Friday, April 27, 2007

Up to Date Jazz Update - 27 April - Play List

Another triumph for jazz on the radio on today's KCUR's Up to Date with Steve Kraske.

Listen to the segment
The Play List (annotations to come)

Artist - Bukeka Shoals With Ken Lovern's OJT
CD - OJT + B (Jazz Daddy Records)
Track - Middle of the Road


Artist - Robert Glasper (pictured at right)
CD - In My Element (Blue Note/EMI)
Track - F.T.B.


Artist - Metheny Mehldau
CD - Quartet (Nonesuch)
Track - A Night Away


Artist - Michel Camilo
CD - Spirit of the Moment (Telarc)
Track - Hurry Up And Wait


Artist - Terrel Stafford Quintet
CD - Taking Chances - Live at the Dakota (MaxJazz)
Track - Pegasus


Artist - Matt Wilson's Arts & Crafts
CD - The Scenic Route (Palmetto)
Track - The Scenic Route


If you like these jazz segments, please let us know. Email the show at uptodate@kcur.org

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Jazz on the radio

I'm doing another Jazz Update on KCUR's Up to Date this Friday.

Details are at The New Low Down
.

Cedar Waxwings


Cedar Waxwing
Originally uploaded by camden hackworth.
One of the highlights of this spring was the visit we received from a flock of cedar waxwings. The showed up one day looking like masked bandits and parked themselves in the bare limbs of our neighbor's Little Leaf Linden tree. A couple times a day they swept in to devour the barries on and under our holly tree. Within a week, most of the berries were off the ground. Gorged on sugar, the flocked moved on.

(Our camera died so I'm borrowing this image from a fine Flickr fan.)

Before this visit, my only association with waxwings was from the opening lines of the epic poem in Vladimir Nabokov's meta novel Pale Fire. I went around repeating it for weeks:

I am the shadow of the waxwing, slain
By the false azure of the window pane.


Nobody got fooled by our windows. I'm looking forward to next year's visit.

Up to Date Jazz Update - 27 April

The Great Kraskini and I will be spinning some new jazz on KCUR's Up to Date this Friday.

The Short List:
  • Michel Camilo - A great trio album from the Dominican pianist, featuring drummer Dafnis Prieto
  • Terril Stafford - The trumpter captured live at the Dakota in Minneapolis, with his new quintet
  • Robert Glasper - Folks looking for a bridge between hip-hop and jazz can look to this talented young pianist
  • OJT+B - KC sounds from Ken Lovern's Organ Jazz Trio and vocalist Bukeka Shoals
When to tune in
  • Friday, April 27 at 11:45 Central (or thereabouts)
Where to tune in
  • KCUR FM 89.3 on your terrestrial radio
  • kcur.org on your web thingee
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UPDATE 4/27 - Another triumph (for jazzishness)

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Show: Matt Wilson's Arts and Crafts

Friday, April 20, 2007 @ The Blue Room

Despite the cover charge and bar tab, it felt more like a house party.

Matt Wilson's Arts & Crafts played three solid sets of top-shelf jazz last Friday at the Blue Room. In the two long breaks in between, the band milled among the tables glad-handing the well-wishers. Arts & Crafts trumpeter Terrell Stafford chatted with local pianist and singer Pamela Baskin-Watson. Local bassist Gerald Spaits worked the room. The Folly's Doug Tatum hung out in a corner with Columbia promoter Jon Poses plotting next year's jazz series at the Folly. A group of hepsters from the UMKC Jazz program (I'm just guessing, they could also be from Jim Mair's jazz program at KCK Community College) called out requests that were honored. Organ-meister Ken Lovern floated in and back out.

In the midst of it all, beer in hand was our host, Matt Wilson. Wilson is a tall job. He looks like the human you'd get if you combined Al Franken and Tim Robbins. He laughs easily on stage and off the high spirits seem to be contagious. Keyboard wizard Gary Versace got out his accordion. Bassist Dennis Irwin told a joke and later brought out his clarinet for a couple numbers.

