“2010 NEA Jazz Masters Recipients Announced”

Bobby Hutcherson

The National Endowment For The Arts has announced the 2010 Jazz Masters Fellowship recipients.  They include Bobby Hutcherson (pictured above), Cedar Walton and Yusef Lateef.

From their website:

“The National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters Fellowships are the highest honors that our government bestows upon jazz musicians. These fellowships are given in recognition that this magnificent art form, so profoundly based in American culture, is one of America’s greatest gifts to the world.”

All the recipients can be seen here.

“New York Loses Its Jazz Festival”

Jazz Fest

NY TIMES
By BEN SISARIO
May 19, 2009

Around this time of year, posters for the JVC Jazz Festival would be appearing on the streets of New York, and jazz tourists would be finalizing plans to arrive in the middle of June for two weeks of bragworthy shows.

But for the first time in 37 years, there will be no major summer jazz festival in New York. Nor will there be related series in Miami or Chicago, as the concert company behind them is suffering a financial crisis.

At stake is one of the most celebrated legacies in American music. Two years ago the impresario George Wein sold his company, Festival Productions, to a group led by Chris Shields, a charismatic entrepreneur who planned to transform Mr. Wein’s empire through aggressive growth. Now that plan has all but collapsed, as Mr. Shields’s company, Festival Network, has lost its top sponsor, as well as several signature festivals, delivering what many call a painful blow to jazz.

In an interview Mr. Shields, 38, largely blamed the economy for his company’s woes. “I’ll certainly take criticism for the robust growth plan,” he said. “It may have been too robust for the time. I think if we weren’t faced with this economy, we would have been just fine.”

But business associates and former employees, many of whom would not comment publicly because the company still owes them money, say that Festival Network overspent on booking talent and took unnecessary risks, including opening four new festivals last summer without securing sufficient sponsorship.  Full Article…

“Herbie Hancock – Live 1975″

Herbie Hancock

Never Enough Rhodes has a great post of Herbie Hancock and Mwandishi recorded live in 1970 at NDR Studios in Hamburg, Germany.  It is almost 3 hours long and is one continuous take of three classic tracks.  Full post here…

Players:
Herbie Hancock – Fender Rhodes, Acoustic Piano
Bennie Maupis – Tenor Sax, Flute, Bass Clarinet
Eddie Henderson – Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Julian Priester – Trombone
Buster Williams – Bass
Billy Hart – Drums

Herbie Hancock – Speak Like a Child from “Live at NDR Studios”

“Beamed From Tomorrow”

Sun Ra

NY TIMES
April 30, 2009
By HOLLAND COTTER

PHILADELPHIA — The jazz musician Sun Ra, ambassador from the Airy Kingdom World Tomorrow, creator of Enterplanetary Solar Exploding Music, and founder of the Astro Intergalactic Infinity Arkestra, is a hero of mine.

To my ears he was not only a genius composer, keyboardist and bandleader, but also constantly surprising. One minute he’s playing elevator schmaltz; then he’s making you float on air; then he’s making you deaf. I love that he was a sharp dresser, sort of kingly, sort of queenly, in faux leopard-skin capes and miner’s hats with lights.

I also admire him for transcending existential categories. He insisted he hadn’t been born, but always existed, coming to Earth from outer space, specifically the planet Saturn. Like many immigrants, he was self-invented, but radically so. He rejected being black or white or American or even human. He opted for extraterrestrial and wore his otherness like a crown.

You’ll find evidence for all of this in “Pathways to Unknown Worlds: Sun Ra, El Saturn & Chicago’s Afro-Futurist Underground, 1954-68,” a small, piquant exhibition of art, writing and ephemera related to his life at the Institute of Contemporary Art here.

Although he kept the precise facts of his early life under wraps, documents show that he was beamed down to Birmingham, Ala., in 1914 as Herman Poole Blount, affectionately known as Sonny. In 1952 he changed his name to Le Sony’r Ra, Ra being the ancient Egyptian solar god. And as a performer he became Sun Ra.

He had at least as many talents as monikers. In addition to being a musician, he was a poet, philosopher, painter, graphic designer, street lecturer, activist and entrepreneur, as well as a numerologist and mystic. He worked out the fate of the universe through interpretive readings of the Bible, the Koran and Flash Gordon comic books, concluding that “the only way this world can be saved from being completely destroyed is through music.”

With that in mind, he composed and played without cease for 60 years, first in Birmingham, then in Chicago and New York, and finally in Philadelphia, where he lived until just before his death in 1993.

