There is much to like about this version by vibraphonist Cal Tjader of Clare Fischer’s modern classic “Morning.†It is from a brief period in the 1970s when Fischer was a member of Tjader’s band. The recording opens with an aware audience greeting" Fischer’s electric piano … [Read more...]
Dave Frishberg Is 86
Today is Dave Frishberg’s birthday. He was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1933. Frishberg is a splendid pianist who has worked with Zoot Sims, Bill Berry, Ben Webster Carmen McRae and too many other leading musicians to list. His greatest fame, however, has come through his songs. Many of … [Read more...]
Gaillard With Parker, Gillespie, Marmarosa, et al
A Rifftides reader recently confessed to never having heard Slim Gaillard’s “Poppity Pop,†a 1945 recording with Charlie Parker as a sideman. The record might be dismissed as a period piece, a novelty, if it did not also include trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, tenor saxophonist Jack McVea, pianist … [Read more...]
A Reader Remembers Don Ellis
In response to yesterday’s Mikrojazz!" review, reader Richard Weyuker wrote: "I’m surprised that you left Don Ellis off of your list of musicians who experimented with quarter-tones. He had a specially-constructed four valve quarter-tone trumpet. I think that at one point, his entire trumpet … [Read more...]
Microtonality, Anyone?
Philipp Gerschlauer, David Fiuczynski: MikroJazz! (Rare Noise Records) This exploratory venture is subtitled, “Neue Expressionistiche Music.†The music is, indeed, expressionistic. Ears accustomed to conventional tuning may initially find the microtonal approach difficult to absorb. However, … [Read more...]
Recent Listening: Chucho Valdes
Chucho Valdés, Jazz Batá 2 (Mack Avenue) Valdes’ Jazz Batá was considered a departure into the avant garde when he made it in 1972. That trio recording was a preview of advances to come from the great Cuban pianist and composer. Nearly half a century later, the followup finds him as … [Read more...]
Recent Listening, In Brief
Albums are arriving for consideration in batches that have my poor postlady groaning down the sidewalk toward the mailbox. Today’s review is intended to be the start of the latest Rifftides attempt to catch up. (If the jazz record business is dying, it has a funny way of showing it.) Daniel … [Read more...]
The Latest From Ed Partyka
The power and imagination in his composing and arranging have made Ed Partyka a major contributor to the European big band scene. A trombonist from Chicago, Partyka leads a formidable big band and chairs the Jazz Institute at the University of Music and Performing Arts in Graz, Austria. … [Read more...]
More From The Late Ed Bickert With Paul Desmond
Following yesterday’s announcement about the loss of the brilliant Canadian guitarist Ed Bickert, here is a piece from the 1975 Paul Desmond Quartet album Live, recorded at Bourbon Street in Toronto in 1975. We hear Bickert and Desmond with bassist Don Thompson and drummer Jerry Fuller. They play … [Read more...]
Ed Bickert, 1932-2019
One of Canada’s finest musicians, guitarist Ed Bickert, died on Thursday. He was 86. He was quiet and reserved, but the rich harmonies in Bickert’s playing captivated listeners and fellow musicians alike. Alto saxophonist Paul Desmond, with whom Bickert performed and recorded in the 1970s, wrote … [Read more...]
Departures: Andre Previn And Ira Gitler
This week, music lost two venerable and influential figures. Andre Previn (above), who distinguished himself as a performer and composer in a wide range of styles and genres, died on Thursday at his home in New York City. He was 89. A gifted pianist whose work as a film composer and … [Read more...]
Recent Listening: The Bill Mays Trio Is Back
Bill Mays Trio Live At COTA Pianist Mays recently reassembled his trio for a concert and their first CD release in more than ten years. Mays, bassist Martin Wind and drummer Matt Wilson came together in a live performance at last Fall’s COTA (Celebration Of The Arts) festival. The audience at … [Read more...]
“Puttin’†(not Putin) “On The Ritz†In Moscow
Rifftides reader Mack Parkhill called our attention to a Flash Mob video featuring a huge number of Muscovites having more fun than may be legal in Russia, dancing to the most joyous and metrically challenging song Irving Berlin (pictured) ever composed. Mr. Parkhill writes, “The dancing was … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra: A Lester Young Story
Long ago, Billie Holiday dubbed Lester Young the President of The Tenor Saxophone. The title long since morphed into “Prez.†Young was beloved among his fellow musicians for his influential playing. He also won admirers for the subtlety and understatement of his way of expressing himself when he … [Read more...]
Jeremy Pelt The Artist
Jeremy Pelt The Artist" (High Note Records) For nearly two decades, Pelt has made it clear via his trumpet playing, and occasionally in interviews, that he is attuned to what other artists achieve in their work. That sensitivity extends well beyond jazz—indeed, beyond music. For this album, his … [Read more...]
Buddy DeFranco’s Birthday
What is your favorite key? Assuming that it’s not Z-minor, you will find it in the video below. Vibraharpist (vibraphonist, if you prefer) Terry Gibbs explains in his introduction. Gibbs’s companions in the key-change extravaganza are Buddy DeFranco, clarinet; Herb Ellis, guitar; Larry Novak, … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra: Meet The Mrudangam
There may be a longshot chance that you are unfamiliar with the mrudangam. It is a South Indian percussion instrument that Rajna Swaminathan has introduced into American music since she became a part of the New York City jazz community in 2011. She is a protégé of the renowned mrudangam maestro, … [Read more...]
Compatible Quotes
Life is a lot like jazz. It’s best when you improvise. – George Gershwin. Do not fear mistakes. There are none. – Miles Davis … [Read more...]
British Critic Alun Morgan Is Gone
Alun Morgan, 1928-2019 The influential and prolific British critic Alun Morgan has died. Morgan’s critiques, reviews and album notes were among the most widely read of those by any contemporary jazz critic. " His longtime admirers included fellow critic Mark Gardner, whose own reputation in … [Read more...]
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