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Rifftides

Doug Ramsey on Jazz and other matters...

Weekend Listening With Jim Wilke

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 it’s on the internet—for music lovers around the world. Here are Jim’s rundown on what he plans for this Sunday, and links that will take you to the program.

For the first weekend of summer, Jazz Northwest features a collection of resident duos and trios playing music for those lazy summer days and nights.

Songs about flowers, lullabies, and fishing are a few of the highlights, and there’s music by two Lennies (Bernstein and Tristano). We’ll also have recent releases by Scenes (guitarist John Stowell, bassist Jeff Johnson, drummer John Bishop); the 200 Trio; Reuel Lubag Trio; duende libre; and saxophonist Hans Teuber and bassist Johnson in duo. Pianists Bill Anschell (pictured left), and Dawn Clement are also included.

Jazz Northwest is produced and hosted by Jim Wilke. We air Sundays at 2 PM Pacific Time on 88.5 KNKX and stream at knkx.org. You can also subscribe to our podcast at knkx.org, or check our archives at jazznw.org.

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 Blue Note and Prestige labels in the 1960s and ‘70s with Stanley Turrentine, Kenny Dorham, Hank Mobley, Lee Morgan and other leaders. Later, Blue Note recordings under his own name included such distinguished sidemen as Hank Mobley, Sonny Clark, Elvin Jones, Houston Person and Larry Young.

In the late 1960s and early ‘70s, Green began adapting elements of the stylistic offshoot known as funk. He wasn’t alone. Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock and George Benson were also incorporating funk in hopes of capturing wider shares of audiences oriented toward the basic—not to say primitive—emotions at the heart of much rhythm-driven pop music of the day. Blue Note albums like Carryin’ On and Ain’t It Funky Now illustrate Green’s dedication to the trend. The first track of Funk In France, recorded live in a Paris studio, is a cover version of the ultimate funk star James Brown’s “Don’t Want Nobody To Give Me Nothing (Open Up The Door I’ll Get It Myself).” The album also captures Green at the top of his bop game in two classics by Sonny Rollins, “Oleo” and “Sonnymoon For Two,” and in an untitled minor blues that incorporates aspects of both idioms. Green’s two-man rhythm section for the studio recording is drummer Don Lamond, the motivational drummer of Woody Herman’s great Second Herd, and bassist Larry Ridley during the period when he was having success with Freddie Hubbard, Philly Joe Jones and Dinah Washington, among many others. Barney Kessel, whose career went back as far as Lamond’s, joins Green to provide  moving second-guitar accompaniment on Parisian Charles Trenet’s “I Wish You Love.”

Slick! was recorded in 1975 at Oil Can Harry’s, a club that thrived in Vancouver, British Columbia, for a decade in the sixties and seventies. The CD’s first half finds Green in familiar territory with Charlie Parker’s blues “Now’s The Time.” A supremely relaxed 26-minute version of Jobim’s “How Insensitive” demonstrates Green’s absorption with the Brazilian music that had captivated Americans. Then, Green’s funk unit revs up with a medley that includes Stanley Clarke’s “Vulcan Princess,” the Ohio Players’ “Skin Tight,” Bobby Womack’s “Woman’s Gotta Have It,” Stevie Wonder’s “Boogie On Reggae Woman” and the O’Jays’ “For The Love Of Money”—in all, a fair overview of the pop-funk landscape of the mid-1970s. Green’s guitar and Ronnie Ware’s electric bass fairly leap out of the speakers during the medley until Green dials back the funk a bit for a relatively relaxed interval by Ware’s bass. Emmanuel Riggins’ electric piano, Greg ‘Vibration’ Williams’ drums and Gerald Izzard’s array of percussion round out the band. Izzard’s panoply of effects includes what may be bird calls and a police whistle. This newly-discovered music probably won’t replace Green’s beloved Blue Notes on collectors’ shelves, but the Resonance discoveries offer a way for those new to this gifted guitaist to make his acquaintance. In Slick! the Oil Can Harry’s audience gives Green and his quintet a joyous reception.

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 Beiderbecke died in 1931 at the age of 28, he had earned the admiration of his contemporary and friend Louis Armstrong and become an inspiration for generations of cornetists and trumpet players. The official cause of his death was pneumonia, his lifestyle strongly suggests that advanced alcoholism was a contributing factor. Beiderbecke was a primary model for Rex Stewart, Jimmy McPartland, Benny Carter and Bobby Hackett, among dozens of others. The influence of his tone, lyricism and phrasing continued well into the new century in players including Warren Vache, Ed Polcer and Richard Sudhalter. Sudhalter was also Beiderbecke’s biographer.

The clip opens with Whiteman symbolically tearing up his RCA Victor contract as he was about to sign with Columbia Records. Beiderbecke is shown standing and playing beginning at 1:12. Erwig Films, which posted this on YouTube, shows us the clip twice.

So much for the novelty of a glimpse into history. For a complete and more satisfying Beiderbecke performance, let’s listen to Beiderbecke on cornet in “I’m Coming Virginia” from 1927. The tag ending with which Bix follows his glorious solo is one of the most quoted phrases in jazz.

The other players were Bill Rank, trombone; Don Murray, tenor saxophone and arranger; Frankie Trumbauer, C-melody saxophone; Irving “Itzy” Riskin, piano; Howdy Quicksell, banjo; Chauncey Morehouse, drums. The performance is included in this album.

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 phrase well?
• Does she have good time?

I have listened twice to Ms. Shew’s album and watched several of her Youtube videos. She can sing.

