He has been gone for fifteen years, but interest in the American Indian tenor saxophonist Jim Pepper seems to be building. Pepper's music, full of vigor and allusions to his cultural background, has received attention akin to cultism in parts of Europe and seems headed toward at least a modest … [Read more...]
Archives for July 2007
A New Arts Journal Jazz Blog
The artsjournal.com family of blogs becomes richer by one today. Howard Mandel (accent on the first syllable) debuts his Jazz Beyond Jazz with a manifesto that begins: What if there's more to jazz than you suppose? What if jazz demolishes suppositions and breaks all bounds? What if jazz - and the … [Read more...]
Trane, Cannonball And Sonny
John Coltrane Not long after John Coltrane died forty years ago this week, Cannonball Adderley was the guest on Jazz Review, a radio program I did in New Orleans. He and Coltrane had forged a bond in the late 1950s as members of the Miles Davis Sextet. I wrote about their relationsip in a profile of … [Read more...]
Earl Watkins
From San Francisco comes word that Earl Watkins died early this month at the age of eighty-seven. Elegant, softspoken and full of knowledge, Watkins was a key figure in Bay Area jazz as a drummer and a historian of the music. He played with bands as varied as Bob Scobey's traditional revival outfit … [Read more...]
Vinyly
If you are holding on to your turntable and LPs, you may be encouraged by what Katie Allen reports in The Guardian, especially if you are in the United Kingdom. The format was supposed to have been badly wounded by the introduction of CDs and killed off completely by the ipod-generation that bought … [Read more...]
CD: Sue Raney
Sue Raney, Heart's Desire: A Tribute To Doris Day (Fresh Sound). Sue Raney is hardly without a following, but it is a puzzle why a singer of her gifts never achieved widespread fame. For far too long, general audiences have been unaware of Raney's sublime work. Happily, EMI recently reissued All By … [Read more...]
CD Catchup: Eberhard Weber & A.K. Salim
There are undoubtedly pairs of CDs farther apart in spirit than these; say, New Orleans Rhythm Kings 1922-1925 and The Art of Mabel Mercer. Well, I like both of those together under my roof. Weber and Salim are welcome to join them. Eberhard Weber, Stages Of A Long Journey (ECM). In 2005 Weber's … [Read more...]
Correspondence: On John Frigo
In response to the John Frigo item in the next exhibit, Rifftides reader Jim Brown writes: In later years, I heard Johnny say of "Detour" that "it was all mine, words and music." He explained that The Soft Winds was a co-op group, and they had an agreement that all of their names would go on … [Read more...]
John Frigo
If John Frigo's only contribution to good music had been his co-authorship of "Detour Ahead" and "I Told You I Loved You, Now Get Out," he would have deserved admiration and gratitude. He wrote those songs in the late 1940s with Herb Ellis and Lou Carter, his partners in the elegant Soft Winds trio. … [Read more...]
Other Matters: Godár And Bittová
Vladimir Godar, Mater (ECM). In the course of writing the notes for George Mraz's forthcoming CD Moravian Gems, I made the aural acquaintance of the Czech singer, violinist and actress Iva Bittová and was enchanted by her. Mraz informed me that the composer VladimÃr Godár, inspired by Bittová's … [Read more...]
Think Before You Stand Up
Remember our series of Rifftides riffs and exchanges about applause? It started like this. Then it went here and here In the past year and a half, the issue has not gone away. San Diego Union-Tribune classical music critic Valerie Scher's Sunday, July 8 column bore the headline, "Think Before You … [Read more...]
Other Matters: More Women
If you enjoyed the video montage of women in painting a few weeks ago, click here for act two; women in film. The cello accompanist is the same. I wonder who it is. … [Read more...]
Quotes, More Or Less Compatible
Take a music bath once or twice a week for a few seasons, and you will find that it is to the soul what the water-bath is to the body.--Oliver Wendell Holmes You can't possibly hear the last movement of Beethoven's Seventh and go slow.--Oscar Levant, explaining his way out of a speeding ticket My … [Read more...]
Warne Marsh
Readers of Safford Chamberlain's An Unsung Cat: The Life and Music of Warne Marsh--indeed, anyone interested in that staunch individualist among saxophonists--will want to investigate The Warne Marsh Site. The web pages developed by Rifftides reader Jack Goodwin include a thorough discography, a … [Read more...]
TT’s Summer Cleaning
Terry Teachout, our favorite polymath arts blogger, has cleaned out and reorganized his clearinghouse of cultural blogs and websites, to my knowledge the most extensive such guide on the internet. It's worth a look. For TT's preamble to the revision, go here. When you see the extent of his choices, … [Read more...]
Supersax
Rifftides reader Don Emanuel alerted us to video of Supersax nineteen years ago at the North Sea Jazz Festival in Holland. The band organized by Med Flory was devoted to Charlie Parker solos transcribed and harmonized for a saxophone section. It played them with accuracy and feeling that gave their … [Read more...]
Compatible Quotes
You've got to learn your instrument. Then, you practice, practice, practice. And then, when you finally get up there on the bandstand, forget all that and just wail.--Charlie Parker If Charlie Parker was a gunslinger, there'd be a whole lot of dead copycats.--Charles Mingus … [Read more...]
“Take Five” By Twelve
In Take Five: The Public and Private Lives of Paul Desmond, I told of having heard Desmond's "Take Five" on a music box in a Prague gift shop and in a number of other unlikely places including the Mexico City subway and my neighborhood gas station. There are sheet music arrangements of "Take Five" … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra: News From Blueport
A message from Bill Crow: Here's a YouTube video I found, of the Gerry Mulligan Quartet in Rome, 1959, playing my tune. Bill Crow The composer is featured on bass. The trumpeter is Art Farmer, the drummer Dave Bailey. The Chinese Shadow Show effect is interesting. Just try to disregard the … [Read more...]