Cannonball Adderley, alto saxophone; Nat Adderley, cornet; Joe Zawinul, piano; Victor Gaskin, bass; Roy McCurdy, drums. Los Angeles, October 20, 1966.
Doug Ramsey on Jazz and other matters...
Cannonball Adderley, alto saxophone; Nat Adderley, cornet; Joe Zawinul, piano; Victor Gaskin, bass; Roy McCurdy, drums. Los Angeles, October 20, 1966.
Carol Sloane sent an alert to yet another step in the abandonment of jazz by public broadcasting in The United States. Here is the headline of a column on the website of The Boston Globe:
The column is by Mark Leccese, an independent ombudsman who keeps an eye on print and broadcast outlets. He laments one veteran jazz host, Eric Jackson, being downgraded and another longtime presence on New England airwaves, Steve Schwartz, being canceled. Then, he asks,
“Is there no air time left for music on public radio?â€
That is a question in dozens of broadcast markets across the country. To read Leccese’s column about the situation in Boston, click here.
WGBH is one of the pioneer public radio stations in the US, a developer of programming emulated by broadcasters in all regions of the country. It is disturbing to see this influential station dilute its commitment to jazz presented by knowledgeable professional broadcasters. But WGBH is not alone in that regard. Indeed, it is behind the trend.
The story where I live differs little from that in other regions. A few years ago, Northwest Public Radio had extensive original jazz programming of its own and an array of jazz shows from National Public Radio and Public Media International. After NWPR changed its primary format to classical music and news, the local jazz shows dropped away. Piano Jazz and Jazz Profiles from NPR disappeared, then NWPR deep-sixed Jim Wilke’s Jazz After Hours from PMI. The anemic replacement is syndicated Friday and Saturday night jazz programming with a host who seems to understand or care little about the music, rarely gives information about sidemen, labels or history and makes fundamental factual errors. Clearly, he is under instructions to keep his part short and breezy. There is none of the personal approach of WGBH’s Jackson and Schwarz or of PMI’s Wilke. Except for the host’s announcementsperfunctory, detachedthose hours might be filled by a jukebox.
Why do we need hosts, anyway? Isn’t all the jazz you’d ever want to hear available on iTunes and downloads and websites and MP3s and CDs? If we want to know the history of the music, get the flavor of the times in which it was created, learn about the musicians, can’t we do web searches? Why bother with someone who can provide context and understanding, who tells stories, who can become a friend?
Public broadcasting has gone the way of commercial broadcasting, living by ratings. There is little need to point out that public stations rely on statistics to encourage the contributions of foundations, wealthy individuals and “listeners like you.†With their aggressive fund drives, they don’t let us forget, and in the fierce battle to stay alive in a staggering economy, they can’t. Should valuable cultural programming be forced to play by the rules of the competitive market system? If so, then we should not feel justified in wailing when that programming is dumbed down to a low common denominator. In a capitalist economy, there is such a thing as market failure. If the market fails a minority audience that wants quality programming, does the society have an obligation to find a way to provide it? Do we owe that to future generations, or should we hope that the next annoying fund drive raises enough to allow public radio and television to hang on by their fingernails and keep dumbing down?
Oh, we weren’t? Well, we are now. First here’s something you can listen to immediately. Today on National Public Radio’s Weekend All Things Considered, the host, Guy Raz, closed with eight minutes and 45 seconds of conversation with drummer Matt Wilson (pictured, left). They talked about Wilson’s new album, Max Roach, Buddy Rich, Lucille Ball, Carl Sandburg, Felicia Wilson’s amazing recovery from a dangerous condition and Wilson’s revolutionary belief that not only is it permissible to make the audience happy, it’s an obligation. To hear the segment, click here.
Looking forward, jazz historian Bill Kirchner (seen here in his saxophonist disguise) sent an alert to tomorrow evening’s broadcast of his Jazz From The Archives. Presented by the Institute of Jazz Studies, the series runs in the New York-New Jersey area every Sunday on WBGO-FM (88.3) and on the internet. Here is Mr. Kirchner’s announcement
The late musician/author Mike Zwerin wrote that “Contemporary Italian jazz can be said to have begun with Enrico Rava.” A compellingly lyrical trumpeter, Rava (b. 1939) has been Italy’s best-known jazz musician since the mid-1970s.