The CD, Eyes Wide Open, finds her in the company of players from the top tier of Los Angeles musicians: Larry Koonse, guitar; Joe Bagg, piano and organ; Darek Oles (Oleszkiewicz), bass; and Jason Harnell, drums. Gary Fukushima’s liner notes trace her history— piano lessons when she was a child, advanced music degrees, marriage to bassist Roger Shew, motherhood, then the loss of her husband to cancer in 2016 when he was 42.

The repertoire includes two of her songs, several cherished standards that include a superb version of “Detour Ahead,” and assured delivery of Thelonious Monk’s “Reflections” with Jon Hendricks’ lyric. There is a rare cover of Slim Gaillard’s 1945 “Flat Foot Floogie” in which she and Koonse have a unison line that sounds enough like something Charlie Parker might have played that I had to investigate whether there’s a hidden alternate take of the 1945 Gaillard recording. There doesn’t seem to be.

Let’s watch a couple of videos. The first is of Jamie and Roger Shew together in 2011 with other members of the music faculty at Fullerton College near Los Angeles. It open with a few words from her husband and includes her performance of Antonio Carlos Jobim’s “Corcovado.” Fullerton’s Dr. Joseph Jewell, saxophonist Bruce Babad, pianist Joe Bagg and percussionist Erik Lekrone are part of the proceeding.

Now, a more recent video, evidently recorded in Jamie Shew’s kitchen, with Larry Koonse, Darek Oles, Kevin Kanner using the surface of a music stand to simulate a drum set—and a short, curious, member of the household.

Ms. Shew wrote the title song of her new album, Eyes Wide Open, to express the importance of moving on from even the most discouraging losses. She seems to have done that.

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, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra and Wynton Marsalis were among many musicians who made memorable live recordings and videos there. The club is a destination not only for New Yorkers but also for jazz listeners from throughout the world who make it a required stop when they visit the city. Here is a recent interview with Mrs. Gordon, courtesy of the National Endowment For The Arts.

For an extensive summary of Lorraine Gordon’s life, see her obituary in today’s New York Times. Her daughter Deborah will reportedly take over management of the Vanguard

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 characterize this album from guitarist Ben-Hur and bassist Harvie S. It might have just as appropriately been titled “Interaction.” With drummer Tim Horner as a third partner, the trio moves through a ten-track collection encompassing several rarely-recorded pieces. Among them are Thelonious Monk’s title tune; the Brazilian master Ary Barroso’s “Prá Machucar Meu Coração;” an intricate take on George Shearing’s “Conception; Harvie S mournfully bowing the melody of Billy Strayhorn’s “Blood Count;” and welcome explorations of Jerome Kern’s “Nobody Else But Me,” Neil Hefti’s “Repetition”, Baden Powell’s “Deixa,” Tadd Dameron’s “Focus” and Kenny Dorham’s “Asiatic Raes.” The album is an attractive amalgam of standard songs, Latin classics and neglected jazz tunes integrated with uncommon sensitivity.

Eliane Elias, Music from Man of La Mancha (Concord Jazz)

Pianist Eliane Elias interprets nine pieces from composer Mitch Leigh’s score of the Broadway musical theatre success based on Miguel de Cervantes’ Don Quixote. As she advances in her career, Elias’s playing seems to gain harmonic and sonic depth. Alternating between all-star rhythm sections with bassists Eddie Gomez and Mark Johnson and drummers Jack DeJohnette and Satoshi Takeishi, she is captivating from “To Each His Dulcinea” through the playfully rich chord-play of the concluding “A Little Gossip.” Elias alternates between all-star rhythm sections, one with bassist Eddie Gomez and drummer Jack DeJohnette, the other with bassist Marc Johnson and Satoshi Takeishi on drums. Throughout, Manolo Baderna enlivens the rhythmic atmosphere with rich percussion touches. This is a captivating collection.

Ivo Perelman, Philosopher’s Stone (Leo Records)

If it is possible to find enough listening time to keep up with the tenor saxophonist Ivo Perelman’s prodigious output, I haven’t discovered the secret. I can report only that when I encounter Perelman, however daring and experimental he may be, I find intriguing elements in his work. Elemental his work is, whether Perelman is collaborating with his frequent piano partner Matthew Shipp or bringing into his orbit a fellow adventurer like trumpeter Nate Wooley. Perelman, Shipp and Wooley joust entertainingly, lyrically, puzzlingly, occasionally gratingly, in Philosopher’s Stone. The album comes in ten parts not named but called “Part 1,” “Part 2,”—and so on. If you believe that the spirit of music allows it to be made in freedom from rules and still be music, I suggest that you open your mind to Perelman. Philosopher’s Stone is a good place make his acquaintance. Neil Tesser’s articulate album liner notes are helpful to understanding this demanding music.

Yelena Eckemoff, Desert (L&H Productions)

This is an interesting quartet, to say the least, a Russian pianist, a Norwegian bassist, an Oregon reed player and a bebop drummer—Yelena Eckemoff; piano; Paul McCandless, oboe, English horn, soprano saxophone, bass clarinet; Arild Anderson, bass; Peter Erskine, drums and percussion. As she prepared this latest in her impressive succession of themed L&H albums, Ms. Eckemoff chose musicians who could picture and feel the desert she conceived. The vision extends to the short-short story and descriptive poems she wrote in the liner notes and her atmospheric painting that makes the cover of the booklet. The music visualizes the unnamed desert to which she gives sonic life. McCandless’s oboe is notably evocative in that regard. Ms. Eckemoff’s own playing leads the way, harmonically and in depth of keyboard tone, as she establishes the album’s feeling of mystery and languor. Eckemoff’s concept is akin to that of many albums released on the ECM label over the years, making it a natural setting for bassist Anderson, often a leader of ECM sessions. Erskine’s percussion array allows him to generate colors beyond his customary mainstream palette.


