimate tribute. Ms. Krall wasn't the first, and you can bet she won't be the last.Bud_powell_at_the_piano

There is so much that can be said about this 86 track set, but no amount of words could possibly do justice to this quintessential jazz icon. Many have tried and even though the praise is effusive, it still seems inadequate.

If I had to choose a single musician according to his artistic merit and the originality of his creation, but also for the greatness of his work, it would be Bud Powell. Nobody could measure up to him.
[Bill Evans]

No one could play like Bud. Too difficult. Too quick. Incredible! 
[Thelonious Monk]

He was the foundation out of which stemmed the whole edifice of modern jazz piano. Every jazz pianist since Bud either came through him or is deliberately trying to get away from playing like him.
[Herbie Hancock]

Bud was the most brilliant that a spirit might be; a unique genius. 
[Max Roach]

Bud is a genius.
[Charlie Parker]

He laid down the basis of modern jazz piano 
[John Birks 'Dizzy' Gillespie]

Bud is a genuine genius 
[Duke Ellington]

High praise, indeed.

February 09, 2006

GRAMMYS....and the winners are....

Last night (February 8) they held the annual music fiasco known as the '48th GRAMMY AWARDS of 2005' at the Staples Center down in LaLa land, and as usual, jazz artists got their fifteen seconds of recognition.

Relegated to a position just below 'country' and well subordinate to such atrocities as 'hip-hop' and 'rap', the  awards for jazz excellence caused nary a ripple in any of the mainstream media accounts that I was able to find.

Although I must confess that I fell asleep long before they got around to awarding prizes to the winners in the jazz category, the morning news reports were full of inspid quotes from some of the winners and performers. For example, somebody named Kanye West, who I guess is some kind of a rap 'star',  came armed with a  long written acceptance speech, which started with 'God....' (It seems he was once pictured on the cover of Rolling Stone' as Jesus Christ on the Cross). 'I'm glad I wrote Him down', he was quoted as saying.

The morning reports also commented on the fact that the evening was notably lacking in the usual obscenity laced acceptance speeches which many of the 'artists'  have, in past award shows, felt compelled to deliver. I would like to think - and I feel quite comfortable in saying that the four letter gutter vocabularies that have been so popular among some of the past GRAMMY winners, (mostly 'rock' and 'hip-hop' genres), would not be a concern if or when jazz musicians are handed the microphone.

In case anybody's wondering how and by what criteria these nominees and eventual winners are selected, one could, if one had an infinite amount of patience and perseverance, go on line to try to find out. But in a nutshell, I can tell you this much: The GRAMMY Foundation is in a partnership affiliation with the Recording Academy, a professional membership advocacy organization, which, best as I can tell, is a Washington DC based lobbying group whose principal function is to 'urge Congressional, as well as state and local action'  on issues that relate to intellectual property, music preservation, music education, 'freedom of expression' (that's the obscenity they maintain is so necessary to good music) and 'radio reform'.

According to to the GRAMMY (originally Gramophone) Awards' official website, recordings and music videos are submitted to Recording Academy members (professionals and other music 'experts') and to record companies, first to assure that they meet all the necessary requirements (whatever those 'requirements' might be) and then, after the screening process, to vote on them 'according to their expertise'. Of course mortals such as you or I are not privy to their membership rosters, so we don't really know just whose 'professional' opinions these choices represent nor are we allowed to examine their 'professional' credentials. We are assured, however, that record sales or chart position in no way influences the voting. Maybe so, but one thing we do know is that the fans and listening public have absolutely nothing whatever to say about it.

So once we have recognized that these 'awards for excellence in music'  are based soley on subjective criteria, and the GRAMMYS Award Show is more about star power, entertainment and glamour than it is about excellence in music, we can sit back and view the results in their proper perspective.

For my money, the real winner last night was a country singer named Keith Urban. He got to go home with Nicole Kidman.

