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61st Annual Critics Poll /// Wayne Shorter /// Charlie Haden /// Robert Johnson /// Christian McBrideAUGUST 2013
Wins!
Jazz
Artist
Jazz
group
Wayne Shorter
Quartet
Jazz
album
Without A Net
Soprano
sax
Hall of Fame
Charlie Haden
Robert Johnson
Poll Winners
91 Top
downbeat.com
Albums
AUGUST 2013
Volume 80 / Number 8
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Contributors
Senior Contributors:
Michael Bourne, John McDonough
Atlanta: Jon Ross; Austin: Michael Point, Kevin Whitehead; Boston: Fred
Bouchard, Frank-John Hadley; Chicago: John Corbett, Alain Drouot, Michael
Jackson, Peter Margasak, Bill Meyer, Mitch Myers, Paul Natkin, Howard Reich;
Denver: Norman Provizer; Indiana: Mark Sheldon; Iowa: Will Smith; Los
Angeles: Earl Gibson, Todd Jenkins, Kirk Silsbee, Chris Walker, Joe Woodard;
Michigan: John Ephland; Minneapolis: Robin James; Nashville: Bob
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York: Alan Bergman, Herb Boyd, Bill Douthart, Ira Gitler, Eugene Gologursky,
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North Carolina: Robin Tolleson; Philadelphia: David Adler, Shaun Brady, Eric
Fine; San Francisco: Mars Breslow, Forrest Bryant, Clayton Call, Yoshi Kato;
Seattle: Paul de Barros; Tampa Bay: Philip Booth; Washington, D.C.: Willard
Jenkins, John Murph, Michael Wilderman; Belgium: Jos Knaepen; Canada:
Greg Buium, James Hale, Diane Moon; Denmark: Jan Persson; France: Jean
Szlamowicz; Germany: Detlev Schilke, Hyou Vielz; Great Britain: Brian Priestley;
Japan: Kiyoshi Koyama; Portugal: Antonio Rubio; Romania: Virgil Mihaiu;
Russia: Cyril Moshkow; South Africa: Don Albert.
AUGUST 2013
On the Cover
Wayne Shorter
Veterans Committee
Hall of Fame
By Frank-John Hadley
By Ted Panken
30
michael piazza
36 Robert Johnson
Charlie Haden
By aaron Cohen
44 Tia Fuller
46 Gregory Porter
48 Gerald Clayton
72 Tommy Emmanuel/
Martin Taylor
78 Gregory Tardy
79 Keith Jarrett/Gary
Peacock/Jack DeJohnette
84 Wallace Roney
50 Jason Marsalis
Rising Star Vibes
By Phillip Lutz
Departments
8 First Take
69 Reviews
98 Toolshed
10 Chords &
Discords
94 Master Class
By Gabriel Alegra
By Hilary Brown
13 The Beat
96 Transcription
52 Derrick Hodge
First Take
By bobby reed
Youthful
Ambition
when youre a youngster can alter your lifes path.
Javon Jackson was 13 when he met Dexter Gordon in Denver and
said to himself, I want to do just what he does. Jackson looked up to
Gordonboth figuratively and literallyas he vividly explains in this
months Blindfold Test, which also includes his anecdote about seeing
Sonny Stitt in concert. When Wayne Shorter was 15 years old, he saw
Lester Young perform in Newark, N.J. Charlie Haden was 18 when he
grabbed a seat on the front row
to see Paul Chambers share the Wayne Shorter
bandstand with Miles Davis,
John Coltrane and Philly Joe
Jones in Los Angeles.
In hindsight, the artists see
these as formative experiences.
Today Jackson is an acclaimed
saxophonist with a discography
of more than a dozen leader projects, and last year he released the
CD Celebrating John Coltrane.
And what ever happened to
those kids crazy kids named
Wayne and Charlie? Well,
Shorter takes home four awards
in this years Critics Poll, and
Haden has just been elected as the
134th member of the DownBeat
Hall of Fame.
As he approaches his 80th
birthday, Shorter remains one of
the most revered musicians on
the planet. He stands eternally youthful and vital, garnering
wins for Jazz Artist, Jazz Album
(for Without A Net), Jazz Group (for the Wayne Shorter Quartet) and
Soprano Saxophone in this years poll. A decade after he was elected into
the DownBeat Hall of Fame, Shorterwhose bandmates in the quartet are pianist Danilo Prez, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Brian
Bladecontinues to make some of the most exciting music of his career.
For this issue, we recruited a couple of saxophonists (who are both
poll winners) to write about Shorters unique artistry. Both of them have
admired Shorters work since the days when they were young, aspiring
musicians. Joe Lovano, this years winner in the Tenor Saxophone category, offers a loving, poetic, exuberant tribute to Shorter. Jon Irabagon,
our winner for Rising StarTenor Saxophone, describes some of his
favorite musical moments in Shorters oeuvre.
Haden, the ultra-melodic bassist, has been an integral contributor to
the music of dozens of Hall of Famers. And now, he rightfully joins
Ornette Coleman, Keith Jarrett and so many more of his collaborators.
We welcome Mr. Haden to the Hall of Fame. Our feature (starting on
page 30) illustrates his deep love for the music and for his colleagues.
Haden has been appearing in (and reading) DownBeat for a half-century.
Each year, our Critics Poll provides a thorough picture of whats happening in the world of jazz, blues and improvised music. With 165 critics voting, and more than 1,000 artists listed, these results provide an
invaluable database for anyone who wants to explore the noteworthy
singers and instrumentalists who are making waves in 2013. This issue is
your invitation to the greatest virtual concert imaginable. Dig in.DB
8 DOWNBEAT AUGUST 2013
adam mccullough
Chords
Discords
Ab
hn
From left:
Drummer Rodney
Green, pianist
Aaron Diehl,
vibraphonist
Warren Wolf
and bassist
David Wong
Jo
bo
tt
Snark Attack
Standing Tall
Too Foul?
I am writing in regard to
the Blindfold Test with
David Weiss in your May
issue. In his comments
about the Peter Evans
Quintet, Mr. Weiss
description includes the
f-word, saying, Its
pretty random for him to
f@*# with his sound like
that . Please keep in
mind that your educational subscriptions reach
younger audiences, and
as an educator, I am disappointed that this kind
of language wouldbe
acceptable.
DownBeat is a great way
to get students interested in
jazz. They can read articles
about artists like Tia Fuller
and TerenceBlanchard,
as well as masters of jazz
like Dave Brubeck. My
students look forward to the
Woodshed section to obtain
information about how
artists think via the transcriptions. I do not condone
this type of language in my
classroom. DownBeat and
its contributors should put
more consideration intowho
the magazines audience is.
Mark A. Russo
Director of Instrumental Music
Constellation Schools Puritas/
Westpark Community
Russo.mark@ConstellationSchools.com
Corrections
The
News
Inside
14 / F
rench Quarter
Festival
15 / Brad Mehldau
at SFJAZZ
16 / Nicole Mitchell
Q&A
18 / Mulgrew Miller
Lickety Split
Signifies Robert
Randolph Revival
Robert Randolph
sam erickson
Kramer. He knows what he wants to hear. And Im the vehicle. I help transfer it into the real world.
Kramer also engineered Robert Randolph Presents: The Slide Brothers,
released in February on Concord Records. Though Randolph appears on a
few tracks from the album, the Slide Brothers are steel players Calvin Cooke,
Aubrey Ghent, Chuck Campbell and Darick Campbell; Randolphs role here
is that of producer and instigator. On the record, most tunes pair two or three
of the Slide Brothers at a time with a rhythm section (some match just one).
The various groupings run through traditional pieces (Motherless Children,
Wade In The Water), pop songs (George Harrisons My Sweet Lord, the
Allman Brothers Dont Keep Me Wonderin) and blues classics (The Sky Is
Crying, It Hurts Me Too). For Randolph, one point of the project is to show
that he is hardly the only steel player out there, and hardly the first to do it.
What happened was, everybody thought I was just some guy from New
Jersey, some strange kid who just started one day to want to play pedal steel.
And its like, no, this is kind of like the Buena Vista Social Club story, man,
says Randolph. This has been going on in our church organization for
80-plus years.
Brad Farberman
AUGUST 2013 DOWNBEAT 13
Dianne Reeves
fests highlights, a Saturday performance by pianist Tom McDermott and His Jazz Hellions.
McDermott, a locally revered keys man, a day
earlier paid tribute to Professor Longhair, James
Booker and Jelly Roll Morton as part of a Piano
Professors salute with Joe Krown and Ronald
Markham Jr. at a packed-out Irvin Mayfields
Jazz Playhouse on Bourbon Street. For the Jazz
Hellions show, McDermott and Singleton were
joined by clarinetist Evan Christopher and singer/soprano saxophonist Aurora Nealand for a
standing-room-only performance at the Palm
Court Cafe, a traditional jazz haven. The decidedly retro fareSaint Louis Blues, Miss The
Mississippi And You, Darkness On The Delta,
Trouble In Mind, Just A Little While To Stay
Herewas topped with Christophers warm,
Steve Masakowski (left) and
Tony Dagradi of Astral Project
philip Booth
Riffs
Chuck Gee
pianist played solo, duo and trio performances, with assistance from fellow pianist Kevin Hays, inventive
drummer Mark Guiliana and Mehldaus own working trio. The opening night of his residency was also the
first solo piano recital to be held at the new SFJAZZ Center, and both artist and audience were curious as to
how the hall would resonate. The sound was crystalline, and Mehldau was comically startled to see audience
members seated above and behind the stage, like the chorus stalls of a classical venue.
Throughout a 90-minute solo set, Mehldau disseminated many of his hallmarksuncanny harmonic
choices, melodic abstraction and left- and right-handed independencethat would be a constant throughout all four shows. In addition to playing originals such as 29 Palms, he interpreted selections from classic
singer/songwriters (a gorgeous reading of Bob Dylans Dont Think Twice, Its Alright; a deconstruction of
Joni Mitchells Marcie; a deliberately paced reading of Tom Waits Martha) as well as contemporary ones,
including the late Elliot Smith (Independence Day).
Mehldau and Hays performed as a duo on the second night. In
2010, the pair recorded Modern Music (Nonesuch), an album of
1, 2, 2, 3 by the Numbers
original compositions and arrangements by their peer Patrick
Song performed twice:
Zimmerli, and the assumption was theyd draw heavily from it.
What Is This Thing Called Love
Pieces they performed from Modern Music included the title track,
(MehldauHays duo; trio)
Generatrix, Crazy Quilt and Zimmerlis two-piano arrangeSongwriters represented twice:
ment of Mehldaus Unrequited. A newly penned Hays waltz
Gillian Welch (Scarlet Town,
was introduced, as was Rodriguezs Sugarman, which Hays first
solo; Dark Turn of Mind, trio)
brought to Mehldaus attention via the Oscar-winning Searching
and Paul McCartney (Blackbird,
For Sugarman documentary.
solo; And I Love Her, trio)
Whereas Mehldau was entirely self-contained the previous
Requests granted: One (for
night, it was fascinating to hear and see how he and Hays interactSufjan Stevens Holland, solo)
ed. Mehldau would solo with just his right hand while Hays provided full support, or Hays would play left-handed arpeggios under
his partners elegant two-handed exposition.
Teaming with Guiliana as Mehliana, Mehldau offered a second night of duet music that was at once
retro-futuristic and open-ended. He faced Guiliana with a Fender Rhodes and Prophet 08 in front of him and
a Moog Little Phatty synthesizer to his left. His partner used a traditional drum kit and occasionally manipulated samples on a laptop.
The duo dug into new pieces that will be recorded for an upcoming release, with a space-age variation on
My Favorite Things the only non-original. Guiliana began by focusing on sections of his kitstarting with
the snare and rim before moving on to the bass drum and hi-hatin a style somewhat reminiscent of percussionist Airto Moreira on trap drums. Later, hed pound with the intensity of a flowing drum n bass groove.
Mehlianas compositions were explorative and still evolving. Mehldau would often utilize two different
keyboards at once, with his left hand laying down bass lines on the Moog and his right hand dropping in
chords on the Rhodes or fat string pads on the Prophet. Further into the set, Guiliana would layer in indecipherable bits of sampled dialog or speeches.
The residency closed with a performance by Mehldaus regular trio, which proved to be a perfect capstone. The groups bassist, Larry Grenadier, played in the first festival produced by SFJAZZ (ne Jazz in the
City), and drummer Jeff Ballard has been as a member of the SFJAZZ Collective since 2012. Given the trio
format, there was ample soloing to be enjoyed. From Ballards distinguished toms-and-snare run on Charlie
Parkers Dexterity, to Mehldaus flowing unaccompanied interlude on his own Ten Tune, to Grenadiers
nimble-fingered and deeply felt elegance on Since I Fell For You, all three players quietly dazzled within the
bandleaders most familiar format.
Yoshi Kato
AUGUST 2013 DOWNBEAT 15
the World Stage in Leimert Park that was co-founded by Billy Higgins. It has a vibe so connected to Fred
Andersons legendary Velvet Lounge [in Chicago].
Looking at the L.A. legacy, I think of Mingus and
Dolphy, who had their start here, and how Ornette
developed his concepts here.
Nicole
Mitchell
Heads
West
Nicole
Mitchell
icole Mitchell has been creating modern, thought-provoking music since she first
came to Chicago from Oberlin College back in 1990. Mitchell, who has topped
the Flute category in the DownBeat Critics Poll for four consecutive years, has
become the premier jazz flutist of her generation, receiving accolades for superior
proficiency, unparalleled creativity and her innovative style, which incorporates
her voice with the instrument. She has also composed suites of music for several musical formats.
Mitchells groups include the Indigo Trio with drummer Hamid Drake and bassist Harrison
Bankhead. Her avant-garde quartet Sonic Projections features continuous musical dialog and
blurs distinctions between charted and improvised music. Her acoustic chamber group, the Black
String Ensemble, is a percussion-less group utilizing flutes, viola, violin, cello and bass. Her Black
Earth Ensemble, dedicated to celebrating the artistry of the African American musical contribution, is an octet that features Mitchells flute with trumpet, saxophone, cello, piano, bass, percussion and drums (she sometimes adds voices). The expansive nature of her musical interests speaks
of her tireless drive and her unquenchable thirst for creativity and individuality.
Like many other artists, Mitchell has found the economics of the creative music business to be
challenging to sustain. When a full-time assistant professorship was offered to her by the
University of California in Irvine, she decided to leave her longtime home of Chicago and make
the move back to California, where she grew up. We caught up with Mitchell and talked about her
current activities and she how she has settled into her new surroundings.
Do you miss Chicago, where you were such
an important part of the citys creative music
scene?
Teaching at UC Irvine has been extremely fulfilling because I have a great group of colleagues to
work with, including Michael Dessen, Kei Akagi,
Chris Dobrian and Kojiro Umezaki. Ive always
believed in mentorship, because its such an important aspect of the arts. James Newton, George Lewis,
Ed Wilkerson, Jimmy Cheatham, Avreeayl Ra,
Donald Byrd and Fred Anderson, to name a few, were
generous in mentoring me, and its a real privilege to
work with these talented students, both undergrad
and grad, who have so much creativity and vision.
Does being a full-time educator inhibit you from
spending the time you need to be creative?
ing to Camelio. It needed to capture the show as it unfolded under a tent before 200 people at Newports
Marble House residence. There were no rehearsals,
and most of the nine tracks involved a different duo
or trio who had never played together.
I asked them to play
something different from
what they had played at the
festival in the preceding days,
Wein said. They jumped.
The performances proved
a mixed bag. Among them
were a heartfelt Im In Love
Again, featuring vocalist Dianne Reeves and pianist Peter
Martin; a contrapuntal conversation with clarinetist Anat Cohen, trumpeter Ingrid Jensen
and pianist Jason Moran; and
a solo turn on electronically
enhanced alto sax, courtesy of Rudresh Mahanthappa.
The musicians were playing very personal stuff,
Wein said. It had nothing to do with show biz, per se.
Show business seems far from Weins mind these
days. At age 87, he is focusing on raising the profile of
younger players with original voices and helping to
ensure that jazz remains widely heard outside of clubs.
He said that plans for his next ArtistShare CD might include Amir ElSaffar, a trumpeter in his 30s who draws
on the maqam tonal system. If the general public
doesnt get to recognize these players the way they
recognized Miles and Monk, he said, the music will
cease to be festival or concert music. Phillip Lutz
downbeat archives
Mulgrew Miller
ANNUAL
t
s
1
6
CRITICS POLL
Wayne
Shorter
Wayne Shorter
at the New
Orleans Jazz
& Heritage
Festival on
May 5
Wayne shorter
From left: Danilo Prez, Wayne Shorter, John Patitucci and Brian Blade in New Orleans on May 5
Visionary Artist
By Joe Lovano
jimmy katz
Wayne shorter
Searching
for the
Unknown
pascal kerouche
By Jon Irabagon
You,
he said to me,
pointing an index
finger mere inches from my face, you have to go your own way.
He then pivoted 45 degrees and high-stepped out
of the room, not looking back.
Wayne Shorter challenged me with his characteristically puzzle-like speech at the 2009 Thelonious
Monk International Saxophone Competition, and
Ive been pondering that riddle ever since. While Im
still searching for my own way, over years of listening
to and watching Wayne, Ive become familiar with
his own blend of balanced variety.
After lending a well-versed voice to the hard-bop
bands of Maynard Ferguson and Art Blakey, Wayne
wrote many compositions for Miles Davis second
great quintet and provided the flowing, searching
foil to Davis oblique trumpet. For me, the pinnacle
of his approach from this periodslicing through
chord changes, running arpeggios up and down the
horn and altering scalesis his solo on the title track
to the 1965 album E.S.P.
Simultaneously, though, Shorter was taking a
noticeably different path on his own albums for the
Blue Note label: records that are now essential for all
jazz students. On these, Wayne develops his trademark ability to pit the simple against the complex in
harmonious coexistence. On albums like Speak No
Evil and Juju, Wayne balances out chromatic and
difficult chord progressions with a simpler, pentatonic-based improvisational approach. For modern
jazz students, these improvisations have become as
integral to the song as the chord changes themselves.
This synchronization continued with his contributions to Weather Report, the famed fusion group
Wayne co-led with Joe Zawinul, as well as his 80s
Columbia records. In the former, Waynes sparse,
held-note solos balance out against busier keyboard
and bass offerings; in the latter, labyrinthine compositions are offset by short bursts of improvisational
nucleijust enough to remind you that within these
complex structures, theres an adventure of life, as
Wayne likes to say, breathing underneath and bubbling to the surface.
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL
1
6 Jazz Album of the Year
st CRITICS POLL
61
Wayne
Shorter Quartet, Without A Net (Blue Note)
ANNUAL
146 votes
(Cuneiform)88
Sam Rivers/Dave
Holland/Barry
Altschul, Reunion:
Live In New York (Pi)68
(Blue Note)
66
Charles Lloyd/
Jason Moran,
Hagars Song (ECM)63
Ryan Truesdell,
Centennial: Newly
Discovered Works Of
Gil Evans (ArtistShare)51
Ciaroscuro (Anzic)
(Marsalis)45
At The Vanguard
(Palmetto)
31
30
26
25
Christian Scott,
Christian aTunde
Adjuah (Concord)40
Its great to hear trumpeter
Scott stretch out on this
project, which signals
his transformation to a
new name embracing his
heritage as a Mardis
Gras Indian and fearlessly takes on social issues.