The Maguire Twins
, Seeking Higher Ground (Three Tree Records)

21 years old at the time of this 2017 recording, the identical Maguire twins—bassist Carl and drummer Alan—were born in Tokyo and raised in Hong Kong. In a dramatic change of scenery and culture, they moved with their parents to Memphis, Tennessee, in 2011. The brothers enrolled at the Stax Music Academy and came under the influence of bassist John Hamar, pianist Donald Brown and saxophonists Greg Tardy and Kirk Whalum. Brown is heard only on electric piano on one track. All of those musicians but Whalum and Hamar are on the twins’ debut album on their family’s label, as are pianist Aaron Goldberg and trumpeter Bill Mobley. The twins manage extremely well in that heavy company. Carl’s responsive drumming is impressive behind Goldberg on Brown’s “An Island, A Piano, and Keith,” dedicated to his son, also a pianist. Carl Maguire contributes two original compositions to the playlist, Alan one. Alan’s bass introduction is important to the success of his abstract arrangement of “Someday My Prince Will Come.” It will be interesting to follow this pair of promising rhythm players as they develop further.

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 Oberlin College a while back. One of my favorite albums, I’ve listened to it 8 or 9 times since buying it. All the tracks are great, but “Perdido” is my favorite. The quartet recorded the album in the early fifties at Oberlin College in a chapel there. According to the liner notes, jazz wasn’t performed very much on college campuses in those days. You can hear how excited the audience was to be hearing this kind of music. The members of the quartet can be heard cheering for each other and encouraging the others, which is very heartening. The music is bright and upbeat. You always feel better after hearing Dave Brubeck and Paul Desmond play together.

Orsolya S’s enthusiasm gives us all a fine reason to listen to “Perdido” again.

A favorite line from one of my visits with Brubeck when I interviewed him for Desmond’s biography:

Boy, do I miss Paul Desmond.

Boy, do a lot of us miss them both.

Take Five: The Public And Private Lives Of Paul Desmond is rarely found in hard cover these days, except at exorbitant prices on the used-book market. It is available as an ebook at a non-exorbitant price. And, as Iola Brubeck observed when it emerged in that format, “It’s a lot easier to take it on an airplane that way.”

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 Koonse meld with Piket in a collection of standards and originals by her and others. After Piket wrote “Mentor,” she discovered that it reminded her of her former teacher Richie Beirach and dedicated it to him.  Her eight-bar exchanges with LaBarbera highlight the track. Zippy versions of Chick Corea’s “Humpty Dumpty,” Richard Rodgers’ “Falling In Love With Love” and George Shearing’s “Conception” are up-tempo successes balanced by the trio’s ballad artistry in Piket’s “A Bridge To Nowhere.” In Walter Donaldson’s 1920s ballad “My Buddy,” she lingers over the melody and Oleszkiewicz caresses the verse mid-chorus. They revive the song so touchingly that one wonders why it isn’t performed more often.

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 1944, pianist Hank Jones was a central figure in jazz as the music evolved from swing to bebop. In this album recorded at a leading Danish jazz club, Jones reunites with drummer Shelly Manne, another key musician who thrived in New York in the mid-1940s. Manne moved west and became a leader in the community of musicians who coalesced into the movement eventually labeled West Coast Jazz. Danish bassist Mads Vinding completed the Jones trio for the Jazzhus engagement. Half the age of Jones and Manne, Vinding was a professional at 16. By 1983 he was in demand by American stars who visited Copenhagen, among them Art Farmer, Kenny Drew, Dexter Gordon, Roland Hanna and Johnny Griffin. Of a generation that produced several, he is one of Scandinavia’s true jazz stars.

It’s a pleasure to hear Vinding in such company. His solos on Bud Powell’s “Budo” and Sonny Rollins’ “Oleo” are highlights of the date. Unfortunately, a listing error on the back of the album misidentifies “Oleo” as Charlie Parker’s “Scrapple From The Apple.” If there are playing errors, better ears than mine will have to find them. This is a rewarding live date by three master musicians. They blend flawlessly through five standard songs and four classic jazz pieces by Parker, Benny Golson and Bud Powell. Sound quality and instrumental balance are excellent. Jones, as always, is superb.

 

Don Braden, Earth Wind And Wonder (Creative Perspectve Music)

For a time, a cyst on his jaw threatened to end Don Braden’s playing days, but following his recovery the tenor saxophonist and flutist sounds as confident and inventive as ever. Braden’s generation was immersed in the music of Stevie Wonder and the pop/jazz ensemble Earth Wind And Fire. He adapted some of their best-known pieces for this tribute collection. He is particularly moving on flute as he expresses the melody of Wonder’s “I Can’t Help It.” The album gets underway with Braden on tenor sax in EW&F’s “Fantasy.” His fluid solo underlines this relatively young musician’s familiarity with saxophone masters going back as far as Lester Young and Don Byas. Braden’s two combos on the album include pianists Brandon McCune and Art Hirahara, bassists Kenny Davis and Joris Teepe, and drummers Cecil Brooks III and Jeremy Warren. The music may be inspired by preferences of the 1970s, but Braden and company find its timeless qualities.

