“Icons Among Us”

“Icons Among Us,” a four-part series beginning Monday on the Documentary Channel, serves as a retort to Ken Burns’s 2001 television documentary “Jazz.” It doesn’t make this explicit, but it doesn’t need to. There’s no other elephant in the room.

Mr. Burns’s series, you may remember, outlined styles and eras and individual accomplishments. His film — with a narrator supplying context and imposing historical judgments — attempted to tell the story from the music’s beginning. He put forth a big extra-musical idea: jazz is the music of sophisticated Americans coming to terms with their country’s sickness about race. And he did not bother much with current trends, putting all of jazz since 1960, more or less, inside its final episode.

When Mr. Burns’s documentary came out, some viewers protested the way he seemed to shine up jazz’s past at the expense of its present. This new film strikes a vague blow for those dissenters. In many ways “Icons Among Us” is starkly anti-Burnsian. It suggests jazz more as a philosophical ideal — “a reflection of what life could be,” in the guitarist Bill Frisell’s on-camera words, “where there’s infinite possibilities, and no one gets hurt” — and less as a particular sound or tradition. It’s mostly about musicians currently under 50. It has a lot of time for jazz that’s basically pop: specifically, jam-band music or hip-hop. It presents jazz musicians as gifted but down-to-earth people, not demigods. And it’s extra-wary about the tyranny of the past.  Full Article….

“Finding New Facets in a Treasury of Old Diamonds”

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The Blue Note 7
NEW YORK TIMES
April 16, 2009

The Blue Note 7, appearing through Sunday night at Birdland, upholds an extremely clear agenda with crisp results. Assembled as a tie-in to the 70th anniversary of Blue Note Records, the group has an album, “Mosaic,” featuring new versions of classic tunes from the label’s catalog. And this week’s run concludes a tour that began at the start of this year, hitting 50 cities across the country. There’s reason to trust that the ensemble — a coalition of bandleaders, almost to a man — has established its own sound and footing.

That’s largely true, judging by its animated late set on Tuesday. Beginning and ending strong, with just a momentary lull in between, the Blue Note 7 fulfilled its mandate with precision and more than a whiff of style. There were good, bracing solos all around, especially by the trumpeter Nicholas Payton and the tenor saxophonist Ravi Coltrane. The rhythm section, led by the pianist Bill Charlap, worked impeccably.

Still, there was a hint of creative constraint to the band’s output, which may have had little to do with the musicians themselves. While the recorded legacy of Blue Note reaches back 70 years, the set spanned only a decade, with songs that originally appeared on records between 1958 and 1967. You can hardly fault a decision to focus on the label’s commercial and creative heyday, but it seems to have placed a rigid grid on the group.  Full Article…