We’ll hear Rava with a number of distinguished partners, including guitarist John Abercrombie, tenor saxophonist Mark Turner, trombonist Gianluca Petrella, pianist Stefano Bollani, drummer Paul Motian, and others.
The show will air this Sunday, June 24, from 11 p.m. to midnight, Eastern Daylight Time.
NOTE: If you live outside the New York City metropolitan area, WBGO also broadcasts on the Internet at www.wbgo.org.
Horace Silver and Sonny Rollins top the winners of the Jazz Journalists Association’s 2012 awards announced yesterday in New York City.
Lifetime Achievement in Jazz: Horace Silver
Musician of the Year: Sonny Rollins
Composer-Arranger of the Year: Maria Schneider
Up and Coming Artist of the Year: Ben Williams
Record of the Year: Sonny Rollins, Road Shows, Vol. 2 (Doxy Records)
Best Historic Recording/Boxed Set: Miles Davis, Bootleg Sessions, Vol. 1, Quintet Live in Europe 1967 (Columbia Legacy)
For a list of the winners in all 40 categories of the JJA awards, go here.
Congratulations to Marc Myers, whose superb JazzWax won in the jazz blog category, and to all of the winners.
This is from the top of one of the long, steep hills on today’s cycling expedition with friend Dave. Looking west, we see the foothills of the Cascade Mountains in the distance.
While the Rifftides staff tackles a couple of deadline assignments, blogging will be intermittent, with entries squeezed in as time allows.
Have you noticed that half of the answers to questions and half of reports (statistic not scientifically confirmed) on radio and television news and interview programs begin with, “So…â€
News Anchor: For the latest on White House reaction to those discouraging employment figures, here’s correspondent Ralph Glutz.
Glutz: So, Robert, the President chooses to see the glass half full…
Interviewer: Coach, did you ever dream that the outcome of a contest against your old rival would be determined by a weird shoestring catch in the bottom of the ninth?
Coach: So, that’s what makes baseball such a great game, y’know?
Are these superfluous uses of the word a way, in uncertain times, of appearing to avoid commitment? Or are they, indeed, superfluous? Why have they suddenly proliferated? What part of speech is “so†when it precedes an answer or a statement adjective, adverb, pronoun, conjunction?
I suppose it’s preferable to, “Uh,†and it goes nicely with another omnipresent advancement in articulate English usage, witness the waiter who asked my table full of beer drinkers the other day, “So, ‘sup?â€
Second thing:
From time to time, the Rifftides staff likes to tap the wisdom of Mr. P.C., the dispenser of advice to jazz musicians who find themselves out of touch with fine points of behavior on and off the bandstand. In his current column, Mr. P.C. addresses a matter of language that relates to economic resourcefulness and well-being.
Dear Mr. P.C.:
When people use big words to describe their music, is that supposed to make it better? Like I know a bassist who says he’s “contextualizing†his music. Why does he do that?
— Bassist Uses Lofty Language
Dear BULL:
He’s practicing Grantspeak, of course. Here’s the story: A few decades ago, granting agencies grudgingly started funding jazz projects. But how can their panelists judge the applications when they know nothing about jazz music?
Well, what they ARE comfortable judging is intellect, so they depend on jazz artists to put it on full display. That’s why savvy applicants like your bassist friend keep their eye on the prize and practice at every opportunity. In fact, if you’d stuck around a little longer you might have even seen him go from contextualizing to “re-contextualizing.†Extra credit!
Although grantors were the original targets of Grantspeak, its use has become more widespread. Other people in positions of power in the jazz world — especially presenters and journalists — have proven equally susceptible to its charms. And it’s even starting to influence artists, not only in their music, but also in their interactions:
Andrew: “Hey, Bob, what’s happening?â€
Bob: “You know, just shedding, trying to keep my chops up. How about you?â€
Andrew: Actually, in my new multidisciplinary song cycle, based on a contemporary reading of recovered scripts from the earliest matriarchal societies, I’m re-examining the relationship between soloist and ensemble, looking for ways to evoke a more egalitarian, communal paradigm.â€
Bob (embarrassed): “Cool. Um, guess I’ll go practice Stablemates.â€
Andrew (silently): “Heh, heh, heh.â€People ask where jazz is heading, BULL, and I can answer definitively: Grantspeak is the future! Not only as a descriptive language, but as a quasi-paradigmatic, non-idiomatic re-contextualization of jazz itself. Buy your thesaurus now, before you and your music are left behind!