Neneh Cherry/
The Thing,
The Cherry Thing
(Smalltown Supersound)39
24
Dave Douglas
Quintet, Be Still
(Greenleaf)
24
Rudresh
Mahanthappa,
Gamak (ACT)
24
Gary Peacock/Joey
Baron, Enfants
Terribles (Half Note) 23
21
Chick Corea/Gary
Burton, Hot House
(Concord)
21
Mary Halvorson
Quintet,
Bending Bridges
(Firehouse 12)
21
Chris Potter,
The Sirens (ECM)
21
20 John Abercrombie
Quartet, Within A
Song (ECM)
20
The Cookers,
Believe (Motma)
20
Return To Forever,
The Mothership
Returns
(Eagle Rock)
20
Kenny Garrett,
Seeds From The
Underground
(Mack Avenue)
34
Inspired by a dream,
this album revels in the
sort of peaceful atmospheric escapism that
normally accompanies
gazing at galaxies through a high-powered telescope. Nothing is hurried, no rhythm ventures
far from the main theme and repetition rules.
10
Spirit Fiction
(Blue Note)
(Wommusic)41
10
38
12 Ravi Coltrane,
Kurt Rosenwinkel,
Star Of Jupiter
11 Anat Cohen,
Branford Marsalis
Quartet, Four MFs
Playin Tunes
39
21 Theo Bleckmann,
Yosvany Terry,
Todays Opinion
(Criss Cross)
19
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL
1
6 Hall of Fame
Charlie
Haden
Making the
World a
Better Place
By Ed Enright S Photo by Jos L. Knaepen
Haden
onstage in
Marciac,
France,
Aug. 5, 2004
charlie haden
and Paul, and I sat in the front row. And all the pictures Id seen of Paul, he always looks like he had
tears in his eyes. He came off the bandstand when
they changed the set and he said, Why are you staring at me? I said, Im sorry; I dont mean to be. Its
a good thing because you always look like you have
tears in your eyes in all your photographs. He said, I
do, man, I do. Lets have some coffee. We sat down
and talked a long time.
On Charles Mingus: We were close friends, too.
I was playing with Ornette Coleman at the University
of Miami [in 1973], and Mingus [who was also performing on campus] was staying at the same hotel.
He called me and said, Can I borrow your bass? I
said, Man, you can have my bass. He said, I dont
want your bass, but could you lend it to me? So I
said, Man, dont worry, it would be my pleasure to
hear you play it. Jaco Pastorius was playing with Ira
Sullivan at the Fontainebleau [in Miami Beach], and
we went there afterwards. Jaco came up to me and
said, I really love your playing, Charlie, could I hang
out with you? And I said, Sure. We went up to my
hotel and he wanted to play my bass, and I said, Do
you play acoustic? And he said, Well, a little bit, and
he proceeded to tear it up. He was so phenomenal,
he could do just about anything. This was when Jaco
was healthy and young and vibrant.
On Ron Carter and Oscar Pettiford: Those are
two good ones there. [Colemans group] opened at
the Five Spot in November of 59, and the band that
was opposite us was the Art FarmerBenny Golson
group, and Ron was playing with them. What a great
bass player, man. And Pettiford, the sound that he
got ... . That was another thing that Paul Chambers
invented: Both of them had this really beautiful acoustic sound, I think because they played gut
strings like I do.
Who else? Haden inquired. Man, thats quite
a lineup so far. I have this old DownBeat from
Oct. 11, 1962, and inside is an article called The
Development of Modern Bass by Harvey Pekar.
Theres a picture of Jimmy Blanton and Ray Brown
on one page, and then on the next page its Paul
Chambers, Wilbur Ware, Scotty LaFaro and me. Ill
read you some of it:
Thus far the most important new bassists
of the 60s seem to be the late Scott LaFaro, and
Charlie Haden. Not surprisingly, both worked
with Ornette Coleman. Playing with Coleman
presents a challenge to a bassist, for his music
often doesnt follow preset chord progressions. To anticipate and react accordingly to
Colemans ideas are considerable accomplishments. The bassist in a Coleman combo has an
unprecedented influence on the soloist because
of the great freedom he is given.
Theoretically, it would seem that Coleman
believes the bass to have almost as important a
melodic function in his group as the trumpet
or alto saxophone. He has spoken of our concept of free group improvisation and called
Haden a melodically independent bassist.
Spontaneous counterpoint sometimes arises
between the horns and the bass in his group.
Despite the fact that Haden and LaFaro had
widely different backgrounds and, in some
respects, playing styles, each met the challenge
of Colemans music admirably.
charlie haden
jack vartoogian/frontrowphotos
Onstage
in 1975
Plucking a
note out of
thin air
In the
recording
studio,
early 60s
steven perilloux
Haden (left)
performing with
Ornette Coleman
in Philadelphia
on June 16, 1968
Constant Discovery
Charlie Haden has been spending a lot of time at home lately. Since being diagnosed two years ago
with post-polio syndrome, he has performed on stage only a few times. One brief appearance was
with keyboardist Larry Goldings at a February fundraiser for MUSE/IQUE in Pasadena, Calif.
Los Angeles-based Goldings has been a semi-frequent visitor to Hadens Agora Hills home during
the past couple of years. Sometimes they play tunes together, with Goldings on the small Baldwin
grand in Hadens living room. Other times, theyll talk and listen to music on Hadens ultra-high-end
stereo system. Pat Metheny and Alan Broadbent, longtime friends of Haden, have also stopped by to
visit and jam whenever they pass through town.
Charlie obviously wants to get back in shape as much as he is able right now, said Goldings,
who performed occasionally with Haden in the past. Stamina is an issue, obviously. But hes sounding just like Charlie Haden, and its always exciting to play with him.
Charlie is really interested in tunes, and he tends to come back to a lot of the same ones. He
loves Blue In Green, How Deep Is The Ocean, Im Old Fashionedthings that hes been playing
with his group for many years. Someone like Charlie can do that and continue to get enjoyment
out of it because hes always finding something newtheres that sense of constant discovery. Hes
so grounded in the tradition of melodicism, and thats evident in the way he solos: He seems to be
always searching for the perfect way to get from point A to point B. Its both wonderful and challenging to play with him in a duo situation because he loves space and has a very strong internal clock.
Haden once called Goldings to substitute for Broadbent in Quartet West for some concerts in
Australia. One of the best bass solos Ive ever experienced when on stage was at one of those gigs,
Goldings said. It was on a Rhythm changes tune, and even though he stayed on the form, his approach came off as so free and devoid of bebop cliches. The way he plays with time and the way he
breathes is so unique, and in the end he transcends the instrument.
Whether listening to tunes or jamming with Haden, Goldings has observed that one element common to everything the Hall of Fame bassist enjoys is his love of melody. No matter what situation hes
in, he approaches music with a profound sense of melody and simplicity, Goldings said. Even when
he plays something within the bebop language, it ends up sounding like folk music.
Ed Enright
you can predict; his music is predictably unpredictable, and lovely, gentle, beautiful, pretty. Thats
what Charlie Parker used to say: Look for the pretty notes. And Ornette has a million of them.
Hank Jones (19182010) and Haden played
together on two duo albums, 1995s Steal Away
(Verve) and 2012s Come Sunday (Emarcy). Both
recordings drew from a repertoire of American
spirituals and hymns. Hank was really something, Haden said. Hes very religious, and he
was worried about improvisation on these songs.
We were recording, and he said, Now, Charles,
weve got to be careful here. This isnt barrelhouse
and this isnt the avant-garde. We dont want to
disrespect the man upstairs. And I said, Oh, my
goodness, no, man. So at one point he stops playing and he looks up and says, Forgive me, Lord,
for that flat 13. He was a real jokester, too. He had
something humorous in the way he spoke about
everything. He was so positive and so upbeat, and
I just loved him. Im so glad I got to make that last
record with him.
On Ed Blackwell: Blackwell and I were also
like brothers. One time when Billy Higgins had to
do something else, Ornette called Blackwell and he
came, and we hit it off right away. And then in the
band Old And New Dreams, what a band that was
with Blackwell, Dewey Redman, Don Cherry [and
myself]. I couldnt think of a more consistently creative band than that. Blackwell and I used to have
these long talks. He was a special guy, very original, very inventive, very New Orleans. He had that
stuff down. He told me once, Charlie, the secret is
Liberation Music Orchestra based around an environmental theme and featuring Bleys arrangements.
He hopes hell be healthy enough to start recording it
late this year or in early 2014.
I know Im gonna get better, and I know Im
gonna play. Its funny, Im finding out about all these
people who love my music. You dont really stop
and think about how many people are affected by
your music because youre too busy trying to make
a living. Im so lucky that I have people who love my
music, and Im looking forward to that more and
more.
Charlie Haden. What a beautiful guy. DB
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
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1
6 Hall of Fame
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1
6
Veterans Committee
ANNUAL
Robert
Johnson
Imperishable
Fame
By Frank-John Hadley
The DownBeat Hall
of Fame Welcomes
Guitarist Robert Johnson,
the Legendary Delta
Bluesman Who Played It
Like He Felt It
Robert Johnson
photo booth
self-portrait,
early 1930s
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL
1
6 Historical Album of the Year
st CRITICS POLL
61
Miles
Davis Quintet, Live In Europe 1969:
ANNUAL
The Bootleg Series, Vol. 2 (Columbia/Legacy)
229 votes
Charles Mingus,
The Complete
Columbia & RCA
Album Collection
(Columbia/Legacy)107
Keith Jarrett,
Sleeper (ECM)74
Dave Brubeck
Quartet, The
Columbia Studio
Albums Collection: 19551966
(Columbia/Legacy)84
Containing about 12
hours of music, this
box set covers all 19
studio albums that Brubeck recorded for Columbia, with bonus tracks scattered throughout.
Recorded live in
Tokyo in 1979 and
released here as
a two-CD set, this
music documents
the pianists
European Quartetwith bassist Palle Danielsson,
saxophonist Jan Garbarek and drummer Jon
Christensenin full power, sensitively executing original material with subtle interaction.
The Quintet,
Jazz At
Massey Hall
(Original Jazz
Classics)66
(Resonance)94
Two previously
unreleased live trio sets
made by Resonance
Records George Klabin
and held in safe keeping since he recorded them
with uncommon care in 1968shed new light on
the intimacy and intelligence of Evans music at an
important time in the pianists history, as he was quietly becoming a major force in contemporary music
using essentially counter-revolutionary materials.
Clifford Brown
& Max Roach,
The Clifford
Brown & Max
Roach EmArcy
Albums (Mosaic)81
Virtuosity and
personality rule on
this latest remastered recording of
a historic 1953 all-star performance in Toronto
featuring Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Bud
Powell, Charles Mingus and Max Roach.
Coleman
Hawkins,
Classic
Coleman
Hawkins
Sessions
19221947
(Mosaic)51
48
Recorded
in 1947, this
two-CD set
10
captures the
primal vigor
of Armstrongs new
concert
group three
months after it became a working unit. Loose, strutting and full of crackle, Pops couldnt have
hoped for a greater front-line partner than
trombonist Jack Teagarden or a more
responsive drummer than Sid Catlett.
11
Terje Rypdal, In The Studio &
In Concert (ECM)
32
12
Dexter Gordon, Night Ballads:
Montreal 1977 (Uptown)31
13
Miles Davis, Live At Montreux
1991 (DVD) (Eagle Rock)
29
14
Duane Allman, Skydog: The
Duane Allman Retrospective
(Rounder)28
15
Clifford Brown, The EmArcy
Master Takes, Vol. 2
(Hip-O Select)
27
16
Michael Brecker, The Very Best
Of Michael Brecker
(Verve Reissues)
26
17
Tito Puente, Quatro: The
Definitive Collection
(Sony Music Latin)
24
18
Albert King, Ill Play The Blues
For You (Stax)21
Albert Mangelsdorff,
Live At Audimax Freiburg,
June 22, 1964 (Jazzhaus)21
19
Jimi Hendrix, People, Hell And
Angels (Legacy)20
Muddy Waters, You Shook Me:
The Chess Masters, Vol. 3, 1958
20
To 1963 (Hip-O Select)
ANNUAL
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POLL
1
6
st CRITICS POLL
1
6
Bass
ANNUAL
Christian McBride
Full Flying Altitude
By Ted Panken S Photo by Chi Modu
May, about an hour after supervising a
Early inrecording
session by trumpeter Sean Jones, Christian McBride
was unwinding with a house special at a cigar club near Carnegie Hall.
Recently off the road from several months playing bass and music-directing
for the Monterey All-Stars, McBride would fly to London in two days for a duo concert with Joshua Redman. A month later, at the Vision Festival, he would join his
uncle, Howard Cooper, and his father, Lee Smith, in a three-bass encounter with
outcat alto saxophone icon Marshall Allen. But at this moment, McBride was considering how to respond to his fifth Bassist of the Year designation in the DownBeat
Critics Poll.
Sometimes Im made to feel like I made a deal with the devil, McBride
remarked with a rueful chuckle. Come on, McBride, whats your secret? What did
you do? What I did was work my ass off studying albums and transcribing solos.
He added, It always feels good to be acknowledged by the critics or readers, but
the biggest thrill is to be acknowledged by your peers and get calls for gigs.
McBride, 41, has been intimate with that feeling almost from the moment he
moved to New York from Philadelphia in 1989. Whether playing with his mentor, Ray Brown, in Super Bass, or in Redmans quartets with Pat Metheny and Billy
Higgins or Brad Mehldau and Brian Blade, or with New Yorks finest pianists at
Bradleys, he impressed elders and peers with just-so bass lines bedrocked by keen
harmonic acumen, spot-on intonation, a set-your-clock-to-it time feel, and a tone
that retained its low-end thwonk at any tempoattributes that he applied when
conjuring solos of horn-like agility, deep swing and abundant soulfulness.
After signing with Verve in 1994, McBride also displayed those attributes on
Gettin To It and Number Two Express, presenting different angles on the values of
traditional jazz while also introducing a compositional voice that extracted strong
melodic hooks from sophisticated harmonic raw materials.
During the aughts, McBride investigated a more all-encompassing view of
jazz with a quartet comprising Ron Blake, Geoffrey Keezer and Terreon Gully. On
Sci-Fi, Vertical Vision (Warner) and Live At Tonic (Rope-A-Dope), he plugged in,
referencing the open-ended spirit of experimental funk and fusion. Simultaneously,
he accepted offers to play with Herbie Hancock, Sting, David Sanborn and Chick
Corea. As McBrides Q-rating ascended, he assumed a broad slate of administrative
obligations: creative chair for Jazz at the Los Angeles Philharmonic, where, from
2005 until 2009, he booked 12 concerts a year; artistic director of the Monterey and
Detroit Jazz Festivals and Jazz Aspen Snowmass; co-director of the National Jazz
Museum in Harlem, where hes presided at numerous public events; and radio host
for the SiriusXM show Conversations With Christian (which yielded a 2011 Mack
Avenue CD of the same title) featuring his interviews and musical dialogs with such
diverse guests as Hank Jones, Bill Charlap, Anglique Kidjo and Quincy Jones.
ANNUAL
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6
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Wadada
6
Composer
ANNUAL
Leo Smith
Embracing
Challenges
By Aaron Cohen
Photo by Michael Jackson
Jr.: Memphis, The Prophecy, I use blues connotations to reflect his speaking
voice. Another one, The Freedom Riders Ride, represents a lot of changing
instrumentation and changing structure to indicate the journey on the bus
wasnt always straight out. Complicated episodes happened. All the musical
forms in there come from a philosophical base, or a psychological base, and I
had to figure out some mobility for those musical forms.
Smith offers a summation of his compositional approach in an essay he
includes in his new two-disc Occupy The World (Tum). He writes that rather
than rely on standard metric designs for melodic construction, his focus is on
building from the sense of geometry within the musical lines themselves. Also,
he does not rework the keys of individual instruments to fit within a singular
tonal spectrum. If this seems highbrow, Smith actually has a lot of fun with it.
He writes about Crossing On A Southern Road: We only used one tuba, but
it could have been three to five.
The assemblage of musicians on the set provided Smith with a huge variety
of instrumental possibilities. He recorded Occupy The World with the large
and unorthodox Finnish orchestra TUMO. Smith conducts this 21-member
ensemble, weaving together strings and brass with Veli Kujalas accordion and
three drummers. Smiths 33-minute Occupy The World For Life, Liberty And
Justice is based on fragments hed been working on for several years. He was
moved to put these portions together after witnessing the mass movement targeting economic inequality in the fall of 2011.
That was a great re-imagining of the possibilities of our society and possibility for radical change of our society, Smith said. It has not achieved it as
such, but nevertheless, the idea is still there and not going away.
Even though Smiths recent distinctions have come from creating largescale works, hes just as excited about an upcoming solo tour.
You have to make sense; thats the first thing, he said. The second thing
is allowing the whole program to be put together while youre performing. Its
very challenging, but challenges lead to rewards. DB
ANNUAL
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6
Tia Fuller
If
Tia Fuller at
LantarenVenster
in Rotterdam,
The Netherlands,
April 27, 2011
ANNUAL
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POLL
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6
st CRITICS POLL
1
6
Gregory Porter
ANNUAL
The
third album, Liquid Spirit, to be released Sept. 17. The singer-songwriter has revealed that the CD, his third overall but his first for Blue
Note, will contain a version of pianist Ramsey Lewis 1965 hit The In Crowd,
a title that Porter finds particularly appropriate for this stage of his career.
I always loved that song, Porter said from his hotel room in Krakow,
Poland. It falls into that in-between space where I am. Its jazz, its soul, it has
a gospel feel; its people music. And theres a whole bunch of ways to look at
that lyric: a snobbish way, a cultural way. Are you saying that youre better than
anybody else? Hell no, I wouldnt say that. But I love jazz, this sometimes-esoteric music, so yeah, that puts me in the in crowd. And Im on Blue Note
Records now, so maybe that puts me in the in crowd, I dont know. I consider myself all-inclusive, so maybe everybodys included in the in crowd.
Whatever your criteria for the figurative in crowd, its clear that
Porter belongs as one of its guests of honor. He was named both Rising
StarJazz Artist and Rising StarMale Vocalist in this years DownBeat
Critics Poll, based on his electrifying concert performances and his
acclaimed sophomore release, Be Good (Motma), which strongly and
soulfully delivered on the promise of his 2010 debut, Water (Motma).
Its significant and extraordinary, Porter said of the awards.
Its a great honor. Im excited about what it says about who I am and
where Im going. I was voted Rising Star, not one falling down, so I
like the sound of that.
Theres little risk of a descent for Porter anytime soon. Hes
recently had opportunities to work with A-listers like Wynton
Marsalis, David Murray, Hubert Laws and Dianne Reeves. After
two releases on Motma, he signed with Universal France; following the Universal Music Groups takeover of Blue Note
parent company EMI, he suddenly found himself a Blue
Note artist.
The legacy of that music is extraordinary, deep,
and it can be very heavy, he said. But interestingly, I didnt feel any weight or any pressure
in terms of recording. I didnt feel like I had to
swing like Hank Mobley; if anything, being on
Blue Note just let me know, Keep doing what
youre doing.