 

Jim Snidero & Jeremy Pelt, Jubilation! (Savant)

The exclamation point on the album title emphasizes the spirit of Cannonball Adderley’s music and
life. Jim Snidero’s expansive alto saxophone style observes Adderley’s way of playing without his being a literal-minded imitator. By pointing out the age he would be in 2018, Braden’s composition “Ball’s 90th” reminds us that Cannonball has been gone since 1975. Trumpeter Pelt’s original “Party Time” captures something of Nat Adderley’s puckishness. Among the album’s delights are Pelt’s Harmon mute solo on Cannonball’s “Wabash” and the fun of he and Snidero exchanging eight-bar phrases with drummer Billy Drummond in that track. Nat’s “Work Song” puts the cap on an album that indeed lauds the irrepressible natures of the Adderley brothers and pays tribute to their perennially fresh legacies. Snidero and Pelt play beautifully throughout, as do the members of their rhythm section—pianist David Hazeltine, bassist Nat Reeves and Drummond on drums. Bound to have a long shelf life in any collection, this album will be forever fresh.

 

Brubeck Brothers Quartet, Timeline 1958-2018 (Blue Forest Records)

Chris Brubeck points out in his informative album notes that it has been 60 years since the Dave
Brubeck Quartet served as Jazz Ambassadors of their counry in US State Department tours that helped spread American culture across the world. Now Brubeck’s sons Chris and Danny pay homage to their father’s contribution in a collection with seven of his compositions and four by members of the BBQ. The album includes famous Dave Brubeck pieces—”Blue Rondo A La Turk” and “Thank You (Dziekuje)” among them—and it’s good to hear them by his sons, pianist Chuck Lamb and guitarist Mike DiMicco. Apart from the commemorative aspect, it is a pleasure to hear the quartet playing so well. After several years together in this format, they have become one of the most consistently satisfying small bands in jazz. Lamb’s “Prime Directive” and “Boundward Home,” with its enticing use of repetition; DeMicco’s “North Coast,” and Chris Brubeck’s atmospheric “3 Wise Men” do not merely hold up well side by side with father Dave’s pieces; they sound as if he might have written them.

Roger Kellaway Trio, New Jazz Standards Vol. 3 (Summit)

It may be one of the better-kept secrets in contemporary jazz—the fact that with the appearance
of this album there are now three CDs of compositions by the versatile and respected trumpeter Carl Saunders, but all credited to other musicians. We learn by way of Vol. 3’s liner notes that the first two were released under the names of the late flutist Sam Most and trombonist Mark Whitfield, who is very much with us. In the case at hand, Saunders recruited pianist Roger Kellaway to be the leader, and added bassist Jay Leonhart and drummer Peter Erskine. He also produced the album. It is a welcome addition to the discography of Kellaway, one of the most technically and imaginatively gifted pianists alive. His collaborators are bassist Jay Leonhart and drummer Peter Erskine. Leonhart also sings Saunders’ “Is That Asking Too Much?” which is as wry as the title indicates. On some of these pieces Kellaway plays like the wind (or Art Tatum), on others with fetching tenderness—for instance on Saunders’ “Short & Sweet.” Saunders the composer deserves wider recognition.

If you’re interested in hearing Carl Saunders as trumpeter, leader and composer, investigate the albums listed on this Amazon page.

 

We will have further brief reviews anon.

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 trade of Rifftides. We begin with the Airmen of Note, the jazz ensemble of the United States Air Force. The arrangement of “Cherokee” is by Alan Baylock.

The US Army Blues appeared a few years ago at—appropriately enough—Blues Alley, the distinguished Washington, DC, jazz club. You may recognize the tune.

Hoagy Carmichael composed “Stardust in 1927. Three years earlier, Douglas Farber wrote the melody of “Limehouse Blues,” a piece frequently adapted, capable of sounding modern in any era. We hear it by the U.S. Navy Band Commodores Jazz Ensemble

There is a top-flight Coast Guard jazz band, too. Doc Severinsen sat in with them not long after his 89th birthday in a concert at the Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut. They played Kurt Weill’s “September Song.”

Finally, we hear the United States Marine Corps Jazz Orchestra in a 2017 concert in Alexandria, Virginia. We move from standard songs to Chick Corea’s modern classic, “Spain,” inspired by Joaquin Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjez. The arrangement is by Mike Crotty. The conductor is Captain Ryan J. Nowlin.

I regret not being able to name the splendid musicians who appeared in these videos. Let us thank them all for their service and their musicianship. We wish them and you a happy Memorial Day.

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 stay.

King Of Jazz: A Guest Review By Jeff Sultanoff

Until 1926, the only sound the movie-going public heard in a theatre was the accompaniment of a piano, organ or symphony orchestra if they went to one of the big movie palaces. There were experiments with sound, but most audiences hadn’t been exposed to them, although if you are a jazz fan, some of them have got into circulation.

Here is Ben Bernie in 1924 via DeForest Phonofilm

Few theaters could run these films, and there were various technical problems. This film actually looks and sounds better than it did back then. But Western Electric came up with a method for film with sound, and convinced Warner Bros. to buy into the concept; the process was called Vitaphone. The first Vitaphone program featured Don Juan as its main attraction, a motion picture with sound effects and symphonic orchestra accompaniment, but the best parts of the program were the short subjects – vaudeville acts and ensembles of all sizes. By 1929, Vitaphone filmed such bands as the Ben Pollack Orchestra with Jack Teagarden and Benny Goodman (this film is currently undergoing restoration from the original negative).

And Red Nichols with Pee Wee Russell and Eddie Condon:

The musicians were Red Nichols, cornet; Tommy Thune and John Egan, trumpet; Herb Taylor, trombone; Pee Wee Russell, clarinet; Irving Brodsky, piano; Eddie Condon, banjo and vocal; and George Beebe, drums. It has become a very well known film that is all over the internet, but here was an excellent-quality version—for a change.

