In the right-hand column, you will find a new batch of Doug's Picks. Yes, I know; it's high time. … [Read more...]
Quote
The whole problem can be stated quite simply by asking, 'Is there a meaning to music?' My answer would be, 'Yes.' And 'Can you state in so many words what the meaning is?' My answer to that would be, 'No.' —Aaron Copland … [Read more...]
Compatible Quotes
Acquaintance: Where are you living these days? Al Cohn: Oh, I’m living in the past. I tend to live in the past because most of my life is there. —Herb Caen … [Read more...]
Shirley Horn Is Gone
The sad news from Devra Hall and John Levy is that Shirley Horn died last night. She had been unwell for several years. As DevraDoWrite, Devra just posted an excerpt about Shirley from her and John's Men, Women and Girl Singers. To read it, go here. For the excellent NPR Jazz Profiles on this … [Read more...]
The Seasons and Bill Mays
Yakima, Washington, where I live most of the time, has more attractions than trolleys and the legacy of William O. Douglas. Among them is a new place in which to hear music. Well, it's not a new place. It was built in 1917 and until recently was the Church of Christ, Scientist. Over the past few … [Read more...]
Maybe He Was Thinking of Willie Mays
Jazz musicians have lots of stories from their gigs. Not to impinge on Bill Crow's territory, but here are three that the peripatetic Bill Mays sent me from the road following his Yakima gig. I was playing the Knickerbocker in New York City several years ago. A man came up after the set and said "I … [Read more...]
Skull Session: The Jazz Audience
I am in Seattle to help fire the opening shot of the Earshot Jazz Festival, a discussion about the jazz audience and what might be done to expand it. I have reservations about the premise of the second part of that proposition, but I look forward to learning from my fellow panelists. Admittance is … [Read more...]
NEA Jazz Masters
The National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters for 2006 are Ray Barretto, Tony Bennett, Bob Brookmeyer, Chick Corea, Buddy DeFranco, Freddie Hubbard and John Levy. They were announced a few weeks ago and will be honored at the annual meeting of the International Association of Jazz Education in … [Read more...]
George Mraz: na Hradĕ
An early September posting on Rifftides discussed Czech President Václav Klaus’s involvement with and support of jazz. In it, I quoted a communique from the fine Czech pianist Emil Viklický: There is a new CD coming out from Prague Castle - George Mraz’s 60th birthday. Multisonic asked me to … [Read more...]
Drummin’ and Writin’ Man
Rifftides readers interested in knowing more about the great drummer and arranger Tiny Kahn (discussed in this posting) will find it in Burt Korall’s Drummin’ Men—The Heartbeat of Jazz: The Bebop Years. From Korall’s chapter on Kahn: His drumming made bands sound better than they ever had … [Read more...]
Artt Frank
Stan Levey was two years younger than Kahn, but in 1944, at eighteen, was Dizzy Gillespie's drummer and provided Kahn with lessons by example. Nearly a decade younger than Levey, Artt Frank was fifteen in 1948 when he frequented 52nd Street, convinced Levey that he was serious about learning to play … [Read more...]
Accent On Youth
Where will we find new jazz writers and critics? At least one will develop his or her chops under the sponsorship of Jerry Jazz Musician. Joe Maita, the proprietor of that estimable web site, is holding a competition to choose someone fourteen to seventeen years old to become a columnist for JJM. If … [Read more...]
Basie and Billie
The comprehensive boxed set Count Basie and his Orchestra: America’s # 1 Band (Columbia/Legacy) has been out for a couple of years during which I have played it so often that if it was on vinyl LPs, I’d have worn them out. Its four CDs contain the most important Columbia recordings of the Basie … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra: Bartoli
Responding to the Rifftides posting about La Scena Musicale, Paul Conley of KXJZ in Sacramento, California, led us to his colleague Jeff Hudson's interview with the mezzo soprano Cecilia Bartoli. This site has Hudson's short and longer interviews with Bartoli and excerpts of her singing. Many jazz … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra:Overgrown Path
Speaking of being led, here's a double lead. On the home page of the Bill Evans website, I found a link to a blog about classical music that has an erudite, informed posting about Evans. Among other interesting facts about the great pianist, the anonymous author of the blog called On An Overgrown … [Read more...]
Weekend Extra: BD For DDD
Happy birthday to one of my favorite fellow bloggers, DevraDoWrite, who reports that it's going to be more or less business as usual today. But there is nothing usual about her business, which, at the moment, includes writing a biography of Luther Henderson, an underheralded figure in twentieth … [Read more...]
Mandel On Kahn
And now, a visit from the lovely and popular Mea Culpa. Please disregard the arranger credits contained in this posting of two days ago. Johnny Mandel did not arrange “TNT,†“Blue Room,†“Who Fard That Shot?,†“My Heart Stood Still†and “Jeepers Creepers.†After faithful reader … [Read more...]
Digital Salvation
Persistance and dumb luck have solved the computer conundrum that derailed Rifftides for a couple of days. Thanks for your forebearance. You did forebear, didn't you? At any rate, we're back on the tracks. … [Read more...]
North Of The Border
Marc Chénard, the jazz editor of La Scena Musicale, sent me his review of Take Five: The Public and Private Lives of Paul Desmond, thus acquainting me for the first time with an impressive Canadian magazine. La Scena Musicale publishes a relatively new English edition,The Music Scene, as well as … [Read more...]
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