Liquid Spirit also will include a rendition of
Abbey Lincolns Lonesome Lover alongside a
new batch of his own original songs. The protest vibe of 1960 What? (from Water)
returns on Musical Genocide, while
the title track harkens back even
further, Porter said, to his moth-
ANNUAL
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POLL
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6
Gerald Clayton
Cliff Jumping
By Joe Tangari S Photo by Bill Douthart
The
ANNUAL
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6
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6
Jason
Rising Star Vibes
ANNUAL
Marsalis
New Chapter
By Phillip Lutz
Photo by Braden Piper
the sundry accolades that come with belonging to the most famous family in
jazz. In 2011, when he was named an NEA Jazz Masteralong with his father, Ellis,
and older brothers Wynton, Branford and Delfeayoa small but vocal group of
dissenters contended that, at age 33, he was too young to have earned the award.
Little wonder, then, that when he was asked to comment on his victory in the
2013 DownBeat Critics Poll in the category Rising StarVibes, he offered a decidedly measured response.
Im honored, he said, but I keep it in perspective and understand that theres
still a lot more music for me to work on.
Hard work is, after all, what this intense scion of New Orleans musical royalty
is all about, whether he is leading the Jason Marsalis Vibes Quartetwhose new
album In A World Of Mallets (Basin Street) signals his arrival as a practitioner of
distinction on the vibraphoneor playing drums in the Marcus Roberts Trio, an
association that stretches back nearly 20 years.
Whatever the musical context, his bandmates deeply appreciate his contributions. Backstage before a recent concert in New London, Conn., banjoist Bla Fleck,
who recorded 2012s Across The Imaginary Divide (Rounder) with the Roberts trio,
praised Marsalis for brilliant ideas that sound as if hes played them his whole life,
but are really coming off the top of his head.
The concert that night bore him out. As the band moved through a varied mix
of material from the album, Marsalisa hard-swinging swirl of brushes, sticks and
malletsoffered a steady stream of fresh insights, informing but not overwhelming the other band members.
As a leader, Marsalis has proven to be similarly attuned to the needs of the
group, explained Dave Potter, the vibes quartets drummer of seven years. Hes
open to our input, Potter said, referring to himself and bandmates Austin Johnson
on piano and Will Goble on bass. Hes free to let the music go where it goes.
That sense of freedom was evident during the recording of the new album.
While Marsalis said the basic order of tunes was set before the recording session
began, the final product took shape as the session unfoldedfrom the opener,
Discipline Discovers A World Of Mallets, through to its bookend, Discipline
Gets Lost In A World Of Mallets, which was cooked up after Marsalis serendipitously stumbled on a striking rhythmic figure while editing another tune from the
album, Blues Can Be Abstract, Too.
I said, Man, we have to use that, he recalled.
Marsalis is not afraid of the comparisons that reinterpretation can invite:
Three tunes from the new CDBallet Class, Characters and Blues For The
29%ersappeared in less fluid form in 2009 on his first vibes album, Music Update
50 DOWNBEAT AUGUST 2013
(ELM). Nor is he afraid of ceding album real estate to colleagues: Louisiana Gold
was written by Johnson; Big Earls Last Ride, by Goble; and Ill Bill, by Potter,
who said he had rescued the Monk-like effort from his college notebooks.
Marsalis also reached back to some personal favorites from the 1960s and 70s,
including Hermeto Pascoals haunting Nem Um Talvez, which his father once
recorded on solo piano, and Bobby Hutchersons My Joy, the new albums most
explicit nod to another vibraphonist. The debt to Hutcherson is clear in Marsalis
straightforward reading.
Hutcherson is one of the few vibes players Marsalis names as an influence. His
influences tend to be drummers and horn players, including his three brothers. For
all the weight of expectation his family members achievements might have saddled
him with, Marsalis seems very comfortable with the way his career has evolved. Its
been great, he said, because Ive had access to a lot of information about music.
Marsalis credits his successful move from drums to vibraphone in part to the
grounding he gained from early violin study. And he attributes the motivation to
make the move in no small measure to an early appreciation of the vibes place in
the musical landscape, where he feels the instrument has been underrepresented.
One of the reasons I wanted to play the vibes, he said, was that there was a lot
more that could be said on the instrument.
The switch has not been easy, he acknowledged. It has taken him a dozen years
of public performance to adjust his mallet technique. His writing, likewise, has
required a reorientation, veering sharply from the front-line dominance of horns
that characterized many of his previous works. But, he said, he has finally found a
vibes voiceand, with the new CD, produced a document that reflects it.
The record is the beginning of a new chapter, he said. DB
ANNUAL
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Derrick
1
6
Rising Star Electric Bass
ANNUAL
Hodge
high level of playing, but also his spirit. Its uncompromised, and people supported it. But what
amazed me most was the level of humility he had.
Lessons learned from Miller influenced
Hodges selection of personnel for Live Today (out
Aug. 6). He wanted to support his counterparts but
also grant them a level of individual freedom. He
cherry-picked a cast of players from his previous
projectskeyboardists Aaron Parks and James
Poyser, saxophonist Marcus Strickland and drummer Mark Colenburgdue to their diverse musical backgrounds and what he calls their producer
mentalities. Hodge also recruited his Experiment
bandmates Glasper, Dave and Casey Benjamin,
who plays saxophone and vocoder.
The end product is the result of a community
of like-minded artists who align with Hodges
uninhibited creative philosophy and his feelings of reciprocity. Each musician on this record
understands the scope of songs, delivery and how
to relate to people, Hodge explained. Its a combination of guys who have studied music in the
classroom and some who have learned by ear
and never read music. Put them all together, and
theyre chronicling each side of myself.
Hodges humility permeates his group outings, making him as coveted a colleague as he is
a leader, revered for his open-mindedness and the
trust he invests in fellow musicians.
Derrick is one of my favorite musicians of all
time, hands down, period, Glasper said. Hes
selfless. Like water, he takes the shape of any musical situation and makes it his own.
That respect is mutual. Robert and I have
similar ideologies, Hodge said. The Experiment
allowed us to bring our individuality into the
mix [and not be influenced] by what other people
think playing music should be. With Live Today, I
never felt that pressure. Give them how we feel and
let them accept it, for better or for worse.DB
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL
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6
Complete
Results
st CRITICS
POLL
61 W
Maria
Schneider
ANNUAL
Hall Of Fame
Jazz Artist
Charlie Haden...81
Don Cherry..................67
Wayne
Shorter...........124
Anthony Braxton........64
Vijay Iyer.......................93
Lee Konitz.....................62
Marian McPartland.....61
Jason Moran............... 77
Fred Anderson............ 58
Robert Glasper............ 73
Sam Rivers...................56
Joe Lovano...................60
Jack DeJohnette........ 47
Jack DeJohnette........59
Von Freeman............... 45
Charles Lloyd...............59
Randy Weston............ 45
Anat Cohen................. 58
Hank Mobley...............44
Bob Brookmeyer......... 42
Terri Lyne
Carrington...................46
Benny Golson..............40
Bill Frisell...................... 43
B.B. King.......................39
Dave Douglas.............. 37
Oliver Nelson...............39
Hiromi........................... 37
George Russell............39
Wynton Marsalis........ 37
Jimmy Heath............... 38
Tim Berne..................... 35
Billy Higgins................. 38
Kenny Burrell.............. 37
Rudresh
Mahanthappa............. 35
Jaki Byard.................... 37
Sonny Rollins............... 35
Charles Lloyd............... 37
Esperanza Spalding... 35
Kenny Barron.............. 34
Veterans
Committee
Hall Of Fame
Robert
Johnson....... 70%
Note: Artists must
receive at least 66% of
the Veterans Committee
votes to gain entry.
Other artists receiving
more than 50% of
the vote:
Eubie Blake............... 61%
Bing Crosby.............. 61%
Red Norvo.................57%
Scott LaFaro..............52%
Muddy Waters.........52%
54 DOWNBEAT AUGUST 2013
Christian McBride.......34
Jazz Album
Wayne Shorter
Quartet,
Without A Net
(Blue Note)......... 146
Wadada Leo Smith,
Ten Freedom Summers
(Cuneiform)..................88
Sam Rivers/Dave
Holland/Barry Altschul,
Reunion: Live In
New York (Pi)................68
Joe Lovano Us Five,
Cross Culture
(Blue Note)....................66
Charles Lloyd/
Jason Moran,
Hagars Song (ECM).....63
Ryan Truesdell,
Centennial: Newly
Discovered Works Of
Gil Evans
(ArtistShare).................51
Branford Marsalis
Quartet, Four MFs
Playin Tunes
(Marsalis)...................... 45
Kurt Rosenwinkel,
Star Of Jupiter
(Wommusic)...................41
Christian Scott,
Christian aTunde
Adjuah (Concord).......40
Neneh Cherry/The
Thing, The Cherry
Thing (Smalltown
Supersound).................39
Kenny Garrett, Seeds
From The Underground
(Mack Avenue)..............39
Anat Cohen,
Ciaroscuro (Anzic).......38
Ravi Coltrane, Spirit
Fiction (Blue Note).......34
Fred Hersch Trio,
Alive At The Vanguard
(Palmetto).....................31
Pat Metheny, Unity
Band (Nonesuch).........30
Mostly Other People
Do The Killing, Slippery
Rock (Hot Cup).............26
Orrin Evans, Flip The
Script (Posi-Tone)......... 25
Aaron Diehl, The
Bespoke Mans
Narrative
(Mack Avenue).............. 24
Dave Douglas Quintet,
Be Still (Greenleaf)...... 24
Rudresh Mahanthappa,
Gamak (ACT)................. 24
Lee Konitz/Bill Frisell/
Gary Peacock/Joey
Baron, Enfants Terribles
(Half Note).................... 23
The Bad Plus,
Made Possible (eOne).. 21
Chick Corea/Gary
Burton, Hot House
(Concord)...................... 21
Mary Halvorson
Quintet, Bending
Bridges (Firehouse)...... 21
Chris Potter,
The Sirens (ECM)........... 21
John Abercrombie
Quartet, Within A Song
(ECM)..............................20
The Cookers,
Believe (Motma).........20
Return To Forever,
The Mothership
Returns
(Eagle Rock)..................20
Theo Bleckmann,
Hello Earth! (The Music
Of Kate Bush)
(Winter & Winter)..........19
Yosvany Terry,
Todays Opinion
(Criss Cross)..................19
Historical
Album
Miles Davis
Quintet,
Live In Europe
1969: The
Bootleg Series
Vol. 2
(Columbia/
Legacy)............. 229
Charles Mingus,
The Jazz Workshop
Concerts 1964-1965
(Mosaic)....................... 136
Charles Mingus,
The Complete
Columbia & RCA
Album Collection
(Columbia/Legacy)...... 107
Charlie Parker,
The Quintet: Jazz At
Massey Hall (Original
Jazz Classics)................66
Coleman Hawkins,
Classic Coleman
Hawkins Sessions
1922-1947 (Mosaic)......51
Louis Armstrong
and The All Stars,
Satchmo At
Symphony Hall
(Hip-O Select).................48
Terje Rypdal,
In The Studio & In
Concert (ECM)............... 32
Dexter Gordon,
Night Ballads:
Montreal 1977
(Uptown)........................ 31
Rudresh
Mahanthappa
jimmy katZ
bassmint photography
Wycliffe
Gordon
Dave
Douglas
SFJAZZ Collective........ 53
Jon Faddis....................40
Sam Newsome............112
Robert Glasper
Experiment.................. 55
Christian McBride
Big Band....................... 52
Brian Lynch..................40
Duane Allman,
Skydog: The Duane
Allman Retrospective
(Rounder)...................... 28
Ron Miles.....................40
Anat Cohen.................80
Steven Bernstein
Millennial Territory
Orchestra...................... 51
Nicholas Payton.......... 38
Evan Parker................. 72
Enrico Rava.................. 35
Ravi Coltrane...............67
Rob Mazurek............... 33
James Carter............... 55
Avishai Cohen............. 32
Joe Lovano................... 55
Clifford Brown,
The EmArcy Master
Takes, Vol. 2
(Hip-O Select)................. 27
Michael Brecker,
The Very Best Of
Michael Brecker
(Verve Reissues)............26
Tito Puente,
Quatro: The Definitive
Collection
(Sony Music Latin)........ 24
Albert King, Ill Play The
Blues For You (Stax).... 21
Albert Mangelsdorff,
Live At Audimax
Freiburg, June 22, 1964
(Jazzhaus)...................... 21
Jimi Hendrix,
People, Hell And
Angels (Legacy)............20
Muddy Waters,
You Shook Me:
The Chess Masters,
Vol. 3, 1958 to 1963
(Hip-O Select).................20
Pat Metheny
Unity Band................... 42
Jason Moran Trio.......39
Henry Threadgill
Zooid............................. 38
Fred Hersch Trio......... 37
Branford Marsalis
Quartet.........................36
Brian Blade
Fellowship.................... 32
Terence Blanchard
Quintet......................... 32
Dave Douglas
Quintet......................... 32
Matt Wilson Arts &
Crafts............................. 31
Roy Haynes Fountain
Of Youth....................... 27
Clayton Brothers........26
Big Band
Darcy James
Argues Secret
Society (tie)......145
Maria Schneider
Orchestra (tie)....145
Jazz Group
Wayne Shorter
Quartet...........130
Joshua Redman.........50
Chris Potter..................49
Wycliffe
Gordon...........195
Steve Wilson................ 43
Donny McCaslin......... 24
Trombone Shorty.......94
Bob Wilber................... 24
Robin Eubanks............88
Roscoe Mitchell........... 23
Curtis Fuller................. 85
Marcus Strickland...... 22
Conrad Herwig............ 85
Ted Nash.......................19
Ray Anderson..............67
Roswell Rudd..............64
Roy Hargrove
Big Band....................... 34
Jeb Bishop...................50
Jazz at Lincoln
Center Orchestra........ 72
Peter Brtzmann
Tentet...........................66
ClaytonHamilton
Jazz Orchestra.............64
Dave
Douglas......... 140
Clifton Anderson........ 54
Steve Davis.................. 47
Luis Bonilla...................36
Delfeayo Marsalis....... 34
Michael Dease............ 33
Wayne Wallace............31
Ambrose
Akinmusire...................115
Frank Lacy....................30
Joe Fiedler.................... 28
Terence Blanchard.....97
Steve Swell...................26
Wynton Marsalis........ 85
Vincent Gardner......... 25
Tom Harrell..................84
Gianluca Petrella........ 25
Tomasz Stanko........... 74
Wolter Wierbos........... 25
Jeremy Pelt..................69
Christian Scott
(Christian Scott aTunde
Adjuah).........................67
Jane Bunnett..............46
Count Basie
Big Band....................... 34
Trumpet
Kenny Garrett.............49
Trombone
Curtis Fowlkes............. 38
John Hollenbeck
Large Ensemble.......... 87
Village Vanguard
Orchestra.....................50
Alto Saxophone
Rudresh
Mahanthappa... 176
Ornette Coleman......123
Tim Berne.....................98
Miguel Zenn..............98
Jon Irabagon................81
Kenny Garrett.............80
Lee Konitz.....................80
Phil Woods...................67
Donald Harrison..........51
Steve Coleman............ 47
Steve Wilson................46
Gary Bartz.................... 43
Henry Threadgill.........39
Anthony Braxton........38
Soprano
Saxophone
Greg Osby.................... 38
Paquito DRivera........ 35
Bobby Watson............36
ICP Orchestra.............. 54
Steven Bernstein........ 52
Wayne
Shorter..........208
Dave Holland
Big Band....................... 53
Roy Hargrove.............. 52
Darius Jones................ 33
Randy Brecker............40
Sherman Irby..............29
Terell Stafford.............60
Ted Nash...................... 35
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL
1
6
st CRITICS POLL
61
Jason Moran
Anat
Cohen
jimmy katz
ANNUAL
Gary
Smulyan
Patience Higgins........ 23
Roscoe Mitchell........... 45
Uri Caine.......................60
Marc Ribot...................95
Holly Hofmann........... 34
Marc Cary.....................48
Russell Malone............90
Roger Lewis.................. 15
Ted Nash...................... 33
Jason Lindner..............46
Lionel Loueke.............. 85
Charlie Kohlhase.........13
Dave Valentin............. 32
Geoffrey Keezer..........45
Nels Cline.....................84
Jon Raskin....................13
Marty Ehrlich...............30
Bernie Worrell............. 45
Chris Potter..................115
Jim Hall.......................... 71
Anne Drummond....... 24
Wayne Horvitz............ 42
John Scofield...............70
George Duke............... 37
Kurt Rosenwinkel.......64
Tenor
Saxophone
Joe Lovano.....163
Sonny Rollins............. 120
Clarinet
Kent Jordan................. 24
Matthew Shipp........... 37
Branford Marsalis.......70
Sam Most..................... 24
James Spaulding........ 23
Marco Benevento....... 33
James Carter............... 58
Henry Butler................ 32
Eric Alexander............. 53
Ken Peplowski.............117
Houston Person.......... 53
Piano
Jamie Saft....................29
Von Freeman............... 45
Evan Christopher........91
Jason Moran....122
Jimmy Heath............... 43
Ben Goldberg.............. 74
Vijay Iyer.......................117
Peter Brtzmann.........41
Eddie Daniels..............65
Donny McCaslin..........41
Marty Ehrlich...............44
Kenny Barron.............. 83
Victor Goines...............40
Fred Hersch................. 77
Joey
DeFrancesco.... 274
Charlie Hunter............36
David Murray..............40
JD Allen........................ 35
Ab Baars....................... 37
Keith Jarrett.................. 71
Dave Fiuczynski.......... 34
Harry Allen...................29
Buddy DeFranco......... 32
Geri Allen......................67
Larry Goldings............175
Pharoah Sanders........29
Chris Speed................. 32
Robert Glasper............65
John Medeski.............134
David S. Ware..............29
Andy Statman..............31
Chick Corea................. 58
Kidd Jordan................. 27
James Falzone............30
Herbie Hancock..........46
Tony Malaby............... 27
Ken Vandermark........30
Ahmad Jamal..............46
Mike LeDonne............. 78
Christian
McBride......... 226
Joshua Redman......... 27
Michael White............. 28
Dave Brubeck.............. 37
Sam Yahel....................50
Dave Holland..............151
Louis Sclavis................. 27
Benny Green...............36
Tony Monaco.............. 42
Ron Carter...................128
Gianluigi Trovesi.........20
Frank Kimbrough....... 35
Charlie Haden.............93
Ned Rothenberg.......... 17
Hiromi........................... 32
Amina Claudine
Myers............................ 32
Charlie Gabriel.............14
Gerald Clayton............. 31
Michael Moore.............14
Baritone
Saxophone
Gary Smulyan...209
James Carter............. 165
Ronnie Cuber..............115
Mats Gustafsson........ 110
Claire Daly.................. 106
Flute
Hamiet Bluiett.............93
Nicole
Mitchell......... 210
Scott Robinson............86
Charles Lloyd...............131
Joe Temperley............ 77
Henry Threadgill........123
John Surman............... 57