In that same year, Hollywood studios were churning out revues featuring their biggest stars. Such films as The Hollywood Revue of 1929 (M-G-M), and The Show of Shows (Warner Bros.) are pretty dismal affairs for the non-historian and are hard to sit through today; most people featured in them were stars in silent films; many couldn’t adapt to the new talking pictures and couldn’t sing very well. Paramount on Parade (Paramount) is the best of that early bunch; unfortunately, it exists only as a torso, as several sections are missing their soundtracks.

Universal Pictures signed Paul Whiteman (pictured left) in October of 1928, but didn’t know what to do with him. He had script approval, and told anyone who would listen that he wasn’t an actor and wasn’t going to be part of a romantic plot. The Whiteman band waited in Hollywood while Universal came up with scripts that Whiteman rejected. They finally returned to the east coast, and this resulted in one of the great missed opportunities in jazz history: Bix Beiderbecke (pictured right) would most certainly have been featured if the film had been made during this period. When the men returned, Bix had been replaced. But Whiteman had several other notable performers in the band: Harry ‘Goldie’ Goldfield, Wilbur Hall, Frank Trumbauer, and the Rhythm Boys, one of whom was Harry “Bing” Crosby.

By that time, it was agreed that Universal would make a revue. John Murray Anderson was hired to produce and direct the film. Even though he’d never made a movie, he was one of the great producer/directors of stage musicals. Anderson brought his noted designer, Herman Rosse, with him, and together they created incredible sets and costumes, all shot in early Technicolor, at that time a red and green process. One problem was that Technicolor could not reproduce a realistic blue, and leaving out “Rhapsody in Blue” was out of the question. The end result was Rhapsody in Teal!By the time the picture was ready, Universal had spent $2,000,000 on this lavish entertainment, but audiences had already tired of movie musicals and stayed away from them. The initial reaction by preview audiences to The King of Jazz was mixed, and some tinkering was done by removing some of the comedy sketches. It didn’t help. For many, this movie was simply a rehash of earlier revues and didn’t offer anything new by the time it came out. It also didn’t help that Universal’s version of All Quiet on the Western Front played to huge crowds and garnered excellent reviews, so the publicity men at the studio spent their time heavily promoting that picture.

King of Jazz played at the prestigious Roxy Theater in New York with Gershwin himself playing the “Rhapsody” on stage with Whiteman for the first week. While Gershwin brought in theater patrons, this diminished the effect of the filmed “Rhapsody.” By the second week, the movie’s attendance tanked. (In this clip, as Jeff notes in the comments below, the soloist is Roy Bargy.)

The film’s failure resulted in a great financial loss for Universal. It was severely recut and reissued in 1933 and did eventually make a profit. After that, it was quickly forgotten. In the mid-1950s, Technicolor asked the studios whether they wanted their two-color negatives back for safekeeping. Since the two-color process was no longer in use, the negatives were unprintable, and except for Universal all of them simply asked Technicolor to junk them, one of the reasons why many Technicolor films from that era don’t exist or can be found only in poor prints. The resurrection of King of Jazz is chronicled in an excellent book by James Layton and David Pierce.

Once it was voted into the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 2013, this prompted NBC/Universal to restore it. Details of the extensive restoration were originally kept quiet; one source was Ron Hutchinson, a founder of the Vitaphone Project which oversees the preservation of early sound films in which the sound was on disc and had been physically separated from the negatives years ago. Ultimately the negative of the complete soundtrack, and the original camera negative of the 1933 reissue were combined with an original print found in England which had been bootlegged over the years and used for a videocassette release in the early 1970s. Where footage was still missing, stills were used. Only one sequence was never found.

On May 13, 2016, a packed house at the Museum of Modern Art watched this restored version of King of Jazz. The audience included relatives of many of the performers. Audience reaction was overwhelming, with applause at the end of each number. The film was soon shown in other venues to sold-out crowds.

Discussion on social media soon began about whether this film would be issued on DVD and Blu-ray. Was there a sizable enough audience for this very special film, and how much would it cost to clear the music rights? No doubt a sizable sum. The likely candidate for such a release was The Criterion Collection, a company owned by Janus Films, that originally started issuing laserdiscs of classic films with cool extras like interviews and commentary; Criterion releases were the model for the modern-day special edition that most DVD/Blu-ray buyers now expect in releases of both new and older films. Sure enough, on March 27 of this year, King of Jazz appeared as a Criterion edition on store shelves and the internet.

What makes King of Jazz special are the appearances of the Whiteman musicians, several now considered legends. “Meet the Boys” was a presentation that Whiteman performed on the road, and features several Whiteman personalities. Such names as Roy “Red” Maier, Chester Hazlett, Wilbur Hall, Harry “Goldie” Goldfield, Roy Bargy and Mike Pingitore can be seen and heard on screen. But perhaps the most priceless part of this section is Joe Venuti and Eddie Lang playing “Wild Cat.” Here is a still from the film.

This was one of five filmed appearances by Lang, who later became Crosby’s accompanist. Lang passed away suddenly at the age of 30 after a tonsillectomy and both Crosby and Venuti never fully got over his loss. Seeing him and Venuti play together is indescribable.
While the presentation of “Rhapsody In Blue” drew mixed reactions from audiences and writers, seeing and hearing Roy Bargy and the Whiteman ensemble play this classic work is amazing when you think that this ensemble premiered the work six years earlier, and Bargy was one of the earliest pianists to perform it, playing it many times over the radio and on recordings. While Whiteman and Gershwin had a falling out because of Whiteman’s tempo alterations, the work is well performed here. But perhaps the most important footage belongs to Crosby. Even though he was a member of the Rhythm Boys at the time, he has many standout solos and the camera absolutely loves him. In glorious Technicolor, his appearance will be the high point of the film for many.

