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7/9/2015 Jazzin - July 2015 -
http://www.louisvillemusicnews.net/webmanager/index.php?WEB_CAT_ID=50&storyid=10915&headline=Jazzin&issueid=317 1/4
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JULY 2015 ARTICLESCOVER STORY
Down On The CornerPaul Moffett
COLUMNS
I've Got A Mind To RambleLes ReynoldsJazzinMartin Z. Kasdan Jr.News From The PitEddy MetalRock Closeup Bradley WayneTracyEddy Metal
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Welcome to the return of my column. I have been gone for too long from the nowvirtual pages of LouisvilleMusic News. I have written partial columns for going on three months, but (to coin a cliche) stuff happened. Lotsof unanticipated bumps in the ol' road of life. Along the way, I misplaced my notebook with my concert notes forStevie Wonder, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Dreamland's Jazz Festival (which featured Trevor Watts andVeryan Weston, Jack Wright's WREST, Ken Vandermark and Tim Barnes, and Rob Mazurek's Black Cube SP. Iwill just say briefly, from memory, that Stevie Wonder, who performed his 1976 3LP masterpiece, Songs in theKey of Life, is still on top of his game. The PHJB was, as always, lots of fun mixing traditional New Orleansmusic with new songs in the tradition from their Kevin Rattermanengineered 2013 album, That's It!.Dreamland's 4evening festival brought rarelyheard avantgarde jazz to Louisville. I was fortunate to see RobMazurek's Black Cube SP a second time in New Orleans, both times playing music from the recent Cuneiformrelease Return the Tides: Ascension Suite and Holy Ghost. Despite its title, it draws more from the blisteringelectricity of early 1970s Miles Davis than from John Coltrane or Albert Ayler.
This marks the 50th anniversary of the Jamey Aebersold Summer Jazz Workshops. As I write this, the first weekhas just finished, and the second week will begin Sunday, July 5 and run through Thursday, July 9. There are freeconcerts given by the distinguished faculty every evening at 7:30 at Comstock Hall, at the University ofLouisville School of Music. Among the roster of topnotch musicians are bassist David Friesen and altosaxophonist Jim Snidero, whose recent releases were reviewed here in March(http://www.louisvillemusicnews.net/webmanager/index.php?WEB_CAT_ID=50&storyid=10092&headline=Jazzin&issueid=313). Other "headliners" include bassist RufusReid, guitarist Dave Stryker (whose new release, Messin' with Mister T is reviewed below), Randy Brecker(Wednesday only), and more. These are all musicians whose gigs would require significant cover charges inclubs around the country, but, to add emphasis, these are free.
Dreamland, 810 E Market St., is presenting a wideranging series of events this month. They include films, nonmainstream rock, and more. Two which might be of particular interest to the jazz community are: bassist JasonAjemian and Louisville band Sapat on July 18, and cellist Daniel Levin and percussionist/composer Tim Daisyon July 25. Dreamland's Facebook page may be the best way to stay informed on these and other events, as wellas getting links to sample the works of the featured artists.
The Laughing Derby at The Comedy Caravan, 1250 Bardstown Road, Louisville, KY 40204, 5024590022,http://laughingderby.com. The Don Krekel Orchestra will continue its gigs there on the third Monday of eachmonth, which will be July 20. Please contact the club for any postdeadline information.
The Decca Lounge and Restaurant (812 East Market Street, Louisville, Kentucky 40206; 5027498128;http://deccarestaurant.com) presents weekly jazz on Monday nights, featuring The Buzzard, with Tim Whalen,tenor; Pete Petersen, keys; Danny Kiely, bass; and Mike Hyman, drums. There are also other occasional jazzevents, for which the website and Facebook page may be the best ways to keep updated.
The Nachbar (969 Charles Street, 5026374377, www.myspace.com/thenachbar)features "Nachbar Jazz" onWednesdays, for free, with Jacob Duncan. SqueezeBot Sundays through Labor Day, 811PM, free. Check theclub for updates or changes. The club also has a Facebook page with occasional updates.
HAPPY 21st ANNIVERSARY To The Jazz Kitchen (5377 N College Ave., Indianapolis, IN 46220; phone:3172534900; www.thejazzkitchen.com), presents nightly offerings of local and regional jazz; check the websitefor the full schedule and updates. They have a really heavy guest lineup, for which a road trip might be advised:
Jazzin'By Martin Z. Kasdan Jr.
ON THE HORIZONJAMEY AEBERSOLD SUMMER JAZZ WORKSHOP FACULTY CONCERTS
SELECTED CLUB AND OTHER LISTINGS
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Anat Cohen: Luminosa (Anzic, www.anzicrecords.com) I've had the good fortune tosee Anat Cohen a few times over the past several years at the New Orleans Jazz andHeritage Festival. Her playing (clarinets, saxophones) is equally at home in traditionalswing settings as well as more adventurous modern contexts. On her latest album, sheis joined by Jason Lindner (keyboards), Joe Martin (bass) and Daniel Freedman(drums), with guests and her Choro Adventuroso project. The material ranges from herinterpretations of pieces by Milton Nascimento ("Lilia") and Romero Lubamba("Bachião"), to "Putty Boy Strut" by Flying Lotus, to originals. "Lilia" opens the disc,swaying gently, with Cohen's sweet but strong clarinet. The Flying Lotus cover shows
the deftness of the ensemble while handling tricky rhythms. "Ima," a Cohen original, is a lovely waltz, picking upmomentum as it progresses. Over the course of an hour, Cohen demonstrates her absorption of influence rangingfrom Brazilian to swing, with the final piece, her "The Wein Machine," capturing her fiery tenor sax in the moststraightahead piece on the album. Cohen's superb playing is the tie that binds throughout the varying styles andshifts in personnel here.