Ken Vandermark.........51
Sam Yahel.................... 23
Organ
John McLaughlin....... 57
John Abercrombie.....46
Pat Martino.................. 43
Howard Alden..............41
Peter Bernstein............41
Dave Stryker................39
Bobby Broom.............. 37
Julian Lage..................36
Bass
Jamie Saft..................... 31
Esperanza
Spalding.......................64
Bill Charlap..................30
Brian Auger................. 27
Stanley Clarke............. 54
Ethan Iverson..............29
Barbara Dennerlein...26
Larry Grenadier........... 54
Monty Alexander....... 28
Craig Taborn............... 25
Carla Bley..................... 22
William Parker............. 53
Cyrus Chestnut........... 25
Chris Foreman.............20
Keyboard
Chester Thompson....20
Reuben Wilson............20
Michael Formanek..... 47
Ben Allison................... 43
John Patitucci.............39
Ben Williams................ 33
Jared Gold....................19
Jane Bunnett..............92
Robert
Glasper............ 181
Frank Wess..................86
Rhoda Scott..................13
Vinny Golia..................40
Hubert Laws................80
Herbie Hancock.........123
Tim Berne..................... 38
Lew Tabackin..............76
Craig Taborn............... 85
Howard Johnson........30
Jamie Baum................70
Larry Goldings............. 82
Guitar
Fred Ho.........................29
Dave Liebman.............64
John Medeski..............80
Omer Avital..................26
Brian Landrus..............26
James Newton............59
Gary Versace...............70
John Hbert.................26
Ben Ellman................... 24
Ali Ryerson................... 55
Hiromi...........................67
Mary Halvorson..........95
Reggie Workman.......26
Wayne Horvitz.............13
Linda Oh.......................30
John Clayton...............29
Greg Cohen.................29
Eric Revis......................29
Avishai Cohen............. 27
Stanley
Clarke
Meshell
Ndegeocello................ 78
Jeff Gauthier............... 42
Herlin Riley.................. 37
Joe Chambers..............13
Charles Burnham.......39
Marcus Gilmore..........36
John Herndon.............. 12
Derrick Hodge............. 54
Carla Kihlstedt............. 34
Andrew Cyrille............34
Jack Bruce.................... 52
Hendrik Meurkens...... 12
Zach Brock................... 33
Tim Lefebvre............... 52
Michal Urbaniak......... 22
Cindy Blackman
Santana........................ 33
Bob Cranshaw.............51
Didier Lockwood..........19
Jim Black...................... 32
Percussion
John Patitucci..............51
Svend Asmussen.........18
Ralph Peterson............31
Richard Bona............... 43
Miri Ben-Ari...................18
James Genus...............36
Jerry Goodman............16
Pino Palladino............. 35
Mary Oliver...................16
Carles Benavent..........31
Andy Stein....................16
Matthew Garrison......30
Vibes
Hamid Drake...............94
Stefon
Harris............. 253
Zakir Hussain............... 87
Poncho Sanchez.........85
Gary Burton...............236
Kahil ElZabar...............65
Drums
Bobby Hutcherson....218
Airto Moreira...............64
Jack
DeJohnette... 202
Joe Locke....................175
Sheila E.........................63
Adam Rudolph........... 53
Brian Blade.................137
Steve Nelson...............80
Giovanni Hidalgo....... 52
Eric Harland.................97
Warren Wolf................. 71
Matt Wilson................. 87
Jason Marsalis............ 37
Regina
Carter............ 306
Roy Haynes.................. 75
Mike Mainieri.............. 28
Han Bennink...............64
Khan Jamal..................20
Jenny Scheinman....259
Billy Hart.......................62
Matt Moran.................20
Marcus Miller..............142
Mark Feldman.............112
Joey Baron...................59
Warren Smith............... 17
Christian
McBride...................... 104
Jean-Luc Ponty...........89
Lewis Nash...................56
Chris Dingman.............16
Gerald Cleaver............46
Gunter Hampel............16
Trilok Gurtu..................36
Mark OConnor............61
Antonio Sanchez........ 42
Peter Appleyard..........15
John Santos................. 35
Esperanza
Spalding........................81
John Blake...................56
Terry Gibbs................... 15
Marilyn Mazur............. 33
Christian Howes......... 55
Nasheet Waits..............41
James Westfall.............15
Alex Cline..................... 32
Victor Wooten.............79
Mat Maneri.................. 55
Hamid Drake............... 38
Kenny Wollesen...........15
Dan Weiss.................... 32
STEVEN PARKE
Skuli Sverrisson...........30
Stomu Takeishi........... 28
Jamaaladeen
Tacuma.........................26
Violin
Electric Bass
Stanley
Clarke............ 169
Mino Cinelu.................49
Han Bennink...............46
Susie Ibarra...................41
Pedrito Martinez..........41
Pete Escovedo.............40
Jerry Gonzalez............. 37
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL
1
6
st CRITICS POLL
61
Dr. John
ANNUAL
Miscellaneous
Instrument
Bla Fleck
(banjo)..............154
Ken Vandermark
(bass clarinet).............. 22
Male Vocalist
Grgoire Maret
(harmonica)............... 109
Kurt Elling.....264
David Murray
Theo Bleckmann........131
(bass clarinet)..............80
Scott Robinson
(bass saxophone)......... 75
Gregory Porter...........213
Bobby McFerrin........ 105
Tony Bennett............. 101
Richard Galliano
(accordion).................. 73
Giacomo Gates............84
Erik Friedlander
(cello)............................ 72
Mose Allison................ 73
Toots Thielemans
(harmonica).................66
Edmar Castaneda
(Colombian harp)........64
Jos James..................79
Lisa Houlgrave
Lindsay Beyerstein
Darcy James
Argue
Jos James
Ren Marie..................50
Terri Lyne
Carrington...................69
Marsalis Music............ 25
Kate McGarry.............. 45
Patricia Barber............44
Steven Bernstein........67
AUM Fidelity................ 23
Madeline Peyroux......44
Gil Goldstein................62
Palmetto....................... 22
Melody Gardot.............41
Allen Toussaint............61
Basin Street.................. 21
Carmen Lundy............ 37
John Hollenbeck........ 57
Resonance....................18
Dee Alexander............36
Mary Stallings............. 28
Sidsel Endresen.......... 27
Composer
Bill Holman.................. 54
Wynton Marsalis........ 53
Carla Bley.....................50
Dave Holland.............. 47
Billy Childs................... 45
Arbors........................... 24
SmallsLIVE..................... 15
Verve.............................. 15
Producer
John Clayton................41
Manfred
Eicher............ 205
Kevin Mahogany.........61
Wadada Leo
Smith..............136
Bob Mintzer................. 37
Michael Cuscuna.......172
Freddy Cole.................46
Maria Schneider........132
Laurence Hobgood.... 35
John Zorn..................... 77
Kenny Washington....43
Guillermo Klein........... 35
Joe Fields.....................67
John Boutt.................39
Terence Blanchard.....68
Christian McBride.......34
Branford Marsalis.......60
Andy Bey...................... 35
Bob Belden.................. 33
Bob Belden..................59
(oud).............................. 53
Mark Murphy............... 31
Robert Glasper............ 52
Vince Mendoza........... 32
David Binney...............48
John Zorn..................... 32
Greg Osby....................44
Rabih Abou-Khalil
Joe Lovano
Jon Hendricks............. 27
Henry Threadgill......... 47
(aulochrome)............... 52
John Pizzarelli............. 27
Dave Douglas.............. 42
James Carter
Bob Dorough...............26
John Hollenbeck.........41
Ian Shaw......................26
Ben Allison................... 38
Ernie Andrews............. 25
Chick Corea................. 38
Jimmy Scott................. 25
Vijay Iyer....................... 38
(bass saxophone).........49
Gary Versace
(accordion).................. 47
Howard Johnson
(tuba).............................44
Steve Turre
(shells)..........................39
Benny Golson..............36
Female Vocalist
Fred Lonberg-Holm
(cello)............................ 38
Cassandra
Wilson.............152
Chris Thile
(mandolin).................... 38
Dianne Reeves............96
Anouar Brahem
(oud).............................. 35
Dee Dee
Bridgewater.................93
Hendrik Meurkens
(harmonica)................. 28
Esperanza Spalding...76
Guy Klucevsek
(accordion).................. 23
Sheila Jordan.............. 74
Karrin Allyson..............67
Roberta Gambarini....67
Randy Weston............36
Pat Metheny................ 35
Tom Harrell.................. 34
Jason Moran............... 33
Carla Bley..................... 32
Muhal Richard
Abrams.......................... 31
Ornette Coleman........31
Gerald Wilson............... 31
Arranger
Butch Morris................44
Todd Barkan................ 43
Record Label
ECM................212
Blue Note....................125
Pi................................... 110
HighNote......................84
Sunnyside....................80
Clean Feed................... 78
Concord........................68
Mack Avenue..............63
Motma........................62
Mosaic.......................... 54
ACT................................44
Cuneiform.....................41
Columbia Legacy........38
Mat Domber................39
Orrin Keepnews..........39
Lee Townsend.............39
Gerry Teekens............. 35
Larry Klein.................... 33
Don Was....................... 33
Craig Street.................. 32
George Avakian...........31
Matt Balitsaris.............29
Gil Goldstein................ 27
Bob Koester................. 27
Blues Artist or
Group
Nonesuch..................... 32
Dr. John..........125
Delmark......................... 31
(bass clarinet).............. 22
Diana Krall...................66
Tzadik............................ 28
Ernst Reijseger
(cello)............................ 22
Tierney Sutton............59
Darcy James
Argue.............101
Carolina Chocolate
Drops.......................... 104
ArtistShare................... 27
Gretchen Parlato........ 58
Maria Schneider.........93
B.B. King.......................88
Rudi Mahall
Otis Taylor.................... 77
Tedeschi Trucks Band.....73
The Black Keys............70
James Blood Ulmer....70
Bettye LaVette............64
Gary Clark Jr................62
Taj Mahal..................... 57
Charlie Musselwhite.... 54
Duke Robillard............40
Eric Clapton.................39
Shemekia Copeland..39
Robert Cray................. 35
Joe Louis Walker......... 28
Steve Cropper............. 24
Marcia Ball................... 23
Keb Mo......................... 23
Blues Album
Dr. John, Locked
Down (Nonesuch)....184
Tedeschi Trucks Band,
Live: Everybodys Talkin
(Sony Masterworks)...86
Ben Harper with
Charlie Musselwhite,
Get Up! (Stax).............. 82
Buddy Guy, Live At
Legends (RCA).............. 78
Beyond Artist
or Group
Slide Brothers,
Robert Randolph
Presents: The Slide
Brothers (Concord).... 37
Robert Glasper
Experiment......111
Jon Cleary,
Occapella (FHQ)........... 24
Dr. John........................59
Erykah Badu................56
Medeski Martin +
Wood.............................50
Flying Lotus.................48
Carolina Chocolate
Drops............................ 45
The Black Keys............44
Leonard Cohen...........43
Tedeschi Trucks
Band..............................40
Bob Dylan.................... 37
Norah Jones................ 33
Jeff Beck.......................36
Meshell Ndegeocello...32
Frank Ocean................ 32
The Roots..................... 32
Fiona Apple..................31
Tom Waits....................30
Alabama Shakes......... 28
Sharon Jones &
The Dap Kings.............26
Jack White...................26
Beyond Album
Jos James, No
Beginning No End
(Blue Note)......... 100
Donald Fagen, Sunken
Condos (Reprise).......... 74
Bob Dylan,
Tempest (Columbia)...70
Fiona Apple, The Idler
Wheel (Epic)................ 55
Norah Jones,
Little Broken Hearts
(Blue Note).................... 54
Melody Gardot,
The Absence (Verve)... 53
Flying Lotus, Until The
Quiet Comes (Warp)... 52
Fatoumata Diawara,
Fatou (World Circuit/
Nonesuch).................... 37
Patti Smith, Banga
(Columbia).................... 35
Bobby Womack, The
Bravest Man In The
Universe (XL)................ 28
David Bowie, The Next
Day (Columbia)............ 27
Neil Young & Crazy
Horse, Psychedelic Pill
(Reprise).........................26
Kendrick Lamar,
Good Kid, m.A.A.d City
(Interscope).................. 25
Billy Bragg/Wilco,
Mermaid Avenue: The
Complete Sessions
(Nonesuch).................... 21
Alabama Shakes,
Boys & Girls (ATO)........43
(Glassnote/Sony RED).....20
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL RISING STARS
1
6
st CRITICS POLL
61
Orrin Evans
Captain Black
Big Band
Salvatore Corso
ANNUAL
Rising Star
Jazz Artist
Gregory
Porter...............91
Jon Irabagon................85
Gerald Clayton.............83
Mary Halvorson...........70
Jos James...................59
Christian Scott
(Christian Scott aTunde
Adjuah)..........................54
Jason Lindner
Big Band....................... 84
Vince Giordanos
Nighthawks..................75
Nicholas Payton
Big Band....................... 69
Rudresh
Mahanthappas
Samdhi..........................42
Satoko Fujii
Orchestra..................... 66
JD Allen Trio................. 41
Ryan Truesdells
Gil Evans
Centennial Project...... 41
Ryan Truesdell............ 48
The Cookers..................39
Orrin Evans.................. 46
Craig Taborn................45
Tierney Sutton
Band...............................36
Jason Adasiewicz........42
JD Allen.........................42
Jenny Scheinman.......36
Tia Fuller........................35
Omer Avital...................34
Eric Harland..................33
John Hollenbeck.........33
Trombone Shorty........33
Avishai Cohen
(trumpeter)...................32
Hiromi.............................31
Jeremy Pelt....................31
Scott Robinson..............31
Sarah Morrow..............27
Glen David Andrews...25
Joel Yennior..................22
Chris Crenshaw............20
Amir ElSafar..................67
Joe Fiedler.....................20
Russell Gunn................67
Jeff Cressman...............15
Joel Harrison
Large Ensemble............51
Corey Wilkes................. 61
David Gibson.................15
Nate Wooley................ 60
Charlie Halloran............ 11
Philip Dizack.................50
Joshua Berman........... 41
Howard Wiley
and the Angola
Project............................28
Michael Rodriguez......30
Maurice Brown............25
Jimmy Greene............105
Christine Jensen
Jazz Orchestra..............53
Ghost Train
Orchestra......................27
Cecilia Coleman
Big Band........................26
Tommy Igoes
Birdland Big Band.......26
Maraca & His
Latin Jazz All Stars.......26
Big Band
Ambrose
Akinmusire
Quintet.............93
Orrin Evans
Captain Black
Big Band......... 129
Nicholas Payton
Television Studio
Orchestra.......................21
Jeff Albert.....................39
Taylor Ho Bynum....... 94
Marcus Shelby
Jazz Orchestra............. 60
Chuck Israels
Jazz Orchestra..............23
Bobby Sanabria
Big Band....................... 94
Ron Westray.................42
Ben Gerstein.................23
Rising Star
Christian Scott
(Christian Scott
aTunde
Adjuah).......... 163
Nils Wogram.................43
Peter Evans..................119
Rising Star
Trumpet
Alan Ferber...................50
Sean Jones..................130
The Dorf........................23
Jazz Group
Rising Star
Mr. Hos
Orchestrotica................20
Jonathan Finlayson... 44
Freddie Hendrix.......... 44
Rising Star
Kirk Knuffke................. 40
Soprano
Saxophone
Bria Skonberg............. 40
Shane Endsley.............34
Donny McCaslin..........111
Mathias Eick.................23
Shamar Allen................20
Carol Morgan...............20
Tineke Postma............ 88
Ingrid Laubrock.......... 84
Yuval Cohen.................65
Christine Jensen..........55
Rising Star
Michael Blake...............47
Trombone
John Surman................47
Trombone
Shorty.............228
Jason Robinson.......... 44
Marcus Strickland.......22
Aurora Nealand...........20
Sam Newsome............. 19
Ryan Keberle...............101
Javier Girotto................ 16
Jacob Garchik............100
Jrg Wickihalder.......... 11
Michael Dease............ 90
Bryan Beninghove...... 10
Samuel Blaser..............65
Hailey Niswanger........ 10
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL RISING STARS
1
6
st CRITICS POLL
61
Howard Wiley............... 19
Ted Hogarth.................25
Gabriele Mirabassi......28
Tenor
Saxophone
Rahsaan Barber........... 16
Josh Sinton...................22
Ned Rothenberg..........28
Andy Stein....................22
Joachim
Badenhorst...................24
Jaleel Shaw.................120
Jon
Irabagon........ 159
Rising Star
Baritone
Saxophone
Grace Kelly....................92
Vinny Golia......93
Darius Jones................ 90
Matana Roberts.......... 66
Noah Preminger..........76
Brian Landrus...............78
Greg Abate.................. 64
John Ellis.......................72
Chris Cheek..................65
Ben
Goldberg.........121
Flute
Sharel Cassity...............47
Ellery Eskelin.................67
Alex Harding................58
Chris Speed..................85
Tia Fuller........203
Tim Green.................... 46
Bill McHenry.................58
Dave Rempis............... 48
Louis Sclavis................. 66
Anat Cohen................165
Tineke Postma.............45
Mats Gustafsson..........55
Jason Marshall............ 46
Oscar Noriega..............59
Holly Hofmann............70
Greg Ward....................37
Ingrid Laubrock.......... 48
Lisa Parrott................... 44
David Krakauer............53
T.K. Blue.........................58
Casey Benjamin...........35
Grant Stewart.............. 44
Glenn Wilson................43
James Falzone..............51
Kent Jordan..................56
Andrew DAngelo........33
Ben Wendel..................42
Roger Rosenberg........42
Michael Moore.............50
Douglas Ewart..............50
Mike DiRubbo..............32
Dan Block......................45
Bart Platteau............... 46
Hailey Niswanger........29
Kenneth
Whalum III....................36
Mort Weiss................... 44
Mark Weinstein...........43
Francesco Cafiso.........28
Jeff Coffin.....................33
Gebhard
Ullmann.........................38
Matana Roberts...........43
Sam Most......................42
Jessica Lurie.................25
Skerik..............................31
Michael Attias..............35
Todd Marcus................35
Magic Malik..................38
Dave Rempis................22
Abraham Burton..........21
Charles Evans...............34
Franois Houle..............31
Kali Z. Fasteau..............35
Todd Bashore................21
Bill Saxton.....................20
Lauren Sevian..............34
Beth Custer...................30
Patrick Cornelius.........20
Myron Waldon.............20
Ben Ellman....................30
Tim Laughlin................30
Orlando Maraca
Valle...............................35
Rising Star
Alto
Saxophone
ANNUAL
Rising Star
Colin Stetson................85
Herwig
Gradischnig...................21
Chris Byars....................24
Aurora Nealand...........23
Evan Ziporyn.................21
Rising Star
Clarinet
Rising Star
Frank Gratkowski........33
George Colligan...........45