He also recorded, packaged and tried to sell his music, which, because it was unconventional, wasn’t easy to do. It is the practical side of his career that this exhibition of album jacket designs, posters, news releases and socio-spiritual manifestos, most of them from his formative years in Chicago, focuses on.  Full Article…

“Freddie Hubbard Memorial Planned for NYC”

Freddie Hubbard

JAZZ TIMES
May 1, 2009
By Jeff Tamarkin

A memorial event to honor the late trumpet great Freddie Hubbard, who died last December, will take place next Monday, May 4, 6:30 to 9:30 PM, at the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine, 1047 Amsterdam Avenue (at 112th Street), New York City.

In addition to Hubbard’s widow Briggie, his son Duane and his musical director David Weiss, the following are scheduled to appear:

Donald Byrd, Cedar Walton, Louis Hayes, Charles Tolliver, Wynton Marsalis, Gary Bartz, Slide Hampton, Jimmy Heath, Billy Harper, Joe Chambers, Al Foster, Wallace Roney, Joe Lovano, Buster Williams, Lenny White, Roy Hargrove, Stanley Crouch, Randy Brecker, Javon Jackson, Christian McBride, Carl Allen, Reggie Workman, George Cables, Russell Malone, Jeremy Pelt, Vincent Herring, Larry Ridley, Killer Ray Appleton, Howard Johnson, George Coleman, Jimmy Owens, Don Braden, Peter Washington, Pete “LaRoca” Sims, and the New Jazz Composers Octet (David Weiss, Myron Walden, Jimmy Greene, Steve Davis, Norbert Stachel, Xavier Davis, Dwayne Burno and E.J. Strickland).

The family asks that donations be made in Freddie’s name to the Jazz Foundation of America, which helped take care of Hubbard during his times of illness. Donations can be made online at Jazz Foundation, or make checks payable to:

Jazz Foundation of America
322 West 48th Street 6th floor
New York, NY10036
Attn: In honor of Freddie Hubbard

JAZZTIMES.COM

“Jazz Standards That Aren’t”

Darcy James Argue

NEWSWEEK
April 25, 2009
By SETH COLTER WALLS

If Ellington went indie, he’d sound something like Darcy James Argue

In high-school jazz bands there’s always a group of players who yawn at the song list. Even when the music isn’t that old, it sounds that way to them. Once rehearsals are over, though, the kids pop in headphones to get their fix of their kind of music: maybe Charles Mingus, but more likely hip-hop, punk or dance. It’s not hard to see why, since there hasn’t been a common language between big band and the large swath of modern pop forms for a long time. Though big band has produced many (mostly unheard) innovators since the days of Count Basie and the Duke—think Sun Ra or Carla Bley—a lot of that music has belonged to the free-jazz fringe. By contrast, the gentler innovators who snuggle up close to classical music might seem a tad tame to listeners who need their jazz to cook. This isn’t the fault of the free-jazzers or the classically minded composers. It’s just that jazz has needed writers and players to reconnect the tradition to more modern forms, without falling victim to pastiche.

Each generation tries its hand at grafting new styles onto jazz, with varying results—note Gil Evans’s not-always successful use of Jimi Hendrix’s music—but lately there have been some hip moves in this direction. On the small-ensemble front, Jason Moran has turned the hip-hop anthem “Planet Rock” inside out on piano, while the Bad Plus have proved they can work up a fever interpreting, by turns, the music of Nirvana and Stravinsky. But often as not, the thrills given off by these mash-ups are those of reinvention, as opposed to sui generis invention itself.

For a wholly original take on big band’s past, present and future, look to Darcy James Argue, a 33-year-old Brooklynite who has composed a batch of manifestoes that draws on past legacies, and adds a little postpunk energy to boot. A onetime student of big-band visionary Bob Brookmeyer, Argue himself seems a natural product of an era in which genres can be shuffled with ease on iPod playlists. Talking with him, you go from discussing obscure Italian serialist composers to indie bands like TV on the Radio. The composer calls his music “steampunk big band,” a reference to the niche art movement that fantasizes about modern tech innovations existing in the steam-powered era. That range is reflected—and, more important, is made frictionless—on Argue’s debut record, “Infernal Machines.” Argue’s tunes can command your attention anywhere—no small feat in our media-saturated world. He and his 18-piece Secret Society band pull off the trick by pairing electro-influenced rhythms with fuzzed-out guitars, fearsome horns and chamber-music voicings in the woodwinds. For all this panstylistic erudition, though, Argue’s music still swings hard whenever it wants. “Transit” explodes with an elaborate fire that recalls Mingus’s “Let My Children Hear Music.” The song “Jacobin Club,” named after Robespierre’s merry band, slinks with the sly wit of “Such Sweet Thunder”–era Ellington, proving Argue is no enemy of history. Listen on headphones, and you can hear a lot of rocklike production layering. Two thirds through “Habeas Corpus (for Maher Arar)”— a civil-rights ode that’s timely in light of the Obama administration’s release of Bush-era “torture memos”—the production supports its trombones, stabbing like sirens, with a guitar that chugs ominously low in the mix.  Full Article…