There's good reason for Wilson to feel comfortable around here. Though he lives in New York now, Wilson grew up in Central Illinois and went to college in Wichita where he studied with Dr. J.C. Combs. I overheard him say he's got family in Springfield and Neosho.

The Arts & Crafts approach, according to Wilson, is using whatever is at hand to express yourself. For Wilson this applies applies as much to repertoire as to instrumentation. The band covered everything from Thelonius Monk to Bossa Nova to Jackie Byard to eclectic originals like "Free Range Chicken." "Chicken" is, by the way, the first time I've heard bubble wrap employed in a jazz setting, but then I don't get out much. The everything-AND-the-kitchen-sink approach covers over a multitude of distractions: when the credit card terminal at the bar went off during "Chicken" it sounded like it was right on cue.

Wilson employed both matched and trad grips, used both ends of his drumsticks, the window sill and what looked like a shoelace full of metal bits on the cymbal. Stafford used a series of mutes including a red plumber's helper to broaden the palette of his trumpet. You might expect a horn player to be the odd man out in this kind of setting, but the arrangements and Stafford's rhythmic attack kept him very much in the mix.

For me the standout of the evening was keyboard player Gary Versace. He traded between the piano the Hammond B3 throughout the night, counting the steps at Wilson's request ("...9, 10, 11 and done!"). Versace is the newest member of the group, taking over for founding pianist/organist Larry Goldings. His work at the organ in particular added an almost mystical sheen to the often antic proceedings.

Wilson has stated often that improvisational jazz is about finding the moment. An apt illustration of this came in the third set. Versace had moved from the piano to the organ as Stafford introduced the original tune "Lester," a tribute to Lester Bowie. He sat staring at his charts (he is the new guy after all) then he whispered to Wilson, "I think accordion!" Wilson half nodded and half shrugged. Versace moved over to get his squeezebox and away he went. A moment later Wilson was grinning like a loon. It was definitely the right call.

More info
The Arts & Crafts Myspace page

Set Lists
We See (Monk)
The Scenic Route*
The Bat (Pat Metheny)
Rejoicing (Ornette Coleman)
Love Walked In

Clarinet/Accordion duet
Cuban Carnival Song
Tenderly
Free Range Chicken*
Beija Flor
We'll Be Together Again (Frankie Lane)

Confirmation (Charlie Parker)
Lester (for Lester Bowie)*
Aluminum Baby (Jakie Byard)
In Touch With Dewey*

*Wilson original

Thursday, April 19, 2007

What Boots is Doing

This should be worth a listen: The "Yakety Sax" man himself, Boots Randolph is putting out an album of jazz standards.

At 79, Boots Randolph has played with everybody from Elvis and Buddy Holly to REO Speedwagon. And he's put out scores of albums, covering pop, country and gospel. So why not serve up some standards?

The track list includes tunes by Charlie Parker (Billie’s Bounce), Mink ('Round Midnight) and Basie (Stompin’ at the Savoy), plus (the inevitable) Nature Boy and, just for grins, Take Me Out to the Ballgame.

A Whole New Ball Game drops on June 12 from the good folks at Zoho.

Speaksing of Yakety Sax, I think it's good to be reminded that there was a time when a instrumental could become a mega-smash-hit. Yakety Sax hit the charts in 1963 and stuck around for a year, in the process working its way into the culture. The song remains a comic safety net for every one from Benny Hill to The Daily Show.

Here's a live performance featuring Boots, Chet Atkins and Ray Stevens (and introduced by a vaguely reptilian Ralph Emery).

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Speaking of Benny Hill, this video must qualify as one of the most sacrilegious (and hilarious) uses of Yakety Sax. Apologies in advance.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

2007 Rhythm and Ribs - Headliners


Attention KC readers.

Happy-Go-Global-Local Pat Metheny will headline the 3rd Annual Rhythm and Ribs Festival. The American Jazz Museum made the announcement today. The other headliners are a pair of smoothies: George Benson and Al Jarreau.

(I don't care what anybody says: "Breezin'" makes me happy for a least a half an hour.)