George Colligan...........70
Wil Blades.................... 60
Gilad Hekselman........ 86
Jorge Pardo..................23
Kris Davis.......................43
Patrice Rushen.............59
Ben Monder...................71
Wolfgang
Puschnig.......................23
Orrin Evans...................42
Jamie Saft.....................50
Amina Claudine
Myers............................ 60
Kris Bowers.................. 40
Gary Husband............. 48
Jamie Saft.................... 49
Steve Adams................20
John di Martino.......... 40
Adam Benjamin...........37
Dan Wall....................... 49
Sylvain Leroux..............20
Fabian Almazan...........37
Kit Downes....................45
Aaron Goldberg...........35
Mamiko
Watanabe.....................28
Itai Kriss.......................... 11
Stefano Bollani............34
Reuben Wilson............ 44
Roni Ben-Hur................47
Jean Derome................ 10
Helen Sung...................34
Bugge
Wesseltoft.....................28
Erik Deutsch.................37
Mike Moreno............... 46
Kit Downes....................24
Alexander
Hawkins.........................35
Graham Dechter..........45
Austin Peralta...............23
Jim Beard.......................21
Jonathan
Kriesberg...................... 40
Zaccai Curtis..................21
Akiko Tsuruga..............30
Nguyn L.................... 40
Lawrence Fields...........20
Gerald Gibbs.................29
Rob Mazurek................20
Joe Bagg.......................28
Jeff Parker.....................36
Brian Coogan............... 19
Bill Heid.........................22
Gareth Lockrane.......... 10
Zaccai Curtis.................29
Eldar Djangirov............28
Rising Star
Matt Mitchell................28
Piano
Gerald
Clayton...........150
Rising Star
David Virelles...............70
Jonathan Batiste........ 66
Jason
Lindner........... 137
Aaron Diehl.................. 64
Rising Star
Hiromi........................... 60
Marco
Benevento.................... 91
Jared Gold......109
Taylor Eigsti..................52
Nik Brtsch.................. 90
Nik Brtsch....................51
Marc Cary.......................71
Frank Kimbrough.........51
Wayne Horvitz..............71
Dan Tepfer....................54
Keyboard
Rhoda Scott..................45
Dan Fogel......................20
Atsuko Hashimoto......20
Organ
Joel Harrison................54
Sheryl Bailey..................51
Lage Lund......................51
Adam Rogers.................51
Liberty Ellman..............35
Doug Wamble..............34
Paul Bollenback...........32
Brandon Seabrook......23
Joe Cohn........................21
Rising Star
Brian Charette...........105
Guitar
Raoul
Bjrkenheim.................20
Matthew Shipp........... 96
Rez Abbasi.......131
James Chirillo...............20
Pat Bianchi.................... 91
Peter Bernstein........... 88
Yotam Silberstein........20
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL RISING STARS
1
6
st CRITICS POLL
61
ANNUAL
Zach
Brock
Rising Star
Bass
Stomu Takeishi.............51
Toumani
Diabat
Scott Tixier.....................13
Tarus Mateen...............50
Ben
Williams.......... 90
Stephen
Thundercat
Bruner........................... 49
Larry Grenadier............83
Tal Wilkenfeld..............43
Avishai Cohen.............. 81
Mimi Jones................... 41
Gerald
Cleaver.............93
Derrick Hodge..............63
Melvin Gibbs............... 40
Allison Miller.................63
Ingebrigt
Hker Flaten.................52
Drew Gress....................37
Rudy Royston............... 61
Bob Cranshaw.............35
Todd Sickafoose..........52
Tyshawn Sorey............59
Nate McBride...............29
Linda Oh....................... 49
Jonathan Blake.............51
Tom Kennedy...............24
Luques Curtis...............47
Kendrick Scott...............51
John Lee........................23
Robert Hurst.................47
Jamire Williams............51
James Cammack.........22
Justin Brown............... 48
Chris Tarry.....................20
Dafnis Prieto................ 44
Eric Revis.......................47
Drew Gress....................42
James Genus............... 40
Rising Star
Mark Dresser................35
Violin
Franois Moutin...........34
Martin Wind.................33
Greg Cohen...................31
Lisa
Mezzacappa..................31
David Wong..................31
Thomas
Morgan..........................25
Rising Star
Drums
Mark Guiliana...............43
Gregg August.............. 40
Eyvind Kang...............129
Jeff Gauthier................87
Mads Tolling.................85
Carla Kihlstedt..............77
Sarah Caswell.............. 68
Ed Alcock
Karrin
Allyson
Joe Chambers..............59
Mike Dillon....................56
Arto
Tunboyaciyan............25
Gunter Hampel........... 48
Michael Zerang............23
Khan Jamal...................42
Lukas Ligeti...................22
Jason Adasiewicz........ 41
Warren Smith............... 41
Mark Sherman............ 40
Warren Wolf.................37
Kevin Norton................36
Dave King.....................37
Clarence Penn..............36
Jason Marsalis.............35
Scott Amendola...........33
Jeff Ballard...................32
Didier Lockwood..........62
Ulysses
Owens Jr.......................32
Ben Powell................... 60
Alex Cline......................30
Aaron Weinstein...........51
Stanton Moore.............30
Miscellaneous
Instrument
Chris Dingman.............28
Toumani
Diabat
(kora)................ 88
James Westfall.............26
Colin Stetson
Christian Tamburr.......25
(bass saxophone)..........83
Jim Hart.........................29
Christopher Dell...........23
Tyler Blanton.................17
Smith Dobson...............17
Wycliffe Gordon
(tuba)..............................79
Rabih Abou-Khalil
(oud).............................. 60
Anouar Brahem
Antonio Sanchez.........42
Adam Cruz....................38
Rising Star
Rising Star
Percussion
Dan Weiss........ 82
Giovanni Hidalgo....... 64
Pedrito Martinez......... 64
Ches Smith...................55
Nan Vasconcelos.......53
Manolo Badrena...........51
Peter Apfelbaum.........50
(oud).............................. 48
Akua Dixon
(cello)............................ 48
Hank Roberts
(cello)............................ 46
Dana Leong
(cello)............................ 44
Omer Avital
(oud)...............................42
Vincent Chancey
(French horn)...............37
Mary Oliver...................42
Harris Eisenstadt.........47
Electric Bass
Scott Robinson
Susie Hansen................36
Sammy Figuero...........47
(theremin)......................37
Derrick
Hodge............. 122
Badal Roy..................... 46
Florin Niculescu...........25
Marcus Rojas
(tuba)..............................36
Avishai Cohen............. 89
Szilrd Mezei................22
Rising Star
Jesse Zubot...................27
Rising Star
Vibes
Satoshi Takeishi...........43
Sunny Jain....................42
Peggy Lee
Skuli Sverrisson............79
Karen Briggs.................20
Jason
Marsalis.......... 159
James Genus............... 66
Nils kland...................20
Matt Moran................104
Guilherme Franco.......37
Felix Pastorius..............59
Rob Thomas.................20
Bryan Carrott...............78
Daniel Sadownick........31
Pino Palladino..............57
Elektra Kurtis................ 14
Mulatu Astatke........... 60
Jon Wikan.....................27
Matt Perrine
Tim Lefebvre................56
Marcus Moore.............. 14
Peter Appleyard..........59
Steve Kroon..................25
(sousaphone).................31
Warren Smith...............39
(cello).............................35
Ben Goldberg
(contra alto
clarinet)........................32
Brandon Seabrook
(banjo)............................30
Rick Braun......................15
Amy Cervini..................27
Hafez Modirzadeh.......25
John Proulx.................. 14
Jackie Ryan...................27
Claire Daly.....................23
Helen Gillet
Mansur Scott.................13
Iva Bittov.....................25
Satoko Fujii...................23
Sachal
Vasandani......................13
Champian Fulton........25
John Ellis.......................20
Rising Star
Tessa Souter.................23
Ben Goldberg............... 19
Producer
Jeremy Davenport.......12
Becca Stevens..............22
Jamie Davis...................12
Susie Arioli.....................21
(cello).............................27
Casey Benjamin
(vocoder).......................25
Todd Marcus
(bass clarinet)...............24
Rising Star
Giacomo Gates..............12
Arranger
Asuka Kakitani............. 10
Robert
Glasper............151
Jason Moran..............106
Ravi Coltrane................82
Rising Star
Female
Vocalist
John
Hollenbeck..... 195
Robert
Glasper........... 119
Miguel Zenn.............166
Karrin
Allyson............ 80
Rudresh
Mahanthappa.............114
Ben Allison....................77
Spike Wilner/
Ben Rubin.....................55
Peter Apfelbaum.........65
Taylor Ho Bynum........53
John Boutt................. 94
Ccile McLorin
Salvant...........................76
Ben Allison................... 69
Anthony Wilson...........65
Jeff Gauthier................50
Curtis Stigers............... 68
Mary Halvorson...........65
Billy Childs....................62
Melody Gardot.............74
Bruce Barth...................45
Ed Reed.........................63
Frank Kimbrough........52
Uri Caine........................ 61
Kate McGarry...............65
Christine Jensen..........42
Marcus Shelby.............55
Seth Rosner/
Yulun Wang..................38
Rising Star
Male
Vocalist
Gregory
Porter.............282
Rising Star
Composer
Guillermo Klein........... 90
John Clayton................ 81
Delfeayo Marsalis........62
Larry Klein.....................55
Allan Harris.................. 60
Kat Edmonson.............47
Milton Suggs................50
Marcus Shelby.............42
David Weiss..................50
Jana Herzen.................34
Rebecca Martin.......... 40
Gordon Goodwin.........47
Wayne Wallace............30
Ian Shaw...................... 48
JD Allen......................... 41
Denise Donatelli..........39
Mark Masters............... 41
Trem Azul......................26
Dean Bowman.............47
Moppa Elliott............... 40
Dominque Eade...........37
Zev Feldman.................26
Jos James...................47
Jenny Scheinman...... 40
Ryan Truesdell............ 40
Carmen Lundy.............36
Ben Ellman....................23
Bill Henderson............. 46
Anthony Wilson...........35
Dafnis Prieto.................36
Jen Shyu.......................36
Chie Imaizumi..............29
Lee Townsend..............23
Alan Hampton.............34
Dena DeRose................35
Laurence
Hobgood.......................34
Warren Wolf..................21
Marc Free......................22
Joo Bosco....................33
Tyshawn Sorey............33
Ben Goldberg...............20
Lenny White.................22
Madeline
Eastman........................29
Steve Lehman..............32
Ezra Weiss..................... 16
Pedro Costa..................20
Vincent Gardner...........17
Nellie McKay.................28
Tord Gustavsen...........26
Jonathan Frelich......... 10
Craig Street...................20
ANNUAL
st CRITICS
POLL
1
6
st CRITICS POLL
61
The Critics
Following are the 165 critics who voted in DownBeats 61st Annual International Critics Poll. The critics distributed up to 10 points among up to
three choices (but no more than 5 points per choice) in each of two categories: Established Talent and Rising Stars. (Note: The asterisk [*] denotes
a Veterans Committee voter.)
ANNUAL
David Adler: The Village
Voice, Stereophile, The
New York City Jazz
Record, JazzTimes
Jalylah Burrell:
WYBCX Yale Radio
Andrea Canter:
JazzINK.com
* Aaron Cohen: DB
* Frank Alkyer: DB
Marc Rosenfeld:
Antunes, Nextbop.com
Bridget Arnwine:
examiner.com,
bridgetsjazzplanet.
wordpress.com
Hrayr Attarian: Chicago
Jazz Magazine, Jazziz,
All About Jazz
Stephanie Crease:
DB, Chamber Music
America
Chris Barton:
Los Angeles Times
Peter Bastian:
Jazzthetik
Angelika Beener:
DB, Alternate Takes,
NPR Music
Peter Berkowitz:
LEO Weekly
Bill Beuttler: Boston
Globe, Boston Magazine,
JazzTimes
Nick Bewsey:
ICON Magazine
Eric Bishop: DB,
The New York Times
Edward Blanco:
All About Jazz
Ross Boissoneau:
Jazziz, Progression
Philip Booth: DB,
Relix, Bass Player,
JazzTimes, Jazziz
Fred Bouchard:
DB, NYC Jazz Record,
BMI Boston
Michael Bourne:
DB, wbgo.org
Amsterdam News,
The Network Journal,
Free Speech TV
Bradley Brambarger:
DB, Sound It Out, Listen
Jon Bream:
Minneapolis Star Tribune
Pawel Brodowski:
Jazz Forum
Gigi Brooks:
JazzTimes
Stuart Broomer:
Musicworks, NYC Jazz Record, Point of Departure
* Hilary Brown: DB
66 DOWNBEAT AUGUST 2013
* Ira Gitler: DB
Jeff Gottschalk:
Rabdaddy
George Grella: The Big
City, The Brooklyn Rail,
ClassicalTV, Culturebot,
Sequenza21
Reynard Guy: Jazz Hot
* Frank-John Hadley:
Anthony Dean-Harris:
nextbop.com
George W. Harris:
jazzweekly.com, Jazz
Messenger
Dave Helland:
grammy.com
* Ed Enright: DB
* John Ephland: DB,
Relix, DRUM!
Josh Jackson:
WBGONewark
Peter McElhinney:
Style Weekly
Alex W. Rodriguez:
Ethnomusicology Review
Damien McPherson:
LEO Weekly
Antonio Rubio:
DB, Jazz.pt, Correio
da Manh
Robin James:
Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder
Giovanni Russonello:
CapitalBop, JazzTimes
Luigi Santosuosso:
All About Jazz Italia
Ralph A. Miriello:
notesonjazz.blogspot.
com, Huffington Post
* Dan Morgenstern:
ber Music,
Weider History Group,
Aficionado Media
Chris Sheridan:
DB, Jazz Review
Areif Sless-Kitain: DB,
Time Out Chicago
Jean Szlamowicz:
DB, Jazz Hot
Richard Skelly:
Asbury Park Press, U.S. 1,
Princeton
Zan Stewart:
Freelance
Ned Sublette: DB
Tim Niland:
Music & More
Stuart Nicholson:
Jazzwise, Jazznytt,
Jazz Special
Mark Keresman: SF
Weekly, ICON, East Bay
Express, AZ Republic
Lee Hildebrand:
San Francisco Chronicle,
Living Blues, East Bay
Express
Will Hermes:
Rolling Stone, NPR,
New York Times
Jason Koransky: DB
* Kiyoshi Koyama:
NHK-FM Jazz Tonight
Jeff Krow: Audiophile,
Audition
Geoffrey Himes:
DB, Washington Post,
JazzTimes
Angelo Leonardi:
Musica Jazz, All About
Jazz Italia
Bruce Lindsay:
All About Jazz, Jazz
Journal, JazzUK
Christopher Loudon:
JazzTimes
Dustin Garlitz:
jazztalent.com
Peter Hum:
The Ottawa Citizen
Eric Jackson:
WGBHBoston
* John
McDonough: DB
* Dan Ouellette:
DB, eMusic
Andrew Sussman:
Freelance
Ron Sweetman:
CKCUOttawa
Eliot Tiegel: DB
Larry Reni Thomas:
jazzcorner.com, allaboutjazz.com, carolinajazzconnectionwithlarrythomas.
blogspot.com,
jazztimes.com
Mark F. Turner: All
About Jazz
Enrique Turpin: All
About Jazz, Cuadernos
de Jazz, LA Vanguardia
Chris Walker: DB, LA
Jazz Scene, California
Tour & Travel, JazzTimes
Dave Wayne:
allaboutjazz.com
* Bobby Reed: DB
Masterpiece
Excellent
Good
Fair
Poor
Inside
75 / Jazz
78 / Blues
85 / Beyond
87 / Historical
91 / Books
jimmy katz
Pat
Metheny
Pat Metheny
HHHH1/2
HHHH
Even though hes been around the Pi roster for a few
years now, Oakland, Calif.-native/New York-based
trumpeter Jonathan Finlayson first really caught
my ear on saxophonist Steve Colemans superb
recent disc Functional Arrhythmias. Hes so lithe
and adaptable, and works so well in the tricky
time zones, that its hard to miss him. Along with
serving in Colemans Five Elements, the trumpet-
JD Allen
Grace
Savant 2130
HHH
We often hear musicians described as
post-bop, an artful way of dodging
any real characterization of anything
in jazz over the last 50 years. Its a spacious description that lets you know
what its not, but offers little in the way
of affirmative clarity. That space serves
JD Allen well on Grace, which defines
its intent with bold precision: a method
for expressing narrativenot previously done in jazz. What we get is a mix of
emancipated cadenzas and musings that
sound in search of a chorus. The pay dirt,
when it comes, seems unconnected to
Allens stated goal.
Annotator David Greenberg attempts to
translate the music into a series of epic statements
expressing such themes as oppression and good
versus evil. Allen seems less preoccupied with all
this. But it wraps the work in an affectation of pretense and that makes it seem vaguely false.
Putting that aside, Allen has that arch, mid1960s emotional backbone in his sound that shuns
Ben Websterish romanticism and reminds us how
little jazz has really changed over five decades. But
he makes it his own and pilots his course with
precision, moderation and a grounded confidence
that evades the shrill. On Load Star and Cross
Damon he falls into a groove that swings gleefully, while Selah and Little Dipper (which
70 DOWNBEAT AUGUST 2013
Wheels
HHH
One reason I get a kick out of Oliver Lakes big
band is because you can hear the essence of the
saxophonist-composers aesthetics in almost
every track. Life Dance Of Is and Holding Together
were the first Lake discs to speak to me back in
the mid-70s; the leaders skills at moving from
craggy bluster to askew lyricism to plush romance
were the main calling cards. Theres often been
something unsettled about Lakes work. Almost
40 years later those qualities still make a mark on
Wheels, his second (and a half) big band disc.
Case in point: the head of Philly Blues and
the way it spills into its full brass and reeds rendering. Theres bop at the center, tension running
through the bar lines, and a constant pivoting
taking place in the rhythm sections engine room.
Oliver Nelsons Hoe Down wafts through the
action, but as usual, the 70-year-old bandleader
finds key spots to stick dissonance and distraction
into the mix. Such juxtapositions arent always
subtle. There are moments of friction that grind
like tectonic plates shiftingthey crop up on the
title suite as well. Ive often deemed such provocative moves as wake up calls that Lake lobs at the
listener, and in the large they work. This large
ensemble makes a very physical roar.
The blare of the alto solo on Clicker, the
smooth thematic roll on Studder, the polyphony that gets sprinkled over the action on Wheels
Suitethe gambits that helped shape Lakes work
with the World Saxophone Quartet are repurposed throughout the disc as well. The most linear the group gets is on a swag-centric spin through
OutKasts The Whole World. Theres lots of clout
when a big band rides a jaunty hip-hop riddim for
all its worth, and the swing they bring to the table
augments the cadence of the Atlanta duos original
into something supercharged.
Jim Macnie
Wheels: Drum Thing; Is It Real; Philly Blues; Wheels Suite; Clicker;
The Whole World; Studder; Maassai Moves.(59:00)
Personnel: OliverLake, alto saxophone; Jason Marshall, baritone
saxophone; Darius Jones, alto saxophone; Bruce Williams, alto
saxophone; Mike Lee, tenor saxophone; James Stewart, tenor saxophone; Waldron Ricks, trumpet; Freddie Hendrix, trumpet; Nabate
Isles, trumpet; E.J. Allen, trumpet; Aaron Johnson, trombone;
Stafford Hunter, trombone; Alfred Patterson, trombone; Terry
Greene, trombone; Yoichi Uzeki, piano; Marc Cary, piano (track 6);
Robert Sabin, bass; Chris Beck, drums.
Ordering info: passinthru.org
Hot Box
The
Critics
John McDonough
John Corbett
Jim Macnie
Paul de Barros
Pat Metheny
Tap: John Zorns Book of Angels
Jonathan Finlayson
Moment & The Message
JD Allen
Grace
JD Allen, Grace
Spacious and earthy, Grace presents serious, understated music from Allen, a singular tenor impossible to
pigeonhole.Interesting to hear Eldar in this context, more serious than some, his richly chromatic harmonies
drawing on classical background in an original way.