Wes Montgomery: In the Beginning (Resonance, www.resonancerecords.com)
July 1718, bassist extraordinaire Victor Wooten; July 25: saxophonist Tim Warfield.
Please sign up for updated local jazz listings: The Louisville Jazz Society provides weekly email updates forlocal jazz happenings. Be sure to sign up for the email "Louisville Jazz Society's "Jazz Insider" atwww.louisvillejazz.org. A monthly calendar of local jazz events is at the Louisville Jazz Society's website:http://louisvillejazz.org/calendar. It is both impossible for me to try to provide complete listings here, and itwould be duplicative of the weekly listings in the CourierJournal and LEO and the Louisville Music Newsmonthly music listings, www.louisvillemusicnews.net.
Dave Stryker: Messin' With Mister T (Strikezone, www.davestryker.com) Dave Stryker played for a decadewith the late tenor giant, Stanley Turrentine, and produced this tribute which features a remarkable array of tensaxophonists, one for each track. Stryker's working trio of Jared Gold (Hammond B3), and McClenty Hunter(drums) provides more than just accompaniment for the many guests. The album kicks off with Houston Personburning up a classic shuffle, "La Place Street," which sets the mood and groove for the album. Louisville's DonBraden, tapped for the title track, moves from deliberate accents to impassioned long lines. Stryker opens "In aSentimental Mood" with a delicate a cappella solo, before being joined by elder statesman Jimmy Heath, whosegentle tone is exquisite. Other highlights include Aebersold faculty members Chris Potter on an intense renditionof Coltrane's "Impressions" (recorded by Turrentine on his classic 1970 album Sugar) and Eric Alexanderweaving through Milton Nascimento's "Salt Song." Stryker clearly learned a great deal from his time withTurrentine, such as when to comp and when to solo, how to dig deep into the blues, and more. Stryker told merecently that he had wanted to record this project for a long time, and that the willingness of the manysaxophonists to participate in the recording over a short period of time was clearly a labor of love. He spreads thelove throughout this 71minute album, swinging hard. Mister T would surely be proud of his guitarist's "messin'"with him with such love and respect.
Kermit Ruffins & The Barbecue Swingers: #imsoneworleans (Basin Street,www.basinstreetrecords.com) Trumpeter/singer Kermit Ruffins' latest release couldn'tbe more appropriately titled. It's paced like a club set, starting with its rollicking themesong, and ending with a slow blues version of "#imsoneworleans," complete with bandintros and thanks. In between, Ruffins and company rhumba through the classicProfessor Longhair "Tipitina," and sway with steel pans on the Caribbeanstyledoriginal "Mexican Special." Standards are updated, with Nayo Jones singing "At Last,"and Ruffins' daughter sweetly tackling "Somewhere Over the Rainbow." But "NewOrleans" is synonymous with "Party," and the Swingers funk it up on the original "Put
Your Right Foot Forward" and the Mardi Gras Indian classic "Iko Iko." This is music for fun, with a simpaticoband led by the charismatic Ruffins.
Steve Smith and Vital Information NYC: Viewpoint (BFM Jazz,www.bfmjazz.com) Having made a name for himself in the pop band Journey,drummer Steve Smith founded Vital Information, which has released many albumsover the past three decades and counting. Best known for intelligent fusion, Smith andcompany (Mark Soskin, piano and organ; Baron Browne, bass; Andy Fusco, alto sax;Vinny Valentino, guitar) have produced an album which is a testament to howmainstream jazz still sounds fresh. After a trick opening to Thelonious Monk's"Bemsha Swing," the band gives this jazz classic a backbeat. Guitar and saxophoneintertwine on "Time Check," followed by Valentino's "The Brush Off," in whichSmith's brushwork drives the shuffle with subtle playing by Soskin and the composer.
From there, Smith pushes the band on a fast lain number, "Time Check," from the Buddy Rich songbook(augmented by saxophonist Walt Weiskopf, who also arranged the piece). The rest of he album alternates songswith drum interludes. The band closes with two concert performances, "The Blackhawk" (sounding like a tributeto the soul jazz of Eddie Harris and Les McCann) and "The Bottom Line," a fastpaced postbop piece with amore electric edge than the rest of the album. Although this album has just been released, both the studio and livesongs were recorded in Fall 2011. If the same players continue today, they should record a followup.
