Now and then, Rifftides alerts readers to Jim Wilke’s Jazz Northwest, the program in which the veteran broadcaster presents his recordings of the region’s jazz artists. Jim’s long-running Sunday series has become a regular date for listeners not only in the Pacific Northwest but also—because … [Read more...]
When Grant Green Got Funky
Grant Green, From Paris To Antibes" (1969-1970) (Resonance) Grant Green, Slick! Live At Oil Can Harry’s, (Resonance) Two previously unissued Grant Green albums are giving the guitarist’s music something of a comeback. Green, who died in 1979 when he was 47, recorded extensively for the … [Read more...]
Monday Surprise: Seeing Bix
For many aficionados of Bix Beiderbecke the surprise is not that there is so little film of the great cornetist, but that there is any. To the left, we see a frame of film shot in 1928 for Fox Movietone News of the Whiteman orchestra recording or rehearsing a piece called "My Ohio Home." When … [Read more...]
Meeting Jamie Shew
Having heard an advance CD by Jamie Shew, a singer new to me, I asked the trumpeter Bobby Shew if she is related to him. He followed his answer—No— with a question of his own, the one that musicians invariably ask about singers: “Can she sing?†Meaning: • Is she in tune? • Doe she … [Read more...]
Lorraine Gordon, RIP
Lorraine Gordon, who inherited the Village Vanguard after her husband Max died in 1989, remained its proprietor and no-nonsense guiding spirit until her death yesterday in New York. She was 95. Under the Gordons, the Vanguard became quite likely the most famous jazz club in the world. Bill Evans, … [Read more...]
Recent Listening
As I may have mentioned a time or two, keeping up is impossible. We can only try. Here we go with observations on a few of the dozens (hundreds?) of recent jazz releases. Roni Ben-Hur, Harvie S: Introspection (Jazzheads) Compatibility, mutual responsiveness and subtle interactivity … [Read more...]
Brubeck And Desmond Through Fresh Ears
A new Rifftides reader, Orsolya S., joined us recently. Now and then she sends comments, an activity we encourage among all readers. Her latest communique concerns a recording that has been exciting listeners for more than sixty years. Thanks for recommending the album Dave Brubeck Quartet at … [Read more...]
Monday Recommendation: Roberta Piket
Roberta Piket, West Coast Trio, 13th Note Records The seasoned New York pianist traveled west to record with a sterling rhythm section of veteran Los Angeles players. The bicoastal combination clicked. Drummer Joe La Barbera, bassist Darek Oleszkiewicz, and—on two pieces—guitarist Larry … [Read more...]
Recent Listening, In Brief
Keeping up with the ceaseless flow of jazz albums is impossible, but it’s a pleasure to try. Here are short reviews of a few relatively recent releases. Hank Jones In Copenhagen: Live At Jazzhus Slukefter 1983 (Storyville) From nearly the moment he moved from Detroit to New York in … [Read more...]
Memorial Day 2018
It is Memorial Day in the United States, a time for parades, picnics and family gatherings across the land. This is the perfect occasion on which to honor the US armed services by acknowledging and displaying the accomplishments of their bands dedicated to the music that is the primary stock in … [Read more...]
Jeff Sultanof On An Important Film Reborn
Composer, arranger, educator and jazz authority Jeff Sultanof occasionally honors Rifftides with his insights. This is one of those happy occasions. Jeff has seen a restoration of " King Of Jazz, a pioneering film from the days when motion picture studios had decided that sound was here to … [Read more...]
Jack Reilly, RIP
News has arrived that the pianist Jack Reilly (pictured) died of a massive stroke on Friday at his home in New Jersey. Mr. Reilly, 86, was an accomplished classical and jazz pianist who returned to his native New York in 1954 following Navy service and pursued graduate studies at the Manhattan … [Read more...]
Oh, Yes, Tom Talbert’s Music…
In Monday’s posting revisiting an early <em>Rifftides</em> piece about Tom Talbert (pictured ca. 1956), the staff was remiss in not including examples of Talbert’s music. Let’s remedy that. From his remarkable Bix Duke Fats album, we will hear his transformation of two Duke … [Read more...]
Monday Recommendation: Get To Know Tom Talbert
Demands on time and resources have sidetracked plans for a new Monday Recommendation. Hey, stuff happens. The Rifftides staff's solution is to reach back to the earliest days of this blog, and introduce or reintroduce you to a lamented arranger, composer and bandleader whose work maintains its … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra: Zeitlin, Williams and Wilson Together Again
Denny Zeitlin, Wishing On The Moon, Live At Dizzy’s Club Coca Cola In New York City Pianist Zeitlin has recorded three albums with bassist Buster Williams and drummer Matt Wilson, beginning in 2001 with Stairway To The Stars, then the adventurous Slickrock in 2003 and In Concert, in 2009. … [Read more...]
Preminger And Garcia Play Chopin
Noah Preminger, Rob Garcia Dead Composers Club Chopin Project (Connection Works Records) If I were going to be in New York City tomorrow evening—alas, I won’t be—I would be at the Cornelia Street Café in Greenwich Village hoping that Preminger's and Garcia’s Chopin CD release concert … [Read more...]
Monday Recommendation: Peter Erskine’s latest encounter with Dr. Um
On Call: Peter Erskine & The Dr. Um Band (Fuzzy Music) Erskine’s quartet luxuriates in excitement that recalls and updates his achievements as Weather Report’s keystone drummer. " Later when he was with Steps Ahead, " that group further contributed to electronica as a legitimate jazz … [Read more...]
Recent Listening In Brief: Hersch, Davis-Coltrane & Hamilton
Fred Hersch Trio, Live In Europe (Palmetto) Hersch opens his new trio album with Thelonious Monk’s “We See†and closes it with an unaccompanied performance of “Blue Monk.†A longtime source of inspiration for the pianist, bassist John Hébert and drummer Eric McPherson, Monk seems to … [Read more...]
Review: Matthew Shipp Solo
Matthew Shipp, Zero, ESP For years pianist Shipp has gone his own unconventional way. Critics have shunted him into the avant garde piano category. That’s not where he belongs. He is the sole occupant of the Matthew Shipp category. The listener with open ears will understand that individuality … [Read more...]
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