Anyway, for what it's worth, here are the winners in the Jazz Category:

Pat_metheny_1Best Contemporary Album:
The Way UP;
Pat Metheny





Dianne_reevesBest Vocal Album:
Good Night, Good Luck;
Dianne Reeves




Sonny_rollins_1Best Instrumental Solo:
Why Was I Born;
Sonny Rollins

track from Without a Song




Wayne_shorterBest Instrumental Album, Individual or Group;
Beyond the Sound Barrier;
Wayne Shorter Quartet




Dave_holland_1Best Large Ensemble Album:
Overtime;

Dave Holland Big Band



Eddie_palmieriBest Latin Jazz Album:
Listen Here!;
Eddie Palmieri


L.A.

February 01, 2006

February schedules;

Thursday, Feb 2; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Ed Wetteland, Piano Solo; 7-9 PM; No Cover

Friday, Feb 3; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Duo, Vernelle Anders, Vocals; Greg Hester, Piano; 7-10PM; 5 Cover

Saturday, Feb 4; Silver Oak Winery, Geyserville; Jazz Duo; Greg Hester, Piano; Steve Weber, Bass; 11AM- 3PM; Admission Free

Saturday, Feb. 4; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Duo, Eric Wiley, Piano; Yancie Taylor, Vibes; 7-10PM; 5 Cover

Sunday, Feb. 5; Hotel Healdsburg, Healdsburg; Sunday Jazz Series with Craig Handy and the Delbert Bump Jazz Organ Trio; Craig Handy, Tenor; Steve Homer, Guitar; Babatunde Lea, Drums; Delbert Bump, Hammond B3 Organ; 7-9PM; No Cover

Tuesday, Feb. 7; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Ed Wetteland, Solo Piano; 7-9 PM; No Cover

Wednesday, Feb. 8; Main Street Station, Guerneville; 'Speakeasy Swing' with Ken Ward, Clarinet, Sax; Wilson Pigott, Guitar, Vocals; 7-12PM; No Cover
Thursday, Feb. 9; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Greg Hester, Piano Solo; 7-9PM; No Cover

Thursday, Feb. 9; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Greg Hester, Solo Piano; 7-9PM; No Cover

Friday, Feb. 10; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Duo, Vernelle Anders, Vocals; Greg Hester, Piano; 7-10PM; 5 Cover

Saturday, Feb. 11; Rodney Strong Vineyards, Healdsburg; Chocolate & Wine Tasting; Greg Hester Quintet with Greg Hester, Piano; Don Olivet, Tenor; Jim Passarell, Bass; Kendrick Freeman, Drums; Vickie Anne, Vocals; 1-4PM

Saturday, Feb. 11; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Trio with Greg Hester, Piano; Adam Thompson, Bass; Elena Welch, Vocals; 7-10 PM

Tuesday, Feb. 14; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Greg Hester, Solo Piano; 7-9PM; No Cover

Thursday, Feb. 16; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Ed Wetteland, Solo Piano; 7-9PM; No Cover

Friday, Feb. 17; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Duo with John Simon, Piano; Robin White, Vocals; 7-10PM; 5 Cover

Saturday, Feb. 18; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Vocalist Frankye Kelly; 7-10PM;
5 Cover

Sunday, Feb. 19; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Duo with Jess Petty, Vocals; Tony D'Anna, Piano; 7-10:30 PM; 5 Cover

Tuesday, Feb. 21; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Ed Wetteland, Solo Piano; 7-9PM; No Cover

Thursday, Feb. 23; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Ed Wetteland, Solo Piano; 7-9PM; No Cover

Friday, Feb. 24; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Duo with Robin Elena Welch, Vocals;  Greg Hester, Piano; 7-10:30 PM; 5 Cover

Saturday, Feb. 25; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Jazz Duo with Ed Wetteland, Piano; Barbara Wetteland, Vocals; 7-10 PM; 5 Cover

Tuesday, Feb. 28; Main Street Station, Guerneville; Greg Hester, Solo Piano; 7-9PM; No Cover

Schedule last update: Feb 4


January 06, 2006

Jazz Masters: Chet Baker

Album: The Best of Chet Baker Sings
Artist(s) Chet Baker, Vocals, Trumpet; Russ Freeman. Piano; Carson Smith, Jimmy Bond, Joe Mondragon, Bass; Shelly Manne, Bob Neel, Peter Littman, Lawrence Marable, Drums

Label: Blue Note
Recorded: 1953-1958 (Monaural)
Release Date: August 29, 1989

Chet_baker_1Jazz trumpeter/singer Chet Baker, like so many of his contemporaries, was never given awards for being a paragon of moral virtue, nor was he ever considered a threat to replace Frank Sinatra as a singer of love ballads, but as a jazz trumpet player/vocalist, he became the ambassador for modern West Coast jazz to mainstream music audiences all over the world, and as such, he was without peer.