EIGHTH NOTES
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Resonance Records continues to present previously unreleased works by jazz masters.This second release of archival music from the legendary Wes Montgomery is true toits title; the music here is from 1949 (three tracks) and 19551958. All but one song ofdisc one was recorded at The Turf Club in Indianapolis, and four of the tunes on thesecond disc (it's a 2CD, 3LP set) were also taped on location in Indy and Chicago.There are also five songs from a Columbia recording session in 1955, and three from a1949 session in California. That Montgomery was a great and groundbreakingguitarist, even in his early days, is welldocumented here. What amazed me, though,was the remarkably high audio quality, especially surprising for the club dates.Montgomery works out with his brothers Monk Montgomery on bass and Buddy
Montgomery on piano, along with Alonzo "Pookie" Johnson on tenor ands Sonny Johnson on drums for most ofthe Turf Club pieces. They play with breathtaking speed and precision on "Fascinating Rhythm," and maintain amostly uptempo program. The only ballad is a vocal rendition of "I Should Care," sung by Debbie Andrews, withaccompaniment only by Wes. The band digs deep into the blues on "Going Down to Big Mary's," also withsinging by Andrews. The second CD starts with 12minute workouts on "Soft Winds," with Wes playing stinginglines and "Robbins' Nest," with his work presaging his mature style. The 1955 studio cuts feature the Turf Clublineup, but in 3minute versions of three originals and "Love for Sale" and "Undecided." These demonstrate howWes and his compatriots could distill the essence of their work into miniatures. After another live 12minutebarnburner, "All the Things You Are," the album closes with the 1949 sessions, three 3minute urban bluessongs.
David Torn: only sky (ECM2433, www.ecmrecords.com) The album credits theartist with guitar and electric oud; the press release adds realtime mechanical andelectronic modifications. Torn's first album in eight years is a journey through ambientsounds, often foreboding. "Spoke with folks" lightens the mood a bit, a cousin to someof Bill Frisell's"ok, shorty" is a sweet interlude, followed by the eerie "was a cave,there...." "Reaching barely, sparely fraught" is harderedged, veering into anexperimental rock space. The title track is dark and shimmering. Torn effectivelyharnesses both his instruments and his electronics in the creation of atmospheric pieceswhich might work well as a science fiction soundtrack. In short, this is intriguing andadventures work.
Nels Cline and Julian Lage: Room (Mack Avenue1091, www.mackavenue.com)Two superb guitarists meet and play, but this is not a lush, romantic pairing. There issteelyeyed intelligence here, as Cline and Lage challenge each other and the listenerwith ten original compositions (seven by Cline, two by Lage, and a collaboration). Ashort, soft but offkilter "Abstract 12" opens, followed by an edgy "Racy." Theystretch out on "The Scent of Light," a spare piece with lots of space, callandresponse,and a buildup near the end that reminded me of early Larry Coryell. "Whispers fromEve" is a pretty tune, while "Blues, Too" plays with the title concept without goingstraight for 12bar, and is dedicated (as is the entire album) to Jim Hall. Not noted onthe album, but in the press release, is the fact that Lage is heard on the left, Cline on
the right. The longest piece on the album, the 10:30 "Freesia/The Bond," is my favorite. It's a stately fantasia,which slowly spins a delicate sound tapestry. Throughout the recording, the artists impress with their obvious"big ears," listening to one another, stepping back from time to time, and pushing each other when the music callsfor it. This is an album which should appeal not only to fans of the guitar, but to anyone interested in adventurousyet subtle music.LOCAL JAZZ CONTACTS
With two nowsixteenyearold daughters, it's hard to get out as much as I would like to hear music. As a result,picking and choosing which performances to catch sometimes require that I postpone seeing some of the localmusicians and singers in order to not miss the onenightstands from outoftown artists. Invariably, I feel guilty,so in an effort to assuage my guilt and, more positively, to provide more exposure to our community of greatlocal jazz performers, I am initiating this feature containing website and email contact information. I am onlyincluding those artists who have given their permission to me; some have indicated a preference for websitelisting only; others have only email addresses. If you wish to be included, drop a line to me with your permissionand preferences, at [email protected]. I reserve the right to edit and to exclude those whose connection to jazzis, in my opinion, tenuous; and this feature may end up online if it begins to take up too much space in print.
MIKE TRACY: www.michaeltracy.com, [email protected], saxophonist and teacher Mike Tracy
UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE JAZZ PROGRAM: www.jazz.louisville.edu
BOBBY FALK: www.myspace.com/bobbyfalk, drummer and composer Bobby Falk;
WALKER & KAYS: www.walkerandkays.com, singer Jeanette Kays and guitarist Greg Walker;
JENNIFER LAULETTA: www.jenniferlauletta.com, singer Jennifer Lauletta;
JEFF SHERMAN: [email protected], guitarist Jeff Sherman;
RON JONES: www.ronjonesquartet.com, [email protected], saxophonist Ron Jones;
STEVE CREWS: www.jazzcrews.com, [email protected], pianist Steve Crews.
1) I am always int7erested in your comments. Contact me at [email protected].
CODA
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Tags:JazzMartin Z. Kasdan Jr.Dave StrykerKermit Ruffins & the Barbecue SwingersSteve Smith
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