George, Abe and Lester: It’s President’s Day
If you guessed Bush, Beame and Maddox,step away from your computer and join the 400 Club. If you got Washington, Lincoln and Young, proceed to Doug Ramsey’s post and revel in the sounds of Prez playing “Sometimes I’m Happy.”
-Michael Cuscuna
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George Wein: Premer Producer Of Jazz Events
“The week after our exhilarating Armstrong incident, Big Sid (Catlett) came through once again. Hoagy Carmichael, composer of “Stardust,” and so many other standards, was working at the Copley Plaza Hotel across the square from Storyville. The Plaza had the most elegant music room in the city, and was charging a six-dollar cover for its show — steep by 1950 standards. Sid knew Hoagy, and when he went over to the Plaza, he was able to lure the songwriter back to Storyville, where to everyone’s surprise and delight, Hoagy played and sang an entire forty-minute set. First Pops, and now Hoagy. Who, I wondered, would drop in next?” -George Wein
This JerryJazzMusician interview with George Wein was conducted soon after his autobiography Myself Among Others: A Life In Music was published. In many ways, this lengthy Q & A gives you a more first-hand feel for the man because his spoken responses are transcribed as he said them. The book, on the other hand, is often written from his thought process. Here, you can hear his voice in the truest sense of that phrase.
-Michael Cuscuna
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John Coltrane Slept Here: Preserving His Home in Philadelphia
This All About Jazz column involves the preservation of the house in which John Coltrane lived from 1952 to ’58 in Philadelphia, where he was raised. Philly is only 90 minutes from New York City, but it seems worlds away. It’s a more provincial, insular community than Manhattan, which may be why all the great jazz musicians that it generated, including Coltrane, Lee Morgan, Benny Golson, Ray Bryant, the Heath brothers and dozens more left Philly to make their mark on the world.
-Michael Cuscuna
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Read MoreIt Was An Experience To Behold: Woody Shaw Locks In With Victor Lewis
This 1979 live version of “On Green Dolphin Street” is an absolute killer for Woody Shaw’s phenomenal fluegelhorn solo. Listen to how drummer Victor Lewis drives and colors Woody’s playing. They locked up like that tune after tune, night after night for years. – Michael Cuscuna
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View VideoDissection of Classic Solo: Sonny Rollins Blue 7
Sonny Rollins and the Challenge of Thematic Improvisation (excerpt) by Gunther Schuller The Jazz Review, Vol. 1, No. 1 (November 1958)
A close analysis of Rollins ’ three solos on Blue 7 reveals many subtle relationships to the main theme and its 3-bar sequel. The original segmentation is preserved throughout. Rollins ’ phrases are mostly short, and extended rests (generally from three to five beats) separate all the phrases \u2014 a n excellent example of how welltimed silence can become a part of a musical phrase.
There are intermittent allusions to the motivic fragments of his opening statement. At one point he introduces new material, which, however, is also varied and developed in the ensuing improvisation. This occurs four bars before Max Roach’s extended solo. A partial repetition of these bars after Max has finished serves to build a kind of frame around the drum solo. In this, Rollins ’ second full solo, thematic variation becomes more continuous than in his first time around. After a brief restatement of part of the original theme, Rollins gradually evolves a short sixteenth-note run which is based on our ex. 1, part a.
He reworks this motive at half the rhythmic value, a musical device called diminution. It also provides a good example of how a phrase upon repetition can be shifted to different beats of the measure thus showing the phrase always in a new light. In this case Rollins plays the run six times; as is shown in ex. 3 the phrase starts once on the third beat, once on the second, once on the fourth and three times on the first beat.
Another device Rollins uses is the combining and overlapping of two motives. In his eighth chorus, Rollins, after reiterating ex. 2, part a, continues with part b, but without notice suddenly converts it into another short motive (Ex. 4) originally stated in the second chorus.
But the crowning achievement of Rollins ’ solo is his 11th, 12th and 13th choruses in which out of twenty-eight measures all but six are directly derived from the opening and two further measures are related to the four-bar section introducing Max’ s drum solo. Such structural cohesiveness\u2014without sacrificing expressiveness and rhythmic drive or swing\u2014one has come to expect from the composer who spends days or weeks writing a given passage. It is another matter to achieve this in an on-the-spur-of-the-moment extemporization. (Ex. 6)
The final Rollins touch occurs in the last twelve bars in which the theme, already reduced to an almost rock-bottom minimum, is drained of all excess notes, and the rests in the original are filled out by long held notes. The result is pure melodic essence (Ex. 7.) What more perfect way to end and sum up all that came before!
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View VideoMike Abene on Jazz Education: Learn your Jazz Roots
Pianist, arranger and educator Mike Abene, caught at the recent Jazz Education Network Conference, laments the indifference of many composition students to the great jazz tradition of Ellington, Basie and Lunceford: how Ellington and Strayhorn often draws a “blank stare.” What students miss when they overlook their jazz heritage.
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Lenny Breau – The Tragic Life Of An Extraordinary Guitarist
Guitar god Lenny Breau is absolutely worshipped by those who know his work. Breau had a toubled life in many respects. He moved around quite a bit musically as well a geographically and I don’t think the general public had a handle on who he was and what he was trying to do. Maybe he didn’t either. This Jazz Wax feature includes a full-length documentary on this unique artist in seven parts on YouTube.
-Michael Cuscuna
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Read MoreCharlie Parker Talks With Paul Desmond
Charlie Parker being interviewed by Paul Desmond on a ‘50s radio show. The world’s slowest alto player meets the world’s fastest! This conversation gives insight into Parker’s gentile demeanor, intellect, charm and articulation.
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Anat Cohen: Clarinet for the Global Village
In this edition of Fresh Air with Terry Gross, Anat Cohen vividly recounts her journey to unlock the expressive potential of the jazz clarinet, in the worlds of Louis Armstrong, Abdullah Ibrahim, Ellington, music of Latin America and yes, even her native Israel.
-Nick Moy
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Herman Leonard’s Eye for Jazz
David Friend of Vanity Fair wrote this astute 2010 appreciation of Herman Leonard’s magnificent photography (Herman’s was still alive at the time). Be sure to click on the slide show to see some of his greatest images.
-Michael Cuscuna
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