John Corbett
The saxophonists quartet move is refreshing after making such an extensive trio statement, and the chemistry between these three new colleagues seems inspiring. Theres yet another level of authority to the horn
lines here, which may be bolstered by sumptuous ideas pianist Eldar Djangirov feeds the boss. Jim Macnie
Allens burry, furry tone and his way of meandering, as if he were luxuriating in the view as he discovered it,
are pleasant enough on their own, but when combined with a clearly matured Eldar on piano and a gently
free pulse from the rhythm section, the result is irresistible. Soulful free-bop on a deliciously broken field.
Paul de Barros
Ten
HHHH1/2
with tricky unison passages featuring the pitch-perfect wordless vocals of Sofia Jernberg pairing with
the leaders horns, the piano of Klas Nevrin or the
violin of Katt Hernandez. Drummers Jon Flt and
Raymond Strid provide polyrhythmic excitement,
but the music rarely swings in conventional jazz
fashion and the compositions also eschew post-bop
forms. Still, although Ljungkvist may be drawing
inspiration from various non-jazz sources, when
the improvisation kicks in theres no missing the
sensibility of his band members. Lackritz, named
for the given surname of Steve Lacy, has a brass
blend that recalls Birth Of The Cool, while Hold
On To Your Hat! sounds like it swipes a melodic
line from Chattanooga Choo Choo, but between
the stately horns and Jernberg zooming, whimsical voice it feels like a soundtrack for a sunny
afternoon. The intense opening of No Panic, Just
Curious sounds closer to Arnold Schoenberg
than to Loren Schoenberg, carving out an opening for a wonderfully jagged, astringent solo from
Hernandez before veering into a passage featuring
colliding improvisations from the leaders baritone
and the garrulous trombone of Mats leklint.
Peter Margasak
Tommy Emmanuel/
Martin Taylor
HHHH1/2
Subscribe
877-904-JAZZ
Were Live
ESP-Disk 4071
HHHH
When it comes to acknowledging Oscar Brown
Jr.s legacy and exploring his dynamic repertoire druing the civil rights era and beyond, the
jazz community barely scratches the surfaces. Beyond the occasional covers of Dat Dare,
Afro Blue and Work Song, his songs arent
that celebrated. Nor is he referenced as one of the
great jazz singers of the past century as much as
he should.
This charming live duet recording from
2001and Browns last recording before his
death in 2005hopefully should rectify those
oversights. Captured at Chicagos HotHouse,
this concert features Brown sharing the spotlight
with his daughter, Maggie, who inherited his gift
for whimsy and wit. When the two sing Bird
Chase and Billies Brown Bounce their voices dazzle as they soar parallel or twist and twine,
creating musical fireworks that echo bebop horn
lines. A similar sensation happens when they
sing When Malindy Sings, as their close harmonies and precise unison phrasing articulate
Paul Lawrence Dunbars humorous verses with
tucked-in suspense.
While the father-daughter duo performs
none of Browns aforementioned classics,
Maggie Brown renders Brown Baby unaccompanied with regal reserve. Even more moving is
Oscar Browns solo, wry treatment of Thelonious
Monks Round Midnight renamed Midnight
(On The Beach) as he contemplates mortality
against Miguel de la Cernas elegiac phrasing and
the shadowy rhythms, created by bassist Yoseph
Ben Israel and drummer Aveeyal Ra. Another
mediation on death occurs on A Tree And Me,
this time sung by Maggie, whose declarative
vocals exhibits tenderness and wariness cloaked
in heroic resolve.
John Murph
Were Live: Introductions, Young Jazz, Bird to Word Billie
Browns Bounce, Bird Chase, Midnight (On the Beach), A Tree and
Me, All Blues Medley, Strongman, Insight, When Malindy Sings,
All Over (Ode Owned Youth), My Little Maggie, Brown Baby, Old
Lovers Song, Old Lovers Song.
Personnel: Oscar Brown, Jr., vocals; Maggie Brown, vocals;
Yoseph Ben Israel, upright bass; Aveeyal Ra, drums; Miguel de
la Cerna, piano; Africa Pace Brown, vocals (7,9); TreSure (Angela,
Cheryl and Caroline Brown), vocals (9); Aaron Graves, piano.
Ordering info: espdisk.com
AUGUST 2013 DOWNBEAT 73
Shamie Royston
Portraits
Jeff Alberts
Instigation Quartet
HHH1/2
RogueArt 0046
Self Release
Portraits: The Beast Within; Run; Portraits; Homecoming; Healing Hymn; Ascension; In This Quiet
Place; Summer in Central Park; Inner Strength; Ruby Goes To School. (46:25)
Personnel: Shamie Royston, piano; Ivan Taylor, bass; Rudy Royston, drums; Camile Thurman,
vocals (3).
Ordering info: cdbaby.com
The Tree On The Mound: Three On Two; Instigation Quartet #3; Instigation Quartet #1; Instigation
Quartet #2; The Tree On the Mound; Instigation Quartet #6; The Strut. (52:32).
Personnel: Jeff Albert, trombone; Kidd Jordan, tenor sax; Joshua Abrams; double bass; Hamid Drake,
drums.
Ordering info: roguart.com
By chris robinson
Keeping
Kansas City
Cosmopolitan
The term Kansas City jazz probably conjures
up thoughts of Count Basie, Charlie Parker and
the blues. Today the citys thriving scene demonstrates the wealth of talent exploring a diversity of
styles and approaches, all helping to redefine the
sound of Kansas City jazz.
Guitarist and oudist Beau Bledsoe describes
his band Alaturkas music as an auditory handshake between Turkish folk and popular music
and jazz. Yalniz (Tzigane 201; 48:43 HHHH1/2 )
is a gorgeous and highly successful realization of
that handshake. Alaturka maintains a perfect balance between the jazz and Turkish elements: saxophonist Rich Wheeler gives the long snaking melodies lyrical readings and solos in a jazz oriented
vein; Bledsoe plays oud in a Turkish style; bassist
Jeff Harshbarger is the groups foundation, while
Brandon Drapers hand percussion adds rhythmic
drive and texture. While not Turkish, the beautiful
performances of two of Chick Coreas Childrens
Songs and Egberto Gismontis A Fala da Paixo
fit right in.
Ordering info: tziganemusic.com
Pianist Eddie Moores The Freedom of Expression (RIK; 62:36 HHH1/2 ) incorporates
soul, r&b and hip-hop elements into his take on
contemporary jazz. Moores compositions exude
a sophisticated and soulful elegance. His band,
which features a rotating cast of some of the citys
finest young players, is based around a piano trio
and is at times augmented by guitar, tenor sax or
trumpet. Tight grooves, a miles-deep pocket and
melodic solos abound.
phil koenig
Jazz /
Jonathan Kreisberg
One
HHH1/2
Jared Gold
Intuition
Posi-Tone 8105
HHHH
Jared Gold represents the youngest
wave of jazz organists; that would
be the post-Tony Monaco, Larry
Goldings, Barbara Dennerlein and
Bill Heid wave. In the company of
journeyman guitarist Dave Stryker
and drummer McClenty Hunter,
Gold gives a personal statement that
also touches many of the mileposts of the organs jazz history.
Gold is not tied to overtly blues-based material. Carole Kings Will You
Love Me Tomorrow? and the feel-good anthem of 70s singer-songwriters,
Youve Got A Friend, are unconventional choices. Stryker doubles Golds
theme lines for these soulful and atmospheric treatments. Youll hear nods
to Larry Young in Golds dissonant flights on Shadowboxing. Hes a playful melodist, and never more so than on the bopping funk of Hoopin On
Sundays. Yet there are bass chords that can blanket the sonic landscape,
often to spooky effect. Golds rolling fog feeling on As It Were almost nods
to mood merchant Korla Pandit.
Kirk Silsbee
Intuition: Will You Love Me Tomorrow?; The Crusher; Pro Zeca; Hoopin On Sundays; Youve Got a
Friend; Shadowboxing; Right Nowish; As It Were; Bedos Blues. (46:22)
Personnel: Jared Gold, organ; Dave Stryker, guitar; McClenty Hunter, drums
Ordering info: posi-tone.com
Hush Point
Erwin Helfer
Sunnyside 1358
Hush Point
HHHH
HHH1/2
Hush Point: Iranic; Peachful; B. Remembered; Bar Talk; Fathers and Sons; Finely Done; New Bolero;
The Train and the River; Get Out; Cat Magnet. (56:29)
Personnel: John McNeil, trumpet; Jeremy Udden, alto saxophone; Aryeh Kobrinsky, bass; Vinnie
Sperrazza, drums.
Ordering info: sunnysiderecords.com.
Erwin Helfer Way: Chicken Shack; Take My Hand Precious Lord; The Fives; Within; Exactly Like You;
Baby Wont You Please Come Home; E&C Boogie; Big Joe; Winin Boy; Sweet Georgia Brown; Tin Roof
Blues; The Preacher. (52:30)
Personnel: Erwin Helfer, piano; John Brumbach, tenor saxophone (1, 2, 10-11, 12); Skinny Williams,
tenor saxophone (1, 12), William Cochran, drums (1-3, 9-12); Lou Marini, bass (1-3, 9-12); Barrelhouse
Chuck, piano (7), organ (8).
Ordering info: thesirensrecords.com
Blues /
By frank-john hadley
Heroic
Harp
Masters
James Cotton: Cotton Mouth Man (Alligator 4954; 48:56; HHH1/2) With new songs
thematically tracing his life from the Delta to
Memphis on to Chicago, James Cottons latest ef-
Gregory Tardy
SteepleChase 31754
HHHH
Saxophonist Gregory Tardy has made his name
as a sideman with the likes of Andrew Hill and
Dave Douglas while focusing his albums as
a leader on original compositions. So the key
words in the title of his new CD are & More.
Although there are a couple of predictable chestnuts (When I Fall In Love, How Deep Is The
Ocean), Tardy expands the concept to include
pieces by Kenny Barron, Wynton Marsalis and
Cedar Walton, as well as an original ballad.
On the tenor ballads, like opener I See Your
Face Before Me, Tardy summons the entire history of the instrument, luxuriating in his big
tone, knowing how to sit on a note and let it
speak, how to bend a phrase with a singers lyricism. The same attention to tone is apparent in
his clarinet (he first trained as a classical player
on the instrument)Charlie Parkers Billies
Bounce and Barrons Voyage are uptempo but also unhurried, with plenty of room for
Tardys generous lower register.
The arrangements are refreshingly varied.
On When I Fall In Love, Sean Conlys bass
states the ballad tune while Tardys tenor improvises filigree around it, rushing ahead, laying back, then falling into sync with the melody. On the spare tenor-bass-drums arrangement
of the contemporary Christian tune How Deep
The Fathers Love For Us, a bass drone conjures
ancient Africa. Cedar Waltons Firm Roots is
a Blakey-style post-hard-bop flagwaver, with
everyone (including pianist Keith Brown and
drummer Jaimeo Brown) ripping it up. Perhaps
the most exploratory piece is Marsalis Aural
Oasis, a rhythmically free slow burn that ignites
with trumpeter Philip Dizacks exuberant openhorn solo. Tardys A Prayer For The Preborn is
also a possible first here: a pro-life jazz composition. Politics aside, the writing and playing of
this short piece are humble and inspiring.
Jon Garelick
Standards & More: I See Your Face Before Me; Voyage; How
Deep The Fathers Love For Us; Billies Bounce; When I Fall in
Love; Secret Love; A Prayer For The Preborn; Aural Oasis; How
Deep Is the Ocean; Firm Roots. (64:35)
Personnel: Gregory Tardy, tenor saxophone, clarinet; Philip
Dizack, trumpet; Keith Brown, piano; Sean Conly, bass; Jaimeo
Brown, drums.
Ordering info: steeplechase.dk
Keith Jarrett/Gary
Peacock/Jack DeJohnette
Somewhere
ECM 2200
HHHHH
You have to know the songs, Oscar
Peterson used to admonish budding pianists. His lesson: Only through intimate
knowledge of harmony, melody and lyrical
nuance can you render the songwriters hand
invisible.
For 30 years, Keith Jarrett, Gary Peacock
and Jack DeJohnette have been seizing ownership of standards, rendering them in a
wide assortment of styles, depending on
the mood of the moment. Since 1991, when
the trio entered a studio to pay tribute to the
recently departed Miles Davis, the band has recorded only live performances, and Somewherecaptured in 2009is the first to be recorded since 2002.
Opening with an abstract, rhapsodic solo Deep
Space, Somewhere feels like it might veer into free
territory, as 2001s Inside Out did, but after three minutes Peacock and DeJohnette establish a sauntering
pulse, and by the 11-minute mark the trio is grooving
hard on Davis Solar, with Jarrett executing some
exhilarating runs. The Somewhere/Everywhere
medley also covers broad territory, but in a different direction. From a gentle, sublime reading of
the Leonard Bernstein/Stephen Sondheim theme,
Jarrett shifts into one of his long, gospel-tinged
vampsa slow-burning build filled with ecstatic
Gabriele Coen
HHHH
On the back of the booklet for Yiddish Melodies
In Jazz, the engaging new album from the
Italian saxophonist and clarinetist Gabriele
Coen, theres a quote from filmmaker Joel
Coen: If the material is challenging, it forces you to challenge yourself when handling it.
And while the material on Melodies isnt technically demanding, per se, the dare is there: to
put personal spins on Jewish compositions that
have previously been explored by jazz artists.
At this task, Coen and his 8-year-old Jewish
Experience quintetpianist Pietro Lussu, guitarist Lutte Berg, bassist Marco Loddo, drummer Luca Caponi and Coensucceed mightily.
With trumpeter Ziggy Elmans take on
the traditional Bublitcki in mind, Coen and company give that tune a punkish funk beat powered by
scampering piano and the leaders rich, passionate
tenor sax. Abe Schwartzs Di Grine Kuzine opens
with a brief chapter of unsettling free-jazz before a
reggaeton-like drum pattern leads into a whimsical klezmer section. But the klezmer bit lasts only a
few seconds: The rest of the tune, marked by Coens
soaring soprano and Bergs cutting, squiggly guitar, settles on a swaying reggae feel. The traditional Der Shtiler Bulgar begins with warm, smiling solo guitar before offering up military drums
and a melody that sounds Celtic at times. Yiddish
David Murray
Infinity Quartet
Be My Monster Love
Motma 112
HHH
Once one of the most prolific
recording artists on the planet, saxophonist David Murray
has become positively reclusive
nowadays by comparison. Every
new project brings promise.
Aside from a new rhythm
section, the promise here
involves the inclusion of singers Macy Gray, also a member of Murrays big band,
and the suddenly ubiquitous Gregory Porter. While Porter lends his robust presence to three songs, Grays role on the title piece is most memorable: Her highly
textured voice is ideal to make author Ishmael Reeds surreal ode to bestial love
roar. Murray matches the singers ferocity with a woolly tenor solo that bounces
all over the horns register.
Reeds lyrics for Army Of The Faithful and Hope Is A Thing With
Feathers dont carry the same poetic whimsy, nor do they scan particularly well, although Porter powers through them with as much soulfulness
as he can muster. He sounds more at ease with Abiodun Oyewoles words
for About The Children, a re-imagining of the themes of God Bless The
Child and Strange Fruit.
Elsewhere, French Kiss For Valerie and Stressology provide effective
showcases for the Murray who many listeners once heard as the obvious heir to
Sonny Rollins. His stentorian tenor gushes torrents of notes, by turns tender and
tough, and Marc Cary provides the kind of percussive support that Murray has
previously found in pianists like D.D. Jackson and John Hicks. The Graduate
features a welcome cameo by trumpeter Bobby Bradfordwho sounds wispy
but lyricalbut, like other parts of Be My Monster Love, feels like the seams
might have been knotted a little tighter.
James Hale
Be My Monster Love: French Kiss For Valerie; Be My Monster Love; Stressology; Army Of The Faithful; Sorrow Song; About The Children; The Graduate; Hope Is A Thing With Feathers. (56:32)
Personnel: David Murray, tenor saxophone; Bobby Bradford, trumpet (7); Marc Cary, piano, organ;
Jaribu Shahid, bass; Nasheet Waits, drums; Macy Gray, vocals (2); Gregory Porter, vocals (4, 6, 8).
Ordering info: motema.com
Culture
Acoustical Concepts 47
HHH1/2
Black Host
Han Bennink/
Uri Caine
Sonic Boom
816 Music 816-1201
HHHH
HHH
Life In The Sugar Candle Mines: Hover; Ayler Children; Citizen Rose; Test-Sunday; Amsterdam/
Frames; Gromek; Wrestling; May Be Home. (77:39)
Personnel: Gerald Cleaver, drums, sound design; Cooper-Moore, piano, synthesizer; Brandon
Seabrook, guitar; Darius Jones, alto saxophone; Pascal Niggenkemper, bass.
Ordering info: northernspyrecords.com
Sonic Boom: Sonic Boom; Grind of Blue; Hobo; Round Midnight; As I Was; Furious Urious; Upscale;
True Love; Lockdown. (48:08)
Personnel: Han Bennink, drums; Uri Caine, piano.
Ordering info: uricaine.com
Tusk
HHH1/2
Rich Halley 4
HHHH
The cover of Crossing The Passes
depicts two gravel paths converging within a mountainscape that is
otherwise unsullied by human presence. So its a bit of a surprise to hear
the brisk, often busy sounds within.
This quartet plays with the easy confidence of men who have shared stages many times. Portland-based tenor saxophonist Rich Halleys music occupies the point where populism and freedom come together. With its bristling
bowed bass intro and swaggering groove, Smooth Curve Of The Bow is
well steeped in the pungent funk that Julius Hemphill forged. The bandleaders hefty-toned tenor dances easily on the unpredictable footing that his son,
drummer Carson Halley, lays out for him on Rain, Wind And Hail. On the
other hand, the way trombonist Michael Vlatkovich draws out the hints of
melancholy and tenderness in the melody of The Spring Rains reaffirms
Bill Meyer
the virtues of patience and simplicity.
Crossing The Passes: The Only Consistent; Traversing The Maze; Looking West From West; Smooth
Curve Of The Bow; The Spring Rains; Duopoly; Crossing The Passes; Basin And Range; Acute Angles;
Rain, Wind And Hail; Journey Across The Land. (62:21)
Personnel: Rich Halley, tenor saxophone, percussion; Michael Vlatkovich, trombone, percussion;
Clyde Reed, bass; Carson Halley, drums, percussion.
Ordering info: richhalley.com
Geof Bradfield
Melba!
Origin 82637
HHHH
If for no other reason than hes giving
orchids to the neglected legacy of
the late trombonist/composer Melba
Liston (who died in 1999 at the age of
74), Chicago-area saxophonist Geof
Bradfield deserves our attention. It
just so happens that in this release
hes composed a good little suite of
pieces that touch on Listons considerable artistic journey, and turned his
fine septet loose on it. Bradfields pieces are sturdy, and most would stand on
their own in a live setting. Hes celebrating Liston, rather than isolating the
trombonist or the composer/arranger.
Trombonist Joel Adams has the feature on Kansas City Child, denoting
Listons place of birth. Its as much a dirge as anything, with ominous mallets-on-tom-toms underneath Adams expressive, heart-clutching lament.