To see all of Mr. P.C.’s June column, visit his Facebook page.
A friend traveling in New York tweets,
Waiting for a train in Grand Central, remembering when there were lovely benches in the ‘waiting room’.
It’s hard to believe that there is now standing room only for commuters and people watchers in Grand Central Station. But whether an observer is upright or seated, the magnificent old terminal is one of the world’s prime spots for studying members of the species, as noted in this Rifftides archive piece from three years ago.
June 19, 2009
At Grand Central Station, I plop into a chair in a semi-circle of what look like overstuffed maroon leather armchairs, a hard plop; the chair is molded plastic. One of New York’s great free shows is underway in the lower concourse, with a cast of thousands. It’s the evening commute to the northern suburbs. Many of the commuters are running. The picture here doesn’t do justice to the activity and energy of the place.
“Attention, please. The 5:36 express for Tarrytown, leaving on Track 6 in one minute.”
A young woman runs by in Dolce and Gabbana jeans. I can tell that they are Dolce and Gabbana because a shiny silver badge on the waist band announces the fact. Hey, if you’re going to wear 400-dollar pants, why keep it a secret? Her lower body is clad in high fashion and she looks great, but there’s discomfort in her expression. Those tight jeans were meant for striking poses, not running. If she could afford 400 bucks for pants, she could take a limo to Scarsdale. One in five people (ratio not scientifically confirmed) is on a cell phone. Many of them are running.
“I just called to tell you I can’t talk. I’m running for the train.”
“I missed the 5:10. I’ll be 20 minutes late. Pick me up. ‘Bye. Gotta run.”
An old woman in short grey hair, a boxy grey suit and mannish brown shoes walks by with a three-year-old boy by the hand. The boy’s other hand is in the hand of a girl of about six. Surrounded by the streaming crowd, the children look bewildered, fearful. The woman is forging ahead, determined and grim. Grandmother? Governess? Kidnapper?
A number of the young women are wearing shower shoes, as they used to be known. Later, they were called zoris. Now, the acceptable term is flip-flops. As the girls run, the footwear neither flips nor flops. The sound is flap, flap, flap, flap, flap. I wonder if they wore those things all day at work or shopping in Manhattan. Wouldn’t their feet get dirty? A drastically short woman in tight capri pants and four-inch heels speeds by. She has what my father used to call a hitch in her getalong, and her sound is clack, de-clack, clack, de-clack, echoing through the concourse.
Five people standing together at the top of the ramp in front of the Oyster Bar break into applause. I look for what inspired them. Nothing is evident, but they seem delighted. It probably wasn’t the extremely tall Hassidic gentleman strolling toward his track with dignity, a tall black hat and a briefcase the size of a small trunk. I wonder if he’s from the diamond district, carrying a load of samples to a wealthy client in Bronxville.
A sign of the times: I see elderly men in suitsmore than a dozen in a few minutesclutching briefcases, wearing their weariness on their faces, slumping toward their trains. Did they expect still to be working at their ages, still catching trains?
A young man slips into the big maroon chair next to mine. His afro is stuffed into an enormous knit cap puffed into the shape of turban. His gold ear ring is fashioned to look like a small horseshoe. He eats a half-pint of yogurt or cottage cheese, then promptly falls asleep. His head slowly leans until it is parallel to his right shoulder. The clack de-clacking, flap-flapping, departure announcements and general hubbub do not interrupt his nap. As I leave, I hope he doesn’t miss his train.
The woman to my left gets up at the same moment I do. I say to her, “It was a great show, wasn’t it?” She looks startled, then laughs and says, “Yeah…if that’s what you want to call it.”
I do.
Rifftides reader Svletlana Ilicheva writes from Moscow about a concert earlier this week at the Tzaritzino National Park. Called “Classics And Jazz,†the program included four prominent American saxophonists of the same generation who have banded together as the Axis Saxophone Quartet.
Ms. Ilicheva reports:
The quartet consists of Joshua Redman, Chris Cheek, Mark Turner and Chris Potter. They played their own compositions. Especially I like those by Joshua Redman, they sounded like poems. Instead of sitting comfortably at some distance on the grass I had been standing for an hour and a half in the front row close to the stage and couldn’t tear my eyes away from these amazing musicians. At some moments I was on the verge of tears – they were so good! (Chris Potter’s solos were just superb).