“Looking to the Present While Peeking at the Past”

peace

NY TIMES
April 24, 2009
By NATE CHINEN

The Five Peace Band, a jazz-rock juggernaut, presents a parody of abundance. Led by the guitarist John McLaughlin and the keyboardist Chick Corea — both restless virtuosos, and legends at 67 — the group works hard and fast, with heroic stamina and superhuman technique. Its overall effect can be exhilarating and exhausting. On Thursday, in its first of several sold-out nights at the Rose Theater, a three-hour concert became a tempest, extravagant in almost every sense.

But it wasn’t as if the crowd came unprepared. Mr. McLaughlin and Mr. Corea initiated their partnership last year, touring widely and generating a glut of bootleg videos online. More to the point, the Five Peace Band can’t help recalling a pair of fusion flagships from the 1970s: the Mahavishnu Orchestra, led by Mr. McLaughlin, and Return to Forever, led by Mr. Corea. And as Mr. McLaughlin acknowledged near the top of the show, it has been 40 years since he and Mr. Corea worked on the Miles Davis album “In a Silent Way,” a calmer touchstone of the jazz-rock era.

Here they made some effort to turn the page, opting not to play “In a Silent Way” or its companion piece, “It’s About That Time.” Yet there was a ’70s-era notion of valor coded into much of their playing. Mr. McLaughlin’s solos were marvels of velocity and precision, and though he introduced the occasional quirk — say, a pitch slightly bent with his guitar’s tremolo arm — the outcome always felt resolute.  Full Article…

“The Man Who Improvises With the Tenor Sax”

“John Zorn: The Working Man”

John Zorn

A really nice exclusive interview with John Zorn from Jazz Times.  A great coup for them to get the elusive Zorn to open up on his life and music:

JAZZ TIMES
May 2009
By BILL MILKOWSKI

Think of John Zorn, the American composer, alto saxophonist and conceptualist, as a juggler. Zorn keeps aloft a plethora of radically different projects while also heading up his own label (Tzadik) and acting as artistic director at the Stone, his own cutting-edge performance venue in Manhattan’s East Village. A restlessly creative spirit with a seemingly inexhaustible supply of energy, Zorn is, at age 55, experiencing unprecedented productivity in a career that dates back to the mid-’70s, when he began experimenting with like-minded improvisers and musical renegades on Manhattan’s Lower East Side who, together, forged an alternative movement that would be identified by critics as the “downtown” scene.

“I feel like things are really flowing now, like I’ve hit kind of a peak and I’m riding it,” confessed Zorn during an interview at the Ukrainian restaurant Veselka, a favorite East Village haunt for artists, thinkers and assorted bohemians. “I’m riding the wave and the wave is taking me further. People have told me that with Virgos, your life is like a crescendo. It begins and it slowly gets better and better and better. What better life to have?”

On a Tuesday morning in early February I met Zorn at the Ontological-Hysteric Theater at St. Mark’s Church in the East Village for a dress rehearsal of “Astronome: A Night at the Opera,” his audacious and powerful new musical/theater collaboration with renowned playwright and avant-garde theater pioneer Richard Foreman. A mind-boggling visual explosion featuring a relentless flood of psychedelic, dreamlike imagery and sacred Jewish symbolism, it is fueled by the unbelievably intense soundtrack of Zorn’s Astronome, performed by his extreme hardcore noise trio Moonchild (Joey Baron on drums, Trevor Dunn on fuzz bass and Mike Patton on wordless banshee-scream vocals). The music is so loud and intense, in fact, that warnings are announced before each performance at the Ontological-Hysteric Theater, along with offers of free earplugs for the faint of heart. (The production was filmed for future DVD release which will be available on Zorn’s label Web site, www.tzadik.com).  Full Article…

John Zorn (Naked City) – Snagglepuss from “Naked City”

John Zorn (Naked City) – Latin Quarter from “Naked City Live, Vol. 1″

John Zorn (Masada) – Beeroth from “Masada: Live in Sevilla”