Bradfield saves the 4/4 swing for Central Avenue, where Liston began to
make her way in the tough, competitive jazz of 1940s Los Angeles. Guitarist
Jeff Parkers single-note guitar solo and his reflective work elsewhere might
surprise some of his avant-garde fans. Bradfields bopping tenor, Ryan
Cohans contrapuntal piano, and Victor Garcias lovely Dorhamesque trumpet make for a wonderfully evocative cut.
Dizzy Gillespie (for one of Listons most ardent champions) alternates
between a rambunctious Manteca-type vamp and a poignant flugelhorn
vehicle. Drummer George Fludas bashes on the former, while Garcias work
is alternately soulful and somewhat stratospheric. Bradfields proclivity for
swirling, fugue-like writing is best showcased on this piece. Musical Africana
surfaces in Randy Weston, as Bradfields bass clarinet and Clark Sommers
bass provide a virile rhythmic anchor. Bradfield has assembled a heartfelt
tribute and, although the short vocal ballad Let Me Not Lose My Dream is
almost over before it begins, an impressive statement.
Kirk Silsbee
Melba!: Kansas City Child; Central Avenue; Dizzy Gillespie; Randy Weston; Solo Saxophone Introduction; Detroit/Kingston; Homecoming; Let Me Not Lose My Dream. (51:32)
Personnel: Geof Bradfield, soprano and tenor saxophones, bass clarinet; Victor Garcia, trumpet,
flugelhorn, percussion; Joel Adams, trombone; Jeff Parker, guitar; Ryan Cohan, piano; Clark Sommers,
bass; George Fludas, drums, percussion; Maggie Burrell, vocal (7).
Ordering info: originarts.com
Didier Petit/Alexandre
Pierrepont
Passages
Rogue Art 42
HH1/2
HHH
Chuck Owens fifth album has a
narrative feel. The ominous
and bass-laden first few bars of
Dawn At Rivers Edge capture
the trepidation that comes with
moving through early morning
darkness, as smatterings of softly rendered, high register strings and a
tinkling triangle suggest a watery unknown. Crescendos and decrescendos
rise and fall before suddenly the wind instruments take over, all daybreak
and cheer. Chutes And Wave Trains boasts stop-and-go horn sections
and dance-ready passages reminiscent of Leonard Bernsteins West Side
Storya plot seems to advance via jazz-influenced rhythms, while moods
are governed by swells with classical roots.
Jennifer Odell
River Runs: A Concerto for Jazz Guitar, Saxophone & Orchestra: Dawn At Rivers Edge/Bound
Away (Greenbrier & New Rivers, WV); Dark Waters, Slow Waters (Hillsborough River, Fl.); Chutes and
Wave Trains (Chattooga River, GA & SC); Side Hikes A Ridge Away (Green & Colorado Rivers, CO & UT);
Perhaps the Better Claim (Salmon River, ID): The River of No Return. (63:19)
Personnel: Chuck Owen, composer, conductor, orchestrator; Jack Wilkins, tenor saxophone; LaRue
Nickelson, guitar; Rob Thomas, violin; Corey Christiensen, guitars, Mark Neuunschwander, bass; Danny
Gottlieb, drums.
Ordering info: summitrecords.com
Brian Charette
Borderline
SteepleChase 31756
HHH 1/2
Wallace Roney
Understanding
HighNote 7235
HHHH
When it comes to consistency, Wallace Roney
brings it. Understanding is yet another high-caliber release in the modern post-bop vein with
the trumpeter leading almost an entire different, all acoustic ensemble from last years outstanding disc, Home. He retains drummer
Kush Abadey, who brings a thunderous excitability to the fore. But this time around, the
trumpeter shares the frontline with two saxophonists: tenor Ben Solomon and alto Arnold
Lee. They both yield robust tones, offering the
ideal foil for Roneys sleek melodic improvisations. Eden Ladin and Victor Gould share the
piano chair with Gould taking the lions share,
while Daryl Johns bolts the ensemble with solid yet
sturdy bass lines.
Understanding finds Roney and company
mostly exploring lesser-known gems. For instance,
the title track is a mid-tempo jewel, penned by
unsung drummer Roy Brooks. The song showcases Roneys increasingly rhythmic improvisations, which obscure the often-touted Miles
Davis references, revealing other touchstones such
as Woody Shaws harmonic sense and Freddie
Hubbards crackling virtuosity. Solomon also radiates on Understanding, fashioning a bright tenor
sound as he uncoils a snaky improvisation atop
of Ababeys jagged rhythms and Ladins grace
accompaniment.
84 DOWNBEAT AUGUST 2013
HHHH
Guitarist and Ornette Coleman protg Kenny
Wessel tackles provocative grooves and left-ofcenter ideas on his third recording as a leader. Playing a warm-toned electric throughout, Wessel opens with the second line flavored
Swamp Meyna, which has him repeating an
angular, hypnotic line, eventually harmonizing
it with a looping pedal, while tenor saxophonists Joel Frahm and Peck Allmond exchange
fractured phrases. Bahut Acha opens in rubato fashion with Wessel dipping into some slippery, non-tempered phrasing. As the piece
develops, it becomes anchored by bassist Brad
Jones deep-toned contrapuntal groove and
fueled by Wollesens loose-limbed bashing in
5/8 time. Wessels solo here is lyrical and full of
intuitive intervallic leaps. Frahm also turns in a
heroic tenor solo and Wessels fellow Coleman
alumnus Jones adds a potent upright solo to the
proceedings. The laid back title track, which is
loosely based on the Jimi Hendrix version of
Hey Joe, has Wessel and Frahm in tight lockstep through the head as Wollesen grooves in
understated fashion. The two kindred spirits
further demonstrate their remarkable chemistry on the radiant guitar-sax duet, Lullaby #2.
The quartet kicks up a storm on the surging, swinging The Speed of the Bass, a feature
for Frahms powerful tenor and Wollesens ferocious bashing. Miniature is a spacious freejazz interlude for sax, guitar and drums while
Bone Dance is a bit of dissonant avant-funk
that contains some of the most outr moments
on the album while also recalling Arthur
Blythes Bush Baby. The collection closes with
a spirited run through Colemans City Living,
a great tune from the Prime Time repertoire.
Wessels take on it is faithful to a point, though
more swinging than the furiously kinetic original, with the guitarist comping in syncopated
pianistic fashion.
Bill Milkowski
Weights & Measures: Swamp Meyna; Bahut Acha; Weights
and Measures; Lullaby #2; The Speed of the Bass; Miniature;
Bone Dance; Lullaby #1; City Living. (50:00)
Personnel: Kenny Wessel, guitar; Joel Frahm, tenor sax; Brad
Jones, acoustic bass; Kenny Wollesen, drums; Peck Allmond,
tenor sax (track 1).
Ordering info: kenwessel.com
Beyond /
By bobby reed
sony/legacy/Don Hunstein
Mammoth
Cash Box
Paints
Complex
Portrait
Johnny Cash,
circa 1960
Carn Davidson
Nine
Addo 14
HHH1/2
Pursuing that piano-less terrain pioneered by
baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan in the early
1950s, Tara Davidson (saxophones) and trombonist William Carn put their own stamp on the
strain, arranging original material for their ninepiece chordless ensemble. The pair, both JUNO
nominated artists, nudge the muse somewhere
between chamber jazz and that equally renowned
but loosely defined 1950s style, crime jazz, as
composed by such notables as Henry Mancini,
Quincy Jones, Elmer Bernstein and Lalo Schifrin.
HHHH
Cornetist Rob Mazurek defines the Buddhist concept of Indras Net as a continuous reflection of,
but always changing reality of, our universe and
what is not seen or heard. The Space Between,
his collaboration with the dancer, choreographer,
and video artist Marianne M. Kim, is about as
abstract and intriguing as that idea, which guided the project. Brought to life with assistance
from Mazureks Exploding Star Electro Acoustic
Ensemble, the music is minimalist, foreboding
and thrillingly disorienting.
Though divided into eight sections, The Space
Between is essentially one long piece. From
Guilherme Granado on sampler, Todd Carter on
sonic manipulation and Matt Bauder, Damon
Locks and Mazurek on electronics come backdrops including cloudy, swelling noise and sparkling, tinkling space-age sounds. Against those
and other landscapes, Nicole Mitchells commanding flute growls, darts, jumps and searches. The leaders cornet barks, screeches and emits
long tones. Jeff Kowalkowskis piano rumbles and
asks questions. And the percussion provided by
Carrie Biolo and Tortoises John Herndon rustles
intermittently. From time to time, Locks coolly
delivers lines like the mountain has grown wings
today, overnight, the burnt landscape turned
green, and let me live in the minutes before
the end begins again. To his Exploding Stars,
the leader has provided written scores, hidden scores and video scores. What are the latter two? Mauricio Takara contributes cavaquinho,
a four-string guitar used to play samba, though its
not clear where. Musically, The Space Between is a
wild ride.
Brad Farberman
The Space Between: Vortex 1-5; We Are All One With The Moon
And Planets; Only; The Shifting Sequence; Illumination Drone 17;
Space Between; Seven Blues; Indras Net. (40:09)
Personnel: Rob Mazurek, electro acoustic composition, written
scores, hidden scores, video scores, paintings, cornet, main
electronics, text (1-2); Marianne M. Kim, video, choreography,
dance; Todd Carter, live sound recording and sonic manipulation,
recording and mixing engineer; Damon Locks, voice, electronics,
text (3-8); Nicole Mitchell, flute; Matt Bauder, electronics; Jeff Kowalkowski, piano, electric piano; Carrie Biolo, percussion; Mauricio
Takara, electric cavaquinho; Guilherme Granado, sampler; John
Herndon, drums.
Ordering info: delmark.com
Historical /
By John mcdonough
Earl Hines
Set Modern
Path
Rempis
Percussion
Quartet
Phalanx
Aerophonic 001
HHHH
Wheelhouse
HHHH
Chicago-based saxophonist
Dave Rempis is the latest musician to take the plunge and
start his own record label. The first
two releases on Aerophonic are both
excellent albums by contrasting
ensembles. Taken together, they effectively establish his current aesthetic
concerns, good taste in accompanists
and consummate musicianship.
Although Wheelhouse has been
active since 2005, Boss Of The Plains
is the trios debut recording. It is also
one of the instigators for Aerophonics
founding; after languishing in another labels hands for a couple years,
Rempis took it back and decided
to put it out himself. Originally the
group performed compositions, but
Jon Ross
Eric Le Lann
I Remember Chet
Bee Jazz 057
HHHH
Eliane Elias
HHH
When taken together, these new releases by
trumpeter Eric Le Lann and pianist-singer Eliane
Elias paint a full picture of trumpeter Chet Baker.
Elias focuses on the vocal aspects of Bakers work,
trying to match his sensitive delivery, with Le
Lann offering a stunning instrumental tribute
that is both vulnerable and powerful.
There is no My Funny Valentine in Le
Lanns world, which seems to focus on the grittier, fragile aspects of Bakers performances, Le
Lanns brittle, cracking trumpet playing paying
tribute to the late Bakers technique. In the liner
notes, Le Lann talks of meeting Baker for the first
time, during one of his final concerts, a performance at the New Morning club in Paris during
which Baker played a disappointing set. The
emotion Le Lann found during his short time
with Baker carries over to I Remember Chet, his
excellent record of standards associated with different points in Bakers career. Le Lann excels at
the instrumental tunes, but he also handles vocal
tunes wonderfully, singing out melodies through
his trumpet, accompanied only by bassist Gildas
Bocle and guitarist Nelson Veras.
On Elias I Thought About You, a breezy, light
rundown of 15 standards associated with Baker,
vocals are front and center. The singers strong,
lightly accented voice suits her small combo well
on a variety of tunes, but she excels on Latintinged readings of There Will Never Be Another
You and Embraceable You. Though her songs
tend toward ballad fare, she isnt maudlin or cloying in her readings, imbuing the tunes with just
enough emotion; however, she closely toes the
fine line between emotional and sappy on I Get
Along Without You Very Well and a few other
songs.
While her vocals are the main event, her
excellent sidemen help shape each tune with
small solos. Trumpeter Randy Brecker weaves
AUGUST 2013 DOWNBEAT 89
Steve Kuhn
HHHH1/2
Enrico Pieranunzi
HHH1/2
Matt Holmans
Diversion Ensemble
When Flooded
HHHH
Trumpeter Matt Holmans Diversion
Ensemble is rounded out by clarinetist Mike
McGinnis, cellist Christopher Hoffman, guitarist Nate Radley and drummer Ziv Ravitz.
Its an unusual instrumentation that raises questions: How will the quintet function
without a bassist? Does clarinet and cello
mean this is a chamber album?
Those worries go straight out the window
once the lush, gorgeous sounds of When
Flooded start to play. On the ominous
Earworm, McGinnis earthy clarinet and the
leaders piercing trumpet form a tense, snaking
two-headed head. On Kindred Spirits, Hoffmans
meditative cello snaps into deep, rubbery bassline
mode once the piece begins in earnest. And on
Chain Of Command, when Ravitzs drums are
at their wildest, you can hear Hoffmans firm, rugged cello pedal loud and clear, even as a three-way
improv conversation shared by guitar, clarinet and
trumpet rages in the forefront.
Is When Flooded a chamber album? Often it is.
But not on the title track when Holman and
McGinnis unleash jagged improvised lines and
90 DOWNBEAT AUGUST 2013
Books /
Musician,
Teacher
Billy Taylor
Exemplified
Class
The ebullient pianist, composer, educator
and author Dr. Billy Taylor almost singlehandedly made jazz a thriving educational
discipline, and presented it in the media with
clarity and dignityall of which comes across
in the pages of The Jazz Life Of Dr. Billy
Taylor (Indiana University Press). The
North-Carolina-born, Washington, D.C.,-bred
Taylor was a poetic and propulsive musician
who recorded more than 60 recordings as a
leader, who, before the term multi-tasking
was invented, launched groundbreaking,
pioneering parallel careers as an Emmy and
Peabody winning radio broadcaster, variety
show musical director and TV correspondent.
He was also an acclaimed author of nine books, including Billy Taylors Taylor Made Piano, and was
a tireless spokesman, who coined the phrase jazz
is Americas classical music. This concise and compelling autobiography was co-written with Teresa
Reed, director of the School of Music at the University of Tulsa. She began working with Taylor in
2006 and continued her work after his passing in
2010 at 89.
The most illuminating passages deal with
Taylors early life. Those looking for a clichd,
dark ghetto tale of black poverty and suffering
in Taylors reminiscences of growing up in the
nations capital in the 1920s and 30s will not find
it here. Instead, Taylorthe son of a dentist and
homemakerproudly describes the D.C. middle-class enclave he grew up in that produced a
segregated yet thriving African-American businesses, art venues, and role models in an age
where there was an equally significant artistic
and cultural movement among our people that
echoed the well-known achievements of the
Harlem Renaissance. That refinement was evident in Taylors Dunbar High School, one of the
greatest black high schools in the country, which
boasted teachers like historian Carter G. Woodson and Taylors piano teacher Henry Grant, who
encouraged Taylor to listen to Debussy etudes
and [former pupil] Duke Ellington together so we
could compare the similarities between their use
of harmony.
Teachers and mentors occupy a special place
in Taylors heart, from his piano-playing Uncle
Bob to Undine Smith Moore, the classical pianist/
composer who urged Taylor to drop his sociology
major at Virginia State to music. He graduated in
1942, and headed to New York a year later. There
he jammed at Mintons Playhouse, secured several prestige-building gigs with Eddie South, Don
Redman, Ben Webster and Cozy Cole, and became the house pianist at Birdland from 1949 to
1951. It was during this period that Taylor penned
his first book, Billy Taylors Basic Bebop Instruction, where jazz education entered his life, which
also included his wife, Theodora, and later his
children Duane and Kim. Those early opportunities to speak and write about jazz foreshadowed
things to come, he writes.
In the ensuing decades, Taylor would record
a number of excellent recordings, including My
Fair Lady Loves Jazz and Its A Matter Of Pride and
even penned a soul-jazz standard, I Wish I Knew
How It Would Feel To Be Free. His profile as an
educator and broadcaster also grew, as evidenced
by his history-making stints as a disk jockey and
program director on New Yorks WNEW and WLIB
radio stations. He also gave back as an educator
through his role in co-creating Jazzmobile, the
Harlem-based mobile performance venue that
provided free jazz concerts and lessons to inner
city youth. Taylor broke ground as musical director of The David Frost Show, being the first African-American in that position, hosted National
Public Radios Jazz Alive, and served as a cultural
correspondent for CBS Sunday Morning.
Though Taylor, who earned his doctoral degree at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst
in 1975, approached his role as jazz educator, ambassador and spokesman with verve, the book
makes clear that his pianism, an astonishing, technically impressive amalgam that spans all of the
eras of jazz, was overlooked as a result. Still, Taylor
did not mind so muchas he writes, At the time, I
knew that my involvement in these various efforts
took away the precious hours that I would have
liked to spend writing songs and playing the piano. Looking back, however, I have no regrets. DB
Ordering info: iupress.indiana.edu
Subscribe
877-904-JAZZ
Eric Clapton
Old Sock
Surfdog 18015
H1/2
Frank Rosaly
Cicada Music
Delmark 6006
HHHH
Any suggestion that the clarinet has lost ground
in contemporary jazz gets its latest refute from
Frank Rosaly, who as a drummer might seem
like an unlikely champion for the instrument.
But with Cicada Music he makes a persuasive
case for its continued vitality, as well as its versatility. Drawn to the sound of woody timbres
bathing in the warm glow of the vibraphone,
the Chicago-based Rosaly tapped three clarinetistsJames Falzone (alto), Keefe Jackson (bass
and contrabass), and Jason Stein (bass)to fill
out a sextet anchored by vibraphonist Jason
Adasiewicz, who also contributed arrangements
for Rosalys original music.
The album marks Rosalys first as a leader
following a handful of strong solo recordings
and countless other appearances, and grew out
of soundtrack work for a documentary about
scrap-metal collectors. Textured remnants from
his score are woven throughout the disc on percussive interludes like the ominously buzzing
Bed Bugs, but Rosalys band has since taken on
a life of its own. Cicada Music serves mostly as a
showcase for the unique tonal palette of his collaborators, a group of improvisers who are well
acquainted (no surprise given Chicagos tightknit scene) yet still driven by curiosity.
A vivid, abstract dialogue winds through
Wet Feet Splashing with clarinets pecking
and chirping at one another before converging
on a hard swinging eighth note ostinato thats as
thrilling as it is short-lived. Typophile/Apples
opens with overlapping layers of free exploration that recede as bassist Jason Roebke pivots to
a series of graceful and propulsive motifs, complementing linear melodies and unusual voicings. As a drummer, Rosaly has proven time
and again that hes a gifted colorist but here he
reveals himself to be a talented composer as well.
Areif Sless-Kitain
Cicada Music: The Dark; Wet Feet Splashing; Yards; Babies;
Adrian; Driven; Tragically Positive; Bedbugs; Typophile/Apples;
Credits. (52:34)
Personnel: Frank Rosaly, drums, percussion, piano, electronics;
James Falzone, clarinet; Jason Stein, bass clarinet; Keefe Jackson,
tenor saxophone, bass clarinet, contrabass clarinet; Jason
Adasiewicz, vibraphone; Jason Roebke, bass, cracklebox.