Baker didn't suddenly burst onto the jazz scene out of nowhere, as some suggest. In 1950, while a member of the U.S. Sixth Army  Band, he began sitting in with local pros around San Francisco jazz clubs like Bop City and the Blackhawk. Upon his discharge in 1951 he gigged with locals as well as a few notables such as Cal Tjader, Stan Getz and Vido Musso before auditioning for Charlie Parker, where he won a spot in Bird's quartet. The Charlie Parker Quartet, which also featured pianist extraordinaire, Russ Freeman, opened at the Tiffany Club in Los Angeles on May 29, 1952.

Even with his movie-star good looks (at a time and place when good looks counted for almost everything) and even with a band as presigious as Charlie Parker's, he was still toiling in relative  anonymity when his big break came. As a member of the Gerry Mulligan Quartet, the group with which he began his prolific recording career, his professional life as a new star in jazz really began. He helped make jazz history in 1952 when, with Mulligan's pianoless quartet, he cut the classic version of My Funny Valentine, a recording which, many critics will argue, was responsible for this Rogers and Hart Broadway creation becoming a jazz standard. For a sound clip, click (The Gerry Mulligan Quartet with Chet Baker, Carson Smith and Chico Hamilton: Recorded live in 1952 on the Fantasy label at the Blackhawk in San Francisco)  Then click on 'My Funny Valentine'.

A hopeless drug addict for most of his adult life, Chet Baker's biography reads like something lifted out of a gothic morality play. It was a bizarre life of wanton self destruction, filled with heroin, cocaine, booze, back-alley street brawls, drug deals gone sour, arrests, scandals and other degradations, butChet_baker_painting_1 interrupted, mercifully, by periods of musical brilliance. It ended sadly but, some would say inevitably on May 13, 1988, at the very time he had reached the peak of his playing ability, when he fell out of an Amsterdam hotel's second story window.

Chesney Henry 'Chet' Baker left a voluminous legacy of recorded music in quantities seldom, if ever, seen for jazz musicians before or since. His discography is comprised of well over 50 albums under his own leadership and countless others as sideman or even as 'anonymous'. He was especially busy toward the latter part of his troubled life, some would say, in order to support his voracious drug habit..

This album, as the title suggests, is about Chet Baker's singing. Someone once said that if Mel Torme had married Blossom Dearie and produced a child, that child's name would be Chet Baker.

His was an understated voice quality variously described as 'haunting' - 'weak' - 'effeminate' - 'pure' - 'simple - 'fragile' - 'delicate' - 'sensitive' - 'unique' - and it was certainly all those things, and probably more; but love him or hate him, he was still able to leave his indelible mark on jazz history as one of the top four or five male jazz singers of the '60s, '70s and '80s'  For an incisive and comprehensive critique of most of Baker's recorded body of work as a trumpet player (his first calling)  by jazz critic Bob Oakley of Jazz Journal International, click here.

Baker had a unique gift for being able to reduce a love song to its barest essentials, whether singing it or playing it and the parallels between the two are obvious. 'My phrasing as a singer has been influenced a lot by my playing. If I hadn't been a trumpet player, I don't know if I would have arrived at singing that way. I probably wouldn't have. I don't know whether I'm a trumpet player who sings or a singer who plays the trumpet. I love to do both.' [Chet Baker quoted on the liner notes]

There is though, at least one distinct departure from this parallel. Unlike his penchant for staying, for the most part, in the middle registers when playing trumpet, his range is broader and he seems to be quite comfortable at the upper ends of the scale in his singing.

A master of pitch with the keenest sense of tone, he could nail a note right smack dab on - every time - perfectly and precisely, never having to start higher or lower before sliding into it. Even though, contrary to rumors, he could and did read music, he preferred playing and singing by ear. One playing colleague recalled how amazed he was that Baker, without the benefit of a chart, and even though he may not have ever played a song before, could uncannily anticipate and recognize all the chord changes.