This video from the concert, uploaded by eugenejazz, gives a generous sample of the Axis Saxophone Quartet’s music, with rear screen projection of the band and scenes of Muscovites enjoying the concert.
The Russian website jazz.ru has a report about the concert. The text is in Russian. The two performance videos are in the universal language of music. There is also one brief news conference statement by Redman. To go to the jazz.ru page, click here.
Thanks to Ms. Ilicheva for letting us know about this impressive instance of jazz diplomacy.
In a meeting of east and west, April’s Ballard Jazz Festival in Seattle brought together New York pianist Orrin Evans with Human Spirit. Led by trumpeter Thomas Marriott, alto saxophonist Mark Taylor and drummer Matt Jorgensen, the Seattle quintet is attracting international attention, in part because of this album featuring Evans as a guest.
Jim Wilke, who doubles as recording engineer and radio host, captured Human Spirit’s Ballard performance and will feature it on KPLU’s Jazz Northwest on Sunday. The program airs at 1 PM PDT on 88.5 FM in the Seattle-Tacoma area. Listeners elsewhere in the world will find it streamed at kplu.org. As usual, after the broadcast KPLU’s website will make a podcast available.
Ballard is a section of Seattle with a seafaring history and a fishing economy. Parts of it are yuppified without serious damageso farto its quaintness and historical character.
Wilke provided a description of the Jazz Walk:
The Ballard Jazz Walk is part of the annual Ballard Jazz Festival and includes a dozen or more venues featuring live jazz, all within walking distance of each other in old Ballard. Over 70 musicians played during the jazz walk and the music and people spilling out of the small clubs along the street provided a very festive atmosphere. The festival is produced by Matt Jorgensen and John Bishop with production coordination by Chad McCullough and supported by the Ballard business community.
In 1921, 16-year-old trumpet student Elden E. Benge of Winterset, Iowa, wrote a letter to Herbert L. Clarke (pictured, right), asking advice. Clarke (1867-1945) was the most celebrated cornet soloist of his day, a veteran of John Phillip Sousa’s band and leader of his own concert bands. His recordings of marches and adaptations of classical pieces rang out in living rooms in the days when Victrolas were the iPods of the early twentieth century. Clarke’s method books of technical and characteristic studies are staples in the libraries of cornetists and trumpeters to this day.
Thanks to classical violinist Brian Lewis for sending a photocopy of Clarke’s reply to young Benge. It was on the letterhead of the Anglo Canadian Leather Co. Band of Huntsville, Ontario, Canada. I retain Clarke’s punctuation and spelling.
Jan. 13th,
1921My dear Mr. Benge: –
Replying to yours of the 19th just received, would not advise you to change from Cornet to Trumpet, as the latter instrument is only a foreign fad for the time present, and is only used properly in large orchestras of 60 or more, for dynamic effects, and was never intended as a solo instrument.
I never heard of a real soloist playing before the public on a Trumpet. One cannot play a decent song ever, properly, on it, and it has sprung up in the last few years like “jaz†music, which is the nearest Hell, or the Devil, in music. It pollutes the art of Music.
Am pleased that you are making improvements in your playing. Keep it up, and become a great Cornet Player. You have an equal chance with all the rest, but you must work for it yourself.
Wishing you all the best of success, I remain.
Sincerely yours,
Herbert L. Clarke
I don’t know whether Elden Benge (pictured, left) took to heart Clarke’s warning about jazz, but he ignored the great man’s contempt for the trumpet. From 1928 to 1933, he was principal trumpet of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, then accepted the same position with the Chicago Symphony. In Chicago, he began designing a new trumpet and by the end of 1935 had made one for his own use. By 1937, he was making trumpets at home and selling them. Two years later he formed the Benge company and continued to make and sell trumpets after he moved to California in 1953. He did little advertising; his trumpets sold through word of mouth among professionals about the quality of Benge horns made in Burbank. According to trumpet expert Jim Donaldson, “a new Benge trumpet arrived by REA Railway Express and came in a cardboard box, protected by wadded up newspaper padding. No case and no mouthpiece were included.†After Benge died in 1960, the company changed hands more than once. Benge trumpets were made for a time by the Conn-Selmer company, but production of most models dwindled, then ceased in 2005. Today, most trumpets with Benge characteristics are made by other companies.