This is probably the finest example of this early form of Technicolor, simply because it is one of the few original negatives extant, and the printing was aided by sophisticated computer software. At the time of release, Technicolor prints were either excellent or shoddy, crisp and clear with glorious color or blurred and washed-out, part of the reason why Hollywood studios stopped using it. This release makes a good case for the process. At its best, the color has a pastel, shimmering quality, albeit with no blue registration. The sound is excellent, partly thanks to Whiteman’s insistence of pre-recording the music and then shooting to a playback. In 1930, many studios recorded the music live during shooting, and the sound was often badly balanced or distorted.

Anyone interested in pre-swing-era jazz and pop music must see this film. The extras are great too; an audio commentary features Gary Giddins, Gene Seymour and Vince Giordano, who knows more about this era of music than almost anyone. An interview with Michael Feinstein, a visual essay by James Layton and David Pierce using photos and other artifacts reproduced in their book, two Oswald the Rabbit cartoons (there is a cartoon at the beginning of <em>King Of Jazz</em> that may very well be the first color cartoon made), a 1929 short of John Murray Anderson’s “Melting Pot” presentation that is similar to the one in the movie, and a rare 1932 Walter Winchell short which stars the Whiteman ensemble (this is an expecially great find; the short is not even mentioned in Don Rayno’s encyclopedic Whiteman biography). Ironically, the music in this film was shot live, on set.

P.S. – Barnes & Noble usually has a 50%-off sale of Criterion releases at around this time of the year.
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(The Rifftides staff is  grateful to Jeff Sultanof for illuminating yet another major development in our culture.)

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 School of Music. His early experience in jazz was with John LaPorta, Sheila Jordan, Ben Webster and George Russell, among other prominent figures in the bebop and post-bop eras.

From the biography on Mr. Reilly’s website:

He was Professor and Head of the Jazz Studies Departments at the New England Conservatory of Music Boston, The New School, for Social Research, and The Mannes College of Music, where he wrote the curriculum for full Degree in Jazz Music. He is the author of the critically acclaimed The Harmony of Bill Evans, Volumes 1 and 2, The Harmony of Dave Brubeck and several books of jazz piano arrangements.

Pianists who studied with Reilly often gave him credit for inspiring them and accelerating their development. The quote in the June, 2008, Rifftides post below is typical of the regard in which his students held him.

Originally posted on June 20, 2008

Recently, I came across this quote:

Jack Reilly’s music is singular, almost private, and yet it reaches beyond his personal vision. This is music that speaks to the colllective spirit of all mankind – Bill Charlap

The quote is by a student of Reilly who is one of his most dedicated fans and has himself gone on to considerable renown. It led to a search that turned up video of Reilly in a performance that melds Chopin and Strayhorn. His subtle key changes are central to the fun and fascination.

For links to Jack Reilly’s publications and albums, see this page of his website.

Jack was a frequent commenter on Rifftides. We will miss him and his contributions.

Funeral or memorial services for Mr. Reilly have not been announced.

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 Ellington compositions. The first is “Do Nothing ‘Til You Hear From Me,” one of Ellington’s best-known popular hits; the second, “Ko Ko,” is perhaps his most celebrated pioneering of bitonal harmonies).  Both were from 1943. Talbert gives them his own distinctive flavors.

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Soloists and featured players were Eddie Bert, trombone; Jimmy Buffington, French horn; Aaron Sachs, tenor saxophone; Barry Galbraith, guitar; Herb Geller, alto saxophone; and Joe Wilder, trumpet. Oscar Pettiford was the bassist, Osie Johnson the drummer.

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 freshness and importance long after he left us. This was first posted shortly after he died on July 2, 2005.

TOM TALBERT, 1924-2005

It is startling how many knowledgeable jazz listeners do not know about Tom Talbert. Let’s do something about that.

Talbert.jpgTom died on Saturday, a month short of his eighty-first birthday. An elegant, soft-spoken man, he was an early and drastically overlooked composer, arranger and band leader on the west coast before West Coast Jazz became a category. His mid-to-late-1940s Los Angeles bands included Lucky Thompson, Dodo Marmarosa, Hal McKusick, Al Killian, Art Pepper, Claude Williamson and other musicians who were or went on to become leading soloists. Talbert’s writing for large ensembles was ingenious and subtle. The best of it, “Is Is Not Is,” as an example, rivaled George Handy’s iconoclastic work for the Boyd Raeburn band. The recordings Talbert made shortly after World War Two sound fresh today. Art Pepper fell in love with Tom’s treatment of “Over the Rainbow” and adopted the song as his signature tune.

During his New York period, the first half of the fifties, he made combo arrangements for Marian McPartland, Kai Winding, Don Elliott, Johnny Smith and Oscar Pettiford. They were on a smaller scale only in terms of ensemble size. His capacious imagination ranged through classical music as well as jazz. He was a gifted composer whose formal chamber pieces received acclaimed New York performances. His setting for Pettiford of Billy Taylor’s “Titoro,” as an example, is quiet and layered with complexity, like Talbert himself.

