Rolling Jazz Thread 2022

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (680 of them)

Great looking compilation of post-war British jazz, featuring Shake Keane, Joe Harriott, Ronnie Scott et al.

https://deathisnot.bandcamp.com/album/i-had-the-craziest-dream-modern-jazz-and-hard-bop-in-post-war-london-vol-1?from=fanpub_fb

Composition 40b (Stew), Friday, 25 March 2022 14:34 (two years ago) link

[tiny thread] Missed this from last week. Great stuff, showing the ongoing fragmentation of 21c art, "we contain multitudes." However NYC is also where true bebop still lives, and IMHO there was no need to take a swipe at Smalls... https://t.co/aXUmRcbuVa

— Ethan Iverson (@ethan_iverson) March 22, 2022

curmudgeon, Friday, 25 March 2022 16:10 (two years ago) link

otm

Mardi Gras Mambo Sun (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 25 March 2022 16:15 (two years ago) link

the distorted lens of formal education
Lol, whut??

Um anyway---some new and recent Sunnyside jazz---think I only recognize Matt Slocum? At least muh lens is ok.
https://myemail.constantcontact.com/Sunnyside-in-Early-Spring.html?soid=1101632560908&aid=rOF0xfVkkdY

dow, Tuesday, 29 March 2022 03:20 (two years ago) link

Oh wow--should check spam folder more often:

https://artistshare.blob.core.windows.net/artists/001/1/images/11079.jpg?1648595335444

and other news via artistshare: http://artistshare.blob.core.windows.net/artists/019/19/downloads/03-23-2022.html

dow, Tuesday, 29 March 2022 23:13 (two years ago) link

My dad's 1968(?) Down Beat review of the Tony Williams with Larry Young and John McLaughlin performing at the Village Vanguard. Since he (famously) hated rock, dad praises the musicians, but undersells it. Me--I'd cut off a toe to hear that show... pic.twitter.com/1OJ4nAvOOZ

— Fitz Gitler (@techdef) March 29, 2022

dow, Wednesday, 30 March 2022 00:22 (two years ago) link

Wonder what Dad thought of their NYC gig w Jack Bruce? Now that's what I call heavy.

dow, Wednesday, 30 March 2022 00:27 (two years ago) link

okay ill admit it, when i was younger i thought that every time someone on a jazz record was credited for "vibes" it meant they hung out at the recording session and made everything feel cool

— Fritz Pape (@fritzpape) March 31, 2022

dow, Saturday, 2 April 2022 19:16 (two years ago) link

If only!

dow, Saturday, 2 April 2022 19:19 (two years ago) link

Lol

“Wow, musicians really liked hanging out with that Milt Jackson guy!”

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Saturday, 2 April 2022 20:32 (two years ago) link

tapes?

Archie Shepp Quintet with Roswell Rudd, Grachan Moncur III, & Beaver Harris (Jimmy Garrison n.p.), Copenhagen, October 1967

📸 Jan Persson / Getty Images pic.twitter.com/WaEt0DI3eG

— jeff (@jazyjef) April 2, 2022

dow, Saturday, 2 April 2022 20:36 (two years ago) link

Oh, here they all are:

Archie Shepp Quintet with Roswell Rudd, Grachan Moncur III, Beaver Harris, & Jimmy Garrison, Copenhagen, October 1967

📸 Jan Persson / Getty Images pic.twitter.com/eDOF4Yf1ko

— jeff (@jazyjef) April 2, 2022

dow, Saturday, 2 April 2022 20:39 (two years ago) link

Archie Shepp & Roswell Rudd, Copenhagen, October 1967

📸 Jan Persson / Getty Images pic.twitter.com/AkWacHY2fT

— jeff (@jazyjef) April 1, 2022

dow, Saturday, 2 April 2022 20:41 (two years ago) link

these were my cheap record finds today O_O

Tidy little pile of jazzers from the chazzer, all early pressings from the 50s/60s pic.twitter.com/F4OhatDX0g

— fell into a green dream (@Mount_Analogue) April 2, 2022

all super-clean and sounding ~incredible~

o shit the sheriff (NickB), Saturday, 2 April 2022 20:42 (two years ago) link

braggin' with the miles davis quintet

o shit the sheriff (NickB), Saturday, 2 April 2022 20:42 (two years ago) link

nice find. are they all english pressings?