Addendum (June 14):
If you have never heard Herbert Clarke or have never heard a Victrola, Rifftides to the rescue. This is Clarke’s 1909 recording of “The Carnival of Venice,” uploaded to YouTube by 1926 Victor Credenza. More than 100 years later, his technique can still make grown trumpeterser, cornetistscry.
Wondering how trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire is doing in the wake of the (justified) fuss over his 2010 album When The Heart Emerges Glistening, I did a bit of web surfing and discovered that he’s doing fine. Among the evidence was video of an intergenerational concert led by the 77-year-old French film composer and saxophone and clarinet adventurer Michel Portal. The occasion was the 2011 Monte Carlo Jazz Festival in Monaco. Portal’s fellow arsonists in this performance of his “Citrus Juice†are Akinmusire, pianist Bojan Z, guitarist Lionel Loueke, bassist Scott Colley and drummer Nasheet Waits.
*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 tip. 3.an unexpected or indirect benefit.
Bobby Shew played a one-nighter Saturday evening in his brief tour of the Pacific Northwest. The gig at Tula’s in Seattle launched in slight confusion over the introduction the rhythm section played to the first tune, Victor Young’s “Beautiful Love.†It did not match what Shew had in mind. He halted the proceedings and offered the packed house a wry explanation, “This is jazz. You don’t have to know what you’re doing.â€
There was a brief conference that consisted mainly of head nods. Pianist Bill Anschell, bassist Phil Sparks and drummer Matt Jorgensen started over. Nationally known members of Seattle’s jazz community, they and Shew set about belying his claim about the unimportance of expertise. Playing flugelhorn, Shew and his accompanists
locked up in a close relationship that continued through three sets. When “Beautiful Love”ended, Shew said, “Nice rhythm section, huh?†In support and in solo, all three were in splendid form all night long.
Among the highlights:
• Shew’s dancing trumpet solo on “Fungi Mamma,†a sunny Caribbean piece by his late friend and frequent big band section mate Blue Mitchell.
• His interval leaps and depth of tone in a passionate treatment of Billy Strayhorn’s “Lush Life.†Shew spoke about his love for ballads. “People think it must be easy to play them because they’re slower,†he said. “No, you just get in deeper trouble.†If there was trouble, it wasn’t audible.
• Intriguing playing by all hands on Randy Aldcroft’s multifarious “Breakfast Wine,†a piece Shew told the audience he has played hundreds of times. “I keep finding surprises in it.†It was the title tune of a 1985 Shew album that is in serious need of reissuing.
• “Darn That Dream†as a medium-fast bossa nova nudged along by the subtleties of Jorgensen’s canny Brazilianisms.
• Trumpeter Thomas Marriott sitting in for three tunes. On “Just Friends†Shew’s exchanges of four-bar phrases with his former student morphed into a chorus of simultaneous improvisation so logical that it sounded like written counterpoint.
Around midnight, most of the audience had drifted away. A handful of Seattle musicians lingered at the bar. Shew took “Body and Soul†at a medium clip and the flugel far, far above the staff with lyricism and no sense of strain or sacrifice of tone. Finally he brought Marriott back to the stand to end the evening transacting serious blues business; several choruses of “Walkin’†with passionate solos by all hands. When it ended, the band stood grinning at one another as if they had achieved something.
They had.
No video or audio is available from Shew’s evening at Tula’s, so we’ll settle—gladly— for “Breakfast Wine†from that 28-year-old out-of-print LP.
(Photos of the rhythm section and Marriott from eyeshotjazz.com)
Seattle and I have got to stop meeting like this. I’m heading back across the Cascades for trumpeter Bobby Shew’s appearance tonight at Tula’s. Coincidentally, a message arrived yesterday evening from Mr. Shew. It was succinct: “Check it out,†followed by a link to this blistering 1981 Chet Baker version of Dizzy Gillespie’s “Blue ‘n Boogie.†A master trumpeter’s recommendation of a trumpet performance is not to be ignored.
Check it out.
Some time ago, I heard a private recording of the Baker Backstreet gig, but I had no idea that it had been released on this album. The Fresh Sound website quotes Baker’s pal Artt Frank, the drummer, who recorded the music that night.
