Rifftides reader and Detroit Free Press music critic Mark Stryker alerts us to an improbable happening in Chicagoa debate on an ESPN sports radio program over the authorship of “Take Five.†The story on drummer Ted Sirota’s website includes audio of the argument. From Sirota’s … [Read more...]
Recent Listening: The Brubeck Birthday Box
The Dave Brubeck Quartet: The Columbia Studio Albums Collection 1955-1967 Dave Brubeck turns 91 tomorrow, December 6, and Columbia Records is releasing a CD box containing all 19 of the Columbia albums that his quartet recorded in the studio. The earliest, Brubeck Time, was released in 1955 but … [Read more...]
Get Hip—Or Was It Hep?—With Christie & Frishberg
Every once in a while, Retta Christie asks pianist, singer, songwriter and raconteur Dave Frishberg to be the guest on her radio program. He usually arrives with items from his private stash of rare and unusual records, tapes and cylinders. Tomorrow, Monday, December 5, is one of those days. To hear … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra: A Story About Elvin
In Portland, Oregon, there’s a radio storyteller named Lynn Darroch. He tells about ordinary people and events near home or extraordinary ones abroad or, often, about jazz. When he performs in public, he may hire a musician or two and make a video. Here’s Darroch with guitarist John Stowell and … [Read more...]
Lennie Sogoloff Still Presents
For a couple of weeks, I’ve been waiting for permission to post photographs from the collection that Lennie Sogoloff donated to Salem State University in Massachusetts. Sogoloff was the proprietor of Lennie’s On the Turnpike, a club north of Boston that presented jazz, comics and cabaret from … [Read more...]
Motian On Motian
National Public Radio’s Fresh Air last night rebroadcast Terry Gross’s 2006 interview with drummer Paul Motian, who died on November 22. Motian’s conversation was like much of his drumminglow-key, definite and often surprising. Here is some of what he said. I'm not a showpiece … [Read more...]
Muted Art
During the years in which Art Farmer (1928-1999) played trumpet as his main horn, his muted work was a pleasure to hear. After he switched to flugelhorn in the early 1960s, his playing took on greater lyricism and depth, but because there were no flugelhorn mutes, a satisfying aspect of his sound … [Read more...]
Odds And Ends
Jason Moran From Washington, DC, comes news that pianist Jason Moran will be the late Billy Taylor’s successor as the Kennedy Center’s artistic adviser for jazz. From the center’s release announcing the appointment: Moran hopes to expand the accessibility that was so important to … [Read more...]
Other Places: Blues On The Rocks In Chicago?
“When Will the Blues Leave?†Ornette Coleman asked the question in 1958 by way of the title of a piece in his first album. In Chicago, of all placesthe blues stronghold of the Midwest for nearly a centurythe question is implied in concerns of musicians and club owners who are trying … [Read more...]
Maybe 80 Really Is The New 60
Why didn't I think of this when I posted the Going Like 80 (+) item a few days ago? [See November 23, below.] I just added Jim Hall and Bill Smith to the original list. It is accumulating a near-record number of comments. … [Read more...]
Other Matters: A Bonus Day
Just when I thought the cycling season had succumbed to the weather, came a perfect day; temperature in the low forties, hardly any wind chill factornothing that couldn't be overcome with five layers on top, two layers below, ear muffs, gloves and a foam grommet for the sunglasses. Here is … [Read more...]
Paul Desmond: Take Eighty-Seven
Referring to the “Going Like 80 (+)†post of November 23, Rifftides reader Ned Corman writes: And, of course, Paul would have been 87, if I have it right. Yes, he was born on Thanksgiving, November 25, 1924. It has become a Rifftides tradition to observe the occasion. Lamenting … [Read more...]
Youth And Grace
The past few days, Rifftides has been unavoidably concerned with deaths and with musicians aged 80 or older. Am I the only one ready for an infusion of youth? Grace Kelly, born in 1992, may not be an elected representative of the talented teenagers in jazz, but she gets the nod here because for … [Read more...]
Thanksgiving 2011
This is an important national holiday in the United States. To Americans observing it, the Rifftides staff sends wishes for a happy Thanksgiving. To readers around the world: we are thankful for your interest, attendance and comments. … [Read more...]
A Great Day in San Antonio And London
Rifftides reader Harris Meyer called my attention to a National Public Radio story about major musical achievements of two men on this date in 1936. In their genres, they could hardly have been more different. What they had in common was greatness. Here is the lead paragraph of the NPR … [Read more...]
Going Like 80 (+)
Rifftides reader Mark Mohr writes: Sad about Motian, he was definitely one of a kind. Who else is still playing at 80? Off the top of my head (more or less): Phil Woods (80) Ira Sullivan (80) Ornette Coleman (81) Richard Davis (81) Jim Hall (81) Bill Henderson (81) Annie Ross … [Read more...]
Paul Motian Memorial Broadcast
This just in: WKCR, the radio station of Columbia University in New York City, will broadcast 24 hours of Paul Motian's music beginning at midnight tonight (EST). The station is at 89.9 on the FM dial and streams at this site on the internet. To hear it, click under "Live Broadcast" in the upper … [Read more...]
Paul Motian, 1931-2011
It was never my intention that Rifftides be a vehicle for so much bad news, but the losses keep mounting. When a musician of Paul Motian’s importance dies, we must take notice. The great drummer succumbed to a bone marrow ailment early this morning in a New York hospital. He was 80. Motian and … [Read more...]
Russell Garcia, 1916-2011
Composer, arranger and teacher Russell Garcia died yesterday at his home in New Zealand, where he and his wife settled after sailing away from Los Angeles more than four decades ago. He was 95. Garcia is less known than other writers of his era, but his influence is enormous. Occasional … [Read more...]
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