also, does chazzer mean charity shop?

budo jeru, Sunday, 3 April 2022 00:57 (two years ago) link

yes and yes! the blue notes are US, but the Miles are all first UK pressings

o shit the sheriff (NickB), Sunday, 3 April 2022 04:04 (two years ago) link

That’s a sweet haul.

reassessing life after bookmarking a Will Smith thread (PBKR), Sunday, 3 April 2022 12:58 (two years ago) link

real good.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Monday, 4 April 2022 23:44 (two years ago) link

From Nonesuch:

Mary Halvorson
Amaryllis & Belladonna
Available May 13
Brooklyn-based guitarist, composer, and MacArthur fellow Mary Halvorson makes her Nonesuch debut with two albums, Amaryllis and Belladonna . The two suites, which Halvorson describes as "modular and interlocking," come in a two-LP vinyl set or as two separate CDs and digital albums. Amaryllis is a six-song suite performed by a newly formed sextet of master improvisers; the Mivos string quartet joins for three of the songs, making this the largest ensemble for which Halvorson has written to date. Belladonna is a set of five compositions written for Halvorson on guitar plus the Mivos Quartet, whose parts are through-composed and augmented by Halvorson's guitar improvisations.

http://maryhalvorson.lnk.to/AmaryllisBelladonna?eml=2022March18/5645359/6011771&etsubid=33248291

dow, Wednesday, 6 April 2022 03:24 (two years ago) link

Links to advance track on bandcamp etc., also video.

dow, Wednesday, 6 April 2022 03:29 (two years ago) link

49 years ago tonight, Pete Cosey makes his debut as a member of Miles’ massive 10-piece live band.

The tape’s a brief one (2 songs, 33 minutes) but Cosey’s solo in “Ife” is the equivalent of a new universe being created in real time. https://t.co/ZhKfNMHhaO

— the Heat Warps (@theheatwarps) April 6, 2022

Via the same links, check also (as we heat warp through electric Miles appearances from 1969 to 197?) the Brazil '74 shows with his three-guitar band (yo Sund4r)

dow, Wednesday, 6 April 2022 04:14 (two years ago) link

Oh, I will look into that. And yeah, the advance Halvorson track is great, actually p tuneful and groovy for her. I heard it some time ago.

And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Wednesday, 6 April 2022 11:18 (two years ago) link

Where hs the Heat Warps been my whole life damn

Otto Insurance (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 6 April 2022 14:45 (two years ago) link

Ornette Coleman's two albums for Contemporary are now back on CD and LP as "Genesis Of Genius" - just the kind of grandiose title his records got early on. Back then, Ornette's champions made extravagant claims on his behalf - that his tunes would become classics, that jazz would never be the same, that his quartet was the hottest thing on New York's incandescent 1959 jazz scene. The thing about Ornette is all that hype turned out to be true.

Kevin Whitehead's good commentary x choice of excerpts---read, stream, dl:
https://www.npr.org/2022/04/06/1091233073/reissue-traces-jazz-giant-ornette-colemans-genesis-of-genius

dow, Thursday, 7 April 2022 17:46 (two years ago) link

i always forget it's shelly manne playing drums on "tomorrow is the question!" -- such a weird choice.

budo jeru, Thursday, 7 April 2022 17:51 (two years ago) link

!

Came Here to Roll the Microscope (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 7 April 2022 18:21 (two years ago) link

I got a copy of that box the other day. Nice packaging, but it's interesting to me that there's no alternate takes from those sessions or anything else — would have been cool if they'd included Live at the Hillcrest Club 1958 (released under Paul Bley's name) as bonus material.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 7 April 2022 18:41 (two years ago) link

i always forget it's shelly manne playing drums on "tomorrow is the question!" -- such a weird choice.

Not so weird surely? Manne sounds right at home on Way Out West, and from there it's not that much of a leap to those first couple of Ornette recs also from way out west). Some of these cats could play on anything.

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 7 April 2022 18:57 (two years ago) link

Chico Pinheiro live-streaming from Mezzrow right now and playing great as always. No Ari Hoenig for Jordan this time, but Alex Kautz is no slouch.This Alex Kautz, not the first Google hit.