Chet confessed to me on several occasions that he had an
uneasy feeling that each time he played could be his last. But whatever the reason, he was fantastic (spectacular!). I thought to myself, this has got to be a very special night. I’ve worked a lot of clubs with Chet over the years both Stateside and Europe, but this particular night seemed a whole lot different to me. Somehow Chet was really burning…Burnin’ at Backstreet!Artt Frank
As it turned out, Chet had seven more years. He died in May of 1988
The latest post in Steve Cerra’s Jazz Profiles concerns first-rate musicians who are well known only where they live. Sometimes, Steve points out, that is because they don’t get a break. Sometimes, it is because they want to stay put.
“Every town has one,†he writes. “Whether it’s Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Reno or Seattle. Somewhere in these cities, there is an exceptional Jazz musician who is mainly known only to those familiar with the local Jazz scene.â€
Cerra’s case-in-point is the late pianist Jack Brownlow (pictured). Here is some of what he wrote:
People who can play the music, flow with it. Their phrasing is in line with the tempo, the new melodies that they super-impose over the chord structures are interesting and inventive and they bring a sense of command and completion to the process of creating Jazz.
These qualities help bring some Jazz musicians to national, if not, international prominence. Deservedly so. It’s not easy to play this stuff.
We buy their recordings, read articles about them in the Jazz press and attend their concerts and club dates.
But throughout the history of Jazz, be it in the form of what was referred to as “territory bands,†or local legends who never made it to the big time or recorded, or those who only played Jazz as a hobby, word-of-mouth communication somehow managed to inform us of the startling brilliance of these locally-based musicians.
Such was the case with pianist Jack Brownlow who for many years was one of the most highly regarded Jazz musicians in the greater-Seattle area.
For Cerra’s account of the first time he heard Brownlow and to watch the video presentation he created to accompany one of the pianist’s most lyrical recordings, visit Jazz Profiles.
If you enter “Jack Brownlow” in the Rifftides search box at the top of the page, you will find a number of posts about him or mentioning him. This one has a story portraying the Bruno anyone who ever knew him will recognize.
One night in the early 1970s when the Half Note of blessed memory was still in downtown Manhattan and had yet to develop midtown pretensions, Roy Haynes was playing drums with Al Cohn and Zoot Sims. Dave Frishberg was the pianist. I think the bassist was Victor Sproles. In the closing tune of a late set, Haynes played a ferocious solo that went on for 20 minutes and was too short. The patrons and the other musicians were spellbound by the intricacy, control and rhythmic wit of his playing. Soaked and smiling, to a roar of approval Haynes came down off the stand behind the bar.
As he walked over to my stool, I asked, “Feel better?â€
Haynes locked eyes with me and said, emphatically, “I felt good to start with.â€
At 87, touring with a quartet of musicians less than half his age, he still feels good. As indicated in this Rifftides post from February, his inventiveness, power, drive and affirmativeness are undiminished. Here he is last year at the San Sebastian Jazz Festival in Spain. Haynes, David Kikoski and bassist John Patitucci play McCoy Tyner’s “Blues on the Corner.â€
This week, Jesse Hamlin of The San Francisco Chronicle talked with Haynes. Here are a couple of sections from Hamlin’s column.
“When you’re a serious artist, you don’t think about how old you are,” he says “We all become the same age on the bandstand.”
Equally effective playing with avant-garde guys such as Eric Dolphy or jazz crooner Etta Jones, Haynes is a fluid and original musician who doesn’t try to explain what he does or how he found his voice.
“I don’t analyze it. I just keep playing,” says Haynes…
To read all of Hamlin’s story, go here.
Before Chick Webb died in 1939 at the age of 30, he established himself as a model for jazz drumming and his band as a gold standard of swing that humbled even Count Basie and Benny Goodman. In addition, Webb discovered Ella Fitzgerald. He became her mentor, guardian and protector as she developed from a street kid into a great singer. “If it wasn’t for Chick, we wouldn’t have had Ella,†arranger and composer Van Alexander says in a new film bout Webb.
