James Hall, Lattice (OutsideIn Music)
As I may have mentioned no more than a hundred times, it is impossible to keep up with the flow of new albums that keep coming even as we continue to hear claims that jazz is dying. The fact that jazz is not dying doesn’t mean that there is plenty of gainful employment for jazz musicians. There is not, and probably never has been since the swing era, if then. Plenty of good players can’t find enough work to make a living without second incomes.
I don’t know whether the trombonist and composer James Hall (pictured) also works outside of music, but his new album, Lattice,  speaks well of his achievement in it.  Hall’s intersecting lines for the instruments do the title justice. He is a native of Nebraska who lives in New York City. His album features an impressive quintet playing five of Hall’s compositions and Joe Henderson’s “Black Narcissus.†The other band members are flutist Jamie Baum, pianist Deanna Witkowski, bassist Tom DiCarlo, drummer Alan Mednard and guest alto saxophonist Sharel Cassity. In a video released at nearly the same time as the CD, Victor Gould is the pianist, with Petros Klampanis on bass.  Here is Hall’s “Gaillardia.â€
More Recent Listening In Brief to come soon.
Today, February 2, is the birthday of James P. Johnson (1894-1955), who developed stride piano as an art form within an art form. In his time, piano cutting contests were proving grounds—most often in Harlem apartments—where competing pianists showed their stuff. If James P was playing, their stuff was likely not to be good enough. Johnson’s most famous composition was “Carolina Shout,†a test of a pianist’s swing, power and rhythm. He recorded it several times. Many pianists, critics and jazz historians consider this 1921 version his best.
Vibraphonist Charlie Shoemake has instructed hundreds of aspiring jazz musicians in the techniques and mysteries of improvisation. Among his early students was Ted Nash (pictured), who as a young man left Los Angeles, became a stalwart of New York’s jazz community, and wins Grammys. Nash has long been a featured soloist in the Jazz At Lincoln Center Orchestra. Mr. Shoemake sent the following message today:
The daring American pianist Marilyn Crispell’s free jazz adventures have more than once been compared to volcanic activity. Here, Crispell joins the Scottish saxophonist Raymond MacDonald and the French-Canadian bassist and electronic adventurer Pierre Alexandre Tremblay. The project’s tectonic aspects alternate with moments so peaceful that they sometimes verge on the soporific—but not for long. That is particularly true in the beginning moments of “Duo # 1.†It opens with percussive slaps followed by vague sounds that may be either from Tremblay’s bass or his digital equipment. Soon, MacDonald appears on soprano saxophone. He and Crispell are off on the first of the album’s duets, her sensitive keyboard touch ameliorating and occasionally abetting, his chattering exclamations. “Duo # 2†finds Crispell and MacDonald in deep musical conversation that incorporates spontaneous mutual phrasing reflecting not only creative compatibility but also uncanny conjunctions of rhythmic like-thinking.
Among the many Canadian musicians attracting the attention of listeners outside Canada is the pianist and singer Laila Biali. She was born in Vancouver, B.C., in 1980 and trained in classical piano at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto. Much of her popularity stems from recordings and videos covering hits by pop performers including Coldplay, David Bowie and Neil Young, but it’s her piano playing and arranging that have made impressions among jazz audiences. Here, Ms. Biali and her frequent bassist George Koller perform the traditional song “Down In The River To Pray.†Although research has failed to trace the piece to an individual, it is frequently attributed to an anonymous African-American slave. Ms. Biali’s brief piano solo suggests that she and the late Ray Bryant may have had common influences.
DuPlex Mystery Jazz Hour we will celebrate the birthday of the great saxophonist/ arranger/ composer Benny Golson. Golson, composer of Killer Joe, Whisper Not and Along Came Betty, began his career in the early 50’s and is still on the scene today. We’re back to our 5-6 PM EST slot; streaming on 
Director Étienne Comar’s Django portrays guitarist Django Reinhardt’s life during two years when it seemed that Europe might fall to Germany. His account emphasizes the greatness of Reinhardt’s music and the Nazis’ recognition of his extensive popularity. They coerce his collaborationist lover to persuade him to play in Berlin. Reinhardt chooses instead to escape to neutral Switzerland. In real life, his escape effort failed and he was returned to Paris. Reda Kater is credible, if sometimes phlegmatic, in the title role. The film emphasizes Reinhardt’s devotion to his Belgian Romany roots and people. A group led, a bit frantically, by guitarist Stochelo Rosenberg recreates Reinhardt’s music. The film is now playing in New York and Los Angeles. One hopes that the movie will encourage viewers to seek out the real Reinhardt. His recordings are plentiful 
In Smith’s album of music by and about Thelonious Monk he is alone with his trumpet. That creates a conceptual challenge for the player of an instrument incapable of harmonic accompaniment. He compensates by employing passing tones to fill in or imply harmonies. The canny Smith’s familiarity with chord substitutions and his formidable trumpet technique make for thrills and occasional amusement, as when he leaps high above the staff to nail precisely the only note that would work at a certain point in his variations on “Ruby, My Dear.†As in most of his albums, Smith’s nicely crafted liner essay answers questions about his titles. He explains that “Monk And His Five Point Ring At The Five Spot Café,†for instance, was inspired by a clip from a documentary about Monk. The occasion that titled “Monk and Bud Powell at Shea Stadium†may never have happened in real life, but in a dream that Smith remembers. Nothing in his playing directly evokes either pianist. Some titles need no explanation; it tends to be general knowledge among Monk followers that “Crepuscle With Nellie†was for his wife. Smith gives the melody a loving late-evening interpretation ending on a lingering high B-flat. When Smith uses his Harmon mute, as he does on “Adagio: Monk, the Composer in Sepia,†his inner Miles Davis emerges. The influence is pronounced. Earlier in the album, essentially the same piece with an altered title is without the mute. Smith also caresses “’Round Midnight†on open horn, playing it slowly. The mood is not unlike those that Davis often created on ballads. When Smith plays the occasional note with cracked edges, it’s natural to wonder who he was thinking of.
