Orrin Evans, Captain Black Big Band (Positone). On last year’s Tarbaby: The End of Fear, Evans was the intrepid pianist in an adventurous trio. Here, he is at the helm of a 16-piece band staffed by New Yorkers and Philadelphians, some of them up-and-comers, a few semi-grizzled veterans, all full … [Read more...]
CD: Jessica Williams
Jessica Williams, Freedom Trane (Origin). The pianist has concentrated on solo performance lately but returns to the trio format by way of this paean to John Coltrane. Accompanied by bassist Dave Captein and drummer Mel Brown, Williams explores four pieces by Coltrane and four of her own that pay … [Read more...]
CD: Stan Getz
Stan Getz Quintets: The Clef & Norgran Studio Albums (Verve). This beautifully packaged and remastered box set has the nonpareil Getz 1953-1955 quintet sides with valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer and pianist John Williams. It also contains the two rarities with trumpeter Tony Fruscella subbing for … [Read more...]
DVD: Erroll Garner
Erroll Garner Live in ’63 & ’64 (Jazz Icons). Garner’s lingering image is of an imp, an elf who smiled and bounced his way into the public’s hearts at the end of an era when “jazz†and “popular†still appeared in the same sentences in Billboard and Variety. Lest we forget: he was a … [Read more...]
Book: Telegraph Style Guide
Simon Heffer, Philip Reynolds, The Telegraph Style Guide (Aurum). Whenever Rifftides has posted an Other Matters entry about language, our readers, a literate lot, have responded. This book, designed to keep the staff of the UK’s Telegraph newspapers on their toes, will appeal to those interested … [Read more...]
La Vie En Satchmo
Speaking of roses… Oh, we weren’t? Well, we are now. The resident rose expert around here informed me the other day that two famous roses are named in honor of Louis Armstrong. The same breeder developed both of them. His name is Sam McGredy (pictured), an Irishman who moved to New Zealand … [Read more...]
Aaron Diehl
In a section of a Hank Jones master class DVD that was a 2008 Doug’s Pick, Jones critiqued budding jazz pianists. One of them was a 21-year-old Julliard graduate named Aaron Diehl. For Jones, Diehl played “I Cover The Waterfront†and Art Tatum’s arrangement of Massenet’s “Elegy.†Apart … [Read more...]
Other Places: Have You Met Mr. P.C.?
It seems unlikely that anyone who follows jazz closely has not encountered Mr. P.C., counselor to musicians who wish to do the right thing but are confused about what that is. However, it's tough to keep up with much of even the most valuable information in the bountynot to say glut of … [Read more...]
Albam From The Archives
One Monday night in the ‘70s, I found myself seated at a table in the Village Vanguard with Manny Albam, listening to the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra. During a break, I said to him, “I wonder why you haven’t written something for this band.†“So do I,†he said. To my … [Read more...]
Guest Shot: Those Grammy Changes
Outrage continues to grow in the Latin jazz community over the decision of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS) to drop the Best Latin Jazz category from the annual Grammy awards. The NARAS Board of Governors this week decided to eliminate nearly a third of the award … [Read more...]
(1) Desmond On “Take Five.” (2) A Financial Report
I had the middle part kind of vaguely in mind. I thought, "We could do this, but then we'd have to modulate again and we're already playing in 5/4 and six flats, and that's enough for one day's work." Fortunately, we tried it, and that's where you get the main part of the song.Paul … [Read more...]
“Take Five” a la Pakistan
When Dave Brubeck and Paul Desmond took time out for tips from Indian musicians during their 1958 State Department tour, the exchange worked both ways. The Brubeck Quartet’s tour was an important component of the cultural diplomacy the United States practiced during the Cold War. Among other … [Read more...]
Correspondence: The Stamp Of Jazz
Jazz historian, composer, arranger, bandleader, educator and short sleeper Bill Kirchner writes: You've probably seenor will seethe new "Jazz" U.S. postage stamp just issued. A year ago, I was a paid consultant on the design of it. The graphic artist's original design included a … [Read more...]
Billy Bang, 1947-2011
The violinist Billy Bang, who created himself as a jazz musician out of the trauma of the Vietnam war, died yesterday at 63. Inhabited by his combat experiences, his emotions wounded, Bang found relief and rehabilitation by returning to the violin he had studied as a child. He pursued an intensity … [Read more...]
Toots And Grace
The first section following the introduction of my 1989 book Jazz Matters is titled “A Common Language.†It ends with this: Like every art form, jazz has a fund of devices unique to it and universally employed by those who practice it. Among the resources of the jazz tradition available … [Read more...]
Meet Olaf Polziehn
Researching key signatures in performances of “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,†I made a discovery. Everyone else out there may have known about Olaf Polziehn, but he was new to me. After I heard him play the piece (in E-flat), further research turned up these facts: Polziehn is 40 years old. He … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra: A Little Song, A Little Dance
Here is Thelonious Monk in Japan with Charlie Rouse, Butch Warren and Frankie Dunlop. Monk is in a dancing mood. That’s the bonus in this splendid performance of “Evidence.†The staff recommends full-screen viewing. Now, how can you not have a good weekend? … [Read more...]
Odds And Ends
Miscellany accumulates, each unrelated matter of some importance but too small for an item of its own. The solutionhardly an innovationis to put them all in the same container, call it Odds And Ends and get the jumble out of my mind and into yours. More Help For Japan Following … [Read more...]
Argue-able
Although there is a link to his website in our blogroll (at the extreme south end of the right column), it has been too long since we’ve caught up with Darcy James Argue and his Secret Society. That big band of brash young New Yorkers is less of a secret these days than when we first encountered … [Read more...]
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 104
- 105
- 106
- 107
- 108
- …
- 229
- Next Page »