Webb’s importance is firmly underlined in a documentary, The Savoy King, making its world premiere this weekend at the Seattle International Film Festival. I screened an advance of the film today. It is impressive for its research and production values; even more for its sensitivity in capturing the essence of the gutsy little man who transcended poverty and physical deformity to become one of the most admired musicians of the swing era. Seventy-three years following his death, Webb’s influence on drummers continues. His band’s recordings are still thrilling.
Veteran director and producer Jeff Kaufman melds appearances by people who knew Webb, archive footage and photos from the 1930s, and music by Webb’s band and others. Van Alexander, trumpeter Joe Wilder, dancer Frankie Manning and drummers Roy Haynes and Louie Bellson are among those who discuss Webb’s impact on them and on jazz. Director Kaufman uses Bill Cosby to voice Webb’s words, Kareem Abdul-Jabar to speak Dizzy Gillespie’s, Janet Jackson as Ella Fitzgerald, Jeff Goldblum as Artie Shaw, Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts as critic Stanley Dance and actors including Tyne Daley, Andy Garcia and Danny Glover as the voices of other figures in Webb’s life and career.
This promotional clip captures some of the flavor of Harlem in the period, and the Savoy Ballroom’s crucial role in Webb’s rise to fame and in breaking New York’s segregation barrier.
The film builds emotional impact through its straightforward, if not entirely unsentimental, account of a man whose constant pain and illness could not overcome the joy he found in music and in life. The premiere is at Seattle’s Harvard Exit Theater, with showings on Saturday and Sunday. I have been unable to find out where it goes from there, but if you are lucky, The Savoy King will come to your town. For more information, see the film’s website.
Whether the mercantile strictures of 21st century television will ever again permit cultural programming of substance on the commercial networks is anybody’s guess. The field has largely been left to public television, which has met the challenge with various degrees of responsibility and effectiveness.
In the medium’s early days, serious music may not have been welcomed with open arms on the major US networks, but it did make it onto the schedules. NBC-TV’s The Subject Is Jazz ran once a week in 1958, during what more than one commentator has referred to as New York’s last golden age of jazz. The program presented prominent representatives of several jazz eras who were at work in the city. Gilbert Seldes was the host, with pianist Billy Taylor (1921-2010) as the viewer’s articulate guide through the mysteries of improvisation, orchestration and swing, among other aspects of the music. Seldes (1893-1970) was a prominent cultural critic whose books, included The 7 Lively Arts and The Public Arts. He had considerable influence on Americans’ understanding of cultural matters.
Seldes may have been a bit stiff on television, but he prepared his questions and comments with care. Taylor exhibited the same relaxation and expertise that later made him an attraction on CBS-TV’s Sunday Morning. Here they are discussing rhythm and leading into a segment that features guitarist Mundell Lowe, bassist Eddie Safranski, drummer Osie Johnson and Taylor in the rhythm section. We hear solos by trombonist Jimmy Cleveland, baritone saxophonist Tony Scott andin a brilliant bebop chorus from his pre-Tonight Show daystrumpeter Doc Severinsen.
YouTube has several segments from The Subject Is Jazz. To view them and see Ben Webster, Lee Konitz, Bill Evans go here to make your selections.
Last night the Emil Viklický Trio appeared at the small Seattle club Lucid, following up the film screening described in yesterday’s post. Lucid has the intimacy, camaraderie and absence of a cover charge reminiscent of jazz clubs in the 1950s and ‘60s. One significant difference from those days; at Lucid, as at many clubs today, the pianist must supply his own instrument, the kind that plugs into the wall. In the first set, Viklický, bassist Clipper Anderson and drummer Don Kinney concentrated on the pianist’s compositions from his recent Sinfonieta album and others inspired by his admiration for the Czech composer LeoÅ¡ JanáÄek.
The second set sitters-in included solo vocalist Berenika Kohoutova from Prague and three other actors from Rhythm On My Heels, the motion picture discussed in the previous exhibit. The music ranged from standards by Victor Young, Hoagy Carmichael and Sonny Rollins to “Bim-Bam,†a Czech popular song from 1941 that is a highlight of the movie. Thanks to photographer Stacey Jehlik for these shots of the festivities.
The west coast tour over, on his way home to the Czech Republic Viklický will play Monday night at Dizzy’s Club in New York City’s Lincoln Center. He, bassist George Mraz, drummer Billy Hart and the Czech singer and screen star Iva Bittová will reprise music from Mraz’s album Moravian Gems.