The latest problem with the Rifftides computer does not involve explosions, but it is serious enough to interfere with posting. The technical staff is working on a solution. Please bear with them. In the meantime, let's dive into the archive for something to tide us over. This choice seems … [Read more...]
Monday Recommendation: John Scofield Quartet
Monday Recommendation, John Scofield, Combo 66 (Verve) “I Can’t Dance,†guitarist Scofield proclaims by way of his new album’s opening track. It may be the rare listener, however, who won’t be moved by his quartet’s rhythmic blandishments. It is difficult not to boogie around the … [Read more...]
Jerry González Is Gone
It is sad to hear of the death of Jerry González, the extraordinary bandleader, trumpeter and Latin percussionist. He died of heart failure at 69 after being overcome by smoke in a fire in his home in Madrid, Spain on Monday. He had lived in Madrid since 2000. In the late 1970s, González and … [Read more...]
Recent Listening: van Nuis And Luxion
Petra van Nuis & Dennis Luxion, Because We’re Night People (Petra Sings) Singer van Nuis and pianist Luxion may not be household names outside of Chicago, but their taste and wide range of musicianship have them perennially in demand in the Windy City. In thirteen ballads dealing with … [Read more...]
Monday Recommendation: Rob Bargad And Others
Monday Recommendation: Reunion 7Tet, (Rob Bargad & Others), A Field Of You (Barnette) Once a year, a band of musicians who go back a long way together gather for a two-night gig at Smalls jazz club in New York’s Greenwich Village. Nominally under the leadership of pianist Rob Bargad, on … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra: Ray Bryant
Why? Because he was Ray Bryant (1931-2011), and a short piece from his 1956 album Ray Bryant Trio, (now retitled Cry Me A River) has been rising out of the past and repeating in my head for days. Fair warning: It may repeat in your head, too. Ray Bryant, piano; Wyatt Reuther, bass; Osie Johnson, … [Read more...]
Monday Recommendation: Miller And Staaf
Allison Miller and Carmen Staaf, Science Fair (Sunnyside) Pianist Staaf and drummer Miller pool their experience and talents in an album that also has superior performances by three guest artists with impressive track records of their own. Firmly established in the New York City jazz milieu, … [Read more...]
Scott Robinson, Tenor Saxophone
Our blogging pace will abate for a while. I am researching and writing liner notes for Scott Robinson’s next album. In it, he returns to his first love, the tenor saxophone, leaving behind the approximately 327 other instruments that he houses on his farm. Robinson tells me that he sometimes meets … [Read more...]
Whatever Happened To Mr. P.C.?
Mr. P.C., the musical and digital counterpart of the print world’s Dear Abby, continues to dispense wisdom on the web by way of Facebook. On occasion, we steal from him. So far, Mr. P.C.’s legal watchdogs have not taken us to court. Here is a bit of knowledge he shared today with an inquiring … [Read more...]
Remembering Monica Z
This is the birthday of Monica Zetterlund (1937-2005). It may have been too long since you have seen the Swedish singer performing one of Bill Evans’ most beloved songs. We can help. She was taped in Copenhagen almost exactly 52 years ago when the Bill Evans Trio included bassist Eddie Gomez and … [Read more...]
Ira Sabin Of Jazz Times Is Gone
Ira Sabin has died at the age of 90. In 1970 he was a Washington, D.C. record store owner and former drummer who started a tabloid-sized publication called Radio Free Jazz. The tabloid grew, ten years later evolved into the magazine Jazz Times and became a major publication covering jazz … [Read more...]
Recent Listening: Reuel Lubag Trio
The Pacific Northwest is home to a dozens of superior jazz musicians. By no means are all of them of them in Seattle and Portland, the attention-getting large cities of western Washington and Oregon. Dozens manage to find work playing in Spokane, Eugene, Bend, Yakima—and increasingly in the … [Read more...]
Monday Recommendation: Emil Viklický, Humoresque
Monday Recommendation, Emil Viklicky, Humoresque (NCML) Last spring Czech pianist Emil Viklický’ traveled from Prague to visit relatives in the American Midwest. Never one to forego a playing opportunity, while he was there he gave a concert at the National Czech & Slovak Museum & … [Read more...]
Recent Listening In Brief: A Sextet And Three Duos
Rafal Sarnecki, Climbing Trees (Outside In Music) A native of Warsaw, guitarist Sarnecki moved to New York City in 2005. An adventurous—even daring—composer, he heads a sextet whose members have similar inclinations. His ten compositions here range from the agitated pointillism and serene … [Read more...]
Sonny Rollins at 88
Today is Sonny Rollins’s 88th birthday. He looks back on a lifetime in music that began when he was a teenager in New York City and took him to the heights of his profession, and of creativity unmatched by few artists in any category. It is tempting to bring you a survey of the saxophonist’s … [Read more...]
Recent Listening: Scott Reeves and others
Scott Reeves Jazz Orchestra, Without A Trace (Origin) Reeves’ second big band album for Origin features players in the top level of New York musicians. Saxophonists Steve Wilson, Vito Chiavuzzo, Tim Armacost and Rob Middleton are among the impressive soloists, along with trombonist Matt … [Read more...]
Monday Recommendation: Early Monk
Thelonious Monk: The Complete Prestige Recordings Any Monk collection without the Prestige dates is missing the pianist’s early partnership with Art Blakey, who is considered by many musicians and critics to have been Monk’s ideal drummer. As mentioned in the Rifftides Labor Day 2018 posting … [Read more...]
For Labor Day: “Workâ€
The admonition above may seem contradictory, since Labor Day was designed to honor" those who labor by giving them the day off. We presume that workers in the US and in Canada (where this is Labour Day), are observing the intent with picnics, ball games, jugs of lemonade and family festivities of … [Read more...]
Randy Weston, 1926-2018
Pianist and composer Randy Weston, who championed the African origins of jazz, died at home in New York yesterday. He was 92. With his distinctive rhythmic patterns and powerful harmonic progressions, Weston underlined the African heritage that so definitively helped shape the music’s development. … [Read more...]
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