Ordering info: delmark.com
Mike Pride
Birthing Days
Aum Fidelity 077
HHHH
Mike Pride
Drummers
Corpse
Aum Fidelity 078
HHH
Multifaceted drummer and mercurial composer
Mike Prides oddly engaging modern quartet From
Bacteria To Boys blends avant garde and edgy rock
along with touches of r&b and intricate classical
motifs on Birthing Days, the groups second release.
A suite of tunes written in a flow of inspiration
following the birth of his first child, it opens with
the explosive free piece 79 Beatdowns Of Infinite
Justice, The, with Jon Irabagon on tenor in fullblown latter-day John Coltrane mode and Alexis
Marcelo playing Sun Ra-esque lines on a purposely cheesy-sounding synth. While this piece builds
to some cathartic peaks on the back of Irabagons
unbridled wailing along with Prides savage traversing of the kit and Marcelos wild synth excursions,
there is a clear structural integrity that kicks into
place in the last half of the tune.
The quirky title track, with Irabagon on alto and
Jason Stein contributing bass clarinet parts, deftly
shifts from harmolodic grooving to intricate counterpoint to catchy 70s r&b motifs, underscored by
Marcelos funky clavinet work. Stein also offers a virtuosic bass clarinet solo on this well-constructed,
odd-metered opus that sounds like it couldve been
composed by a committee consisting of Ornette
Coleman, Ronnie Laws and Eric Dolphy.
Marcels Hat is a pensive free interlude with
Pride on glockenspiel, Peter Bitenc bowing his
upright, Marcelo on piano and Irabagon on alto.
Brestwerp is a straight-up midtempo swing number fueled by Bitencs big-toned bass walking and
Prides loose, highly interactive pulse on the kit,
while the beguiling Lullaby For Charlie carries the
lyrical and luminous quality of Coltranes Central
Park West, By contrast to that reflective number,
underscored by Prides sensitive brushwork, CLAP
is a dense, dissonant blast of collective improvisation.
More flavors come into the picture on the up-tempo
hard-boppish romp Fuller, which has some fiery
exchanges between Irabagon on alto and Jonathan
Moritz on tenor and also features an extended drum
solo by Pride.
Occupied Man, Prides answer to Ornette
Colemans Lonely Woman, opens with an extended drum solo. As the band enters, the piece morphs
abruptly from peaceful rubato to jarring staccato. The emotionally charged closer, Motiaon, was
written on the evening that Paul Motian passed away.
With Pride on brushes, underscoring the plaintive
melody with a firm but unpredictable touch, its the
perfect ode to an important forefather.
The clever title Drummers Corpse (a play on
drummers corps) is the first indication that Pride
is operating in subversive waters on this powerfully
cathartic experimental project. The 33-minute title
track is a maelstrom of percussive bashing by a battery of fellow drummers and kindred spirits over a
grinding machine-like drone. The intensity level and
darkly mesmerizing quality here is reminiscent of such pioneering noise works as Glenn
Brancas epic guitar army piece, Symphony No.
1 or Lou Reeds Metal Machine Music.
The 26-minute Some Will Die Animals
is sedate by comparison, with Prides sparsely
coloristic drumming underscoring the kotolike avant extrapolations of guitarist Chris
Welcome and the droning arco work of bassist
Eivind Opsvik. The intensity level picks up as
the three improvisers interact with multi-layered simultaneous recitations by Marissa Perel, Yuko
Tonohira and Fritz Welch. Strictly for adventurous
Bill Milkowski
Woodshed
master class
By gabriel alegra
Afro-Peruvian Jazz:
A Journey of Discovery
Definition of
Afro-Peruvian Jazz
Historical Implications
Instrumentation
Latin American jazz music has distinctly different sounds, grooves and
instrumentation depending on the
country of origin. Id like to mention
some examples of what makes AfroPeruvian jazz music unique and different from any other form of Latin
American jazz music.
The instrumentation in AfroPeruvian jazz music is based on
wooden or bone percussion instruments such as the cajn, cajita and
quijada de burro.
Rhythmic patterns are not layered as in other traditions. For
example, there is no central clave
in Afro-Peruvian music. Check out
Carrousel de Luces (track 2) and
notice how Huevitos cajn comes in
and out of the drumming provided
by Shirazette Tinnin.
Rhythmic patterns played on
instruments such as the cajn, quijada and cajita are actually guidelines
for improvised accompaniment, not
set patterns.
The accentuation of phrasing in
Afro-Peruvian music is continuously on the upbeats, rather than
the downbeats. This gives the music
a constant sense of urgency at fast
tempos and elasticity at slow tempos.
Bassist John Benitez adds that
most every genre in Afro-Peruvian
music is in 12/8 time, due to an elongated bass line underlying most
grooves. This is quite different
than the 6/8 Afro-Cuban or duple
time Brazilian grooves players are
familiar with. The fast festejo pattern can be heard on tracks 1 (La
Puertecita), 5 (Capicua), 7 (Caras
II) and 12 (El Primer Final). The
slower land and tondero patterns
can be heard on tracks 3 (Tarde o
Temprano) and 8 (A Lima Lleg el
Tondero), respectively. All of these
grooves are in 12/8. The Peruvian
waltz known as valse (written in 3/4
but often felt in 12/8) can be heard
on tracks 6 (Junio y Garua) and 11
(La Princesa Voladora).
Attitude
Jazz Elements
Woodshed
solo
By jimi durso
DownBeat Archives
Randy Brecker
sic Brecker Brothers live album from 1978, features fine playing and great compositions
from trumpeter Randy Brecker. For his song
Sponge, Brecker changed the middle section
from what had appeared on the original studio version (from the 1975 album The Brecker
Bros.)allowing him, saxophonist Michael
Brecker and guitarist Barry Finnerty to trade
eight-bar sections. Its a simple three-chord pattern in F minor, starting on the root, going to the
bVI on the way to the V chord and leading back
to the I for the next soloist.
Each of the soloists makes a point of ramping
up the energy with each eight, egging each other
on to an exhilarating crescendo. Randy takes the
first round, and its the sparsest of his solos. He
plays with a swung 16th-note feel, and 16th-note
triplets are the densest rhythm he plays here. But
in his remaining solos, we find strings of 32nds,
bringing the rhythmic energy to new heights.
This is especially evident in his final chorus,
which is nearly filled with 32nd-note runs, producing his most rhythmically dense statement.
Brecker uses more than just rhythmic intensity to heighten the energy. He employs other
techniques, including a harmonizer effect that
adds a fifth to each of his pitches. For the second, third and fourth choruses, he starts and
concludes with this effect, but turns it off in the
middle. The length of time that he disables the
harmonizer increases with each chorus, start96 DOWNBEAT AUGUST 2013
ing with a little more than a measure in the second (bars 1415), two-and-a-half measures in the
third (2426) and about five bars in the final chorus (3236).
He also uses a wah-wah effectnot the conventional mute wah-wah associated with trumpet, but the electronic one more common in blues
and rock guitar.
Another intriguing aspect of Breckers choruses is how they spill over into other choruses.
In every instance, his lines trail a beat or two into
the next eight, and for the third and fourth chorus he starts about a half-beat early, overlapping
the guitar solo.
Brecker also builds and dissipates tension
through the use of chromatics. One curious
choice is the A natural. The composition is in F
minor, and Brecker does a lot of playing within
the F minor scale. So A natural, the major third,
is one of the most out notes you could play. In
the first two choruses, Brecker softens this by
using the A as a passing tone between Ab and B b
(measures 4, 7, 11 and 18). One very clever technique of incorporating this pitch is heard in measures 4 and 7: rhythmic displacement. Brecker
plays the same lick, but in measure 4 he starts it in
beat two, while in bar 7 he moves it over a quarter
note, beginning on beat three.
So far, Brecker hasnt given the A more duration than a 16th note, so the ear never gets a
chance to really hear it as a dissonance. In his
third chorus, however, Brecker starts creating
Toolshed
Firebird Pro V
Cannonball Mio
M7 E Flute
Refined Performance
firebirdsaxophones.com
cannonballmusic.com
Firebird Saxophones
Tone Goals Achieved
DW Jazz
Series
Resonant Snare
shopis
that it features DWs
Tuning Sequence, which is basically numbers printed directly on the head, near the edge
of the drum, that correspond to each lug on the
drum. This makes it easy to keep track of what
lug gets tuned next as you are making your way
around the drum with a drum key.
Another important feature of this snare, other
than its great sound, is DWs MAG throw-off
with the three-
position butt plate. Looks-wise,
the roundness of the throw-off is reminiscent of
one of my favorites, the Slingerland Zoomatic,
but without the problematic protruding lever.
The multi-position lever in the butt plate allows
you to have four different snare tensions available at a moments notice. I found switching
between sounds during a live set was much easier than in the past. Going from a greasy-sounding
New Orleans groove with loose snares to a tighter backbeat funk sound was as easy as a flip of the
three-position lever. As for the main throw-off, the
body has a magnet inside so it is kept steady while
in place; when you need to turn the snares off, a
simple flick will accomplish this.
Sound-wise, the drum was responsive at various tunings and at all volume levels. Whether
tuned up high and tight or low and loose, from
heavy backbeats to the quietest press rolls, the
drum never sounded choked or flappy, and it delivered a tone that did not disappoint. Even though it
is marketed as a jazz drum, a drum of this caliber
can operate well in many different tunings and can
be used across genres.
Matt Kern
dwdrums.com
Toolshed
Gear Box
Reed Launch
Gonzalez Reeds has launched the Classic,
Jazz and GD (pictured) lines. Classic reeds
feature a thin tip balanced with a thicker
design toward the heel. Jazz reeds have a
thicker tip and flexible palette that makes
them more dynamic and versatile. GD reeds
have a thicker tip and a longer palette
for a richer sound. conn-selmer.com
Heavy
Hitter
The Railhammer Anvil pickup is
designed for players who want the
chunky tone and sustain of a high-output design along with tonal clarity and
string definition. A ceramic magnet,
44-gauge wire and increased winding
help produce amp-pummeling power
and girth. Fast riffs, complex chords
and palm muting are defined and cut
through the mix. railhammer.com
Dig In
The Gold Digger from Radial
Engineering gives studio engineers
the ability to quickly compare
and select the best-sounding
microphone to suit the character of
a particular voice. It features four
radio-style switches that can be
used to activate each microphone
one at a time. Phantom power (48
volts) is generated and managed
inside the unit to ensure switching
between mics will be quiet and
pop-free. radialeng.com
EQ Collection
Plush Cans
Tascams new TH-02 closedback headphones deliver clear,
balanced sound. Featuring plush
cushioned ear cuffs and a padded
headband, the TH-02 can be put to
work for hours of comfortable use.
Both left and right ear cuffs offer full
90-degree rotation for an excellent
fit, and a folding design makes
the headphones easy to transport and store. tascam.com
School Notes
Jazz On Campus
Esperanza Spalding
Devin Rodino
Jamal Nichols (left), Anat Cohen and Matt Wilson at Jazz at the Bistro in St. Louis on April 18
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no agency commission. Check, Money Order, Visa and MasterCard are accepted. Deadline: Ad copy and full payment
must arrive 2 months prior to DB cover date. Send your advertisement by MAIL: DownBeat Classifieds, Att. Maggie
Glovatski-Cuprisin,102 N. Haven Road, Elmhurst, Illinois, 60126, email: maggie@downbeat.com, FAX: (630) 941-3210.
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DB Buyers Guide
AAM Music..............................................72
aammusic.com
Acoustical Concepts.............................91
johnvanore.net
Antigua Winds.......................................27
Eastman Saxes.........................................9
eastmanmusiccompany.com
ECM Records......................................... 33
ecmrecords.com
Evans...........................................................5
antiguapro-one.com
evansdrumheads.com
Bari Mouthpieces..................................10
Festival Mimo........................................89
bariwoodwind.com
mimo.art.br
Geraldo Henrique
Bulhes Music.......................................80
basinstreetrecords.com
BlueLand Records................................65
bluelandrecords.com
BMI............................................................ 53
bmi.com
Butman Music......................................29
igorbutman.com
Cacophony Records............................ 74
frankmacchia.net
Cannonball Music.................................. 11
cannonballmusic.com
Czech Ease.............................................92
czech-ease.com
P. Mauriat Instruments.....................107
pmauriatinstruments.com
guelphjazzfestival.com
Heads Up................................................. 17
headsup.com
HW Products.........................................97
hwproducts.com
Intakt Records..........................................2
intaktrec.ch
IPO Recordings.....................................63
RS Berkeley............................................90
rsberkeley.com
Sabian .....................................................39
sabian.com/en
Sam Ash..................................................96
samash.com
Sony Music..............................................25
iporecordings.com
sonymusic.com
J.J. Babbitt...............................................37
Sunnyside Records.......................85, 87
jjbabbitt.com
Jamey Abersold....................................62
jazzbooks.com
Jazz Cruises...............................................7
thejazzcruise.com
JodyJazz Mouthpieces....................... 35
jodyjazz.com
Lawson Rollins......................................86
sunnysiderecords.com
TUM Records..........................................18
tumrecords.com
Vandoren...................................................3
wearevandoren.com
Vic Firth..............................................22, 23
vicfirth.com
lawsonrollins.com
Local 802................................................76
DW Drums..............................................59
LP..................................................................8
dwdrums.com
mackavenue.com
geraldohenrique.com
Dream Cymbals..................................... 15
dreamcymbals.com
justiceforjazzartists.org
latinpercussion.com
William Paterson..................................43
wpunj.edu
Zildjian......................................................19
zildjian.com
Zoom...................................................... 108
zoomfx.com
AUGUST 2013 DOWNBEAT 105
Blindfold Test
By willard jenkins
Javon Jackson
Lester Young
Ive Found A New Baby (The Complete Lester Young Studio Sessions On Verve,
Verve, 1999, recd 1946) Young, tenor saxophone; Nat Cole, piano; Buddy Rich, drums.
Unbelievable! Buddy Rich on drums, Nat King Cole on piano and the one,
the only, Lester Young on tenor saxophone. Im familiar with that; its an
incredible recording from the 40s. Whats incredible about it, first of all, is
theres no bassist! Nat Cole was the bass and the pianomost people know
Nat Cole as a vocalist, but he was an unbelievable piano player who influenced
many, many jazz pianists. Lester Young, hes the head of the snake [he] and
Coleman Hawkins. Youve gotta give a little bit more to Coleman Hawkins, but
Lester Young was the person who influenced so many great jazz artists, including Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Charlie Parker. Buddy Rich, all drummers will
agree, is probably technically the greatest drummer who ever lived. Thats just
an incredible recording. There are two of these [trio dates]; the other was with
Red Callendar, Nat Cole and Lester Young. A thousand stars!
Melissa Aldana
Ill Be Seeing You (Second Cycle, Inner Circle 2012) Aldana, tenor saxophone; Gordon
Au, trumpet; Joseph Lepore, bass; Ross Pederson, drums.
Javon Jackson
(left) and
writer Willard
Jenkins at
Clevelands
State Theatre
on April 20
I got to know him during my time with Art Blakey; and I got to play with Stafford
[James] quite a bit. Dexter is the first bebop saxophone player to put the styles of
Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins and Charlie Parker on the tenor; some would
say Wardell Gray, but Ill give the nod to Dexter.
The composition and presentation were beautiful. The sound was beautiful,
the interplay was wonderful and it had a real freshness to it. Was that Branford
[Marsalis]? Id give that about 4 stars; it was strong. The saxophonist seemed
to be influenced by Branford. [After] Ive never heard him. He sounds great.
Lucky Thompson
Twas Yesterday (New York City, 196465, Uptown, 2008, recd 1964) Thompson, tenor saxophone; Dave Burns, trumpet; Danny Turner, alto saxophone; Cecil Payne, baritone saxophone; Benny Powell, trombone; Hank Jones, piano; Richard Davis, bass; Al
Dreares, drums.
I liked his use of space, nice tone and nice inflection . I have no idea who it
was, but the soloist is very engaging. For a listener like myself, it seems like
he has the history and the lineage well put together. It was somebody younger, because there were things that he did that were more what we call today
the way he used the altissimo range, the higher side of the saxophoneso its
more of a contemporary artist. [After] I knew it was a younger person just
by the way that she phrased. It had a more contemporary style to it, but her
sense of phrasing gave me the idea that she has studied the history of the saxophone. 4 stars.
Dexter Gordon
Benny Golson
Lets Get Down (Homecoming: Live At The Village Vanguard, Columbia, 1977) Gordon,
tenor saxophone; Woody Shaw, trumpet; Ronnie Matthews, piano; Stafford James,
bass; Louis Hayes, drums.
Turning Point (The Complete Argo/Mercury Art Farmer/Benny Golson/Jazztet Sessions, Mosaic, 2004, recd 1962) Golson, tenor saxophone; Wynton Kelly, piano; Paul
Chambers, bass; Jimmy Cobb, drums.
This one gets a thousand stars, too! Life is funny; I lived in Cleveland, Ohio, for a
little bit and then we moved to Denver, Colorado. As a 13-year-old, my father
took me to see two saxophonists who changed my life. The first person he took
me to see was Sonny Stitt. Then a few months later, he took me to see Dexter
Gordon. When I saw [Gordon] I said, I want to do just what he does. I was tall
for my age, and this tall man [Gordon] came out, and he was suave, and he was
cool and he played the saxophone brilliantly . I said, I want to be just like
him. As life and fate would have it, Ive been able to do career-wise the same
things Dexter did, in terms of touring, performing and having groups and making recordings.
Whats interesting is that from this recording [Homecoming], I have played
with and know four of the musicians: Ronnie Matthews, the pianist, who I
worked with quite a bit; Louis Hayes is like an uncle or big brother; Woody Shaw,
That was beautiful. Some of it was reminiscent of Benny Golson, and some of
it reminded me of the tenor saxophonist with Duke Ellington, Paul
Gonsalveswho plays a little more sideways than that. It was really nice, but
I dont know who it is. Id give that 5 stars. [After] Its been so long since Ive
heard these things. I should know Benny GolsonIm a Jazz Messenger, for
Gods sake! That goes back to a thousand stars for Benny Golson. Hes a close
friend whos been so helpful to me and been supportive of so many musicians, a person I look up to greatly as a composer, as a saxophonist and as a
manone of the most incredible people Ive ever known. DB
The Blindfold Test is a listening test that challenges the featured artist to discuss and identify
the music and musicians who performed on selected recordings. The artist is then asked to rate
each tune using a 5-star system. No information is given to the artist prior to the test.
Jeff Forman
enor saxophonist Javon Jacksona Berklee College of Music graduate and former member of Art Blakeys Jazz Messengerswas, as
a teenager, inspired to become a professional musician after experiencing encounters with Sonny Stitt and Dexter Gordon. The list of jazz
giants with whom Jackson has performed includes Freddie Hubbard,
Elvin Jones, Ron Carter, Charlie Haden and McCoy Tyner.
Jackson was one of the artists-in-residence at the 34th annual
Tri-C JazzFest Cleveland. In addition to adjudicating student ensembles and presenting daily clinics, his residency included a special concert paying tribute to Gordon on the 90th anniversary of his birth.
Jacksons latest album is Lucky 13 (Solid Jackson Records), featuring
Les McCann on piano. Jacksons second Blindfold Test took place in
front of an audience at Clevelands State Theatre during the festival.