We in the Western world suffer from too many categories and classes; we've forgotten that we all still have diapers on. We've separated music from life.Ornette Coleman If you don’t live it, it won’t come out of your horn.Charlie Parker What we play is … [Read more...]
Archives for 2012
Lagniappe*: Thelonious Monk
Thelonious Monk with Charlie Rouse, Butch Warren and Frankie Dunlop in Japan in 1963, playing “Epistrophy.†*la"·gniappe (lan-yap), noun Chiefly Southern Louisiana and Southeast Texas . 1.a small gift to a customer by way of compliment or for good measure; bonus. 2.a gratuity or … [Read more...]
Other Places: A Rifftides Dedication
Here's a first: trumpeter, composer, teacher, blogger and frequent Rifftides correspondent Bruno Leicht (seen here) has dedicated a new compositiona suite, no lessto this weblog. Mr. Leicht, who is based in Cologne, explains on his own blog that he bases the composition on several … [Read more...]
International Jazz Day
The first annual International Jazz Day came and went on April 30 with no mention on Riffitdes, a lapse I regret. Fellow arts journal blogger Howard Mandel, president of the Jazz Journalists Association, has a fine report at his Jazz Beyond Jazz site. Howard includes a great quote from United … [Read more...]
Miscellany From The West
It may have been news to many that there was a trace of jazz left anywhere on AM radio, but that doesn’t make a report from Los Angeles easier to take. Here’s the lead paragraph from Kirk Silsbee’s story in today’s L.A. Times. A silence has descended on Los Angeles' AM radio band. On April … [Read more...]
Cornelia, McNeil, Carter And Will
The next time I visit New York, which can't be soon enough, I will make it a point to visit the Cornelia Street Café. The restaurant in Greenwich Village has intrigued me with its digital notifications about performances by musicians, singers, poets and uncategorizable others. Eclecticism seems to … [Read more...]
Other Matters: Dandelions
Dandelions may be the gardener's curse, but they have their place. Around here in springtime, their place is in the orchards. On the most recent cycling expedition, this was a good reason to stop. … [Read more...]
Preserving Ted Williams’ Photographs
If you follow jazz even tangentially, you have seen photographs by Ted Williams. Most of us have also seen his shots of major figures in news events of the second half of the twentieth century. This picture of Martin Luther King is one of them. When Williams died in 2009 at the age of 84, he … [Read more...]
A Blues By Bird
I couldn't find a Parker recording of a blues in the key of A to follow the Ted Williams story. Let's settle for E-flat. Here's Bird with Al Haig, piano; Percy Heath, bass; and Max Roach, drums, recorded in 1953, the same year as the Bee Hive gig in Chicago. Have a good weekend. … [Read more...]
Shelly Manne: Checkmate
The previous item about the Blackhawk triggered thoughts of Shelly Manne (1920-1984) and the quintet he led in the late 1950s and early ‘60s. As chance would have it, this morning I encountered videos of a superb edition of that band. The pieces are from Manne’s 1961 album Checkmate. The … [Read more...]
The Blackhawk Gets Its Due
In my notes for the final volume of Shelly Manne & His Men At The Blackhawk, I wrote: During my years of labor at KGO-TV in San Francisco, I never passed the parking lot a block away at Turk and Hyde without regretting the injustice of a world that puts more value on the storage of … [Read more...]
Passings: McKusick, Charles, Muranyi, Jones
We have been losing important musicians in batches. In the past few days we said goodbye to four men who were not well known to general audiences but were appreciatedeven reveredby jazz listeners and by their fellow artists. Hal McKusick’s early career found him in two of the most … [Read more...]
Readers Choices 2012 (4)
Here is the final round of Rifftides readers’ listening choices. Thanks to all who responded for introducing meand many others, I’m sureto music or musicians that I would not have known otherwise. Without this exercise, among other recordings The Mars Volta, cellist Claire Gastinel … [Read more...]
Readers Choices 2012 (3)
Thanks to the dozens of Rifftides readers who sent lists of music that they have been listening to. The sweepstakes is now closed (no drawing, no prizes, no winners, no losers). It will take at least a day or two longer to get everyone's list posted. I have been impressed with the range of interests … [Read more...]
Readers Choices 2012 (2)
Rifftides readers' recent listening choices are still coming in. We intend to get them all posted as production time allows. Scroll down to the April 15 item to see the simple guidelines. If you respond, please end with your name and where you live. Use the "Contact Me" link above the Rifftides … [Read more...]
CT Needs Help
Clark Terry’s long siege of ill health, and recent drastic surgeries, have left him in need of help to meet medical expenses. Later this month, the Jazz Foundation of America will hold a special New York fundraising event for CT. The concert will bring together dozens of musician friends and … [Read more...]
Readers Choices, 2012 (1)
Responses to the invitation in the previous post are arriving in sizeable batches. Briefly, the idea is for you to let the rest of us know what you’ve been listening to. How to do that? The April 15 post tells you to use the “Contact Me†link at the top of this page. Remember to include your … [Read more...]
Readers’ Choices
Six years ago when Rifftides was a year old, we asked readers to send information about the music they were turning on, and vice versa. There was a deluge of replies. It took several days of long posts to accommodate the responses. It's time to do it again. The invitation went something like … [Read more...]
They Said Goodbye To Brookmeyer
Wednesday night’s memorial service for Bob Brookmeyer attracted friends and admirers from many compartments of his productive life. The valve trombonist, composer and arranger—influential in jazz since the early 1950s— died at the age of 81 last December 15. The memorial was at St. Peter’s … [Read more...]
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