 and production skills of Bill Laswell, a veteran of the Downtown movement in New York City in the 1970s. Like Smith, Laswell is partial to the electronic Miles Davis. Their fondness for that idiom helps determine Najwa’s atmosphere. Smith has a long history with three of the guitarists here, Michael Gregory Jackson, Brandon Ross and Henry Kaiser. He has a newer, family, relationship with the fourth guitarist, Lamar Smith, his grandson, who has performed with him since 2009, been a member of Wadada Leo’s Organic Ensemble and Silver Orchestra and was on the Yo Miles! album. From the first track, evocative of Ornette Coleman’s harmolodics, much of the album’s power rides on Laswell’s bass lines, often in harness with the drumming of Pheeroan akLaff, a Detroit native with a forty-year history in the free jazz sphere. In its titles as well as its music, Najwa constitutes tributes to Coleman, John Coltrane, the late drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson and Billie Holiday. The ten-minute Holiday track is entitled, “The Empress, Lady Day: In a Rainbow Garden, with Yellow-Gold Hot Springs, Surrounded by Exotic Plants and Flowers.†The other titles, in Smith’s poetic way with words, are nearly as long. Throughout, Smith’s playing is infectious even in his muted work in the slow title tune. By far the shortest piece in the album, its mystery and languor and the melancholy of Smith’s muted solo keep me going back to it.
The Young \ Promane Octet contains distinguished musicians based in Ontario, Canada. Young is the bassist, Promane the trombonist. Each is an accomplished arranger. The album opens with Young’s waltz-time version of Hammertein’s and Rodgers’ “Oh, What A Beautiful Morning,†and continues with fresh arrangements of nine other standards from the jazz and popular repertoires. The album includes pieces by Charles Mingus, Michel Legrand, Duke Pearson and Cedar Walton.
From New York comes news that the singer Marlene VerPlanck died today at 84. She reportedly had pancreatic cancer but managed to keep the illness a secret from nearly everyone. Beginning in the 1960s Ms. VerPlanck worked closely with her husband Billy as a studio musician, singing in commercial jingles. In the 1970s she began singing in jazz clubs and at festivals and appeared at Carnegie Hall. Billy VerPlanck died in 2009. By then his wife’s career as a jazz performer had blossomed. She was in demand in the US and became popular in Europe, particularly in Great Britain, appearing at Ronnie Scott’s club in London and touring  in England and on the continent.
Kathrine Winfeld’s second album further establishes the 30-year-old Dane in the vanguard of new arranger-composers and bandleaders. Her young, experienced, adventurous musicians from Denmark, Sweden and Norway may be considered an all-star Scandinavian aggregation, but not in the sense that Ms. Winfeld’s music dwells on Scandinavian themes. Rather, her work is in a league with bands like those of Maria Schneider, Darcy James Argue, Christian McBride and John Beasley’s Monkestra—outfits unafraid to be eclectic and eccentric but insistent on values growing out of the mainstream tradition. Ms. Winfeld’s crew maintains swing even when the saxophones in the piece called “Double Fleisch†verge on free jazz a la Chicago’s AACM of the 1960s. Then she unleashes the intrepid trombone soloist Göran Abelli, who is  unrestrained, as he was in the 2016 Windfeld album Aircraft.
Philharmonic conductor Leonard Bernstein in adapting Bernstein’s “Mass†and works by Charles Ives for symphony performance. When he was conductor of the Kansas City Philharmonic, a performance by Ellington’s band deeply affected Peress. In his 2004 book, Dvorak To Duke Ellington, he wrote:
If Randy Porter played more widely outside the US Pacific Northwest, he would likely be lauded as one of the leading contemporary jazz pianists. This new album of songs composed by his namesake Cole Porter could go a long way toward bringing about wide recognition of an artist with a record of achievement going back more than three decades. Porter has toured extensively in Europe and Asia, traveling with saxophonist Charles McPherson and bassist David Friesen, among others. He is known on the west coast well beyond his home base in the Portland, Oregon, area.
with vibraharpist Milt Jackson, pianist John Lewis, bassist Ray Brown and drummer Kenny Clarke. They first recorded as an entity in 1951 as the Milt Jackson Quartet. After Percy Heath replaced Brown the following year the group changed its name to The Modern Jazz Quartet. When Clarke concentrated on freelancing around New York in 1955 and then moved to Paris, Connie Kay assumed the drum chair.
From his years with Buddy Rich in the 1960s through his long membership in the late bassist Charlie Haden’s Quartet West and for years since, the tenor saxophonist Ernie Watts has had a noteworthy career. One of his longest associations has been with his European quartet and its rhythm section of pianist Christof Saenger, bassist Rudi Engel and drummer Heinrich Koebberling. Their  Wheel Of Time has compositions by each of the quartet members plus Joe Henderson’s jazz standard “Inner Urge†and Canadian pianist Adrean Farrugia’s calypsoish “Goose Dance.â€