The masterpieces of his New York years are Wednesday’s Child, an album of settings for the singing of the underappreciated Patty McGovern, and Bix Duke Fats. Despite critical acclaim, Atlantic Records let the brilliant Wednesday’s Child LP die on the vine and has never reissued it on CD. Bix Duke Fats is another matter. It got five stars in Down Beat, but Atlantic also ignored this jewel in its discography. The Discover Jazz label has rescued it and kept it available on CD. Bix Duke Fats has some of Talbert’s most imaginative writing and features great musicians, among them Pettiford, Herb Geller, Joe Wilder, Eddie Bert, Barry Galbraith and Aaron Sachs. Talbert 2.jpgAs Bruce Talbot points out in his biography of Talbert, Tom’s arrangements of pieces by Beiderbecke, Ellington and Waller preceded by more than a year Gil Evans’ celebrated New Bottles, Old Wine. Both evoke past days by setting familiar works in contemporary harmonic language. Stylistically, Talbert and Evans had much in common. Maria Schneider commented on that in an interview with Talbot after she had listened to Talbert’s arrangement of Ellington’s “Prelude to a Kiss.”

To me what’s amazing about that, what Tom has in common with Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn, and Gil Evans, is that the harmony is driven by the line. Hearing this reminds me of the Ellngton recording of “Variations on Mood Indigo.” That interweaving of lines that brings you to harmonic places that you would never come up with if you were thinking of reharmonitzation in a passing-from-chord-to-chord kind of way; thinking of vertical chords. It’s truly a weaving of the horizontal that creates very interesting vertical structures…Tom is clearly a master of that, and “Prelude to a Kiss” is an incredible example of that.

When rock and roll drove out the good, Talbert was one of the victims. He left New York in 1960, returned to his parents’ home in Minnesota and went into his father’s business, barges on the Mississippi. He had success with a band in Minneapolis, tried cattle ranching in Wisconsin for a while, but ultimately listened to friends who said things were getting better for music in Los Angeles. In 1975, he moved back to California.

By 1977, he was recording again, an album called Louisiana Suite, inspired in New Orleans when he was in the barge business. Then, he started writing for television shows, the Serpico series and the Carol Burnett Show among them. In the early eighties, producers’ eagerness to cut costs made it easy for electronics to chase live musicians out of the studios. It was the period when Conte Candoli told a friend, “I played a fantastic studio gig today. We had ten brass, six saxophones, five percussion, thirty strings, a harp, an organ and a piano. It put two synthesizer players out of work.”

Talbert took some time off, and accepted a job as a cocktail pianist for a time, but it wasn’t long before his arranger-composer genes reactivated. He found a marvelous women named Betty who helped him organize sextet concerts in his house on a hill above Laguna Beach. She eventually became his wife. Before long, Talbert was writing big band charts. Through the eighties and nineties, he recorded several CDs, including Duke’s Domain, a rare instance of an arranger doing a collection of pieces by Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn without copying them. In the notes for the album, I wrote:

Talbert applies to the maestro’s compositions voicings unlikely to have occurred to

Thumbnail image for Duke's Domain.jpghim if Ellington’s example hadn’t long since permeated modern music. But his work owes at least as much to his career as a classical composer who admires Ravel, to his tolerant, sophisticated, amused and slightly exasperated world view and to his own long experience in jazz.

That experience came to an end over the weekend, but much of the music Tom created in his long career is preserved for us. It is worth hearing repeatedly.

He left something more. I’m not sure of the source of Tom’s wealth. It might have been the family business or the studio work, or both. It certainly wasn’t his concerts and recordings, the chamber music or the cocktail piano gig. In any case, he did a lovely thing with some of it. He created a private foundation to help promising young composers and arrangers. One of his first grants, in 1996, went to young Maria Schneider. This year she won four Grammys.

 

(Apologies for some repeated material in the “related” items that follow)

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. Wishing On The Moon, recorded earlier but just released, revisits several items that Zeitlin has recorded before, including “Slickrock.” Inspired by his and his wife’s mountain-biking adventures, Zeitlin expands the piece into a four-part suite that conjures up the sport’s peaceful setting in the sandstone reaches of Utah’s Moab region and the thrills it gives the cyclists who ride there.

Despite their not working regularly as a group and long stretches between gigs, the music here indicates the trio’s increased rapport in terms of close listening, balance and reaction to one another’s stimuli. They revisit pieces like “All Of You,” and “Put Your Little Foot Right Out” with the same sense of discovery as in “Wishing On The Moon”—a lyrical new Zeitlin ballad—and their smoking explorations of David Friesen’s “Signs & Wonders” and Zeitlin’s “There And Back.” Zeitlin, Williams and Wilson have tightness and togetherness that could lead a listener to assume that they play together every night. This is an important addition to the account of their achievement. We don’t often enough give credit to soundmeisters, but in this case recording by Jeff Jones, and mixing and mastering by Vadim Canby, deserve recognition. It’s a crisp, clean recording with depth and clarity

To my knowledge, no video exists of the Wishing On The Moon date, but Bret Primack, the Jazz Video Guy, posted this earlier encounter of Zeitlin, Williams and Wilson in a more conservative, but nonetheless rhythmically compelling, 2003 version of “All Of You.”

The Rifftides staff hopes that you’re having a good weekend.

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 would be as fascinating as the album itself. Preminger’s tenor saxophone and Garcia’s drumming have support from guitarist Nate Radley and bassist Kim Cass in their interpretations of nine of Frederic Chopin’s nocturnes and preludes and his formidable Etude No. 7 in C# Minor.

My guess is that Friedrich Gulda would have approved of Preminger’s and Garcia’s adaptation. Gulda was, after all, respected for both his classical and jazz abilities. He and Joe Zawinul (later of Weather Report) were close friends beginning in their teen years in Vienna. Gulda was admired for his composing in both fields. For comparison with the Preminger-Garcia approach, let’s hear and see Gulda (1930-2000) play the piece as Chopin wrote it. This performance was in 1990 at the Philharmonie in Munich, Germany. You may wish to turn up your volume.