Came Here to Roll the Microscope (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 8 April 2022 01:03 (two years ago) link

Yamamoto/Parker/Hirsh/Fowler Quartet Announce "Spontaneous Folk Music" CD Sparks April 29 Via Mahakala Music, Share "In The Garden" Single + Live In-Studio Video
+Playing Vision Fest June 24

Genres: jazz, avant-garde, free jazz
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ddboA1PRG3Y

dow, Saturday, 9 April 2022 17:31 (two years ago) link

ABOUT THE ALBUM

When Eri Yamamoto, William Parker, Chad Fowler and Steve Hirsh settled in for their first recording session together, the engineer shouted “rolling” and sparks flew. But they weren't steel mill sparks: the music unfolding in that moment was more like a crackling campfire, smoke rising slowly, points of light lifting lazily into the breeze — and foreshadowing a greater heat to come.

Such an image is apt for the airy chords with which Yamamoto kicks off the title tune of Sparks, the quartet's new album on Mahakala Music. After her piano begins, like wind chimes playing standards, Parker and Hirsh fall in as if walking up from the woods, and then Fowler's stritch enters, do-re-mi-do, like a sprite carrying memories of a folk song.

“Spontaneous folk music,” says Yamamoto with a ripple of laughter, recalling the phrase Fowler used to suggest the quartet's point of departure that day. And she responded immediately to the premise, as Yamamoto herself has created hybrid free/composed jazz that sometimes harkens back to the traditional Japanese music of her youth, as on her Goshu Ondo Suite. For over a quarter century, she's made waves as she “gracefully bridges the worlds of post-bop and free jazz” according to Time Out New York, with her “evocative songs without words.”

A classically-trained pianist with a vibrant improvisational streak, she's long performed and recorded with William Parker, a composer in his own right and a mainstay of the New York free jazz community. Indeed, playing a session with Parker, who has pursued an unparalleled vision of free jazz since before his days with Cecil Taylor, and whose quartet recordings in this century are legendary, was an inspiration to all. “I've played on nine or ten albums with William as a leader,” says Yamamoto. “He's really been an eye opener for me. It was like he reminded me, 'Ah, I can be free!' And he always writes great melodies, which is very natural for me: start with a good melody, and have a lot of open space.”

With only those sentiments and a brief introductory chat guiding them, the players created these pieces on the spot. And like a strong line in visual art, a spontaneous, striking melody typically jumpstarts each performance on Sparks. That's always been at the core of Yamamoto's playing. “Growing up in Kyoto, I was surrounded by a lot of traditional Japanese music, with very minimalist melodies. I started writing music when I was eight, and I still write the same way. It all starts when I hum some melody. But even with my composed tunes, my approach is to leave a lot of space for musicians to go beyond the form.”

Space is another key element on this album. “Kyoto is a very old city, with a lot of shrines and temples,” says Yamamoto. “And zen philosophy is very prominent there. Sometimes emptiness is more full of feeling.” The space is crucial to even the more lively passages. When Parker announces, “I can pull an old rabbit out of the hat” and launches the swinging “Bob's Pink Cadillac,” Fowler and Hirsh immediately pick up on the groove, spontaneously evoking the classic trio sound of, say, Sonny Rollins' Way Out West. Yamamoto is content to listen, until she's not: reaching into the piano with her left hand, her right hand chops the keys like rim shots. As the tune evolves, Fowler squawks, Hirsh rolls, and Yamamoto is up and down from her seat, first muting strings, then playing traditionally, then plucking the strings like a ragged harp.

“That was completely spontaneous. I don't plan anything, in general. Then after I play, I don't remember anything,” Yamamoto laughs, recalling the performance. “But the piano is a percussion instrument, after all. On that one particular tune, I felt, 'I'm gonna wait until the moment comes.' And then, Boom!”

Such dynamics were typical of the day. As Fowler notes, “We expected this session to be laid back. And there are some moments of beauty and tenderness, but it was anything but mellow, overall.” That's partly thanks to Hirsh's perceptive drumming, ranging from the gentle rattle of shells to to full on Klook-mopping and bomb-dropping as the intensity demands.

Ultimately, the rapid-fire energy, the screeching and hammering, was a natural corollary to the music's spaciousness. For Yamamoto, it's all about dramatic juxtapositions. “I always like contrast in music,” she reflects. “Or in anything. Paintings, poems. The contrast makes art, especially music, more interesting. When I play something, yes, at some points the dynamics get very intense with more notes, but after that, in contrast, having a chunk of space is pretty powerful. That empty spot has more meaning. So I try not to do too much all the time. If I say something, then in the other spot I want to have a chunk of space.”