He was always at his best when swinging softly, as evidenced by Kern's  But Not For Me, track 2 or the whimsical Loesser- McHugh tune, Let's Get Lost, track 12. Most critics would probably agree that his voice, beguiling though it may have been, lacked the stentorian timbre that some consider necessary for the consistent and convincing selling of a slow ballad, a shortcoming that was far less noticeable in up-tempo tunes; eg, Track 1, The Thrill Is Gone, or track 10,  I Get Along Without You, and even though they'll try to make that argument over and over again... still...his wistful, at times, fragile - even androgynous, 'about to fall apart' - ballad delivery was not entirely without its devastating effect on the opposite sex. (Whichever that happened to be) Not by a long-shot:

'Have you ever heard someone who couldn't sing, but did something to you emotionally?' [Ornette Coleman quoted on the liner notes]

Cet_baker_russ_freemanThese twenty tracks provide an ideal showcase for Baker's early work as a vocalist - a period ranging from 1953 with his first recording session and his first song, I Fall In Love Too Easily, track 8, through Like Someone In Love in 1956. His main-man piano accompanist, Russ Freeman, provides an essential element to the album's overall appeal.

One of my personal favorites on this album, inexplicably, is the 1920 Jerome Kern - Buddy DeSylva  song, Look For The Silver Lining. For its simple, unpretentious clarity, I suppose.This tune has been done instrumentally by such jazz luminaries as Dave Brubeck and Paul Desmond and it's even been sung by Susannah McCorckle, but never with the same emotional pull and passion as Chet Baker's version. As Will Friedwald opines on the album's liner notes, '....that's 'cause the source of his inspiration in singing isn't to work the crowd, to win popularity or to rest his embrouchure; Chet Baker sings out of love for the songs.' It certainly does appear that way.

There are, of course, a couple of let-downs, not the least of which, I'm sad to say, is the group's rendition of the old stand-by, I've Never Been In Love Before. I can't remember how Frank Loesser originally wrote this for Guys And Dolls, but what I do know is that it works so much better at up-tempo rather than in the slow, muzak-ian pace as done here.

There are many delightful moments on this disc. From the rarely played up-tempo verse and  stop-tempo interludes on But Not For Me to the swinging, driving bass of Jimmy Bond and the outstanding drum-cymbal work of Peter Littman on That Old Feeling and - maybe the biggest surprise of all - My Buddy. Check out Baker's Harmon mute technique, which, in my opinion, in every way, is compararble to the mute-happy Miles Davis.

This album is a rare treasure  of oldies and goodies with lots of examples of what straight-ahead jazz singing has been all about this past half-century and, for my money, still is.

L.A.

Track Listing:
1) The Thrill Is Gone (Brown/Henderson) 2:46
2) But Not For Me (G. Gershwin/I.Gershwin) 3:00
3) Time After Time
( Styne/Cahn) 2:44
4) I Get Along Without You Very Well (Carmichael) 2:56
5) There Will Never Be Another You (Warren/Gordon) 2:56
6) Look For The Silver Lining (DeSylva/Kern) 2:36
7) My Funny Valentine (Rogers/Hart) 2:15   
8) I Fall In Love Too Easily (Styne/Cahn) 3:18
9) Daybreak (Grofe/Adamson) 2:38
10) Just Friends (Klenner/Lewis)  2:40
11) I Remember You (Mercer/Schertzinger) 3:12
12) Let's Get Lost (Loesser/McHugh) 3:41
13) Long Ago And Far Away (I. Gershwin/Kern) 3:55
14) You Don't Know What Love Is (Raye/DePaul) 4:48
15) That Old Feeling (Brown/Fain) 2:59
16) It's Always You (Van Heusen/Burke) 3:31
17) I've Never Been In Love Before (Loesser) 4:23
18) My Buddy (Kahn/Donaldson)  3:16
19) Like Someone In Love(Burke/VanHeusen) 2:23
20) My Ideal(Chase/Whiting-Robin)  4:19

Click on album cover image in side-bar for mp3 sound clips.