Oddly, the Preminger-Garcia Chopin album seems to be not yet listed at Amazon, CD Baby or  other usual online album sources. I hope that it soon will be.

https://www.artsjournal.com/rifftides/2017/12/monday-recommendation-premingers-meditations.html

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 movement. The band features saxophonist Bob Sheppard, John Beasley playing keyboards, and the ebullient electric bassist Benjamin Shepherd. As it has for decades, Erskine’s drumming incorporates rhythmic subtlety and explosiveness in a balance that makes him in many respects the prototype fusion drummer. Highlights include humor and near-abandon as Erskine stimulates irresistible energy from Sheppard on tenor sax and Shepherd on bass in their solos on “Hawaii Bathing Suit” from a live date recorded in Italy. The tenderness of Sheppard’s tenor work is memorable in Henry Mancini’s “Dreamsville.” For sheer enjoyment, the live set edges out—just barely—the first disc, recorded in a US studio date.

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 trigger renewed stimulation and interaction whenever they play his compositions. In “We See,” Hersch maintains a flow of stimulating ideas even as he fragments the melody line that he develops so brilliantly. Hersch’s “Newklypso,” a tribute to Sonny Rollins, builds on the saxophonist’s devotion to the calypso music of his Caribbean ancestry. Hersch dedicates “Bristol Fog” to the late British pianist John Taylor, and the languorous, quirky, blues “The Big Easy” to New Orleans writer Tom Piazza. The album was recorded in concert in Brussels, Belgium. Six Hirsch compositions and two Wayne Shorter pieces, “Miyako” and “Black Nile,” complete the collection and help make it one of the trio’s most satisfying in their nine years together.

Miles Davis & John Coltrane, The Final Tour: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 6 (Columbia Legacy)

The music on this album was tenor saxophonist John Coltrane’s 1960 farewell to the Miles DavisQuintet, and whatever you’ve heard about it is probably true. Yes, Coltrane was breaking away from Davis conceptually, headed toward his “Giant Steps” reinvention of himself. Yes, at times he indulges his every random musical thought in displays of concentrated energy, perhaps even unto the anger his critics accused him of during this transition (Coltrane denied using his music to express anger). Yes, pianist Wynton Kelly, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Jimmy Cobb are at a peak of the heated swing that made them the gold standard of mainstream rhythm sections in the late 1950s and early ‘60s. Yes, these concerts in Paris, Copenhagen and Stockholm radiate the tension generated by Coltrane’s disgruntlement with Davis’s music and, no doubt, with his inability, under the circumstances, to find his own way.

In the Paris “Bye Bye Blackbird,” Coltrane adopts Davis’s lyricism before moving into complexity just short of indecipherability. In the Copenhagen and Stockholm performances of “All Blues,” Coltrane’s fluidity is remarkable even as—particularly in Stockholm—he cranks up the intensity before yielding to Kelly’s vision of pure beauty. Through all four CDs in the package, it is rewarding to hear Kelly, Cobb and Chambers as individuals and in the surging undercurrents they develop as a section. This is one of the great small bands in all of music. Davis himself does some of his most affecting playing, and it is gripping to hear Coltrane finding his way through the transition to his next phase.

Scott Hamilton, Swedish Ballads…& More (Charleston Square)

When so many albums arrive for possible review, there is always the possibility that a worthy one will end up in a music room nook or cranny, only to be rediscovered much later. That’s what happened to this 2012 gem. Tenor saxophonist Hamilton teamed with a world-class Scandinavian rhythm section for a collection of seven Swedish songs. It begins with “Ack Värmeland Du Skona,” long known outside of Sweden as “Dear Old Stockholm,” thanks to recordings by Stan Getz and Miles Davis. Hamilton also makes his unruffled way through, among other pieces, Ulf Sandström’s “You Can’t Be In Love With A Dream,” Ole Adolphson’s “Trubbel” and the Quincy Jones classic “Stockholm Sweetnin’,” which has Hamilton at his most vigorous. Pianist Jan Lundgren, bassist Jesper Lundgaard and drummer Kristian Leth support him with great sensitivity and—no surprise—authenticity. Hamilton gives a tender reading to “Min soldat” (“My Soldier”), a song popular in Sweden in the 1940s and revived in the 1970s when it was used in a TV series. The late Swedish pianist Jan Johansson’s “Blues i oktaver” wraps up the album. It includes a terrific solo by Lundgren, then a witty exchange of phrases between Hamilton and Lundgren, who is an admirer of and successor to Johansson. Lundgren contributes helpful liner notes.

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 is the core of Shipp’s approach. The title of his new solo album, Zero, may suggest metaphysical implications. My advice is, don’t worry about metaphysical implications. Simply listen to Shipp’s keyboard mastery and the wide range of emotions in his playing—and leave categories behind.

Shipp is a natural collaborator. His most frequent recording companions are musicians who share his comfort with free expression. There are few videos of him playing alone. The following Fifteen-minute recording is an exception that can serve as an introduction to his solo work. It was shot a few years ago at Outpost 186 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It ends abruptly.

For parts 2 and 3 of that Shipp recital, go here.

As for the new Shipp album, Zero, the eleven tracks of the primary CD are beautifully recorded on a splendid piano. The second CD presents Shipp delivering “A Lecture on Nothingness.” He calls it “Zero,” as he does the album. Whether the talk is metaphysical depends on how you hear it.

 

Next time on Rifftides, recent listening in brief.

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Doug Ramsey

Doug is a recipient of the lifetime achievement award of the Jazz Journalists Association. He lives in the Pacific Northwest, where he settled following a career in print and broadcast journalism in cities including New York, New Orleans, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, San Antonio, … [MORE]

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