The miracle of these performances was how well each player tuned in to the others' dynamics, in the moment. Though Fowler and Yamamoto had each played with Parker separately, the saxophonist and pianist had never played together. As it turned out, they surprised each other with some distinctly Asian touchstones at the core of their playing. “'Taiko' is named after my Japanese grandmother, Taiko 'Jean' Sawyer, who passed at 92 in late April of last year,” says Fowler. “Before we started it, I asked the group to play something as a memorial for a lost loved one. My playing references some music of meaning to my grandma, including a minor key version of 'You Are My Sunshine,' her favorite song. None of that was planned, but it came out as we went.”

All told, there's an infectious joy felt as these players encounter each other in this arrangement for the first time. As Yamamoto says, “That was the first time I'd been in a recording studio for a year and half. New York City was locked down for a long time. And I'd never played with Chad or Steve before. But I could tell, just from our first greeting, that we could trust each other. So, returning to the studio with such wonderful musicians, I felt so alive. I said to myself, 'Yes! Yes!'”

She pauses and reflects on the final product. “The four of us really made one music together. Everything was just one take, and I think we really blended well. No one was shy. We just trusted each other and made one sound. Instead of going, 'I'm saying blah blah blah,' and then answering, 'da da da da,' we made one moment together. Spontaneous folk music. Improvising that moment together.”

dow, Saturday, 9 April 2022 17:34 (two years ago) link

April 29 - Full Album

LIVE DATES

April 26 - Album Release Party - Brooklyn, NY @ Bar Lunatico - LINKhttps://www.barlunatico.com/calendar/2022/4/26/eri-yamamotowilliam-parkerchad-fowlersteve-hirsh
April 30 - Radio Appearance on WFMU's Music For a Free World with Dave Sewelson
June 24 - Vision Festival NYC - Full Schedule
https://jazztimes.com/festivals-events/lineups/2022-vision-festival-lineup-announced/

LINKS
Chad Fowler: Website || Instagram
Steve Hirsh: Website || Instagram
William Parker: Website || Instagram
Eri Yamamoto: Website || Instagram
Mahakala Records: Website || Twitter || Facebook || Instagram || Bandcamp

ALBUM CREDITS

Eri Yamamoto – piano
Chad Fowler – stritch and saxello
William Parker – bass
Steve Hirsh - drums

CONTACTS
Press: Gabriel Birnbaum, Gabe at clandestinepr.com
Radio: Evan Welsh, radio at clandestinelabelservices.com

dow, Saturday, 9 April 2022 17:38 (two years ago) link

really enjoying melissa aldana's 12 stars

flamenco drop (BradNelson), Sunday, 10 April 2022 22:56 (two years ago) link

More Miles from xpost The Heat Warps: the same run of shows that gave us Black Beauty (not incl. among these tapes, because officially released:

OTD in 1970, Miles wraps a 4-night stand with the Grateful Dead at Fillmore West.

“What’s the use? How can we possibly play after this? We should just go home and try to digest this unbelievable shit." -Phil Lesh https://t.co/pW1gDy4zqg

— the Heat Warps (@theheatwarps) April 12, 2022

dow, Wednesday, 13 April 2022 17:37 (two years ago) link

Really enjoying that Yamamoto.

Composition 40b (Stew), Wednesday, 13 April 2022 18:16 (two years ago) link

Actually a septet, he corrects later, says he's in denial of Dominique Gaumont's departure:

Today’s tape: The Miles Davis octet ends a brief California run with 4 nights at the Troubadour.

Oscillating between waves of unreal intensity and stretches of near-silence, this is the final tape before the Japanese tour that produced Agharta & Pangaea. https://t.co/ofDrjBoA9n

— the Heat Warps (@theheatwarps) April 14, 2022

dow, Friday, 15 April 2022 00:53 (two years ago) link

How did I not know about Jessica Williams?!