Organizers are promising 40 other national and local musical acts. The only one named so far is Javon Jackson, but that's good news to me. The young (a.k.a., my age) sax player is definitely one to watch. And his website says he'll be playing with two keyboard greats: Dr. Lonnie Smith and Les McCann. So that will definitely be worth it.

Rhythm & Ribs will also bringing back its amateur BBQ contest. I can already smell the woodsmoke.

Dates:
June 15-16, 2007
Location: 18th & Vine

» More info to come on the Rhythm & Ribs website.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

KC Alert: Matt Wilson



[Note: Video updated 01 Feb 08]

Hotshit drummer Matt Wilson's Arts & Crafts ensemble is coming to the Blue Room on Friday (April 20) and the show is definitely worth checking out. Wilson is touring in support of a new album Arts and Crafts, just out on Palmetto.

To get a taste of what to expect, check out the eccentrically framed video of "The Scenic Route," captured in February at the Elmhurst Jazz Festival in Elmhurst, Illinoize. The Arts and Crafts group features of M@ (that's his new symbol) on skins, Terell Stafford on trumpet; Dennis Irwin, on the doghouse and Gary Versace, being heroic on the Hammond B3.

Versace should be as much fun to see as Wilson. They both did amazing work on Dan Balmer's recent Thanksgiving album. And Versace also lent his magic fingers to The Places You'll Go
(Songlines), a fine album by featuring guitarist Brad Shepik. He's taking the Hammond, that workhouse of the blues, to fascinating new places. Definitely not Butter For Yo Popcorn.

Terell Stafford, by the way, has a new album out: Taking Chances - Live at the Dakota (released March 13 on MaxJazz).

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Turtle Island plays Trane



The violin has long been my favorite jazz instrument. And I'm one of those geeks whose ears perk up at the blending of jazz and classical.

So you might think I'd be thrilled about the Turtle Island Quartet's album: "A Love Supreme", which TelArc released late last month. And yet there's something a little Wynton stiff about the performance in the video above.

You be the judge.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Paolo Conte



I treated myself to the Nonesuch edition of The Best of Paolo Conte recently. Go ahead, call me a rank sentimentalist. It won't hurt.

If you get the same notion, be prepared. The packaging is accurate but several tracks are mislabeled on the CD.

But anyway, I bring up Conte to present the piece of useless information.

His show at the Masonic in San Francisco, on a suitably rainy night in 2001, was The Greatest Single Concert I've Ever Attended. Hands down.

I think it had a lot to do with the element of surprise: I was prepared for Conte; his band blew the roof of the dump. And they did it with the studied nonchalance of Roman street cats.

The video above gives a sense of what I experienced that night.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Hiatus

hi·a·tus noun
A break in something where there should be continuity; A gap where something is missing, especially in manuscripts.

...and in blogs, I guess.

As all four of you may have noticed, I've been neglecting this blog in favor of off-line pursuits. That, and my camera died.

Chief among my current pre-occupations is figuring out how to inveigle myself into this:

The Public Radio Talent Quest


Check it out. And then sign up. And then vote for me (assuming you like what I post once the contest begins next week).

There are three categories: Talk, entertainment and music.

Any suggestions?

Hiromi's Sonicbloom

Hiromi's Sonicbloom: Time Control



Hiromi's back, y'all. The new album Time Control dropped March 27. Haven't heard it yet, but the video above would indicate more of the energetic angularity that was so pleasant on last year's Spiral. (The video would also indicate that beneath all that jazzfire she's also an endearingly dorky young woman-person).

Instead of the trio, the ensemble this time is Hiromi's Sonicbloom. Not to be confused with the appetizer at Outback Steakhouse. Ms Uehara's site has this to say:

Recorded at Blackbird Studios in Nashville in October 2006, Hiromi’s Sonicbloom includes British bassist Tony Grey and Slovakian drummer Martin Valihora, and features a more explosive sound, thanks to special guest David “Fuze” Fiuczynski, the iconoclastic jazz-rock guitarist from Screaming Headless Torsos, KIF, Lunar Crash and Black Cherry Acid.

All rightee, then. I'm intrgued.