David Bianculli: For over 30 years on our show, we have played recordings by pianist and composer Jessica Williams. We were sorry to learn that she passed away last month on March 10, a week before her 74th birthday, after a period of declining health. She leaves behind dozens of great solo and trio recordings. For several years, Jessica Williams was the house pianist at the Keystone Korner jazz club in San Francisco, where she played with jazz giants, like saxophonists Dexter Gordon, Stan Getz and Charlie Rouse, and drummers Philly Joe Jones and Tony Williams, both of whom she became close to. McCoy Tyner and Dave Brubeck were among the jazz pianists who singled her out for her spectacular playing.

In 1994, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship for composition. After years of trying, we finally were able to bring her to Philadelphia in 1997 to play on FRESH AIR. In a few minutes, we'll hear that performance and the interview she did with Terry. But first, a brief appreciation from our executive producer, Danny Miller.

So Miller plays some favorite Williams tracks, then she demonstrates some ideas she got and adapted from Monk, Garner, Rollins, and, lately stride pianists---good talk, good-to-fairly dazzling music, much more of the latter:
https://www.npr.org/2022/04/15/1093047427/remembering-jazz-pianist-and-composer-jessica-williams

dow, Monday, 18 April 2022 17:13 (two years ago) link

I'm not familiar with her at all either! Will definitely listen.

change display name (Jordan), Monday, 18 April 2022 17:29 (two years ago) link

Same here. I hadn’t heard about her at all until my kid’s piano teacher told me of her passing.

Wile E. Kinbote (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 18 April 2022 17:31 (two years ago) link

My new Stereogum column is up. One commenter fixed on my use of the phrase "highly complex composition in the 'Brooklyn jazz by white people' tradition" but, come on, you can't deny that it's a tradition, school, whatever. I even defined it in a parenthetical - "(long, post-Tim Berne melody lines; intricate tumbling rhythms; sculpted electronic noise; more juxtaposition than harmony)". It's a thing. And I wasn't even defining it pejoratively!

but also fuck you (unperson), Monday, 18 April 2022 18:42 (two years ago) link

Cool, but couldn't you describe a fair amount of jazz by black people the same way? In the same age group, but---maybe more in Chicago than Brooklyn?

dow, Tuesday, 19 April 2022 02:22 (two years ago) link

Where black people making that kind of music are more concentrated, that is (or that's just where I here it more from, while not living in either city)

dow, Tuesday, 19 April 2022 02:24 (two years ago) link

xp yo Sund4r Another guitar trip 4 U, 4 any1 who can dig thee 1981 Middle Eastern answer to 1969 John McLaughlin x Dick Dale's proud roots, lacking a better description, and I'm disgusted with myself for not saying more in these Pazz & Jop comments for 2014:

Omar Khorshid and His Group
Live in Australia 1981

Post-surf electric Eastern modal clarity in waves, wires (duh), and other forms.
Sound quality doesn't bother me at all, though if I knew his studio, suppose it might. Can always turn it up. The excitement of music and audience def cuts through.

He died that same year in a car accident--what a musical life, though:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omar_Khorshid

Haven't got time to check if this is the whole thing, but here's at least some of the live album, with other excerpts also on YouTube:
http
://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrQSA0buXmU&list=RDJrQSA0buXmU&start_radio=1&rv=JrQSA0buXmU&t=2

dow, Wednesday, 20 April 2022 23:01 (two years ago) link

The "In the Garden" clip is wonderful!

And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Thursday, 21 April 2022 03:54 (two years ago) link

Man, thanks for the Omar Khorshid mention, I wasn't familiar with him, he's awesome. Egyptian surf-Morricone guitar, good stuff. His tone is great and his solos are astounding. Like check him out here from about 2:55 on.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=STw2KAShz7E

Oh, you're welcome---also, I finally thought to check Amazon and see that he's got several albums there, incl. the Australian show.

Today’s tapes: Miles begins a 3-week tour of Japan with a pair of thrilling nights in Tokyo. 🇯🇵

Intensely funky and frequently disorienting, these 2 tapes capture a band intent on rebirth and on the path to assuming its final form. https://t.co/MlyAlmw1bL

— the Heat Warps (@theheatwarps) April 22, 2022

dow, Saturday, 23 April 2022 20:42 (two years ago) link

I love this shot of Mingus and Max Roach *in the audience* at Newport. Who’s set were they watching? 1962. pic.twitter.com/zsRX6WB6FD

— Brad Farberman (@BradFarberman) April 22, 2022

dow, Saturday, 23 April 2022 21:06 (two years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.